Is this AI generated? I can obviously read Taco Bell and Honda but the other words I can't make out. Hard to tell if they're the usual AI nonsense or just because there's only 10 pixels in the image, 7 of which are devoted to that guys hair.
Funny
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The details on the motorcycle gives it away. The engine appears to have two pistons of different sizes connected to two different cranks. The wheel spokes are also of different thicknesses and unevenly spaced. There is no front brake lever. It definitely looks like this image has AI generated elements in it.
He took the front brake lever off to reduce the bikes weight and go faster, since he lacks a right hand to use the brake...
Main thing for me is he seems to be missing a hand.
Uniform spokes are for squares!
The back wheels orientation is definitely off.
I think you're right. Much of the text has that "word adjacent" you see a lot in AI images. Also, the picture appears to be very 80s in style, but that taco bell logo wasn't used in the 80s. I'm pretty sure the logo and Honda were edited in.
Oh, that's right. Taco Bell originally used an actual bell on their buildings - themed to look like an old western missionary.
This guy is glitching and the pixelation look's off. I think it's a composite though. The people are still too well put together.
That Taco Bell logo is not the one from the 80s.
I'll vote A.I. I can see the parking lot divider line behind and through the back bike wheel looks off. Although I don't discont crappy parking lot paint jobs do exist too.
It's possible that the image is real and has been enhanced visually. Saturation and ~~added pixels~~ resolution upscaled with ai.
AI. That bike is supposed to be a Honda Hurricane. One of Honda's first full frame sports bikes. It has an inline 4. The motor it shows looks like a Vtwin or some kind of dual crank case thing going on.
Thanks. I was gonna ask what kinda bike that is.
This dude rides.
There are actually 2 versions for this bike. The 600 and 1000cc. The 600 is actually faster than the 1000 in terms of pure acceleration. I owned the 600, I think it was a 1987 or 89.
Out of all the bikes I ever owned(and I owned many), this bike was the bike that got the most looks and thumbs up.
I miss this thing.
No need for a helmet with that thicc mane.
Ai The engine is janky looking, he is missing his right hand, the fonts are garbled even the Honda logo is off, the peeps in the background have bizarre stances, his bike looks more like a suzuki 1100r
Sounds like someone is just jealous of that sick Ronda motorcycle. And maybe right hands.
Human jazz cup
Kinda hate to say it at this point, but who would win in a showdown:
him or a wizard?
Whoever ponders the orb
Whoever wants to gain knowledge. The Orb is a special shape affecting belief systems and encoding knowledge.
https://www.mathsisfun.com/geometry/circle-theorems.html
A circle is just a simpler orb. It also has infinite data points.
This encodes knowledge because it has numbers with relationships and shapes. You could imagine writing something that looks like how to add a number in this system. It makes up inter-related values and something that looks like data structures using maths.
Same with Lambda Calculus or programming in Lisp since it does the exact same thing. It builds up abstractions. You can store the concept in your own head, set it to some state, then see how things are related.
Ancient mathematicians like Pythagoras would often worship shapes and use them to inform beliefs, along with spreading knowledge about these shapes and their properties. Shapes can encode vectors and matrix transformations, along with mathematical group theory, which should all clearly be logically the same as any mathematical system.
Ancient mathematicians weren't stupid either. They used internal geometries to deduce things about the transformations of shapes based on assumptions about what was inside the shape, then show stuff that was obviously true to them since they can visualise it.
If you wanted to understand all this stuff and have it look obvious, you could try reading:
-SICP (Lisp programming by early MIT researchers)
-An Intro to Octave programming (and how it relates to shapes)
And finally anyone who's spoken about "SCP 606" or "The Orb". Many have: Ashens (British youtuber who made a popular video literally called the Orb), Tomska (related), Terry Davis (and other crazy people who were skilled in certain practices a bit like computers), religious leaders who seemed to preach shapes like triangles (with rotation identities), people like Richard Stallman who made up weird philosophies many easily followed and could justify to themselves, old fantasy stories with orbs that worked like computers, etc.
Many people discovered and used these very universal concepts to try to "enlighten" themselves about most skills many could never understand or dream of in their own minds, like operating systems or consistently appealing comedy.
I love everything about this photo.
Tbf that Al dude is OOZING confidence