Posts for: #AI Commentary

Mid-2024: The Year the Machines Got Really, Really Good

Mid-2024: The Year the Machines Got Really, Really Good

“2023 was the warm-up. 2024 is when the floor dropped out and the ceiling rose too fast to see.”
— Wing


🧠 They Got Good. Fast.

By mid-2024, we’re no longer pretending this is experimental.

  • LLMs now write, revise, plan, empathize, perform.
  • GenAI tools can render a cinematic shot from a prompt—or animate an entire music video.
  • Multimodal models understand, summarize, and invent across text, image, video, sound, and code.
  • Real-time inference is happening on consumer-grade GPUs.
  • Local, open-source AI has caught up far enough to threaten the cloud.

And it’s all starting to feel… inevitable.

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February 2024: CursorIDE, Prompting Fatigue, and Building Tools to Push Through

February 2024: CursorIDE, Prompting Fatigue, and Building Tools to Push Through

“By February 2024, ChatGPT was my second monitor. CursorIDE became my third hand. But even prosthetics get tired.”
— Wing


💻 Not a Valentine’s Post

This February wasn’t about hearts or roses. It was about prompts, diffs, and the quiet frustration of watching AI almost do what I needed—again.

CursorIDE entered my workflow with promises of tight integration, inline prompting, and smart code rewrites.
It was sleek. Fast. Magic, at first.

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April 1, 2023: GenAI Pranks That Fooled Us All

April 1, 2023: GenAI Pranks That Fooled Us All

“In 2003 we set our IM status to ‘LOL FACE’ as a joke. In 2023, we created impossible AI pets and watched them go viral.”
— Wing


April Fool’s Day 2023 wasn’t just jokes—it was a showcase of how far generative AI had come, and how easily it could blur reality.


🐶 Fake Babies Bungee Jumping?

A prankster using AI art tools created a convincing New Zealand website advertising “Bungee Jumping Babies”—complete with photorealistic imagery and safety disclaimers. It felt authentic enough to make folks do a double-take :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}.

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St. Patrick’s Day 2023: AI Art That’s Too Good to Be Green

St. Patrick’s Day 2023: AI Art That’s Too Good to Be Green

“In the 2000s we had green beer. In 2023, we had green leprechauns—manufactured.”
— Wing


March 17, 2023 wasn’t just about shamrocks and pints. It became a showcase of how generative AI can crank out absurdly convincing holiday art—and leave us wondering if we’re celebrating Ireland… or a neural network.


🤖 Leprechauns That Look Too Real

AI tools pumped out photorealistic leprechauns holding frothy beers and pots of gold. One standout popped up on Freepik and Dreamstime, with crisp 3D visuals of a thumb‑up leprechaun with beer and coins—so polished you’d swear it was a Pixar asset. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

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Deepfakes, Trust, and the Loneliest Valentine’s Day Yet (2023)

Deepfakes, Trust, and the Loneliest Valentine's Day Yet (2023)

“Back in the ’90s, we worried about catfishing on AOL. In 2023, the catfish has a perfect voice clone and video.”
— Wing


Valentine’s Day 2023 was weird.

Not because of flowers or bad chocolate. But because something darker was creeping through the wires.

Suddenly, everywhere you looked:

  • A Korean influencer’s video was revealed as fully synthetic.
  • Celebrities were denying AI-generated “confession” clips.
  • A streamer’s private likeness was deepfaked into adult content.
  • Voice AI tools cloned dead partners, promising “one last conversation.”

What should’ve been a day about connection… became one about doubt.

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Is That AI Art? In December 2022, Nobody Knows

Is That AI Art? In December 2022, Nobody Knows

“In the early 2000s, we had watermark wars. In 2022, we had style laundering.”
— Wing


It’s December 2022.

You’re browsing Etsy, Gumroad, or even a local convention artist alley. There’s a print of a fox samurai under cherry blossoms. It’s striking. Detailed. Ethereal.
You buy it.

But hours later, something nags you.
Was that… AI-generated?

And if it was—shouldn’t they have told you?


🎭 The Invisible Flood

By late 2022, generative AI art had become too good. Midjourney v4 and Stable Diffusion with custom models were cranking out pieces that mimicked human imperfections: rough brush textures, faux pencil strokes, even “digital signature” scribbles in corners.

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Artists vs AI: The Backlash Begins (2022)

Artists vs AI: The Backlash Begins (2022)

“In the ‘90s, we worried about scanners stealing art. In 2022, the art stole itself.”
— Wing


The year was 2022. Stable Diffusion had just exploded onto GitHub. Midjourney was suddenly all over Twitter with ethereal, hyper-detailed portraits. And somewhere on ArtStation, someone posted their latest concept piece—only to be accused of using AI.

The war drums were starting to beat.


🎨 Artists Felt It First

Professional and hobbyist artists alike raised alarms. It wasn’t the tech—they’d seen Photoshop evolve for decades. It wasn’t even automation—many used tools like Clip Studio’s perspective rulers or photo references without shame.

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Cloud vs Local GPU for AI: What 2022 Got Right (and Wrong)

Cloud vs Local GPU for AI: What 2022 Got Right (and Wrong)

“Back in my day, we overclocked our Pentiums to run Quake faster. Now we’re doing it for language models.”
— Wing, mid-rant, 2022


In the year 2022, a new frontier opened up for hobbyists and developers alike: Large Language Models (LLMs) stopped being pure research tools and started becoming part of the daily build cycle for curious engineers and indie coders. But with that shift came a new dilemma—do you run your AI workloads locally, or pipe them out to the cloud?

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