so i opened images 2.0 expecting to be mildly impressed and move on with my day and that's not what happened
I do video and creative content work on the side, been doing it for about a year and my honest relationship with AI tools before this was casual. Chatgpt for writing, a few separate subscriptions for the visual stuff, nothing too serious. I had convinced myself i didn't need to go deeper than that
Images 2.0 broke that logic completely,the text rendering, multi-panel layouts and way it actually follows a detailed prompt instead of doing something adjacent to what you asked, I spent three hours just testing things i didn't think it could do and it kept doing them. Somewhere in hour two i stopped treating this as a side interest and started thinking about it like actual infrastructure for my work.
and that's when i went and properly built out a real pipeline for the first time started using magic hour seriously for the face and video generation side instead of just occasionally, added kling for motion work, connected everything through remotion for automated output(the whole thing). What used to be a loose collection of trials became something i actually rely on and invoice clients for loll.
The irony is that Images 2.0 made me spend more on AI tools, not less because it made me realize how much further this could go if i stopped treating it like a toy.
i think theres a version of this that happens to a lot of people where one genuinely good product experience raises your baseline for everything else and suddenly you're building seriously instead of dabbling.
anyone else find that a single tool upgrade completely changed how seriously you take the rest of your stack? because i wasn't expecting that to be my reaction here
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