Photos | Wired Magazine Advertisement
A screenshot of the Wired Magazine website showing a document being signed by three people next to a poster promoting electronics. A man's hand holding a phone is also visible.
BLIP-2 Description:
wired magazine website screenshotMetadata
Capture date:
Original Dimensions:
1041w x 500h - (download 4k)
Usage
Dominant Color:
factory part pm search april go sign electronics book need rss feeds threat wii sections day tear webpage discoveries phone fit blogs subscribe wired cleaning now read places challenge dropping security poster cybercrime gags innovator stories month spring top china excerpt closing geekipedia sheets zero file page trends doughy fools advertisement ideas game war web heal life wire great know next best mag text document rekognition_c magazine gallery world's robot logout
Detected Text
00 03.24.08 03.31.08 04.01.08 04.02.08 1 10 149 3 5 6 am april best blogs book cleaning china cybercrime d149 discoveries doughy excerpt factory fools gallery game go gags geekipedia great innovator life logout mag now pm people places robot rss read search security spring stories threat trends war wii world's web wire wired zero a after and but challenge closing day dropping feeds fit for heal ideas is know magazine month need next once sections subscribe the to top you
overall
(4.12%)
curation
(25.00%)
highlight visibility
(2.45%)
behavioral
(70.43%)
failure
(-0.12%)
harmonious color
(1.41%)
immersiveness
(0.07%)
interaction
(1.00%)
interesting subject
(-85.99%)
intrusive object presence
(-4.10%)
lively color
(10.77%)
low light
(0.07%)
noise
(-2.10%)
pleasant camera tilt
(-7.87%)
pleasant composition
(-67.43%)
pleasant lighting
(-17.80%)
pleasant pattern
(1.83%)
pleasant perspective
(7.96%)
pleasant post processing
(5.74%)
pleasant reflection
(-6.99%)
pleasant symmetry
(0.42%)
sharply focused subject
(1.10%)
tastefully blurred
(2.20%)
well chosen subject
(8.39%)
well framed subject
(-20.81%)
well timed shot
(6.42%)
all
(-3.80%)
* NOTE: This image was scaled up from its original size using an AI model called GFP-GAN (Generative Facial Prior), which is a
Generative adversartial network that can be used to repair (or upscale in this case) photos, sometimes the results are a little...
weird.
* WARNING: The title and caption of this image were generated with AI (gpt-3.5-turbo-0301
from
OpenAI) based on a
BLIP-2 image-to-text labeling, tags,
location,
people
and album metadata from the image and are
potentially inaccurate, often hilariously so. If you'd like me to adjust anything,
just reach out.