[Day 13] I got a cat to "talk." The biggest wall: the AI couldn't recognize the cat's face
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Intro Day 13! Today's experiment: take a single cat image, lay human facial motion on top of it, and make a "talking cat." It's the usual "talking avatar" idea, except I use a cat instead of my own face. The tool is LivePortrait (still image + a "driving video" of motion → it transfers the video's expressions onto the still). The result: a cat that properly talks . The hard part wasn't the animation — it was the step before it, getting the AI to recognize the cat's face . Here's where it…
1Key Takeaways
- Today's experiment: take a single cat image, lay human facial motion on top of it, and make a "talking cat." It's the usual "talking avatar" idea, except I use a cat instead of my own face.
- The tool is LivePortrait (still image + a "driving video" of motion → it transfers the video's expressions onto the still).
- The result: a cat that properly talks .
- The hard part wasn't the animation — it was the step before it, getting the AI to recognize the cat's face .
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3Why it matters
Coding AI shifts how fast software ships and how much human review each change needs. DEV — ML reports that today's experiment: take a single cat image, lay human facial motion on top of it, and make a "talking cat." It's the usual "talking avatar" idea, except I use a cat instead of my own face.
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