All posts tagged: creative

Claude Gains Integrations With Adobe, Blender, SketchUp and Other Creative Apps

Claude Gains Integrations With Adobe, Blender, SketchUp and Other Creative Apps

Anthropic today updated Claude with new connectors aimed at creative professionals, adding integrations for Ableton, Adobe, Affinity, Autodesk Fusion, Blender, Resolume Arena and Wire, SketchUp, and Splice. Connectors are tools that Claude can use to access other platforms and help with completing tasks. Anthropic says that Claude can open up new ways for creatives to work and take on larger-scale projects. Ableton – Allows users to ask questions about the official product documentation for Live and Push. Adobe – More than 50 tools across Creative Cloud apps like Photoshop, Premiere, and Express are available. Affinity – The Affinity connector lets users automate repetitive production tasks and generate custom features. Autodesk Fusion – Fusion subscribers can create and modify 3D models through conversations with Claude. Blender – The Blender connector adds a natural-language interface for the Python API. Users can analyze and debug Blender scenes, build custom scripts to batch-apply changes to objects, and add new tools to the Blender interface. Blender’s documentation is also available. Resolume Arena and Wire – Visual artists can control Arena, …

Creative Assembly drops first look at the ‘Alien: Isolation’ sequel

Creative Assembly drops first look at the ‘Alien: Isolation’ sequel

Twelve years after the original Alien: Isolation game was released across platforms, on the official “Alien Day” meant to celebrate the beloved franchise, game developers Creative Assembly are returning to the world of xenomorphs and unreliable robots to once again terrify the living daylights out of us. The teaser trailer, aptly titled “False Sense of Security,” does a lot with very little, from the flashing red light in a poorly lit room to the ominous background music and eventual close-up of what looks to be a payphone, with the word “Emergency” appropriately backlit. As you might expect from the makers of the original game, Creative Assembly is clearly reluctant to over-share, relying on atmosphere and sound to do the heavy lifting, but the brief glimpse we get of the background when the door opens suggests the possibility that, unlike the first game, the sequel might also take place on a planet’s surface, perhaps hinting at a much larger game world. Needless to say, we’ll be covering more details about the game’s development and progress as …

How to Develop Creative Potential

How to Develop Creative Potential

Creativity scholars are often asked whether everyone is creative. Not everyone is creative in the sense of having developed new products that enrich our lives or make them more convenient. However, everyone might be able to build their creative potential. What do we mean by creative potential? Creative potential is best described as including capacity for creative thinking and the drive for creativity. In other words, the potential means being able to think in original ways and being motivated to do so. Creative thinking is called for when we are facing open-ended problems which cannot be addressed by following a precise step-by-step process. Scientists have devised tests that can assess how people think when multiple answers are possible. Such tests might ask people to think of unusual uses for common objects (e.g., a tin can) or come up with ideas for what would happen in fanciful scenarios (e.g., if people could speak with animals). Responses are scored for how many ideas people generate, how original the ideas are, and how much they detail is included …

Does listening to true crime make you a more creative criminal?

Does listening to true crime make you a more creative criminal?

Reading about or listening to stories of real-world violence does not seem to make people more creative when it comes to harming others. In fact, heavy consumers of true crime might actually be less likely to use their imaginative skills for malicious purposes. These findings were recently published in The Journal of Creative Behavior. Media consumption shapes how people think, feel, and act in their daily lives. Researchers have spent decades testing how fictional violence in video games and movies might influence aggression. Many psychologists suggest that consuming violent content primes aggressive thoughts and desensitizes watchers to human suffering. Yet one exceptionally popular genre has largely escaped scientific scrutiny. True crime media focuses on real human stories of assault, serial murder, and hostage situations. Half of the public in the United States consumes true crime tales on television, in books, or through podcasts. People often debate whether immersing oneself in these grim realities might leave a lasting, negative imprint on an individual. A team of psychology researchers wondered if this constant exposure to real-life violence …

Adobe Is Working With Anthropic to Bring a Creative AI Agent to Claude

Adobe Is Working With Anthropic to Bring a Creative AI Agent to Claude

Adobe is diving deeper into agentic AI and expanding its partnership roster in a new deal with the AI developer Anthropic. Adobe on Wednesday introduced its latest conversational, agentic creative assistant, which is the technological foundation for its work with Anthropic. Firefly is the hub for all things Adobe AI, with integrations across other popular Creative Cloud apps such as Photoshop, Acrobat and Premiere Pro. The new Firefly AI assistant is agentic, which means that it can perform tasks with minimal human oversight. You can upload a batch of photos and have the AI edit them for you, automatically adjusting the lighting and cropping, for example. One way to think about it is as a new school AI tool that you can use to do old-school, or non-generative, editing.  Adobe has been building assistants into its creative software for a while now. It introduced AI assistants in Adobe Express and Photoshop back in October. Agentic AI tools like the kind Adobe is building are becoming rapidly popular across the entire AI industry, with tools like …

Netflix scraps Millie Bobby Brown’s Olympics movie after actor exits over creative differences

Netflix scraps Millie Bobby Brown’s Olympics movie after actor exits over creative differences

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Netflix has scrapped Millie Bobby Brown’s latest film following the actor’s exit over creative differences. Brown, 22, had been due to star as real-life gymnast Kerri Strug in Netflix’s Olympics drama Perfect. The project – which was announced last September – will no longer be going ahead at the streaming giant after the Stranger Things star left due to creative differences, two sources have confirmed to Deadline. Brown was set to portray Strug, a member of the 1996 “Magnificent Seven” USA gymnastics team. At 18 years old, the Tucson-born gymnast helped take her team to first place after she performed the vault on an injured ankle. The moment has become a touchstone of Olympic history after Strug’s coach had to carry her off the mat when her ankle gave out – but not before she landed perfectly. Her coach had to …

A Complete List of Meghan and Harry’s Creative Projects, From Documentaries to Unrealized Podcasts

A Complete List of Meghan and Harry’s Creative Projects, From Documentaries to Unrealized Podcasts

In recent years, Meghan and Harry have admitted that they didn’t have a solid plan for how they would rebuild their careers after leaving the service of the crown in early 2020, just months before they signed their Netflix deal. Either way, it was clear that Hollywood was interested in giving them a shot, and their company Archewell Productions was born. They also signed an exclusive podcasting deal with Spotify, but that ended in 2023 after just 13 episodes had aired. It took a few years before they released any projects, but their first show on the streamer, Harry & Meghan, broke a documentary-debut record on the platform when it premiered in December 2022. Telling the story of their private meeting, royal wedding, and high-profile exit from the UK, the docuseries made headline news for weeks and provoked much upset among Harry’s extended family. Harry & Meghan and With Love, Meghan represent Archewell Productions’ biggest splashes in Hollywood by far, but the company has also had its hands in an array of other documentaries, the …

California’s Creative Job Losses Aren’t AI Casualties, Report Finds

California’s Creative Job Losses Aren’t AI Casualties, Report Finds

Industry insiders know the story all too well. Over the last few years, as Hollywood restructured to meet the demand for streaming entertainment and as major businesses saw fit to merge, the entertainment industry whittled down budgets, shed jobs and in some cases outsourced work overseas. This painful moment of contraction happened to coincide with leaps forward in generative AI like the release of ChatGPT in 2022, the same year that Netflix, and the rest of Hollywood, began shifting their streaming models to focus on profitability. But don’t blame generative AI for the devastating recent shrinkage in California’s creative workforce, says the latest report from the L.A.-based Otis College of Art and Design, which produces research annually encompassing the state’s film, fashion, gaming, media, advertising, arts and architecture industries. “The pattern of job loss in terms of the types of jobs that are being lost and when they’re being lost does not support the fact that there’s been this displacement of workers by AI,” says the co-author of this year’s research Patrick Adler, a founding …

People consistently devalue creative writing generated by artificial intelligence

People consistently devalue creative writing generated by artificial intelligence

A recent study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General suggests that people consistently judge creative writing more harshly if they believe it was created by artificial intelligence. This bias appears incredibly difficult to overcome, pointing to a persistent human preference for art created by people. Generative artificial intelligence refers to computer programs capable of producing new text, images, or music by predicting patterns from massive amounts of data. Tools like ChatGPT and Claude can now write essays, poems, and stories that read very much like they were written by a real person. As these technologies become more common, scientists wanted to understand how people react to computer-generated art. “We started this project in early 2023, shortly after the launch of ChatGPT. From my early interactions with the technology, it was clear to me that this tool was capable of creative production, and I was very curious about whether and how humans would react to AI-produced creative goods,” explained study author Manav Raj, an assistant professor in management at the Wharton School of the …