and the result is far from what I've expected:
- it only 'mirrored' the side view to the opposite one, so that the bike has 8 muffler pipes ! XD
- it failed to interpreted which part should go wider instead of narrow ones.
- the 'in-between' parts (top of the fuel tank, radiator, etc.) were very simplified or false interpreted.
It looks impressive from side view... but...
It doesn't know how fuel tank looks like... also, it added some weird geometry on the handle-bar.
The foot steps for rear passenger goes inward instead...
It copied the muffler to the other side... since every thing from side view are mirrored to the other side.
Looks like it doesn't yet have adequate 'knowledge' regard motorcycle parts...
I'm quite impressed though... yet, it still need lots and lots thing to learn.
Personally, I don't get the worldwide current obsession with A.I. We're constantly told it's going to do everything a human being can do and better, but it certainly won't. It can approximate and generate end results based on what it's trained to learn and/or look for, but it will never be able to replicate human consciousness to the point that a program can actually understand how to observe a 2-dimensional image that has never existed in 3 dimensions (e.g. artwork that an artist has drawn and which is a stylised/distorted/exaggerated version of things from the real world) and be able to figure out what steps would need to be taken to authentically create that as if it existed in the real world. It would be like training a monkey to play the piano, but only because you're forcing it with punishment and rewards to associate pressing certain notes when you whip it or something.
Plus, add to the fact that the human unconscious and subconscious minds can't be measured, mapped or replicated: components which are vital and necessary to genuinely understand and interface with reality.