The greatest distraction of the day has hit the internet as four new harmonious blobs all boinging up and down and supposedly bringing joyful music to users this Christmas. The known interactive vocal ...
If you've dreamed about creating your own opera masterpiece, Google has your back. The company has introduced a new experiment under its Arts & Culture non-profit initiative called 'Blob Opera.' The ...
Christmas songs are ubiquitous during the festive season, but most of them lose their luster after you’ve heard them a trillion times. If you wish this really would be the Last Christmas you’re forced ...
Found: Google's latest machine learning experiment is a strange but compelling opera simulator. Dubbed "Blob Opera," the gadget puts you in control of four squishy singers who perform improvised ...
Last year Google debuted a machine learning with its unique “Blob Opera” and, thanks to some incredible remakes posted to YouTube, they ended up going somewhat viral. Now, Google is sending the Blob ...
2020 is clearly not the year for caroling. However, that doesn’t mean you have to give up on the festivities of singing. Through a quirky new project from Google, you can assemble your own four-person ...
'Blob Opera ' is a service that allows you to compose your own opera-style music by moving the mysterious and mysterious characters 'Blob'. It's okay if you don't have any knowledge of music, so I ...
Google's Arts and Culture lab has launched a clever browser experiment in collaboration with David Li. The Blob Opera puts four operatic voices at your disposal to create glorious AI-driven ...
The Blob Opera is a machine learning project that Google has had around for a while, and it was also the undisputed star of this year’s Google I/O conference. Now, Google is updating Blob Opera for ...
Toward the end of 2020, digital artist David Li collaborated with Google's Arts and Culture lab to release a fun machine learning experiment called the Blob Opera. Now Stuck Labs has developed a ...
Christmas songs are ubiquitous during the festive season, but most of them lose their luster after you’ve heard them a trillion times. The creatures were taught the art by professional songbirds ...