Andrey Usolt (@usoltt) 's Twitter Profile
Andrey Usolt

@usoltt

CEO and Co-founder of Lensa and Prisma. Angel investor. Bringing AI to the people.

ID: 85153757

linkhttps://land.prisma-ai.com/magic-avatars/ calendar_today25-10-2009 20:05:44

2,2K Tweet

853 Followers

252 Following

Andrew Steinwold (@andrewsteinwold) 's Twitter Profile Photo

GPT-4 is rumored to be coming soon, sometime between Dec - Feb - GPT-3 has 175 billion parameters - GPT-4 supposedly has 100 trillion parameters It is something like 500x more powerful than GPT-3 What kinda stuff will you be able to create with GPT-4!?

GPT-4 is rumored to be coming soon, sometime between Dec - Feb

- GPT-3 has 175 billion parameters
- GPT-4 supposedly has 100 trillion parameters

It is something like 500x more powerful than GPT-3

What kinda stuff will you be able to create with GPT-4!?
Matt Navarra (@mattnavarra) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Playing around with Prisma Labs’s new AI-generated avatars ✨ Upload 10+ selfies to teach its AI Creates images using Stable diffusion + Dream booth in a few taps

Playing around with <a href="/PrismaAI/">Prisma Labs</a>’s new AI-generated avatars ✨ 

Upload 10+ selfies to teach its AI

Creates images using Stable diffusion + Dream booth in a few taps
Prisma Labs (@prismaai) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Alright, guys, let's have some fun! Marques Brownlee, we've generated AI avatars that appeared too cool not to share. If you like them, feel free to use them. And guys, let us know whom we should do next!

Alright, guys, let's have some fun! <a href="/MKBHD/">Marques Brownlee</a>, we've generated AI avatars that appeared too cool not to share. If you like them, feel free to use them. And guys, let us know whom we should do next!
Marques Brownlee (@mkbhd) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One thing I've conceded: There's enough high resolution images of my face on the internet that I could be sufficiently reconstructed with AI and it would be frighteningly realistic. Case in point: Prisma Labs generated these avatars 🀯

One thing I've conceded: There's enough high resolution images of my face on the internet that I could be sufficiently reconstructed with AI and it would be frighteningly realistic.

Case in point: <a href="/PrismaAI/">Prisma Labs</a> generated these avatars 🀯
Prisma Labs (@prismaai) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Since we introduced our AI-generated avatars here, the hype has gone over the roof. Among the first and most voted names of whom we should do next, you named Casey Neistat. So we've braced ourselves, prepared more bandwidth on servers, and are happy to show Casey Neistat as seen by AI

Since we introduced our AI-generated avatars here, the hype has gone over the roof. Among the first and most voted names of whom we should do next, you named Casey Neistat. 
So we've braced ourselves, prepared more bandwidth on servers, and are happy to show <a href="/Casey/">Casey Neistat</a> as seen by AI
Olivia Moore (@omooretweets) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Lensa wasn’t the first AI avatar product. They were the best on mobile, which ended up being πŸ‘‘ I see similar opportunity for the first platform that makes avatar gifting easy, especially with Christmas coming up!

Lensa wasn’t the first AI avatar product. They were the best on mobile, which ended up being πŸ‘‘

I see similar opportunity for the first platform that makes avatar gifting easy, especially with Christmas coming up!
Olivia Moore (@omooretweets) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There are 1.8M apps on the iOS App Store. Only 37 claimed the coveted #1 spot in the U.S. (for at least one day) in 2022. Here's what they tell us about the current state of consumer apps πŸ‘‡

There are 1.8M apps on the iOS App Store.

Only 37 claimed the coveted #1 spot in the U.S. (for at least one day) in 2022.

Here's what they tell us about the current state of consumer apps πŸ‘‡
Dror Poleg πŸŽ— (@drorpoleg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In 1930, the union of American singers spent the equivalent of $10m on a campaign to stop people from listening to recorded music and watching movies with sound. 1/

In 1930, the union of American singers spent the equivalent of $10m on a campaign to stop people from listening to recorded music and watching movies with sound.    1/