Early Computer Art in the 50’s & 60’s
A deep dive on the early days of creative computing coming to life. Punch cards, plotters, light pens and lots more.
SuperGeekery: A blog probably of interest only to nerds by John F Morton.
Welcome to my link library. These are not links to content I have created unless you see that mentioned in the link’s description. These are links I found interesting enough to want to keep track of. If you read Craft Link List, the Craft CMS newsletter I used to write, this page is a replacement of sorts for that exercise. Enough talk. Let’s hit the links.
A deep dive on the early days of creative computing coming to life. Punch cards, plotters, light pens and lots more.
Follow our step-by-step tutorial to paste your face onto anything your heart desires.
Or how I get inspiration for creating stuff with code
Pick up some handy generative design tips by building a super clean generative landing page and Dribbble friendly background animation.
Turn your sketch into a refined image using AI
Sindre Sorhus has made using Stable Diffusion easy on macOS, assuming you have a computer with an M1 or M2 processor. The app is highly optimized and runs on the Apple Neural Engine.
I wish I could share some additional info about this site, but I’ve got nothing for you.
Discover amazing ML apps made by the community
The unofficial Stable Diffusion subreddit.
BIRME is a flexible and easy-to-use bulk image resizer. It can resize multiple images to any specific dimension and crop images if necessary. It’s an online tool, and you don’t need to download or install it on your computer. BIRME is free to use. It works on both Mac and Windows machines.
This page is an interface to use Colab to train an image model for Stable Diffusion.
With the recent development in AI technology and training, you can now use Dreambooth (based on a Google’s AI) to train a stable diffusion model with multiple subjects at the same time.
You can read about this, but don’t actually install it on your Mac. That’s just my 2¢.