What’s Happening in BC in AI and ML?
The VCS team gets a call about creating visuals for the Las Vegas Sphere—the biggest screen on Earth. Most studios would need months just to plan it. VCS had six weeks. So what did they do? They built an entire pipeline that could preview their work on Meta Quest and Apple Vision Pro without ever setting foot in Vegas.
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That’s BC innovation. We don’t just solve problems—we reinvent how problems get solved.
Scene: Picture this: They're testing the visuals in a Whistler
parking lot, Quest headsets on, fine-tuning a show that would
eventually play on a screen the size of four football fields.
Someone walks by with their dog, probably thinking they're crazy.
They're actually making history.
But that’s just one story. Let me take you to the SFU Metacreation Lab.
For years, I’ve been documenting BC through my lens—every corner, every moment, every play of light. Now, we’re training small AI models on this archive. But here’s the wild part: The AI isn’t just recreating photos—it’s dreaming in the visual language of BC. It’s learning not just what we see, but how we see.
Story Beat: The first time I saw the AI generate an image
that captured that unique Vancouver light—you know, when the
rain's just stopped and everything glows—I realized we weren't
just training an AI. We were teaching it to see beauty the
way we do.
Then there’s Suzanne Gildert at Nirvanic AI. While everyone else is debating if AI can think, she’s exploring if AI can feel. Her quantum conscious robot dog project went viral, but that’s just the surface. She’s asking questions that could only come from a place where technology and humanity collide in interesting ways.
The real magic, though? It’s happening in the spaces between.
Remember that Vancouver AI Meetup I mentioned? It started with a few of us geeking out over ChatGPT in a coffee shop. Now it’s over 1,000 members strong. But here’s what makes it special:
Community Snapshot: Last month, someone walked in with an
idea that sounded impossible. Two weeks later, they had a
prototype. Two months later, they're starting a company.
That's not rare here—it's Tuesday.
And this is happening everywhere in BC:
- Small studios pushing boundaries
- Independent creators experimenting
- Ideas flowing between art and technology
- Communities forming and reforming
Why does it work here? Because we’ve built something unique:
- A culture where creative risk-taking is celebrated
- Where egos take a backseat to innovation
- Where competition gives way to collaboration
- Where global ambition meets local values
Closing Scene: Walk into any coffee shop in Mount Pleasant,
Railtown, or Gastown. Look around. That person with three
screens open, training an AI model? They might be redefining
how we create art. That group huddled over laptops? They're
probably building the next big thing in creative technology.
And the best part? If you walk over and ask what they're
working on, they'll probably invite you to join them.