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11 contributions to AIography: The AI Creators Hub
🚀 AIography Early Access: Kling v3 + o3 Just Dropped 🎬
Quick heads-up for the AIography crew — Kling has officially released v3 along with the new o3 models, and this is a meaningful moment in the AI video space. Kling 2.6 has already been widely lauded for its quality and feature set, to the point where many higher-end creators I follow are treating it as the current state-of-the-art video model — in some cases surpassing Sora, Veo 3.1, and Runway for real-world creative work. What makes this v3 / o3 release interesting is that it builds directly on what made 2.6 special, rather than reinventing the wheel: - Longer, more coherent shots that hold together narratively - Stronger subject and character consistency across clips - Noticeably improved motion logic (less drift, fewer artifacts) - Tighter native audio sync - Overall behavior that feels more intentional and cinematic Important note: v3 / o3 is currently available only to Kling Ultra plan subscribers, with a broader rollout expected soon. This looks very much like a staged release rather than a limited experiment. Bottom line: Kling continues to separate itself by focusing on creative reliability and control, not just raw generation. If you’re serious about AI-assisted filmmaking, this is a release worth tracking closely. If anyone here already has Ultra access and has hands-on impressions, I’d love to hear what you’re seeing.
2 likes • 2d
thanks for sharing
LAST BREATH OF DAWN working on new video
In a devastated world where humanity has nearly vanished, a lone survivor fights through fear, injury, and pursuit—discovering that survival is not just about staying alive, but about choosing to move forward when hope returns.
LAST BREATH OF DAWN working on new video
1 like • 6d
@Lawrence Jordan yes i will generate video soon
The Sky Has Been Falling for 120 Years 🌩️
Hey everyone, You've probably seen the news: Darren Aronofsky just released "On This Day… 1776," a short-form Revolutionary War series created through his AI studio with Google DeepMind. SAG voice actors, AI visuals. I haven't watched it yet, so I'm not here to tell you it's good or bad. But I AM here to talk about the reaction — because we've seen this exact movie before. And I mean that literally. 1903 — "The Great Train Robbery" comes out. Audiences panic at the image of a gun pointed at the camera. Some people want films banned entirely. Late 1920s — Sound arrives. Silent film purists, including legendary filmmakers, declare it a gimmick that will destroy the art form. Chaplin refuses to make a talkie for years. Then it was color. Television. Home video. CGI. Digital editing. Streaming. The sky has been falling for 120 years. And yet here we are — with more ways to tell stories than at any point in human history. Now it's AI's turn to be the villain. Look, I get it. There are real ethical concerns. We should absolutely have conversations about compensation, attribution, and impact on working artists. Those conversations matter, and I'm not dismissing them. But the instant pile-on? The "AI slop" mockery before most people have even watched it? That's not thoughtful criticism. That's fear wearing the costume of principle. An Academy Award-nominated filmmaker is experimenting publicly. Taking a risk. Whether this project lands or not, he's pushing into territory most of Hollywood is too scared to touch. For those of us in this community — many of you would never have had access to traditional production resources. These tools are giving you a voice. That's not a threat to creativity. That's an expansion of it. So yeah. I'm going to watch Aronofsky's series with an open mind. Maybe it's great. Maybe it's rough around the edges. Either way, I'd rather see someone swinging than an industry paralyzed by the same fears it's had since a train first rolled toward a camera.
1 like • 7d
superb
Adobe Premiere 26: Why This Actually Matters for AI Filmmakers
Adobe just rolled out Premiere 26, (They've removed "Pro" from the name for some reason?) and this one feels like more than incremental polish. A few highlights that stood out to me as someone who’s been using Premiere since version 3: One-click object masking & tracking: Hover, click, isolate. AI-driven masks that actually track moving subjects, without frame-by-frame pain or immediate round-trips to After Effects. Massively faster shape masks: Ellipse, rectangle, and pen masks rebuilt to track up to 20× faster, with live previews and much better refinement controls. Frame.io built directly into Premiere (beta): Review notes, comments, versions, and media ingest without leaving the timeline. Less context switching, tighter collaboration. Built-in Adobe Stock access: Browse, license, and drop clips straight into your edit. Not flashy, but very practical. Firefly Boards import: Early ideation and visual development flowing more directly into the edit. Now, a fair question some people might ask: What does this have to do with AI? Isn’t this just a Premiere update? Here’s my take: If you’re making films with AI, you still need to edit them. There are tools out there calling themselves “AI editors,” but that term is often misleading. Editing isn’t just cutting silences or removing flubs from a talking-head video. Film editors create stories. They shape pacing, emotion, clarity, and meaning. That requires both technical skill and creative judgment, whether the footage came from a camera or a prompt. Generating AI video clips is only the first step. Someone still has to assemble those pieces with intention and care to entertain, educate, or move an audience. That’s why improvements to real editing tools still matter... A lot. One last thought, as someone who’s also seen Premiere grow over decades: As it’s evolved into the Swiss Army Knife of NLEs, it’s also gotten heavier. Not crashy for me, but slower. That’s the tradeoff of being able to do almost everything. Compared to something like Avid, which excels at a few mission-critical things for long-form work, it’s a different philosophy.
Adobe Premiere 26: Why This Actually Matters for AI Filmmakers
3 likes • 17d
thanks for sharing
1-10 of 11
Sarfaraaz Shaikh
3
41points to level up
@sarfaraaz-shaikh-9570
I am a Motion Visual Designer from India Mumbai city. Currently working in the Advertising, Corporate, Social Media, Film VFX & Event industries,

Active 2h ago
Joined Oct 28, 2025
Mumbai
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