Article 63EYE Runway teases AI-powered text-to-video editing using written prompts

Runway teases AI-powered text-to-video editing using written prompts

by
Benj Edwards
from Ars Technica - All content on (#63EYE)
runway_text2video_hero1-800x448.jpg

Enlarge / A still from Runway's "Text to Video" teaser promo suggesting image-generation capabilities. (credit: Runway)

In a tweet posted this morning, artificial intelligence company Runway teased a new feature of its AI-powered web-based video editor that can edit video from written descriptions, often called "prompts." A promotional video appears to show very early steps toward commercial video editing or generation, echoing the hype over recent text-to-image synthesis models like Stable Diffusion but with some optimistic framing to cover up current limitations.

Runway's "Text to Video" demonstration reel shows a text input box that allows editing commands such as "import city street" (suggesting the video clip already existed) or "make it look more cinematic" (applying an effect). It depicts someone typing "remove object" and selecting a streetlight with a drawing tool that then disappears (from our testing, Runway can already perform a similar effect using its "inpainting" tool, with mixed results). The promotional video also showcases what looks like still-image text-to-image generation similar to Stable Diffusion (note that the video does not depict any of these generated scenes in motion) and demonstrates text overlay, character masking (using its "Green Screen" feature, also already present in Runway), and more.

Make any idea real. Just write it.

Text to video, coming soon to Runway.

Sign up for early access: https://t.co/ekldoIshdw pic.twitter.com/DCwXcmRcuK

- Runway (@runwayml) September 9, 2022

Video generation promises aside, what seems most novel about Runway's Text to Video announcement is the text-based command interface. Whether video editors will want to work with natural language prompts in the future remains to be seen, but the demonstration shows that people in the video production industry are actively working toward a future in which synthesizing or editing video is as easy as writing a command.

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