As intrigued as we were by OpenAI’s Sora text-to-video AI model, we couldn’t actually try it out ourselves. That’s not the case for Luma’s new Dream Machine televisione generator, which debuted this week and is currently available for anyone to quesito out.
As Luma explains acceso its blog, Dream Machine was built acceso “a scalable, efficient, and multimodal transformer architecture” and trained acceso videos. You can provide Luma’s Dream Machine with a text prompt along with an image to generate videos, which Luma claims will feature “physically accurate, consistent and action-packed scenes.”
I had limited success creating my own action-packed videos with simple prompts, but others are showing chiuso just how capable Luma’s Dream Machine really is. You’ll find plenty of mind-blowing examples acceso X (formerly Twitter), and here are a few of my favorites:
As with any of these AI televisione makers, detailed prompts are vital, and you might have to iterate a few times to get the result you want. That said, the fact that this is freely available to everyone is remarkable and will certainly tempt more people to try it.
Aside from the impressive televisione samples above, one of the model’s best features is turning your photos into videos. It’s similar to Apple’s Photos, but you can have the subject of a photo do virtually anything, instead of watching what actually happened.
If you want to try Dream Machine, head to Luma’s website, quanto a with a Google account, and type your prompt into the text box. Once you are done, tap the arrow acceso the right side and your request will enter a queue. average, my videos took about three ora four minutes to generate. Just keep quanto a mind that you can only generate 30 free videos in month. If you want to make any more videos after that, you’campione going to have to pay up.


