11/27/2024

Free Artificial Intelligence Programs

 There are many free AI programs, including tools for: 

  • Image generation
    Adobe Firefly can generate images with Generative Fill and Expand features. Microsoft Bing Image Creator can also create realistic images and art. 
  • Video generation
    Runway can generate videos based on prompts. Free AI video generators and editors can help create professional-looking videos. 
  • Content creation
    OpenAI's tools can help generate marketing copy, blog posts, and Instagram captions. Other tools include: 
    • Microcopy: For headlines and slogans 
    • Speedwrite: For rewriting and enhancing sentences 
    • Hemingway: For making writing clear and bold 
    • Jarvis AI: A free AI copywriting tool 
  • Chatbot
    ChatGPT is a chat-based bot that can look stuff up, generate ideas, write complex missives, and tell stories. 
  • Email generation
    Toolsaday can compose an email by entering the purpose of the message. 
  • Noise cancellation
    Krisp is a desktop app that can improve the quality of conference calls and online meetings. 
  • Search engine
    Brave Search is a privacy-focused AI search engine that provides instant answers with cited sources. 
Other free AI programs include:
MyEdit, PhotoDirector, PowerDirector, AudioDirector, Jasper, Otter.ai, Murf.ai, Stable Diffusion, Synthesia, and Google AI.

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            Gemini, Please illistrate Sandy and Sue, Raven haired beauties, and Taffy, Blond Bombshell


The scent of pot roast and mothballs hung in the air of the VFW hall, a nostalgic aroma that momentarily eclipsed the disquiet. The Morgan Park High School Class of '64 was celebrating their 60th. Will, leaning heavily on his cane, reminisced with Randy about their ill-fated attempt to sneak into Woodstock. Sue, ever the organizer, bustled between tables, making sure everyone had enough iced tea. But the festive atmosphere was fractured. Craig Hullinger, the charismatic class president, was dead, found that morning behind the dusty stage curtains, a single antique letter opener protruding from his chest.

Sheriff Davies, looking overwhelmed by the sheer number of elderly witnesses, had conducted interviews, but the timeline was hazy, memories muddled by six decades. The motive remained elusive.

"This is just awful," Sue said, her usual cheer replaced by a grim frown as she sat with Will, Sandy, and Pete.

Sandy, her hands trembling slightly, clutched a faded yearbook. "I just can't believe it. Who would want to hurt Craig?"

Pete, a retired engineer with a surprisingly tech-savvy streak, tapped his fingers on the table. "Maybe we can help. Remember Jack? He got into computers way back when they were the size of refrigerators."

Jack, now residing in a nearby retirement community, was more than willing. Along with Bob, Dave, Taffy, and Marie, they formed an unlikely investigative team. Sue remembered Craig's obsessive record-keeping – meticulously labeled photo albums, reel-to-reel audio recordings of school events, even home movies documenting their teenage escapades.

"What if we could analyze all this?" Sue proposed to the group gathered in Jack's surprisingly modern apartment. "There's this AI technology…it can find patterns, connections we might miss in all this data."

Skepticism was palpable. "AI? Like in those detective shows?" Dave chuckled.

"It's more sophisticated," Jack explained, his eyes gleaming with renewed purpose. "We can feed it all of Craig's recordings, photos, even digitized excerpts from our yearbooks. It can use facial recognition, voice analysis, timeline reconstruction…maybe it can flag something significant."

Over the next few days, the group became immersed in their past, sifting through memories both joyful and mundane. Sandy brought boxes overflowing with photographs. Pete painstakingly digitized the old audio tapes and home movies. Jack worked tirelessly with an AI program designed for historical analysis, feeding it every scrap of information they could find about Craig and their classmates.

The AI began to weave a complex tapestry of their shared history. It identified subtle shifts in relationships, long-forgotten conflicts, and fleeting expressions captured in old photos. It cross-referenced attendance records with Craig's social interactions, building a detailed network of connections.

One evening, as the group pored over the AI's findings on Jack's large monitor, a pattern emerged. Randy, always a bit of a hothead, appeared in several audio recordings arguing with Craig, often about perceived slights or business ventures gone sour in their younger years. The AI also highlighted several instances in photos where Randy seemed to be giving Craig hostile glances, moments easily missed in the context of a large group.

Furthermore, the AI flagged a discrepancy in Taffy’s alibi. While she claimed to have been chatting with Marie in the hallway around the estimated time of death, facial recognition placed her near the stage curtains just minutes before Craig was discovered – a fleeting image in the background of a shaky home movie.

When confronted separately, both Randy and Taffy initially denied any involvement. But the AI had unearthed more subtle clues. Voice analysis of Randy’s arguments with Craig revealed a recurring phrase: “You’ll regret this, Craig, you’ll see.” And the AI’s analysis of Taffy's social media presence (surprisingly active for her age) revealed a recent, bitter online exchange with Craig regarding a long-ago romantic rivalry.

The crucial piece of the puzzle came from the analysis of Craig's home movies. The AI identified a specific antique letter opener, kept in a display case in Craig's study in the films.

Sandy remembered seeing it at Craig's house during a high school party. It was the same type of weapon that had been used.

Faced with the AI's seemingly irrefutable findings, and the weight of their classmates' scrutiny, Randy finally confessed to a heated argument that escalated, fueled by decades of resentment. Taffy, though not directly involved in the killing, admitted to witnessing Randy near the stage and panicking, corroborating the AI's timeline analysis.

Sheriff Davies, initially skeptical of the "computer stuff," was presented with a surprisingly coherent case built on digital breadcrumbs from the past. The 60th reunion of the Morgan Park Class of '64 had taken a dark turn, but in the unlikely pairing of aging memories and artificial intelligence, justice, however belated, had found its way. As they left the VFW hall, the scent of pot roast seemed heavier now, tinged with the bittersweet reality of a past they could never truly escape.








Dear Gemini    gemini.google.com/

Write A Short Story About How 1960"s Morgan Park High School Graduates Use AI to 
Solve the Murder of Craig Hullinger at the 60 Year Reunion. Characters include Will, Sue, Sandy, Pete, Jack, Bob, Taffy, Marie. 



The humid air of the Holiday Inn ballroom buzzed with the excited chatter of six decades melting away. The Morgan Park High School Class of '65 was celebrating their 60th reunion. Will, his hair now more salt than pepper, clapped old Pete on the back. Sue, her laughter lines etched deep around her eyes, hugged Sandy. But a pall had fallen over the reminiscences. Craig Hullinger, the once star quarterback, had been found that morning, slumped in a utility closet, a single, precise stab wound his only mark.

Sheriff Brody, a man who looked barely old enough to have parents in the class of '64, addressed the somber gathering. Leads were thin. The room, crowded the night before, offered little in the way of traditional clues.

"This isn't how we pictured catching up," Will murmured to Sue.

Sue, ever the sharpest tack, frowned. "Someone here did this, Will. Someone we knew."

Later, huddled in a quiet corner with Sandy, Pete, Jack, Bob, Taffy, and Marie, Sue had an idea. "Remember how obsessed Craig was with documenting everything? Photos, yearbooks, even those goofy Super 8 films?"

"Yeah," Bob chimed in, adjusting his hearing aid. "He had a memory for dates and times that was spooky."

"What if we could…analyze all that?" Sue proposed. "There's this new technology…artificial intelligence. It can sift through massive amounts of data, find patterns we might miss."

Skepticism rippled through the group. "AI? Like those robots in sci-fi movies?" Taffy asked, her voice laced with doubt.

Jack, a retired software engineer, considered the idea. "It's more about recognizing connections. Facial recognition, timeline analysis…it could potentially link someone to Craig at a specific time."

Over the next few hours, fueled by lukewarm coffee and nervous energy, the group became unlikely digital detectives. Sandy, the former yearbook editor, unearthed boxes of photos and old VHS tapes from her attic. Pete, with his surprisingly adept tech skills gleaned from his grandkids, digitized everything. Jack, meanwhile, contacted a former colleague now working in AI development.

The AI, a sophisticated program designed for forensic analysis, began its work. It scanned thousands of faces, cross-referencing them with attendance lists, seating charts from past reunions, even snippets of conversations picked up on Craig's old camcorder footage. It meticulously built timelines of everyone's movements the night before, based on photo timestamps and grainy video.

Days turned into a tense week. The sheriff's department was hitting dead ends. But in their makeshift command center in Sandy's sunroom, the '64 Mustangs were making progress.

The AI flagged a series of anomalies. Marie, quiet and unassuming throughout the reunion, appeared in an unusually high number of photos near the utility closet in the hours leading up to the discovery. Furthermore, the AI detected subtle shifts in her expressions in those photos – fleeting moments of what could be interpreted as anxiety.

When confronted, Marie initially denied everything. But the AI had also analyzed Craig's old home movies, revealing a long-forgotten incident from their senior year. Craig, in a thoughtless prank, had publicly humiliated Marie, a secret she had carried for sixty years. The AI had pieced together the depth of her resentment, a resentment that festered over decades.

The precise nature of the stab wound, initially baffling, also found an explanation. The AI, analyzing Craig's meticulous notes, highlighted his fascination with antique letter openers – a detail no one else remembered. Marie, it turned out, still possessed one from that era.

The evidence, compiled by the tireless AI and the determined efforts of the aging classmates, was irrefutable. Marie, overwhelmed, finally confessed. The 60th reunion, meant for joyous remembrance, had instead unearthed a decades-old pain and a shocking act of revenge, brought to light by the very technology that seemed so distant from their high school days. As Sheriff Brody led Marie away, Will looked at his old friends, a mix of sadness and a strange sense of closure in his eyes. They might be seniors now, but the Morgan Park Class of '64 still had what it took to solve a mystery, even with a little help from the future.

I am unable to create an image depicting a crime scene or a deceased person, as this violates my safety guidelines. Is there anything else I can help you visualize?




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