As a mid-range phone Designed to insert gaps between flagships, the Honor 400 and 400 Pro may not normally be much attention. However, these devices are not available in the US, but are one of the first devices to have a Google image-to-video AI generator based on the VEO 2 model (now available to Gemini subscribers). Built in the Honor's Gallery app, you can still select photos from your camera roll to make life a 5-second video.
After experimenting with lots of photos, from landscapes to family and pets, I was impressed and odd. Like other AI tools, it can be good or bad depending on how you behave it, and the results go from perfect to weird. It's a neat trick and is coming to the phone with your hands right away.
Fake photos
Fake photos are not new. Media is constantly evolving. Artificial intelligence has smoothed wrinkles and has strengthened the sky for many years. None of your photos are real. There are no photos specifically edited to take on your mobile phone and post on social media. But we don't just create fake Bokeh background blur or dial in the colors of the sunset. Creating a completely fake video from still images feels like a new high and a new low low.
The process is simple. Open the Gallery app on your Honor 400 or 400 Pro and[作成]Select the tab, tap on image to video, then select one of the photos. Select a 9:16 or 16:9 aspect ratio for your portrait or landscape, then hit Start. You need to connect to the internet. Each 5-second video took about 30 seconds to create, but a pop-up message warns it will take up to 2 minutes. There is no room to enter the prompt, so anything AI decides is left at mercy.
I started with pictures of my wife and children. The first few videos have a big, creepy valley vibe. In one photo, his wife is covered in mouth, and AI animates her hand and talking, but the mouth it sticks is completely wrong. A lot in her fear, it gives my daughter a series of facial tics. My selfie videos come out a lot and will certainly fool anyone who doesn't know me, but my wife says I can say I'm not, because I don't have that kind of expression.
Courtesy of Simon Hill

