I converted the photos into short videos that included AI’s latest phones. Very strange

As a mid-range mobile phone Designed to bridge the gap between flagships, the Honors 400 and 400 Pro usually won’t attract much attention. However, these devices (not stored in the United States) were the first devices to be based on its veo 2 model (now available for Gemini subscribers). Built in Honor’s Gallery app, it allows you to select still photos from the camera roll to bring them to life as a five-second video.
After different photo experiments, from the landscape to the family and pets, I was impressed and weird. Like any AI tool, it has the possibility of good or bad, depending on how you wave it, and the result goes from flawless to weird. It’s a neat trick and it’ll quickly get the phone in hand.
Fake photography
Fake photography is nothing new – the medium is always developing. Artificial intelligence has been smoothing wrinkles and enhancing the sky for years. None of your photos are real, especially those taken with your phone and edited to post on social media. However, we are pushing to create a fake bokeh with blurred backgrounds or dial the colors of sunsets. Creating a completely fake video from a still image feels like a new high and a new low.
The process is easy. Open the Gallery app on the Honor 400 or 400 Pro, select the Create tab, click the image to the video, and select one of your photos. Choose a 9:16 or 16:9 aspect ratio for portrait or landscape and hit start. You need to be connected to the internet. Each five-second video took about 30 seconds to create, but a pop-up message warned me that they could take up to two minutes. There is no room for entry prompts, so you will not be at the mercy of everything the AI decides to do.
I started with pictures of my wife and children. The first few videos have a huge incredible valley feel. In one photo, my wife covers her mouth, AI animates her hands and speaks, but the sticking mouth is completely wrong. To her fear, this provided my daughter with a series of facial twitches. My selfie videos are great and will surely deceive anyone who doesn’t know me, but my wife says she can say it’s not me because I’ve never made facial expressions like this.
Simon Hill