Apple may be working on a new artificial intelligence tool that will let you create basic animations from your photos using a simple text prompt. If the tool comes to fruition, youâll be able to turn any static image into a brief animation just by typing in what you want it to look like.Â
According to 9to5Mac, Apple researchers have published a paper that details procedures for manipulating image graphics using text commands. The tool, Apple Keyframer, will use natural language text to tell the proposed AI system to manipulate the given image and animate it.Â
Say you have a photo of the view from your window, with trees in the background and even cars driving past. From what the paper suggests, youâll be able to type commands such as âmake the leaves move as if windyâ into the Keyframer tool, which will then animate the specified part of your photo.
You may recognize the name âkeyframeâ if youâre an Apple user, as itâs already part of Appleâs Live Photos feature – which lets you go through a âlive photoâ GIF and select which frame, the keyframe, you want to be the actual still image for the photo.Â
Better late than never?Â
Apple has been notably slow to jump onto the AI bandwagon, but thatâs not exactly surprising. The company is known to play the long game and let others beat out the kinks before they make their move, as weâve seen with its recent foray into mixed reality with the Apple Vision Pro (this is also why I have hope for a foldable iPhone coming soon).Â
Iâm quite excited for the Keyframer tool if it does come to fruition because itâll put basic animation tools into the palm of every iPhone user who might not know where to even start with animation, let alone make their photos move.
Overall, the direction Apple seems to be taking in terms of AI tools seems to be a positive one. The Keyframer tool comes right off the back of Appleâs AI-powered image editing tool, which again reinforces the move towards user experience improvement rather than just putting out things that mirror the competition from companies like OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google.
Iâm personally glad to see that Appleâs dive into the world of artificial intelligence tools isnât just another AI chatbot like ChatGPT or Google Gemini, but rather focusing on tools that offer unique new features for iOS and macOS products. While this project is in the very early stages of inception, Iâm still pretty hyped about the idea of making funny little clips of my cat being silly or creating moving memories of my friends with just a few word prompts.Â
As for when weâll get our hands on Keyframer, unfortunately thereâs no release date in sight just yet – but based on previous feature launches, Apple willingly revealing details at this stage indicates that itâs probably not too far off, and more importantly isnât likely to get tossed aside. After all, Apple isnât Google.
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muskaan.saxena@futurenet.com (Muskaan Saxena)