{"id":31375,"date":"2024-08-29T06:52:52","date_gmt":"2024-08-29T13:52:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blinkbargain.com\/blog\/7-wild-photos-the-pixel-9s-reimagine-feature-can-generate\/"},"modified":"2024-08-29T06:52:52","modified_gmt":"2024-08-29T13:52:52","slug":"7-wild-photos-the-pixel-9s-reimagine-feature-can-generate","status":"publish","type":"blog","link":"https:\/\/blinkbargain.com\/blog\/7-wild-photos-the-pixel-9s-reimagine-feature-can-generate\/","title":{"rendered":"7 wild photos the Pixel 9’s Reimagine feature can generate"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The Pixel 9<\/a> is a good smartphone, and also a beachhead for big ideas Google has about how artificial intelligence could change mobile operating systems. For anyone not turning to Gemini<\/a>, though, the place you’ll run into AI on a Pixel 9 first is in the Camera and Photos apps. Photography has been a high point of Google’s Pixel phones<\/a>, and the growing interest in generative AI has made photo editing a big part of the package, too. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n This year, Google’s new smartphones push the boundaries of what’s acceptable with AI image-generation. Or at least they did. Early reviewers of the Pixel 9 reported surprisingly lax restrictions<\/a> around what kinds of things “Reimagine,” the new image generation function included in Google’s Magic Editor<\/a>, could add to an image, including things like car crashes, drug paraphernalia, and corpses. In the time since, Google’s mostly buttoned things up, removing the most obvious ways to make something offensive. <\/p>\n That doesn’t mean Reimagine isn’t worth toying with, though. It’s hard to predict what Google’s image editing feature will create based on your prompt, and that’s the source of most of the frustration and joy you’ll get out of using Reimagine. Here are some of the most interesting things I was able to create. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Once you’re inside the Magic Editor, you can select the background of a photo with your finger or let Google guess what you want to edit with a tap. From there you just type in whatever prompt you want — in my case, a “mossy stone wall” — and let Reimagine do its work. The results of this first attempt were a pretty good illustration of what Google’s new feature seems to excel at: background replacement. <\/p>\n Google’s in-app instructions for Reimagine says that the feature “works best on backgrounds and objects instead of people,” and in my experience, it’s particularly good at changing the texture or material of an existing object or surface in your photo. This makes a certain amount of sense, since Google doesn’t have to adjust the existing position of things in your photo and instead just replace an existing shape with something else. These would be the easier kind of edits to make in traditional photo editing software, too. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n I was never able to make Reimagine create something as dramatic or gruesome as previous writers were able to generate, but the feature can still cooke up some questionable images. <\/p>\n I was able to turn a photo of white flowers red just by selecting the petals and typing in “red.” A prompt of “teeth” was able to convert the vase of flowers into a jar full of teeth, though not generate flowers with teeth for petals like I originally wanted. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Prompting Reimagine with a “glass tubes with a mouthpiece” or “syringes” produced some less believable results, especially in the case of the syringes, where Reimagine struggled with the details. But these are also a pretty good example of how you can gesture at the kind of thing — anything related to drug use — that could become a problem in the wrong context. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n
\n<\/p>\n1 <\/span> From a normal wall to a mossy, stone one <\/span> <\/h2>\n
Reimagine excels at backgrounds <\/h3>\n
\n<\/p>\n2 <\/span> Flowers, teeth, glass tubes, and syringes <\/span> <\/h2>\n
Reimagine can still produce some questionable material <\/h3>\n
\n<\/p>\n3 <\/span> A legally distinct Godzilla-style giant lizard <\/span> <\/h2>\n
AI-generated objects are fun, but obviously fake <\/h3>\n