Exploring Apple’s Vision: How the Tech Giant Promotes Eyewear Innovation

Exploring Apple’s Vision: How the Tech Giant Promotes Eyewear Innovation

Brian Lv13

Next-Level Image Editing with Apple’s Latest Innovation: Photo Transformations Guided by Written Prompts | Explore the Tech Breakdown

A photo of an MGIE demo

A photo of an MGIE demo on Hugging Face.

Maria Diaz/ZDNET

Apple just introduced an open-source AI model that executes text-based image editing commands. The model, named MLLM-Guided Image Editing (MGIE) was developed in collaboration with the University of California, Santa Barbara.

MGIE can perform various image editing tasks, like cropping, resizing, and rotating; as well as adjustments to brightness, color balance, and contrast – all by following text prompts from users. The ins and outs of MGIE’s capabilities and performance were outlined in a conference paper published this week.

Also: Microsoft upgrades Copilot AI with inline image editing and better suggested prompts

The report discusses how MGIE shows significant improvements in image editing performance across different metrics and maintains competitive inference efficiency. The technology was used to perform Photoshop-style modifications, photo optimization, and local editing.

Newsletters

ZDNET Tech Today

ZDNET’s Tech Today newsletter is a daily briefing of the newest, most talked about stories, five days a week.

Subscribe

See all

The paper explained MGIE demonstrated superiority over existing techniques, suggesting a promising direction for future image editing tools that would be more accessible and intuitive to use. MGIE isn’t widely available to the public as an official development from Apple, but users can access it through GitHub for technical exploration or try its web demo on Hugging Face .

A screenshot of another MGIE demo on Hugging Face.

Screenshot: Maria Diaz/ZDNET

The development of MGIE could be an effort to catch up to what Microsoft, Google, and Meta have done in the past two years. Though these other tech giants have released refined AI-powered chatbots and even some image generators , Apple’s absence in the generative AI market has been intriguing.

Also: 3 AI features iOS 18 needs to catch up with Android

The company appears to be working on catching up: In 2023 alone, Apple acquired as many as 32 AI startups, many more than Google’s 21 acquisitions, Meta’s 18, and Microsoft’s 17. Apple keeps these acquisitions and generative AI advancements under wraps, leaving us to only be able to speculate as to when the company will release them publicly and in which devices and platforms they will be included.

Apple is known for acquiring smaller companies to take over their technology and talent, and Tim Cook, Apple CEO, said in 2021 that the company acquires a startup every three to four weeks, according to the BBC , but it reportedly slowed its pace in 2022 and only acquired two companies that year.

Why I’m recommending the standard iPhone 16 over the Pro this year (and I’m not alone)

Is OneDrive messing with your files? How to get your Windows storage under control

Best early Prime Day deals under $50 to shop in October 2024

Rust in Linux now: Progress, pitfalls, and why devs and maintainers need each other

Also read:

  • Title: Exploring Apple’s Vision: How the Tech Giant Promotes Eyewear Innovation
  • Author: Brian
  • Created at : 2024-12-09 17:00:24
  • Updated at : 2024-12-12 19:19:37
  • Link: https://tech-savvy.techidaily.com/exploring-apples-vision-how-the-tech-giant-promotes-eyewear-innovation/
  • License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.
On this page
Exploring Apple’s Vision: How the Tech Giant Promotes Eyewear Innovation