In a recent social media post, Ahsen Khaliq has captured the hearts of internet users worldwide. The post features a series of animals enjoying a meal of noodles, but there’s a twist – these images are the result of using Kling AI.
animals eating noodles, Kling AI
by u/AndrewJumpen pic.twitter.com/mfbeSlRA0M
— AK (@_akhaliq) July 14, 2024
From a panda munching on a bowl of ramen to a kangaroo slurping up some udon, the images are both hilarious and heartwarming. The level of detail and realism in the images is a testament to the capabilities of Kling and the progress made in the field of AI.
The post has gone viral, with thousands of users reacting and sharing the images. Many have expressed their amazement at the quality of the images and the creativity of the concept.
Developed by the Chinese tech giant and TikTok competitor, Kling is available for all users.
It outperforms the competition by generating videos up to two minutes long in 1080p at 30 frames per second. This is a significant improvement, which produces only a few seconds, and double what OpenAI’s Sora is expected to handle.
While the US is debating heavily on AI ethics and incorporating ‘Responsible AI’, China seems unperturbed and is probably responding to these AI ethicists with Kling.
The Chinese Alternative to Sora
As an answer to OpenAI’s Sora, Chinese technology company Kuaishou introduced it as a new text-to-video AI model capable of generating high-quality videos.
The model can create large-scale realistic motions which essentially simulate physical world characteristics and has the ability to produce 3D face and body reconstruction backed by the company’s proprietary technology, allowing users to create videos in various aspect ratios.
AI video creation seems like the next battleground for tech companies with contenders like OpenAI’s Sora, Adobe’s Firefly, Midjournery, and Odyssey, already in the game.
Now that Kling is here, the benchmark of making cinematically impressive and real-world-like videos has gone up.