I was trying to get a picture of crane birds before a gibbous moon.
Previously it has been established that Bing Chat AI will not paint a gibbous moon when asked for a gibbous moon.
So I decided to try to get the desired result by describing the moon otherwise than by using the word "gibbous".
Yet however I have phrased the prompt thus far it is always a full moon that is produced.
So, hey ho, maybe it is just not possible.
So, on what I suppose is a researcher's hunch, I thought of trying some other celestial body. Hmm - Saturn would be distinctive - I wonder if Bing Chat AI will do that. Yes, it will! Those look good, I'll post one to the thread. Well, post two.
Imagine please a real life artist who paints pictures for a fee. How would he or she react to being asked to paint such a picture by a fee-paying client? How does a garage mechanic who usually works on new cars react when he is assigned to a customer's many years old car that the customer wants to keep going? Maybe it is one of the best cars that he has to work on (What!) Ah, but the customer pays the bill promptly upon receiving the invoice. Do all of the people with new cars pay the bill promptly?
The answer to the second question asked of me in the post is, as far as I know, "No".
I opine that the first picture is particularly stylish.
I am asked "Why do you consider this a good result?"
I have thought of what answer I can state. I do consider it a good result, but I find it hard to express why. It has expanded my knowledge of what Bing Chat AI can be prompted to produce. Bing Chat AI will not place a gibbous moon in the background, but it will place Saturn.
I remember a movie, I don't remember which, where a woman is on stage and starts to sing a song, then the curtain is pulled down on her mid-performance, and then she is not part of the rest of the movie, yet that actress is recorded in that movie, so she got the part and is remembered. That picture might perhaps get reproduced in an article on AI somewhere, sometime and it may get accompanied by a Journalist's Downbeat Quip but it would still have been mentioned and printed in the article.
I remember a feature in one episode of a television show called "That's Life" many years ago where fun was poked at a publication about people where basically it seems that if someone paid a fee then the person could have a page about themself in the book and got a copy of the book. So if I remember correctly there was a page quoted about a man who ran a small filling station somewhere in the American Mid-West. Yet, I wonder where those books are now? Are they family heirlooms, are they in local history collections, is one in The Library of Congress? And the programme did inform me of the existence of the book and I thought about its concept and its implications, then and now.
That first picture of the cranes and Saturn. There is the possibility that I will use Affinity Designer software to enlarge that picture and place it on an A3 size canvas and then produce an A3 size PDF document and then get five copies printed in colour on 350 gsm paper. Yet hush, would I dare say so?
And yes, this reply does ramble, it does jump from topic to topic in a way that some people may find peculiar, yet that is a matter for them, yet this is my reply and it makes logical sense to me. ... Yes, I know, I know.