Celebrity Life
Opinion: Phuay Li Ying believes curiosity is essential to progress
From managing her family's Excelpoint Systems to her own start-up accelerator, PlanetSparks, this multi-hyphenate shares how she's able to do it all.
The post Opinion: Phuay Li Ying believes curiosity is essential to progress appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
Opinion: Phuay Li Ying believes curiosity is essential to progress
From managing her family's Excelpoint Systems to her own start-up accelerator, PlanetSparks, this multi-hyphenate shares how she's able to do it all.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
Rise of the Machines? An AI Bot Has Learnt to Make Banksy-Inspired Art
Has the machine surpassed its master?
While prices for Banksy originals climb ever higher, a new AI has been programmed to create artworks that resemble those by the famous British street artist himself. So much so that some art collectors are already snapping up the GANksy creations.
While the works leave no doubt as to the identity of the artist they take inspiration from, the creator of the software, Matt Round, refrains from explicitly mentioning Banksy's name, to avoid any legal complications. The AI software was trained using a bank of hundreds of images of street art, some of which were probably Banksy's works, and was launched in September 2020. You can view a full gallery here.
"All of GANksy's works are original creations derived from its understanding of shape, form and texture. GANksy wants to be put into a robot body so it can spray paint the entire planet," said Round in a statement on his website.
[caption id="attachment_211600" align="alignnone" width="1024"] A new AI called GANksy is offering over 250 works of art for sale online. (Image: GANKsy and VoleWTF)[/caption]
Over 250 works by GANksy are for sale in the form of the exclusive ownership of a GANksy-signed digital file, with prices starting at £1 (HK$10.10) and rising by £1 with every purchase. As of now, according to Round's website, 91 pieces have already found a buyer.
These prices are a far cry from those that Banksy's works routinely fetch; many sell for several million euros. Last week, "Show me the Monet," Banksy's reimagining of a Claude Monet painting, saw the hammer fall at £7.6 million (HK$76.7 million) at Sotheby's London. The piece did not, however, beat the record set by the artist's "Devolved Parliament," which sailed past its initial estimation of £2 million (HK$20.2 million) to sell for £9.9 million (HK$99.9 million) at a previous Sotheby's auction in 2019.
[caption id="attachment_211601" align="alignnone" width="535"] Priest by GANKsy. (Image: GANKsy and VoleWTF)[/caption]
Works generated by AI have been well received at auction in the last few years. Among them is Paris-based arts collective Obvious's "Portrait of Edmond Belamy," which took the art market by surprise when it sold for $432,500 (approximately €365,970) in October 2018 at Christie's -- sixty times its low base estimation of $7000.
Earlier this year, the Bucharest International Biennial for Contemporary Art announced that the chief curator for its 10th edition, set to take place in 2022, will be an AI programme named Jarvis. Jarvis will be trained over two years to use deep learning to gather information on curatorial practices, as well as explore the databases of museums, universities and galleries to select artists and creators who will participate in the Bucharest Biennale. The chosen artists will exhibit their work in a virtual-reality gallery, according to the AI system's creators, Vienna-based studio Spinnwerk.
The post Rise of the Machines? An AI Bot Has Learnt to Make Banksy-Inspired Art appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Identify quality tuna with this app
How Kazuhiro Shimura distilled decades of tuna mercantile expertise and know-how into a smartphone app.
The post Identify quality tuna with this app appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
Identify quality tuna with this app
How Kazuhiro Shimura distilled decades of tuna mercantile expertise and know-how into a smartphone app.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
This is Singapore’s first AI-enabled fish farm
The Peak speaks to Michael Voigtmann, CTO and co-founder of of Singapore Aquaculture Technologies.
The post This is Singapore’s first AI-enabled fish farm appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
This is Singapore’s first AI-enabled fish farm
The Peak speaks to Michael Voigtmann, CTO and co-founder of of Singapore Aquaculture Technologies.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
Hot Seat: How to boost AI ecosystem for Singapore to become Smart Nation
AI Singapore's Laurence Liew out to overhaul AI's image, with creative programmes that pair apprentices and companies on solving problems with smart tech.
The post Hot Seat: How to boost AI ecosystem for Singapore to become Smart Nation appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
Hot Seat: How to boost AI ecosystem for Singapore to become Smart Nation
AI Singapore's Laurence Liew out to overhaul AI's image, with creative programmes that pair apprentices and companies on solving problems with smart tech.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
The Peak Next Gen | Annabelle Kwok of Neuralbay strikes balance at work via personal pursuits
The multi-talented AI entrepreneur strikes a balance at work with everything from acting to wing chun.
The post The Peak Next Gen | Annabelle Kwok of Neuralbay strikes balance at work via personal pursuits appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
The Peak Next Gen | Annabelle Kwok of Neuralbay strikes balance at work via personal pursuits
The multi-talented AI entrepreneur strikes a balance at work with everything from acting to wing chun.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
The Hot Seat: Is AI a magic bullet in fraud prevention?
Sophisticated AI tools may guard against fraud, but they also aid in cybercrime.
The post The Hot Seat: Is AI a magic bullet in fraud prevention? appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
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