Sora is Hollywood Archiveshere.
On Monday, Dec. 9, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced that users in "most countries" will have access to its AI video generator, Sora — all you have to do is head to Sora.com and use your ChatGPT account.
This was the company's biggest announcement so far in its ongoing 12 Days of OpenAI event, in which it discusses new products every day for the first 12 business days in December.
"This is going live today in most of the world," Altman said during the livestream, adding that it won't actually go live in most of Europe or the UK. "If you have an open AI Plus subscription, you get 50 generations a month. If you have an open AI pro, you get unlimited generations in our sort of slow queue mode and 500 normal faster generations. You can also get fewer generations at the higher resolution. And anybody with any account can enjoy the feed."
The livestream also featured a demo of Sora, showing users how to check out videos made in Sora by scrolling through them in the "Featured" tab, which you can find under "Explore." OpenAI showed off how to prompt video, choose resolutions, length and aspect radio, and took viewers through how to use its new Storyboard feature.
"We're really excited to see what you all will create," Altman said. "We're really excited to see all of the new ways that this new kind of entertainment and tool will be used. You all did incredible work on this. I'm super proud of the team. I love the product."
Topics Artificial Intelligence ChatGPT OpenAI
Previous:Firing Lines
Subway ad heartbreakingly warns riders not to HodorFirst female black designer in 103 years of Chelsea Flower Show wins goldEverything coming to Hulu this JulyThe best episodes of 'Luke Cage' Season 2 prove it should be two different showsMemo to 2018 from the 1960s: Forget 'civility.' Get angry. Don't stop.Elle Fanning missed her senior prom, so she casually recreated it in CannesWeatherman loses it when he spots a spider on setHow crowdsourcing helped locate ISIS supporters in European citiesElephant dozes off to sleep after human sings her a lullabyLyft tests letting users schedule rides up to 24 hours ahead of time‘Oumuamua is not an asteroid but an icy comet from interstellar spaceInstagram Stories celebrates 400 million users with music in StoriesKroger and Nuro team up for robotic grocery delivery servicePut down the bronzer: Kim Kardashian says she's over contouringAll the musical guests in 'Luke Cage' Season 2'Split memes' are gaming Facebook's algorithmTinder hasn’t brought me love, but damn, it's been great for my Spotify playlists'Harry Potter and the Cursed Child' to head to the West CoastGoogle: Reboot to fix 'glitch' that took out Google Homes and ChromecastsMan has brilliant exchange with Tesco after being given too much change Sexual assault hotline sees record surge in calls during Christine Blasey Ford's testimony Yes, the LG V40 really has five cameras Reboot your mind with this 24/7 lo President Obama rips into Trump: 'The Donald is not a facts guy' Which of 'Maniac's' pill hallucination stories was the best? Oppo's next flagship might have an unearthly 10GB of RAM Fears for safety of YouTube vlogger after fans find ‘hidden messages' Blac Chyna re Turns out Ross and Rachel from 'Friends' were initially never meant to go on a break Elon Musk has to pay $20 million to settle with the S.E.C. A secret new Chromecast wound up on the shelves at a random Best Buy The biggest pumpkin ever grown in North America weighs more than a ton 'Minecraft: Dungeons' delivers a new way to play 'Minecraft' in 2019 Snapchat's new mission: getting you to buy more stuff 'American Horror Story' finally brought its witches back Celebrities sing 'Fight Song' for Clinton at Democratic convention ALS ice bucket challenge leads to real Here's how to get new Dynamic Desktop wallpapers for Mojave Here's your first glimpse of '70s In an 'audacious' move, Australia's banks are taking the fight to Apple
1.8273s , 8190.8203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Hollywood Archives】,Information Information Network