Makes sense to me as far as avoiding a sort of maximized sunset that is always there and is SUNSET rather than a nice sunset... but also avoiding watering it down and getting a way too subtle sunset.
It's not AI but I've been watching some folks solving / trying to solve some routing (vehicles) problems and you get the "this looks like it was maximized for X" kind of solution but that's maybe not what is important / customer perception is unpredictable. I kinda want to just come up with 3 solutions and let someone randomly click .... in fact i see some software do that at times.
Yeah, I think the trick is that when you ask for "a picture of a sunset", you're really asking for "a picture of a sunset that looks like a realistic natural image and obeys the laws of reality and is consistent with all of the other tacit expectations a human has for an image". And so if you just go all in on "a picture of a sunset", you often end up with what a human would describe as "a picture of what an AI thinks a sunset is".
Makes sense to me as far as avoiding a sort of maximized sunset that is always there and is SUNSET rather than a nice sunset... but also avoiding watering it down and getting a way too subtle sunset.
It's not AI but I've been watching some folks solving / trying to solve some routing (vehicles) problems and you get the "this looks like it was maximized for X" kind of solution but that's maybe not what is important / customer perception is unpredictable. I kinda want to just come up with 3 solutions and let someone randomly click .... in fact i see some software do that at times.