

GPT-4 can "perceive" the contents of imagery, leaving less to interpretation. You can augment your text query by providing photos, diagrams or even screenshots to better express your intent. You could create a slide, diagram or UX flow and GPT-4 will understand the context. Not so good if you have a specific vision in mind. This was a big problem with text-to-image models. Let's explore why.Ĭonveying intent purely in text form requires an exacting command of the language, but still leaves too much to interpretation. TL DR What ControlNet did for image generation, GPT-4 will do for LLMs. GPT-4 bridges the communication gap with AI by embracing visual imagery to better express our intent. 🖼 Simply put: a picture is worth a thousand words. #givingnatureavoice #peopleandplanet #wetlands #biodiversityįorest and Bird CEO slams Government's walkback on wetland protections "Just don't destroy wetlands in the first place - and reap the benefits of that!"

There are great examples of restored wetlands, the problem is though, the cost of restoring a wetland is exponentially higher than just looking after it. The cost will be significant in terms of flood, in terms of drought and in terms of carbon sequestration (peat wetlands worldwide hold more than twice as much carbon as the world's tropical rainforests). How do communities who are still struggling with the impacts of recent flood events feel about the idea that the Government is going to open up consenting pathways to put housing on wetlands?

When you have only 10% of a remaining habitat type left, there has to be a better way. The Government's walk back late last year on freshwater policy is significant and most people don't know that it is because 21 industry groups pressured the Government to allow for housing developments, landfills and expansion of coalmines on wetlands - which flies in the face of our climate commitments. "The frustration for Forest & Bird and all our members and supporters is the Government saying on one hand they are all about climate change and reducing carbon, and yet we have something sitting there that naturally does it for FREE!" "Wetlands protect us from flooding in intense rain events they alleviate the impact of drought because they can release water during drier periods and they are significant when it comes to carbon sequestration," Forest & Bird CE, Nicola Toki said on Newshub Nation over the weekend.
