This is more of a rant than anything else, but I'm also looking for some community input regarding an on-going issue I'm dealing with...
I have a client for whom I create a lot of residential 3d imagery for. This client, let's call him Jay is extremely picky with detail and precision. About 5x more than any other client. Every single pixel and mm in my scenes has to be perfect for them. Like, the tiniest bit of flicker in an animation has to be fixed, or a coffee cup in the back of a living room isn't rotated 5degrees more 'correctly'. Or the a blanket isn't fluffy enough. You know the deal...
Jay is also constantly pushing me to investigate AI. Like, really pushing me. Every conversation includes "ok, and can we somehow make that job faster with AI?"
Of course, I use AI touch-ups, particularly on scene people. But I still mostly get Max + Corona to do the grunt work.
What Jay fails to understand is that AI is not a one-click solution. It's not a band-aid. It currently doesn't do the things he expects it to do. And it certainly won't reach the level of detail and precision he expects in my regular cgi stills + animations. At 7k resolution, too!
Now, in my latest conversation with Jay - where we're discussing modelling 200+ unique apartments for glb export (for web-viewing) he insists I do thorough research to ensure that some AI software isn't out there that will save me from manually importing each CAD floorplan and modelling each apartment. He believes we can get AI to not only model each apartment (accurately, and consistently, mind you!) but also with lighting, furniture and all textures and make it suitable for low-poly glb export!
I see Jay 'like' and 'share' so much 'AI developed' stuff on LinkedIn. Half of which is fabricated (clearly not AI to my cgi-trained eyes) and the other half is just such poor quality. This is one of the roots of the problem, I think.
Of course, this is all coming in the name of time and cost saving. Which I understand. But there are doing things right (the way the client expects the final result to look like) and doing things quickly with AI.
Ugh. How can I convey to Jay a more accurate reality here?
Or am I simply wrong? Is all this possible in AI these days, in a time-saving, accurate and reliable manner?
I'd love to hear other experiences if there's any out there. Cheers. /rant
(Reposting from a throwaway account - I hope that's OK?)