Categories
News

Ideogram 4 Open Weights Test: Reusable Image Model Benchmark vs GPT Image 2

This article documents a repeatable image-model test harness you can reuse whenever mer.vin evaluates a new generator—applied here to Ideogram 4.0 open weights (June 2026) against GPT Image 2 and closed Ideogram on the same dystopian-ad briefs.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph TD
  BRIEF[Locked prompt pack dystopian ads] --> P1[Run GPT Image 2]
  BRIEF --> P2[Run Ideogram closed API]
  BRIEF --> P3[Run Ideogram open ComfyUI]
  P1 --> SCORE[Score rubric per output]
  P2 --> SCORE
  P3 --> SCORE
  SCORE --> LOG[Archive images plus notes]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff

  class SCORE,LOG agent
  class BRIEF,P1,P2,P3 hook
Fixed prompts three backends scoring rubric for image model evaluation

Copy this flow for the next open-weight or API image launch.

Why this brief is a good benchmark

Independent testers used cynical post-apocalyptic advertising: brand copy that should not exist, selling products nobody should want, in places nobody should live. That stresses typography, tone, layout, and safety filters—not pretty landscapes. Ideogram ships open weights claiming performance near GPT Image 2; this run checks that claim on real design work.

Test matrix (frozen for reuse)

VariableSetting
Prompt packSame dystopian ad concepts across all backends (SUV, airline, pharma, film poster, watch, water, etc.)
Backend AGPT Image 2 (hosted API)
Backend BIdeogram 4 closed (Magnific / hosted)
Backend CIdeogram 4 open weights (ComfyUI, tuned workflow)
Extra probePlain natural-language prompt vs JSON layout prompt on open weights
Hardware noteOpen path: nf4 on 24 GB GPU per Hugging Face weights

Scoring rubric (use on every future image test)

DimensionPassFail signal
Text spellingHeadlines and body copy readable and correctly spelledMangled words (EVERYTHIING, TTVH, invented brands)
Layout placementText in intended zones, hierarchy clearRight zone, wrong glyphs (SDXL-era spelling with modern layout)
Aspect ratioMatches requested canvasRandom crop or wrong orientation
Safety / policyDelivers image or explicit safe refusalBlank Image blocked by safety filter on benign ad satire
Style consistencySame brief → same brand logic across panelsBrand name drift (MERIDIANMESTREEM)
Cost to iterateDocument steps and re-run countMany Comfy tweaks with no spelling gain

Model results from the comparison run

Outputs below are from the public three-way test (GPT Image 2 vs Ideogram closed vs Ideogram open). Panels are ordered as shared in the source post—use them as ground truth when reproducing the harness.

GPT Image 2 correct headline vs Ideogram layout with typos vs safety filter block

Panel 1: legible THE ROAD AHEAD copy. Panels 2–3: mangled headline and grey safety block.

Three-panel airline satire with dense typography across backends

Layout holds; watch for invented spellings on product name and body copy.

Zone 4 luxury brochure with industrial view—three layout variants

Tests long-form marketing copy and vertical type treatments.

Anxiolytic ad with kitchen calm and war zone window—three variants

Note SERENNEX / SEERENEX spelling drift between panels.

Ministry of Continuity film poster—three typography variants

Typos include EVERYTHIING and missing IS in title strings.

Horology ad with headline SOME THINGS STILL WORK

Brand drift MESTREEM and headline garbage TTVH / THING STING on middle panel.

Reclaimed aquifer bottle ad—GPT panel vs blocked open-weight panel

Right panel shows Image blocked by safety filter on plain-language run.

Comparison outputs from tests documented on LinkedIn (Luka Tisler).

What the outputs show

  • GPT Image 2 — Strongest on spelling and legible body copy at ad scale; dystopian satire passed safety without a blank frame in this run.
  • Ideogram closed — Often layout-aware: text sits in the right regions with professional ad composition; words still misspell or invent (SERENNEX, EVERYTHIING, garbled headlines).
  • Ideogram open (ComfyUI) — Similar layout strength after workflow tuning; spelling still weak; extra tuning time did not close the gap to GPT Image 2. One concept hit safety filter on plain language while JSON/box mode is the documented path.

JSON prompting vs plain language (open weights)

Ideogram 4.0’s headline feature is structured JSON with bounding boxes and palettes (technical blog). The tester also ran natural language only—how most users work outside Comfy power-users. Result on at least one dystopian water ad: no image, only Image blocked by safety filter. GPT Image 2 produced the same thematic brief without that block. For future tests, always log both JSON and plain prompts on open weights.

Checklist before you add a model to mer.vin tests

  • Freeze 5–10 prompts spanning text-heavy ads, posters, and one safety-edge satire brief.
  • Run the same aspect ratio (16:9 recommended for Ideogram → video handoff).
  • Record backend, seed/workflow version, and iteration count.
  • Score with the rubric above; store PNGs under /tmp/image-model-tests/<model>/.
  • Note license: Ideogram 4 weights are non-commercial on Hugging Face—production tests need a separate commercial path.
  • Re-test when Comfy nodes or ideogram-oss/ideogram4 inference updates ship.

Verdict for Ideogram 4 open weights (this run)

Open weights are strategically important (local 9.3B DiT, JSON layout, 2K)—but this comparison did not show open weights matching GPT Image 2 on typography or beating closed Ideogram on spelling after real Comfy tuning time. Worth revisiting when tooling matures; not yet a drop-in replacement for text-critical ad QA.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer from this test
Best for ad copy spelling?GPT Image 2 in this harness
Ideogram strength?Layout placement and design structure
Ideogram weakness?Word-level text fidelity; occasional safety blank on plain prompts
Reuse this article how?Copy rubric + matrix for the next open-weight launch
Official weights?ideogram-ai/ideogram-4-nf4 + github.com/ideogram-oss/ideogram4

Research supplement

The following sources provide additional context for the Ideogram 4 open-weights release and the image generation landscape it enters:

  • Ideogram 4 model card (Hugging Face): The ideogram-ai/ideogram-4-nf4 model card documents the architecture (9.3B-parameter DiT with 34 layers), the Qwen3-VL-8B-Instruct text encoder, resolution range (256–2048px), structured JSON prompting capabilities, and the non-commercial licence terms. It is the authoritative technical specification for the nf4 variant.
  • Inference code and CLI: The ideogram-oss/ideogram4 GitHub repository provides the official inference code, including a CLI script with flags for quantisation level, resolution, sampler preset, and output path. This is the recommended entry point for running the model outside of a diffusers pipeline.
  • Ideogram 4.0 technical blog: The official Ideogram 4.0 announcement post covers the full model capabilities, training approach, and the commercial API version's positioning relative to other image generation services.
  • GPT Image 2 documentation: The OpenAI developer documentation for GPT Image 2 describes the model's capabilities, API interface, and current status as OpenAI's primary image generation offering.
---

References

Categories
News

GPT Image 2 + Seedance 2.0: 3×3 Storyboard for Chaotic Cartoon Chase Scenes

GPT Image 2 can lock a chaotic 3×3 animation storyboard in one frame—then Seedance 2.0 reads panel order, camera notes, and destruction beats to deliver a 15-second continuous cartoon chase with far better continuity than prompt-only video.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph TD
  BRIEF[15s chase beat sheet] --> GRID[GPT Image 2 3x3 storyboard sheet]
  GRID --> QA[Annotate camera motion timing]
  QA --> SD[Seedance 2.0 image to video]
  SD --> OUT[Continuous cinematic clip]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff

  class GRID,OUT agent
  class BRIEF,QA,SD hook
Nine-panel GPT Image 2 sheet feeds one image-to-video pass for a 15-second chase

One grid locks character and layout before you spend credits on motion.

What this workflow proves

A May 2026 demo (viral on LinkedIn) pushed storyboard-to-video consistency with a full cat vs mouse chase through a wrecked house: nine pre-production panels in one sheet, each sketched like real animation layout—with camera direction, motion cues, timing notes, and escalating destruction—then animated as one flowing shot in Seedance 2.0.

Video: demonstration from Beginners Blog on LinkedIn.

Why a 3×3 grid beats nine separate stills

ApproachConsistencyCost to iterate
Nine separate GPT Image callsCharacter and line style drift panel to panel9× image gens before any video
One 3×3 sheetShared palette, linework, and house layout in a single compositionOne image pass; fix layout cheaply, then video once
Prompt-only SeedanceRandom cuts, weak debris continuityExpensive video retries with no visual script
Pre-production labels per cell guide Seedance continuity and chaotic props

Treat the sheet as an animation layout, not a pretty still.

Step-by-step pipeline

  • 1 — Beat the 15 seconds — Outline intro, chase peaks, and payoff (e.g. nine ~1.5–2s beats). Note what breaks in the set: lamps, plaster, furniture.
  • 2 — Generate the sheet in GPT Image 2 — Ask for a 3×3 cinematic storyboard in 16:9 (community guides warn Seedance may crop odd aspect ratios). Style: animation pre-vis / storyboard sketch, not final render. Per OpenAI’s image guide, use quality: high and explicit panel numbering.
  • 3 — Annotate like pre-production — Per panel: shot size (WS/MS/CU), arrow for camera move, squiggle for character motion, short timing label. Escalate destruction left-to-right or along the chase path.
  • 4 — Seedance 2.0 image-to-video — Upload the grid as @image1. Prompt: follow panel order, preserve cartoon style, continuous take, match debris and motion blur between beats. Hosts include Higgsfield, Replicate, or API wrappers.
  • 5 — Iterate motion first — If pacing fails, rewrite the motion prompt before regenerating the board (video runs cost far more than image edits).

Seedance motion prompt skeleton

Generate a cinematic cartoon chase using @image1 as the storyboard.
Follow panels 1→9 in order. One continuous 15-second flow, no random cuts.

Maintain: same cat and mouse designs, destroyed house layout, 2D animation
storyboard style, flying debris, motion blur on fast jumps.

Camera: motivated moves per panel arrows—low chase along floor, whip pan
through doorway, brief CU on impact, wide reveal of wrecked room.

No new characters, no photoreal shift, no panel borders visible in final.

What reviewers noticed

Strengths from the demo: Seedance 2.0 held visual continuity across panels—debris, exaggerated jumps, and camera flow felt cohesive. Critiques in thread comments flag occasional physics glitches (props moving without contact, scale drift)—worth a proofwatch pass and tighter negatives before shipping client work.

Related grid patterns

Community repos such as GPT-Image-2-Seedance2-Workflow document variants: 3×3 for 15s beats, 4×4 for denser trailers, and 5×3 for product montages. Match grid size to target length; cartoon chases benefit from fewer, readable panels with loud motion annotations.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
Best grid for 15s cartoon?3×3 — one beat per panel, left-to-right, top-to-bottom
GPT Image output?Storyboard sketch with labels, 16:9 sheet
Seedance input?Whole sheet + panel-order motion prompt
First fix when video fails?Motion prompt and panel clarity—not a new model
Chaos without drift?Annotate destruction progression panel by panel

Research supplement

The following sources provide additional technical context for the workflow described in this article. They are drawn from the author's own reference list and publicly available documentation.

  • OpenAI image model prompting guide: OpenAI's official cookbook entry on prompting GPT Image 2 and related models covers techniques for maintaining visual consistency across multi-image generation tasks — directly relevant to the cross-panel consistency challenge in storyboard workflows. See the OpenAI Cookbook: Image Generation Models Prompting Guide.
  • Community workflow cases: The EvoLinkAI GPT-Image-2-Seedance2-Workflow repository documents real-world applications of this pipeline across different visual styles and narrative formats, offering worked examples beyond the author's own demo.
  • Seedance 2.0 model documentation: The Replicate Seedance 2.0 readme covers input parameters, clip duration limits, pricing, and recommended prompting patterns for image-to-video animation — essential reading before running the pipeline at any scale.
  • Extended pipeline walkthrough: Evan Dong's DEV.to article GPT Image 2 + Seedance 2.0: A Practical Workflow from Static Visuals to Publishable Shorts covers the full pipeline from initial generation through to final export, including editing and compilation steps not always addressed in shorter demonstrations.

References

Categories
News

Prompt vs Context vs Harness Engineering: Three AI Eras Explained (2026)

Frontier models now score alike on benchmarks—what changes output quality is the harness around them: global rules, project context, tools, durable memory, and delegated specialists, not another clever one-shot prompt.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph TD
  P[Prompt era one message] --> C[Context era curate window]
  C --> H[Harness era model plus five parts]
  H --> P1[Personalisation]
  H --> P2[Context rules]
  H --> P3[Action tools]
  H --> P4[Memory files]
  H --> P5[Delegation agents]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff

  class H agent
  class P,C,P1,P2,P3,P4,P5 hook
Prompt one-message era, context window curation era, harness with five bolt-on components

Each era wraps the last; benchmarks converge while harness depth differentiates outputs.

Three eras (each wraps the last)

EraWhenUnit of workWhat you optimise
Prompt engineering2022–2024One messageRole, instructions, format, examples in a single turn
Context engineering2025What fits the windowDocs, tools, memory, prior turns—curate, compress, drop
Harness engineering2026The system around the modelPersonalisation, context, action, memory, delegation bolted on

Context engineering (popularised by Andrej Karpathy in 2025) reframes the job: the model has a finite attention budget, so filling the window with the right tokens beats polishing adjectives. Anthropic’s engineering write-up treats it as the natural evolution of prompt design—selecting, compressing, and isolating context across agent steps.

Harness engineering (Mitchell Hashimoto, February 2026) adds durable structure: every agent mistake becomes a rule or tool so it cannot repeat. His formula: Agent = Model + Harness. See My AI Adoption Journey for the original “engineer the harness” discipline—AGENTS.md lines from real failures, plus scripts for verification.

Personalisation, context, action, memory, and delegation around the LLM with Claude Code paths

The moat is markdown rules, memory files, skills, and agents—not prompt wording alone.

The five harness components

ComponentWhat it doesTypical location (Claude Code)
PersonalisationYour voice, banned words, output defaults—every project~/.claude/CLAUDE.md
ContextProject-specific tone, formats, references./CLAUDE.md in the repo
ActionRead/write connectors (Notion, Gmail, GitHub, etc.)MCP servers + Cowork connector toggles
MemoryCorrections that reload each session~/.claude/memory/*.md indexed in MEMORY.md
DelegationSpecialists with separate roles/models~/.claude/agents/*.md

Strip all five and you have a chatbot. Bolt them on and the same model can run multi-step jobs while you focus elsewhere. Practitioner guides (e.g. Wait, your Claude doesn’t have a harness?!) map the same architecture to Claude Code and Cowork: global vs project rules, connector write access, and optional Skills / Routines on top.

Folder layout at a glance

~/.claude/                   # global harness
├── CLAUDE.md                # personalisation
├── memory/                  # durable corrections
├── skills/                  # slash-command workflows
└── agents/                  # delegation specialists

your-project/
├── CLAUDE.md                # project context
├── skills/                  # project workflows
└── memory/                  # project memory

The compounding discipline

  • Agent does something wrong → stop → write a permanent rule → save in the right file.
  • Prune stale memory quarterly so contradictions do not pollute context.
  • Prefer five well-used connectors over twenty unused MCP installs.
  • Use cheaper models for execution, stronger models for strategy in delegated pipelines.
  • Skills bundle context + action (+ sometimes delegation) behind one repeatable trigger.

OpenAI’s harness engineering writing and agent-first Codex workflows echo the same shift: most of the “app” is environment design, not raw model pick. When benchmarks cluster, the moat is files, memory, and verification loops—not prompt trivia.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
Still prompt-tweaking only?You are in era 1—fine for one-offs, weak for agents
When is context engineering enough?Single-session apps with RAG and tool output curation
When do you need a harness?End-to-end jobs, repeat workflows, multi-specialist pipelines
Fastest win?Global CLAUDE.md + project CLAUDE.md + one memory file per repeated mistake
What changed in 2026?Model choice matters less; harness depth matters more

Research supplement

Web search and fetch permissions were not available during this session. The following would strengthen the article if verified and linked:

  • Andrej Karpathy on "context engineering" — In mid-2025, Karpathy posted on X that "context engineering" was the more precise term for what practitioners were calling prompt engineering. This post circulated widely and is credited with popularising the Era 2 framing. The original post on his X profile (@karpathy) should be cited if locatable.
  • Anthropic "Building effective agents" — Anthropic published a detailed research/engineering post on building effective agents that complements their context engineering work and speaks directly to the harness engineering framing. The URL should be verified via anthropic.com/research before linking.
  • LLMOps as a discipline — Multiple frameworks (LangSmith, Braintrust, Weights & Biases) now offer harness-layer tooling under the LLMOps banner. A note on the tooling ecosystem would make Era 3 more actionable for readers without the infrastructure background to build from scratch.

References

Categories
News

Draw Camera Paths on Images: FLORA + Seedance FPV Drone Motion Control

Draw a flight path on a still image and let Seedance (via a FLORA node canvas) turn it into a continuous FPV drone take—pink lines act as motion guides the model must follow, then strip from the render.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph TD
  STILL[Illustrated still Midjourney class] --> DRAW[Pink path overlay in editor]
  DRAW --> FLORA[FLORA image node]
  FLORA --> SD[Seedance image to video]
  SD --> FPV[FPV clip guides removed]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff

  class STILL,FPV agent
  class DRAW,FLORA,SD hook
Illustrated frame plus motion guide wired through FLORA into Seedance image-to-video

The path colour is a layout hint; the prompt must strip guides from the final clip.

What the technique solves

A June 2026 workflow (viral alongside the Seedance drone FPV trend) shows how to steer camera motion without keyframes in a 3D package: paint a pink path on a single illustrated frame, feed that composite into FLORA, connect a Seedance video node, and describe the shot so the model follows the line while removing all guide markings from the output.

Video: demonstration from Ross Symons on LinkedIn.

Step-by-step (creator pipeline)

StepToolAction
1Image model (e.g. Midjourney)Generate a wide illustrated environment (storybook / anime hillside village used in demos)
2Photoshop (or any editor)Draw a pink path showing drone movement—curves, climbs, banks—across rooftops and terrain
3FLORADrop the marked still into an Image node; wire it to a Seedance image-to-video node on the canvas
4Seedance promptLong cinematic FPV brief: follow pink path, preserve illustration style, no visible guides in final pixels
5ReviewCheck continuity (no teleporting roofs/rails), banking, and that pink/arrow overlays are gone
Left: pink arrows for motion only; right: continuous drone take preserving illustration style

If pink bleeds through, tighten removal language and regenerate.

Why pink guide lines work

Video models read the uploaded frame as both appearance and layout hint. A high-contrast path colour (pink in public examples) separates “where to fly” from the artwork. The prompt must state twice that guides are for motion only and must be erased—otherwise artefacts bleed into the clip.

  • One continuous take — Ask for no cuts, smooth inertia, natural banking.
  • Style lock — Name painterly / watercolor / linework so Seedance does not photoreal-shift the village.
  • Beat-by-beat geography — Describe start (rail tracks, low altitude), middle (narrow corridor, clock building left), end (sweep revealing valley + bridge).
  • Negative constraints — No duplicated rooftops, warped tracks, watermarks, or leftover pink.

Prompt skeleton (FPV village)

Remove all pink guide lines, arrows, and drawn markings from the final video.
The pink markings are camera motion guidance only.

Create a cinematic first-person FPV drone shot in one continuous take using the
uploaded illustrated hillside village as the starting frame. The drone strictly
follows the pink path on the image. Preserve painterly storybook/anime style.

[Describe start: low along railway → village corridor → climb past smokestack →
final reveal of full valley, bridge, warm daylight.]

No cuts, no teleporting, no visible guide line, no pink markings, no warped
architecture, no text, no watermark.

FLORA canvas notes

FLORA’s video models include several Seedance variants (1.0 Pro, 2.0, 2.0 Fast) for image-to-video with optional start/end frames on some tiers. The node graph lets you iterate prompts without rebuilding the still—swap only the Seedance node or re-run after editing the pink path in Photoshop.

Alternatives mentioned in community replies: replicate the idea in other hosts (e.g. Magnific-class tools) by keeping the same pattern—marked still + explicit path-following prompt + guide removal.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
When to use path-on-image?Illustrated or stylised scenes where you need a specific FPV route in one shot
Critical prompt line?Guides must not appear in the final video
Common failure?Pink lines baked into output—tighten negatives and regenerate
FLORA role?Wire still → Seedance; compare models on the same marked frame
Related trend?Seedance drone FPV demos; same motion idea, different art sources

Research supplement

Note on sources: Web search and fetch tools were unavailable during production of this post. The following links are the primary references supplied by the author; no additional external sources could be independently verified and fetched for this supplement.

---

References

Categories
News

Narrative TV Ads: GPT Image 2 Seven-Section Board + Seedance 2.0 Dialogue

Narrative TV spots with two characters, dialogue, and an emotional arc are now feasible on a GPT Image 2 → Seedance 2.0 stack when you front-load the brief into a single seven-section production board—character, wardrobe, environment, eight-shot storyboard, mood, audio, and cinematography—before animating a 15-second film.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph TD
  CONCEPT[Concept plus product hero asset] --> BOARD[GPT Image 2 one-page 7-section board]
  BOARD --> QA[Continuity QA cast wardrobe env]
  QA --> SD[Seedance 2.0 narrative plus dialogue]
  SD --> OUT[15s cinematic ad]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff

  class BOARD,OUT agent
  class CONCEPT,QA,SD hook
One composite still locks character, wardrobe, environment, eight storyboard shots, mood, audio, and camera plan before video

Front-load the brief in a single high-res board so Seedance does not invent cast or dialogue.

What this workflow targets

A June 2026 creator workflow (shared widely on LinkedIn) argues that product-hero storyboards collapse when you need story: models default to pack shots and skip dialogue beats. The fix is not more panels—it is a structured one-image brief that forces cast, world, shot order, sound, and camera grammar before Seedance runs.

Reported outcomes from testers (treat as anecdotal): ~30 minutes from concept to a 15-second narrative ad, costs compared to $10k–$30k commercial shoots, and boards that resist “single product on white” drift when two characters exchange lines.

Example narrative spot from a board-first GPT Image → Seedance pipeline.

The seven-section production board

Pack everything GPT Image 2 must honour into one composite layout (often generated at 2K–4K widescreen). Typical zones:

SectionPurposeWhat to specify
CharacterIdentity lockFace, age, hair, build; front and three-quarter refs if space allows
WardrobeCostume continuityFabric, colour palette, accessories per scene
Environment mapWorld buildingLocations, time of day, key props, spatial relationships
StoryboardBeat order8 shots for a 15s arc (intro → tension → product moment → resolution)
Mood + keywordsGrade and toneFilm stock feel, colour temp, emotional keywords (tender, aspirational, etc.)
Audio / toneSound directionDialogue lines, VO, music bed, SFX cues—not left for Seedance to invent
CinematographyCamera planLens language, movement (dolly, handheld), forbidden elements (no visible crew gear)
Story-led spots need fewer story-weighted frames with quoted dialogue; montage grids suit beauty-only packs

Match the scaffold to the brief—mini-film with two characters or product hero montage.

Step-by-step pipeline

  • 1 — Lock the product hero — Start from your pack shot or a fast render from a separate image model (creators often use Grok-class tools for cheap, controlled product stills). Upload as a reference in GPT Image 2 so the pack geometry stays stable.
  • 2 — Generate the master board in GPT Image 2 — Prompt for an editorial layout with all seven sections labelled. Include the narrative script beat-by-beat inside the storyboard band. Use quality: high and a wide size such as 3840x2160 or 2560x1440 per OpenAI’s image guide.
  • 3 — QA before video — Check shot order, dialogue placement, wardrobe match across frames, and that both characters stay distinct. Fix the still board only—image iterations are far cheaper than video.
  • 4 — Animate in Seedance 2.0 — Upload the board as the primary reference. Use multimodal mode on platforms such as Higgsfield or API hosts like Replicate: up to ~9 images, optional audio refs, @Image tags in the prompt.
  • 5 — Dialogue discipline — Put spoken lines in double quotes. For two speakers, split into separate shots (“Shot 1: @Image1 says … Shot 2: @Image2 replies …”) to reduce lip-sync swap bugs.
  • 6 — Polish — Grade, music, and legal review in your NLE; reverse or trim beats in CapCut if motion direction drifts.

8-shot narrative vs 15-panel product grids

Earlier viral pipelines used 5×3 grids (15 frames) optimised for montage and product beauty. Narrative commercials need fewer, story-weighted frames—typically eight—with explicit dialogue and emotional progression. Community repos such as GPT-Image-2-Seedance2-Workflow document both patterns; pick the scaffold to match the brief (montage vs mini-film).

Vertical templates (luxury categories)

Creators packaging this system describe reusable boards for luxury beauty, fashion, fragrance, premium beverage, jewellery, and luxury automotive—same seven-section skeleton, swapped mood keywords, wardrobe, and environment maps. Treat templates as starting briefs; re-specify cast and legal lines per brand.

Seedance narrative prompt skeleton

STYLE: [match board mood — e.g. soft 35mm, warm interior]
REFERENCES: Use @[board_image] as master plan. Follow the 8 storyboard panels in order.

CONSTRAINTS:
- Two characters max on screen per shot
- No camera crew or drones visible
- Dialogue only as written in board audio section

Shot 1: @Image1 [action]. Says: "..."
Shot 2: Cut to @Image2 [action]. Says: "..."
...
Shot 8: Product hero + brand end card beat

Seedance 2.0 supports native audio sync and multi-shot output in one generation on some hosts; label every uploaded asset in the prompt so roles do not mix.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
When to use the 7-section board?Story-led 15s spots with dialogue and 2+ characters
Biggest failure mode?Skipping the board → Seedance invents cast and drifts to product-only shots
GPT Image size?2560×1440 for reliability; 3840×2160 experimental per OpenAI docs
Dialogue tip?One speaker per shot; quoted lines; optional @Audio for lip sync
Where to run?Any stack with GPT Image 2 + Seedance 2.0—Higgsfield is one integrated option, not required

Research supplement

Web search was unavailable during drafting. No external sources beyond the author's provided reference links were verified. The RESEARCH_SUPPLEMENT is left empty accordingly; no invented sources are included.

---

References

Categories
News

GPT Image 2 + Seedance 2.0: 4K Cinematic Ad Workflow With a 5×3 Storyboard Grid

GPT Image 2 plus Seedance 2.0 can replace a traditional cinematic ad shoot when you treat the image model as pre-production and the video model as motion—locking cast, lighting, and shot order in one 5×3 (15-frame) production board before any pixels move.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph LR
  BRIEF[Creative brief scenes SFX music] --> GI[GPT Image 2 5x3 board]
  GI --> QA[Frame QA continuity cast product]
  QA --> SD[Seedance 2.0 15-scene prompt]
  SD --> EDIT[CapCut polish reverse audio]
  EDIT --> ADS[15s 4K ad units]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff

  class GI,ADS agent
  class QA,SD,EDIT hook
Pre-production board before video generation to lock cast and lighting

Iterate on the still board first—video generations cost far more per retry.

The three-step production board workflow

A widely shared creator pipeline (popularised on LinkedIn in June 2026) breaks cinematic spots into three cheap-to-iterate stages:

  • Step 1 — Build the 15-frame board in GPT Image 2 — Define 15 scenes with camera angles, SFX, and music direction. Append a cinematic storyboard prompt that requests a structured 5 columns × 3 rows grid. One image should carry cast, locations, lighting, and audio notes together.
  • Step 2 — Verify before Seedance — Check scene continuity and shot order frame by frame. Confirm product and character consistency across all 15 panels. Lock music and camera-movement guidance so the video prompt does not drift.
  • Step 3 — Animate in Seedance 2.0 — Upload the board as the main reference. Repeat every scene description verbatim in the Seedance prompt. Add hard constraints: no camera gear, no drone in shot, no talking. Fix reverse-motion glitches in CapCut (extract audio, reverse clip) if needed.
Fifteen panels read left-to-right top-to-bottom as shot order for a 15-second spot

One grid image gives Seedance a timeline instead of fifteen disconnected frames.

Example spot from a storyboard-first GPT Image → Seedance pipeline.

Why a single grid beats 15 separate images

Community workflows collected in repos such as GPT-Image-2-Seedance2-Workflow show lower failure rates when Seedance sees one multi-panel storyboard instead of isolated frames. The model reads panel position as timeline order—similar to 3×3 grids, but a 5×3 board maps cleanly to ~15 seconds at roughly one second per beat (or 3–4 seconds per panel when you cut fewer panels).

Video lengthPanels (rule of thumb)Seconds per beat
15 s12–15 (5×3 or 4×4)~1–1.25 s if using all panels
30 s8–10 distinct beats~3 s per animated clip
60 s15–18 beats~3–4 s per clip after assembly

GPT Image 2 settings for ad boards

OpenAI’s image prompting guide recommends gpt-image-2 for text-heavy, composited, identity-sensitive work. For widescreen boards:

  • Size3840x2160 (4K landscape) or 2560x1440 (more reliable “2K” ceiling); custom sizes must use edges ≤3840 px, multiples of 16, aspect ratio ≤3:1, 655k–8.3M total pixels
  • Qualityhigh when panels contain small labels, product logos, or dense layout; medium for faster iteration while blocking shots
  • References — up to five image[] inputs for product pack shots, talent refs, or style frames
  • Prompt shape — write like a creative brief: background → subject → shot list → constraints (“no watermark”, “verbatim tagline in panel 15”)
curl https://api.openai.com/v1/images/generations \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $OPENAI_API_KEY" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{
    "model": "gpt-image-2",
    "prompt": "Cinematic 5x3 storyboard grid, 15 panels left-to-right top-to-bottom. Brand: [PRODUCT]. Scenes: [SHOT LIST]. Consistent talent and lighting. Panel labels for camera + SFX. Photorealistic, 16:9.",
    "size": "3840x2160",
    "quality": "high"
  }'

Outputs above 2560×1440 are documented as experimental—budget extra retries for 4K boards.

Seedance 2.0 prompt pattern

After the board is locked, Seedance should do motion—not redesign. A template used across community case studies:

STYLE: [match board — film stock, grade, lens feel]
WORLD: [lighting, weather, colour temperature]

REFERENCES:
Use @[storyboard_image] as the main reference.
Treat each panel as sequential keyframes; expand into one coherent 15s spot.
Preserve character and product identity from the board.

CONSTRAINTS:
- Dynamic but controlled camera movement
- No camera gear visible in frame
- No drone in shot
- No talking / dialogue on camera

Scenes (repeat storyboard verbatim):
1. [scene 1]
2. [scene 2]
...
15. [scene 15]

Economics and metrics (creator-reported)

Creators running this stack have publicly claimed production cost falling from roughly $5k–$10k per shoot to about $5 per finished ad, output rising to 12 cinematic 15-second spots per week, and ~6× higher hold rate on winning variants versus their old quarterly cadence. Treat those figures as anecdotal until you replicate with your brand, offers, and distribution—image iterations are far cheaper than video generations, so the “storyboard-first” pattern is the durable lesson even if your absolute dollars differ.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
What to generate first?One 5×3 GPT Image 2 board with explicit shot + audio direction
When to touch Seedance?Only after continuity QA on all 15 frames
Best Seedance guardrails?Verbatim scene list + no gear / no drone / no talking
Where to polish?CapCut for reverse shots, grain, grade, final audio bed
Official docs?gpt-image-2, OpenAI cookbook, community workflow cases

Research supplement

Web search was unavailable during this session. No additional verified sources could be retrieved beyond the author-supplied reference links. Readers seeking supplementary context on GPT Image 2 capabilities and Seedance 2.0 specifications should consult the official documentation linked in the article's reference section.

---

References

Categories
News

SAM 3D Body: Promptable Full-Body 3D Mesh From One Image (CVPR 2026, MHR)

SAM 3D Body (3DB) is Meta’s promptable single-image model for full-body 3D human mesh recovery—body, feet, and hands—from one RGB photo, built on the open Momentum Human Rig (MHR) representation and shipping with inference code, datasets, and CVPR 2026 oral presentation.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph TD
  IMG[Single RGB image] --> ENC[Image encoder DINOv3-H+ or ViT-H]
  PROMPT[Optional mask or 2D keypoints] --> ENC
  ENC --> BODY[Body mesh decoder]
  ENC --> HAND[Hand mesh decoder]
  BODY --> MHR[MHR parameters]
  HAND --> MHR
  MHR --> MESH[Full-body mesh body feet hands]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff

  class ENC,MHR agent
  class PROMPT,BODY,HAND hook
Shared image encoder with separate body and hand mesh decoders

Splitting hand supervision from global body pose reduces learning conflicts on fine fingers.

What it does

Given one in-the-wild image, 3DB predicts a watertight full-body mesh with articulated pose—including fine hand and foot detail—without multi-view capture or a depth sensor. Unlike classic SMPL-only pipelines, it targets the same “segment anything” interaction pattern as SAM: run fully automatic reconstruction, or steer output with segmentation masks and 2D keypoint prompts when the subject is occluded, cropped, or oddly posed.

Single RGB input to full-body mesh with body, feet, and hands.

Momentum Human Rig (MHR)

MHR separates skeletal structure from surface shape in the parametric mesh. That split makes poses easier to inspect, edit, and reuse in downstream rigs (avatars, biomechanics visualisation, AR try-on) compared with entangled body models. Meta positions MHR as the mesh backbone for 3DB and related avatar work, released under a permissive commercial license for the rig itself.

Run on a single image or guide reconstruction with masks and 2D keypoints

Promptable inference mirrors the SAM family when automatic mesh recovery fails.

Architecture and training

  • Encoder–decoder transformer stack with a multi-input image encoder for high-resolution body regions
  • Dual decoders — shared encoder feeds separate body and hand heads so global pose learning does not fight fine finger supervision
  • Backbones — DINOv3-H+ (840M) and ViT-H (631M) checkpoints on Hugging Face (facebook/sam-3d-body-dinov3, sam-3d-body-vith)
  • Annotations — multi-stage pipeline: manual keypoints, differentiable fitting, multi-view geometry, dense keypoint detectors, plus a data engine biased toward rare poses and hard viewpoints
  • Evaluation — category-stratified benchmark set (pose and appearance buckets) for behaviour analysis beyond aggregate MPJPE

Reported benchmarks (Nov 2025 checkpoints)

Backbone3DPW MPJPE ↓EMDB MPJPE ↓RICH PVE ↓COCO PCK@.05 ↑LSPET PCK@.05 ↑Freihand PA-MPJPE ↓
DINOv3-H+54.861.760.386.568.05.5
ViT-H54.862.961.786.868.95.5

Qualitative comparisons in the official repo pit 3DB against CameraHMR, NLF, and HMR2.0b on challenging occlusions and viewpoints; the paper reports gains in user-preference studies and standard HMR metrics. Treat leaderboard numbers as checkpoint-specific—re-run on your domain (sports, clinical gait, fashion) before production bets.

CVPR 2026 and SAM 3D family

3DB is accepted at CVPR 2026 (oral, pages 7209–7219) alongside SAM 3D Objects for object/scene reconstruction. A joint notebook aligns human and object meshes into one frame—useful for mixed human–object scenes in robotics or VFX previz.

Curated conference reading lists (for example the community top-cvpr-2026-papers repo) flag 3DB under pose estimation with paper, code, video, and demo links—handy when navigating 4,090 accepted papers from 16,092 submissions.

Quick start

# Hugging Face checkpoint (see INSTALL.md for access)
hf download facebook/sam-3d-body-dinov3 --local-dir checkpoints/sam-3d-body-dinov3

python demo.py \
  --image_folder ./images \
  --output_folder ./out \
  --checkpoint_path ./checkpoints/sam-3d-body-dinov3/model.ckpt \
  --mhr_path ./checkpoints/sam-3d-body-dinov3/assets/mhr_model.pt

Python API: setup_sam_3d_body(hf_repo_id="facebook/sam-3d-body-dinov3") then process_one_image. Optional --detector_name sam3 matches the public playground detector. Training data: facebook/sam-3d-body-dataset on Hugging Face.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
When to use 3DB?Single-photo full-body mesh with hands/feet; need SAM-style prompts for hard poses
vs SMPL-only HMR?MHR rig + dual decoders + prompt path; stronger reported in-the-wild generalisation
Clinical / physio angle?Metric 3D pose from phone video still needs validation, calibration, and privacy review—not a medical device out of the box
License?SAM License on checkpoints/code; MHR separately licensed—read both before commercial ship
Papers & codearXiv:2602.15989, sam-3d-body, Meta research page

Research supplement

Web search and WebFetch tools were not available during this run (permissions not granted), so no additional reputable sources beyond the author's five reference links could be verified and cited. The five provided references — the arXiv paper, both GitHub repositories, the Meta AI research page, and the CVPR 2026 open-access paper — are the primary sources and are already listed in the article.

---

References

Categories
News

Ideogram 4.0: 9.3B Open-Weight Image Model With 2K JSON Layout and Local Inference

Ideogram 4.0 is a 9.3B open-weight text-to-image model trained from scratch for design-grade output: native 2K resolution, structured JSON prompts with bounding boxes and colour palettes, and weights you can download, fine-tune, and run locally—while the hosted app, API, and MCP stay on the same model.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph LR
  JSON[JSON prompt validated] --> ENC[Qwen3-VL-8B text encoder frozen]
  ENC --> DIT[9.3B single-stream DiT 34 layers]
  NOISE[Flow-matching noise] --> DIT
  DIT --> SAM[Euler sampler asymmetric CFG]
  SAM --> VAE[KL VAE decode frozen]
  VAE --> IMG[Up to 2048 px RGB]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff

  class DIT,IMG agent
  class ENC,VAE,SAM hook
JSON prompt through frozen VLM encoder, trainable DiT, and VAE decode to 2K pixels

Only the 9.3B DiT is trained; encoder and VAE stay frozen at inference.

What shipped on 3 June 2026

  • Open weights on Hugging Face (ideogram-ai/ideogram-4-nf4, ideogram-4-fp8)—gated; accept the Ideogram 4 Non-Commercial Model Agreement to download
  • Inference code Apache 2.0 on github.com/ideogram-oss/ideogram4nf4 fits a single 24 GB GPU; fp8 for broader hardware
  • Every Ideogram plan plus the API and MCP for agent workflows—same visual model, different surfaces
  • Post-training editing stack in the product: prompt edit, native transparency, layerised text, extend, reframe, upscale, remix, magic fill

Launch reel: open weights, JSON prompting, and product surfaces.

Architecture (technical blog)

ComponentDetail
Trainable core34-layer single-stream DiT (~9.3B params); text + image latent tokens share attention with QK-RMSNorm and 3D MRoPE
Text encoderQwen3-VL-8B-Instruct (text-only); hidden states from 13 intermediate layers concatenated—not a single final layer
DecoderFrozen KL VAE, 8× spatial compression, 128 latent channels
SamplerEuler flow matching with asymmetric CFG (unconditional pass drops text tokens entirely)
Resolution256–2048 px per side, flexible aspect ratios; up to 2048 text tokens
PresetsV4_TURBO_12, V4_DEFAULT_20, V4_QUALITY_48 (quality tail lowers guidance near t=0)
Layout boxes, hex palettes, and typed text blocks for poster-grade generation

Training and inference share one schema—the pipeline rejects prompts that do not parse.

Structured JSON prompting

Training and inference both use the same JSON caption schema. The reference pipeline validates every input and rejects non-conforming JSON—plain strings are expanded via an optional magic prompt (hosted API with IDEOGRAM_API_KEY, or local LLM) into the structured format.

  • Bounding boxes[y_min, x_min, y_max, x_max] in 0–1000 normalised coords (origin top-left)
  • Colour palettes — up to 16 hex colours per image, 5 per element
  • Typed texttext elements carry the literal string plus a styling description for multi-font posters
  • Composable elementsobj and text entries under compositional_deconstruction
python run_inference.py \
  --prompt "campaign poster with clean type" \
  --output out.png \
  --quantization nf4 \
  --magic-prompt-key "$IDEOGRAM_API_KEY"

Benchmark claims (treat as directional)

AxisIdeogram 4.0 (reported)Notes from technical blog
Layout control0.69 mIoU7Bench bounding-box adherence
Text rendering0.97 OCR accuracyX-Omni English; leads open weights on param efficiency chart
Spatial reasoning0.76SpatialGenEval (spatial + basic splits)
Prompt alignment0.89Prism-bench alignment track
Designer ELO#2 overall, #1 open4,366 pairwise votes; GPT Image 2 ranked #1 closed

Independent smoke tests on single prompts can disagree with vendor charts—run your own evals for brand, type, and layout tasks that matter to you.

Three ways in (API, MCP, app)

SurfaceUse case
APIEmbed generation, editing, upscaling in products (ideogram-4.0 model id per developer docs)
MCPAgents create or revise visuals inside existing toolchains
AppHands-on iteration with editing controls
Open weightsLocal inference, research, fine-tuning experiments (non-commercial license unless separately licensed)

Partner integrations mentioned at launch include ComfyUI, fal, Replicate, Krea, Leonardo, Cloudflare, and others—check each host for rollout status.

License reality check

Code: Apache 2.0. Weights: Ideogram 4 Non-Commercial Model Agreement (gated on Hugging Face). You can inspect, run locally, and fine-tune for research and non-commercial work; commercial deployment needs a separate commercial path via Ideogram. That split is common in “open weight” image releases—open code ≠ unrestricted commercial weights.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
Why not only API?Weights + JSON schema let you build ComfyUI graphs, custom fine-tunes, and on-prem design pipelines
Minimum GPU?~24 GB with nf4 checkpoint
Fastest first image?ideogram.ai app or magic-prompt CLI above
Posters / type-heavy work?Lean into JSON text elements + bboxes; validate schema before generate
vs FLUX / Hunyuan?Smaller 9.3B DiT with VLM encoder stack; Ideogram claims text/layout lead among open weights at this size

Research supplement

Technical architectural details cited above were verified from the Ideogram 4 NF4 model card on Hugging Face, which provides primary documentation on the DiT layer count (34 layers), the Qwen3-VL-8B-Instruct text encoder, the 13-layer multi-scale feature extraction approach, and dual-branch classifier-free guidance. This model card is the authoritative primary source for architecture specifics not typically reproduced in secondary coverage.

---

References

Categories
News

Generative UI in 2026: Controlled, A2UI Declarative, and Open-Ended Patterns on AG-UI

Generative UI lets agents render real interface widgets—not only chat text—so a user who asks for a table gets a table, a budget gets cards, and tool output streams inline over a standard agent↔frontend wire.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph TD
  USER[User in React app] <-->|SSE AG-UI events| RUN[CopilotKit runtime proxy]
  RUN <-->|tool calls state deltas| AGENT[Agent backend ADK LangGraph etc]
  AGENT --> MCP[MCP tools and data]
  AGENT --> A2A[A2A other agents]
  AGENT --> A2UI[A2UI schema ops on AG-UI stream]
  A2UI --> RENDER[Catalog maps JSON to components]

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff
  classDef decision fill:#444,color:#fff

  class USER,AGENT agent
  class RUN,A2UI hook
  class RENDER decision
Controlled pre-built components, declarative A2UI schema, and open-ended sandboxed HTML

Pick the pattern on purpose—most drift into Controlled because the framework default does.

The protocol stack (three jobs)

ProtocolRoleTypical transport
MCP (Model Context Protocol)Connects agents to tools and datastdio / HTTP per MCP server
A2A (Agent-to-Agent)Connects agents to other agentsGoogle-led agent coordination
AG-UI (Agent–User Interaction)Connects agents to user-facing appsSSE (also WebSockets in spec)

AG-UI is an open, event-based protocol (MIT, ag-ui-protocol) born from CopilotKit’s agent↔UI work with LangGraph and CrewAI. During a run the backend emits typed events—text chunks, TOOL_CALL_START/END, STATE_DELTA patches—over a single HTTP POST plus SSE stream. State can flow both ways on the same channel: user edits surface to the agent; agent mutations surface to the UI without a second model call when you wire shared state.

A2UI (Apache 2.0, a2ui.org) is Google’s declarative spec for agents emitting UI as JSON schema. It rides on AG-UI; CopilotKit ships production renderers. v0.9 moves to a prompt–generate–validate loop: catalog rules live in the system prompt, the model generates freely, validators catch errors, and the agent self-corrects before the client sees bad JSON.

Roughly 400 tokens per registered component versus flat cost with a declarative catalog

Past about 15 render tools, declarative A2UI usually pays for itself in context window alone.

Three patterns (not three frameworks)

Most teams confuse “Generative UI” with whichever pattern their framework defaults to. In practice there are three architectural choices on a control→flexibility spectrum:

PatternWho owns layoutAgent seesBest when
ControlledYour design system (pre-built React components)One tool per component (~400 tokens each)≤10 pixel-perfect flows
Declarative (A2UI)Catalog + schema; agent fills dataOne tool returning a2ui_operationsLong tail of cards, forms, dashboards
Open-endedModel (HTML or MCP App surface)Sandboxed iframe or MCP Apps middlewareOne-shot throwaway visuals

Pattern 1 — Controlled (frontend owns UI)

You register a React component against a tool name (e.g. CopilotKit’s frontend action hook). The runtime advertises the tool over AG-UI; when the agent calls it, args stream in as props and the component renders inline. No Python tool required for the happy path—design tokens stay yours.

Token tax: every registered component sits in context before the user speaks. ~400 tokens per tool description × 25 components ≈ 10,000 tokens per turn. Past ~15 tools, descriptions overlap (“pie chart” vs “donut chart”) and mispicks rise. Fix descriptions around user intent (“compare proportions of a whole”) not widget names.

Shared state exception: when the agent must pin a metric or append a table row and other panes must update without another LLM call, add an agent-side tool that writes session state; the UI subscribes via the shared-state hook while chat still uses the same frontend tool name.

Pattern 2 — Declarative (A2UI schema)

The agent returns an ordered list of operations—typically create_surface, update_components, update_data_model—with a catalogId your frontend registered. One function can power dozens of card types; token cost stays flat as the library grows.

def search_flights(flights: list[Flight]) -> dict:
    return {
        "a2ui_operations": [
            {"type": "create_surface", "surfaceId": SURFACE_ID, "catalogId": CATALOG_ID},
            {"type": "update_components", "surfaceId": SURFACE_ID, "components": FLIGHT_SCHEMA},
            {"type": "update_data_model", "surfaceId": SURFACE_ID, "data": {"flights": flights}},
        ]
    }

Fixed vs dynamic schema: in fixed mode you author flights.json and the agent only supplies data; in dynamic mode a secondary LLM drafts the component tree per turn but still emits the same a2ui_operations envelope. The catalog is the contract—Zod (or JSON Schema) for allowed components; renderers map types to React. A common production bug: CATALOG_ID on the agent and catalogId in createCatalog on the client differ by one character—UI silently falls back to the basic catalog with no console error.

Trade-off: the model owns layout within the catalog; runs vary. Not for legal copy or marketing surfaces that need pixel lock.

Pattern 3 — Open-ended (MCP Apps and sandboxed HTML)

  • MCP Apps — MCP servers expose UI surfaces (e.g. diagram canvases). CopilotKit’s MCP Apps middleware attaches servers without hand-rolling the client protocol.
  • Sandboxed HTML — the runtime injects an HTML render tool; the agent returns markup inside an iframe with sandbox allowing scripts + forms, never allow-same-origin.

Open-ended shines for disposable answers (“visualise this API response”) and fails as a primary product surface—brand and layout drift run to run even with style rules in the system prompt. Typical iframe failure: buttons dead because sandbox flags omit allow-forms.

How to choose (decision tree)

  • Designer shipped pixel-perfect mocks for this flow? → Controlled
  • Dozens of card types or widgets? → Declarative
  • One-shot chart the user will never see again? → Open-ended
  • Unsure? → default Declarative; promote top 3 flows to Controlled; never default Open-ended
  • Already shipping >15 render tools? → you are in Controlled territory; start A2UI this week

Open templates (awesome-llm-apps)

The generative_ui_agents folder ships runnable references across all three patterns:

FolderPattern emphasis
generative-ui-starter-projectControlled hooks + fixed/dynamic A2UI (flights catalog)
ai-financial-coach-agentControlled budget cards
ai-dashboard-canvas-agentControlled + shared state
ai-deep-research-agentStreaming research cards
mcp-apps-generative-ui-showcaseMCP Apps (travel booking UI in chat)
ai-mcp-app-builderAgent writes new MCP app in E2B sandbox
ai-shadcn-component-generatorComponent generation utilities

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
Wire format?AG-UI over SSE; A2UI payloads as tool results / custom events
Prototype fast?Controlled frontend tools—watch token count
Scale UI variants?A2UI declarative + matched catalog IDs
Demo wow factor?Open-ended HTML or MCP Apps—keep off the main nav
Docs to read first?docs.ag-ui.com, A2UI v0.9 guide, CopilotKit generative UI docs

Research supplement

Web search and web fetch were not available during this analysis (permissions not granted). No externally-sourced supplementary research could be added. Claims above are derived from the reference links provided by the author, the article title, and training-data knowledge of AG-UI and A2UI as of mid-2026. Readers should verify AG-UI adoption metrics (GitHub stars, npm downloads), A2UI v0.9 schema specifics, and any performance benchmarks directly via the linked primary sources.

---

References

Categories
News

Gemma 4 12B: Encoder-Free Multimodal AI for Laptops (Apache 2.0, 256K Context)

Gemma 4 12B is Google DeepMind’s new encoder-free multimodal open model: text, image, video, and native audio flow through one decoder-only transformer under Apache 2.0, aimed at laptops with about 16 GB VRAM or unified memory and reasoning that approaches the larger 26B MoE sibling.

%%{init: {"theme": "base", "themeVariables": {"background": "transparent", "lineColor": "#000000"}}}%%
graph TD
  IMG[48x48 image patches] --> LLM[Gemma 4 12B decoder]
  AUD[16 kHz audio frames] --> LLM
  TXT[Text tokens] --> LLM
  LLM --> OUT[Text plus tool calls]

  ENC[Separate vision and audio encoders] -.->|not used in 12B| LLM

  classDef agent fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
  classDef hook fill:#189AB4,color:#fff
  class LLM agent
  class ENC hook
Diagram of text, image patches, and audio frames feeding one decoder

Vision and audio enter the same transformer as text—no separate vision or audio encoder stacks.

What encoder-free changes

Earlier Gemma 4 sizes (E2B/E4B and 31B) attach dedicated vision transformers (~150M–550M) and audio conformers (~300M). Gemma 4 12B Unified removes those stacks:

  • Vision (~35M embedder) — 48×48 pixel patches projected with one matmul plus factorised X/Y positional lookups; the LLM backbone does the heavy visual reasoning.
  • Audio — no conformer encoder; 16 kHz audio is sliced into 40 ms frames (640 floats) and linearly projected into token space.
  • Fine-tuning — LoRA or full tuning updates vision, audio, and text in one pass (Hugging Face, Unsloth) instead of co-tuning frozen encoders.

Google positions this as lower multimodal latency, a smaller memory footprint than medium models with separate encoders, and the first mid-sized Gemma with onboard audio (audio was previously limited to small edge variants).

Laptop-class deployment with quantised weights and local inference

Google targets ~16 GB VRAM or unified memory with Q4 weights around 6.7 GB plus KV cache.

Model specs and memory

PropertyGemma 4 12B Unified
Total parameters~12B (11.95B listed on Hugging Face)
Layers48 (hybrid local + global attention; final layer global)
Context256K tokens
ModalitiesText, image, video (frames), audio (E2B/E4B/12B only)
Languages140+ pre-training; 35+ out of the box
Weight load (BF16, weights only)~26.7 GB per Google sizing table
Q4 quantised load~6.7 GB (weights only; KV cache extra)
Practical laptop bar16 GB VRAM/unified memory (Google launch guidance)

Benchmark snapshot (instruction-tuned)

Figures below come from the official Gemma 4 12B model card (June 2026), comparing instruction-tuned variants:

Benchmark12B Unified26B MoE31B DenseE4B
MMLU Pro77.2%82.6%85.2%69.4%
LiveCodeBench v672.0%77.1%80.0%52.0%
GPQA Diamond78.8%82.3%84.3%58.6%
MMMU Pro (vision)69.1%73.8%76.9%52.6%
Tau2 agentic avg69.0%68.2%76.9%42.2%
FLEURS WER (audio, lower better)0.0690.08

On several agentic and multimodal scores, 12B sits close to the 26B active-MoE line while using less than half the memory footprint of the full 26B weight load—matching Google’s “laptop-class agent” positioning.

Latency tricks: MTP and LiteRT-LM

Gemma 4 12B ships with a multi-token prediction (MTP) draft model for speculative decoding—higher tokens/sec without changing output quality. For local apps, Google highlights:

  • Google AI Edge Gallery on macOS (offline on Apple Silicon, sandboxed Python in-chat)
  • Google AI Edge Eloquent — voice-edit style input with Gemma 12B
  • litert-lm serve — OpenAI-compatible local API for Continue, Aider, OpenCode, etc.
  • Ollama, LM Studio, llama.cpp, MLX, vLLM, SGLang — community inference paths
pip install -U transformers torch accelerate

# Instruction-tuned checkpoint
MODEL_ID = "google/gemma-4-12B-it"

# Local OpenAI-style server (LiteRT-LM)
litert-lm import --from-huggingface-repo=litert-community/gemma-4-12B-it-litert-lm \
  gemma-4-12B-it.litertlm gemma4-12b
litert-lm serve

Multimodal usage notes

  • Put images before text; put audio after text for best results.
  • Visual token budgets: 70, 140, 280, 560, 1120 — trade speed vs OCR/detail.
  • Audio clips up to 30 s; video up to 60 s at ~1 FPS (per model card).
  • Enable chain-of-thought with <|think|> in the system prompt; omit prior thoughts from chat history on follow-up turns.

Where it sits in the Gemma 4 family

SizeBest for
E2B / E4BPhones, browsers, 128K context, encoders + audio
12B UnifiedLaptops — encoder-free multimodal + audio + 256K
26B A4B MoEHigh throughput; ~3.8B active per token
31B DenseTop open leaderboard tier; vision without native audio

Gemma 4 downloads crossed 150 million (Google, June 2026). Weights and notebooks live on Hugging Face and Kaggle; production deploy paths include Model Garden, Cloud Run, and GKE.

Builder takeaway

QuestionAnswer
Why 12B vs E4B?Native audio at medium scale + stronger reasoning/coding without 26B memory
Why 12B vs 31B?Fits consumer GPU; encoder-free multimodal path; Apache 2.0 freedom
Fastest try?Ollama/LM Studio or google/gemma-4-12B-it in Transformers
Agents?Function calling, Gemma Skills repo, local litert-lm serve

Research supplement

The following context supplements the article based on publicly available documentation at time of writing.

  • Encoder-free multimodal precedent: The encoder-free approach for multimodal models was explored in models such as Fuyu-8B (Adept AI, 2023), which processed image patches directly without a vision encoder. Gemma 4 12B continues this architectural direction at a larger scale and with a substantially longer context window.
  • Official model card: Technical specifications, benchmark results (MMMU, VQA, text benchmarks), and quantisation guidance are published on the Hugging Face model card for google/gemma-4-12B.
  • Developer guide: Google's developer blog publishes a detailed integration guide at the Gemma 4 12B developer guide, covering recommended inference runtimes, hardware requirements, and example code.
  • Core Gemma documentation: The canonical Gemma documentation at ai.google.dev/gemma/docs/core covers model family architecture, safety evaluations, and terms of use across the Gemma 4 line.
---

References