ed 7 days ago

Elegant architecture, trained from scratch, excels at image editing. This looks very interesting!

From https://arxiv.org/html/2409.11340v1

> Unlike popular diffusion models, OmniGen features a very concise structure, comprising only two main components: a VAE and a transformer model, without any additional encoders.

> OmniGen supports arbitrarily interleaved text and image inputs as conditions to guide image generation, rather than text-only or image-only conditions.

> Additionally, we incorporate several classic computer vision tasks such as human pose estimation, edge detection, and image deblurring, thereby extending the model’s capability boundaries and enhancing its proficiency in complex image generation tasks.

This enables prompts for edits like: "|image_1| Put a smile face on the note." or "The canny edge of the generated picture should look like: |image_1|"

> To train a robust unified model, we construct the first large-scale unified image generation dataset X2I, which unifies various tasks into one format.

  • nairoz 7 days ago

    > trained from scratch

    Not exactly. They mention starting from the VAE from Stable Diffusion XL and the Transformer from Phi3.

    Looks like these LLMs can really be used for anything

    • yieldcrv 7 days ago

      Pretty cool, comfy ui and community is too cumbersome for me and still results in too much throwaway content

lelandfe 7 days ago

I left all the defaults as is, uploaded a small image, typed in "cafe," and 15 minutes later I am still waiting on this finishing.

  • cubefox 7 days ago

    Same, I left running for half an hour but nothing happened.

    • phromo 6 days ago

      On an A100 running 512x512 takes roughly 20s for one image+text input (50 iterations)

    • bob_1200 7 days ago

      The author updated their code a couple of days ago, and it runs smoothly on my end, producing results in about one minute. https://github.com/VectorSpaceLab/OmniGen

      • Citizen_Lame 7 days ago

        Left it running 1 hour nothing happens. Maybe this is a social experiment.

        • grvbck 7 days ago

          Left it running overnight. Set output to 512x512 in an attempt to speed things up. Nothing.

        • zamadatix 7 days ago

          Seems far more likely it's a transient unhandled exception which isn't bubbling up to let the frontend know.

ilaksh 7 days ago

I think this type of capability will make a lot of image generation stuff obsolete eventually. In a year or two, 75%+ of what people do with ComfyUI workflows might be built into models.

  • freilanzer 7 days ago

    Well, at the moment it seems it's not working at all.

sswz 7 days ago

Using a single model to unify all image generation tasks, including many computer vision tasks and visual language reasoning, could transform future image generation models. Although some capabilities, like text-to-image, aren't perfect, it's a significant advancement. The model's ability to integrate so many tasks with strong instruction-following skills is impressive. I'm excited about the broad impact OmniGen could have on future research.

block_dagger 7 days ago

This looks promising. I love how you can reference uploaded images with markup - this is exactly what the field needs more of. After spending the last two weeks generating thousands of album cover images using DALL-E and being generally disappointed with the results (especially with the variations feature of DALL-E 2), I'm excited to give this a try.

101008 7 days ago

I am working on a API to generate avatars/profile pics based on a prompt. I tried looking for train my own model bt I think it's a titanic task and impossible to do it myself. Is my best solution use an external API and then crop the face for what was generated?

  • ncoronges 7 days ago

    The simplest commercial product for finetuning your own model is probably Adobe firefly, although there’s no API access support yet. But there are cheap and only slightly more involved options like Replicate or Civit.ai. Replicate has solid API support.

    Check out:

    https://replicate.com/blog/fine-tune-flux

    • 101008 7 days ago

      Is it Flux 1 possible to download and deploy to my own server? (And make a simple API on top of it?) I don't need fine tuning.

      • spaceman_2020 7 days ago

        The easiest flux api I’ve seen is with Fal.ai

        It is expensive though- Flux dev images are like $0.035/image

      • handfuloflight 7 days ago

        If you have GPUs on your server that can handle it.

  • haccount 7 days ago

    You can use a few controlnet templates and then whatever model you like and consistently get the posture correct. The diffusion plugin for Krita is a great playground for exploring this.

KerryJones 7 days ago

Love this idea -- you have a typo in tools "Satble Diffusion"

gremlinsinc 7 days ago

Anyone know how it handles Text? That's kind of my deal breaker, I like Ideogram for it's ability to do really cool fonts, etc.

wwwtyro 7 days ago

With consistent representation of characters, are we now on the precipice of a Cambrian explosion of manga/graphic novels/comics?

  • Multicomp 7 days ago

    I sure hope so - at the very least I will use it for tabletop illustrations instead of having to describe a party's scenario result - I can give them a character-accurate image showing their success (or epic lack thereof).

  • jowday 7 days ago

    It’s not really consistent - or anymore consistent than, say, SDXL with IP adapter. Even in their example images the character they’ve input comes out wearing different clothes.

  • haccount 7 days ago

    I would say we already had one of those. There's more hand crafted human made content available than anyone cares to read.

    While this will enable a certain degree of more spam it will more importantly, on the positive side of things, democratize the creative process to those who want to tell a story in images but lack the skill and resources to churn it out traditionally.

  • fullstackwife 7 days ago

    not yet, still can't generate transparent images

empath75 7 days ago

it seems like there's a lot of potential for abuse if you can get it to generate ai images of real people reliably.

  • hnbad 7 days ago

    We literally already had AI fake porn of Taylor Swift making the rounds a while ago. Prepare for women in public positions to face that kind of bullshit more frequently.

    • CamperBob2 7 days ago

      Eh, once it's ubiquitous, nobody will care.

      • cubefox 7 days ago

        Once fakes in politics are ubiquitous, people will stop trusting the real evidence.

        • CamperBob2 6 days ago

          That appears to have already happened, no AI required.

          • cubefox 6 days ago

            The trust in video evidence certainly can be much lower than it is now.

            • CamperBob2 5 days ago

              It's more an issue of indifference than trust. For instance, you can show Trump supporters any number of legitimate videos that depict Trump and his associates saying, doing, and promising all kinds of outrageous, offensive, and destructive things, and they won't care in the slightest. It's not that they don't trust the video, it's that they've been programmed not to care. The leader cannot fail.

              That's the ultimate purpose of disinformation -- it's not to make you believe false things, it's to make you believe nothing.

              So yes, AI fakery will contribute to that phenomenon on behalf of numerous bad actors, but it was always going to happen anyway. You don't need Hinton and Sutskever on your side if you have Aisles and Murdoch.

              • cubefox 5 days ago

                > So yes, AI fakery will contribute to that phenomenon on behalf of numerous bad actors, but it was always going to happen anyway.

                That's like saying: "Yes, crime might increase, but we will always have crime anyway." What will happen anyway is irrelevant precisely because it happens anyway. What's relevant is the expected increase in media distrust once everything might be a fake.

oatsandsugar 8 days ago

I mean, I struggle even getting Dall-E to iterate on one image without changing everything, so this is pretty cool

anyi09881 7 days ago

Curious what's the actual cost for each edit? Will this infra always be reliable?

  • CamperBob2 7 days ago

    I was able to clone the repo and run it locally, even on a Windows machine, with only minimal Python dependency grief. Takes about a minute to create or edit an image on a 4090.

    It's pretty impressive so far. Image quality isn't mind-blowing, but the multi-modal aspects are almost disturbingly powerful.

    Not a lot of guardrails, either.

    • hyuuu 4 days ago

      could you elaborate on the multi modal aspect of this model?

kazishariar 7 days ago

[flagged]

  • illumanaughty 7 days ago

    We've been manipulating photos as long as we've been taking them.

  • handfuloflight 7 days ago

    Art is what you can get away with. (Andy Warhol)