The AI doesn't understand Navy ranks and levels of command or naval vernacular. The captain of a ship is not referred to a commander. The second in command is the executive officer and would not be a lieutenant for a capital ship with a captain as the commanding officer.
Clearly there’s still a long way to go to have AI convert speech to text, although it’s been available as a relatively reliable alternative for a decade or two. Heck it’s been available on MS Windows, especially when using a program so old I can’t remember the name. For students a decent speech/picture to text/diagram there are various versions of these abilities many of which were available in the days of Pentium III CPU’s from intel and much less memory (RAM usability around 32 Megabytes) and basic text scanners. That was in the bad old days (80-90’s) of ludicrously expensive, non-upgradeable Apple Macs (no change there), limited, or the relatively increasing monopoly of Microsoft which was brought down because American politicians don’t like monopolies, especially when those same politicians aren’t getting any of their usual kickbacks. There were plenty on alternatives for GUI’s besides MS, but that’s when the entire system was all on a few 180kb 5.25” FDD’s, or when Windows v2 came on several 720k 3.5” FDD’s, but there was also DR-DOS, PC-DOS, and others to choose from. All those earlier versions of hardware (I had an IBM portable, c/w 8” green screen, and a pair of 8” FDD’s with enough aluminium support to keep them tracking accurately! The keyboard made up the lid, so whilst it was “portable” it wasn’t remotely like anything we now take for granted, and you needed to attend a gym if you wanted to carry it further than 50yds, but lumbar spinal injuries were likely (assuming your company could afford the hardware and the software combined. Sorry about the reminisce’s of this old guy that learned programming in 1975-1978 onto punched paper tape/cards, using a telex style unit with no screen and results being printed by the local council offices held the mainframe, and printed out onto the old style green line wide punched edge sheets. CESIL and FORTRAN were used in schools as was COBOL by the time I had joined the RM Commando’s (extra A-level in computer science put you on the Officer fast track (but as our younger brothers, the USMC will know, fast tracking an Officer doesn’t mean what it sounds like. It’s just a way of ensuring potential yo-yo nods do everything faster than anyone else). Perhaps it’s the way the software was written but all of the AI narrations have the same issue with translation of English into text. I can’t speak for other languages but I’d be surprised if anyone can claim anything approaching better than 95% accuracy in any language.
The AI doesn't understand Navy ranks and levels of command or naval vernacular. The captain of a ship is not referred to a commander. The second in command is the executive officer and would not be a lieutenant for a capital ship with a captain as the commanding officer.
This is in the future and not even human. No telling what the real term would sound like.
DEI is strong in this story.
Clearly there’s still a long way to go to have AI convert speech to text, although it’s been available as a relatively reliable alternative for a decade or two. Heck it’s been available on MS Windows, especially when using a program so old I can’t remember the name.
For students a decent speech/picture to text/diagram there are various versions of these abilities many of which were available in the days of Pentium III CPU’s from intel and much less memory (RAM usability around 32 Megabytes) and basic text scanners.
That was in the bad old days (80-90’s) of ludicrously expensive, non-upgradeable Apple Macs (no change there), limited, or the relatively increasing monopoly of Microsoft which was brought down because American politicians don’t like monopolies, especially when those same politicians aren’t getting any of their usual kickbacks.
There were plenty on alternatives for GUI’s besides MS, but that’s when the entire system was all on a few 180kb 5.25” FDD’s, or when Windows v2 came on several 720k 3.5” FDD’s, but there was also DR-DOS, PC-DOS, and others to choose from. All those earlier versions of hardware (I had an IBM portable, c/w 8” green screen, and a pair of 8” FDD’s with enough aluminium support to keep them tracking accurately! The keyboard made up the lid, so whilst it was “portable” it wasn’t remotely like anything we now take for granted, and you needed to attend a gym if you wanted to carry it further than 50yds, but lumbar spinal injuries were likely (assuming your company could afford the hardware and the software combined.
Sorry about the reminisce’s of this old guy that learned programming in 1975-1978 onto punched paper tape/cards, using a telex style unit with no screen and results being printed by the local council offices held the mainframe, and printed out onto the old style green line wide punched edge sheets. CESIL and FORTRAN were used in schools as was COBOL by the time I had joined the RM Commando’s (extra A-level in computer science put you on the Officer fast track (but as our younger brothers, the USMC will know, fast tracking an Officer doesn’t mean what it sounds like. It’s just a way of ensuring potential yo-yo nods do everything faster than anyone else).
Perhaps it’s the way the software was written but all of the AI narrations have the same issue with translation of English into text. I can’t speak for other languages but I’d be surprised if anyone can claim anything approaching better than 95% accuracy in any language.
Sarah Chen again 😢
its the Chen Cinematic Multiverse
@asgardhomestead7076 love it lol
What! Did Sarah Chen come out of retirement?
Ingenuity, adaptibility and determination are keywords for AI written stories. And the reading software sucks.
I agree about the AI text and narrator--both annoyingly bad. I very much wish there is a method to delete the text from all of these types of videos.
First..not bad
Ok story a little wordy , Rodriquez and Patel were missing 😂 tired of the same old story line