u/spaceuniversal

▲ 8 r/SoraAi+3 crossposts

VEO and Kling - primitive models

Un messaggio per coloro che pensano: “Beh, ora abbiamo Veo e Kling…

Tutto andava bene fino a marzo, quando è scoppiata la notizia che tutti conosciamo.

Come sempre, il mio unico modello generativo di riferimento era Sora 2. Per rifinire un video, usavo Veo 3.1 o Grok o Kling, se necessario, giusto per completare un breve clip che Sora non aveva gestito bene, ma non avrei mai osato usarli per più di qualche secondo, perché sapevo benissimo che non erano all'altezza.

Capisco che tutti qui stiano usando i modelli Veo o Kling, ma chiunque qui abbia effettivamente usato Sora 2 fin dal primo giorno—e intendo davvero usarlo, non solo per fare video di gatti su TikTok—sa benissimo che non c'era un singolo comando che Sora 2 seguisse alla lettera… spesso inventava cose, immaginava nuove scene e raccontava storie in modo completamente originale.

Quindi la risposta è SÌ, c'era un modello capace di fare tutto ciò, eravamo già nel 🚀2027 e ora non c'è più

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u/spaceuniversal — 23 hours ago
▲ 16 r/SoraAi+3 crossposts

Sora closes. Honestly? I understand why half of you are celebrating. But it didn’t end here

The news that Sora will be permanently shut down on April 26 prompted me to reflect on how we’re interpreting the evolution of AI video.

It seems to me that the industry is splitting into two opposing camps, and I have a very clear stance on the matter.

On one hand, I see many colleagues who are enthusiastic about tools like VEO or Kling. They prefer them because they are "rigid," consistent, and allow them to generate precise clips to take into the trenches on Premiere or DaVinci.

For this faction, AI is just another element to be manually assembled on the timeline. Honestly, I see this approach as nothing but a waste of time: it’s the old way of editing trying to survive by changing its skin.

On the other hand, there is the vision I share—and which I saw reflected in Sora—the end of video editing as we know it.

For me, Sora wasn’t just a clip generator, but the first step toward a model of “Agentic Total Direction.” My goal shouldn’t be to spend hours editing individual sequences, Create a prompt for each individual scene but to collaborate with AI Agents (Director, Screenwriter, Cinematographer) to transform an idea into a finished product.

The future I envision is one where you communicate a vision and artificial intelligence handles the technical complexity of editing and narrative coherence.

The closure of Sora on April 26 seems to me like a victory for those who want to remain tied to the traditional timeline and a defeat for those who, like me, hoped to finally free themselves from the bondage of technical editing to focus solely on the concept.

What do you think? Are you in favor of the granular control of the “old guard,” or are you also waiting for the moment when the timeline becomes a thing of the past?

reddit.com
u/spaceuniversal — 3 days ago
Let's save Crystal.party from Sora
▲ 0 r/SECourses+1 crossposts

Let's save Crystal.party from Sora

We can wipe out Sora 2 and all its synthetic cameo characters, but we can’t let Crystal—the cream of the crop among cameos—meet the same sad fate. How many adventures have we shared with her… how can I possibly tell her now that her story has come to an end? Let’s save her from this sad fate. Cast your vote to save Crystal from oblivion!

u/spaceuniversal — 10 days ago