Tamez Labs

Veo 3 vs Sora 2: which one ships the commercial

10 min · 7. maj 2026
episode Veo 3 vs Sora 2: which one ships the commercial cover

Description

Google and OpenAI are literally fighting right now over which AI can shoot a 30-second Nike-style running shoe commercial, and neither one can do it without a human fixing the seams. Sora 2 dropped April 26 with physics modeling that actually understands how a foot hits pavement, while Veo 3.1 still wins on studio lighting and 4K vertical output for social cuts. But both tools fall apart on hand shots, character consistency across clips, and anything requiring precise direction from someone who writes prompts like a cinematographer, not a caption.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Tamez Labs community!

Get Started

2 months for 19 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

54 episodes

episode We shipped a 60 second apparel spot using Google Omni as the heavy lift artwork

We shipped a 60 second apparel spot using Google Omni as the heavy lift

Google just dropped Gemini Omni at I/O 2026 and motion designers are already stress-testing it on real client work — specifically, building a full 60-second branded spot for an indie apparel brand using nothing but Omni and After Effects. The catch is brutal and very real: Omni hard-caps every clip at 10 seconds, slaps a mandatory AI watermark on every export, and has zero native integration with AE, meaning a 60-second deliverable is at minimum six separately generated clips, each transferred by hand. The stateful conversational editing is genuinely new and useful, but whether this two-tool pipeline produces something that reads as craft instead of just content is a question the field cannot answer yet — Omni was barely 72 hours old when designers started finding out.

21. maj 202611 min
episode Why Physical Intelligence Open-Sourced a $1.1B Model artwork

Why Physical Intelligence Open-Sourced a $1.1B Model

Two robotic arms ran a commercial espresso machine for 13 hours straight at Physical Intelligence's SF headquarters — grinding, pulling shots, frothing, cleaning, repeating — with zero human intervention and zero reprogramming between cycles. This isn't a party trick: it's proof that their open-source AI model, trained across hundreds of tasks and dozens of robot types, can handle the relentless small variations of real work without breaking. The team behind it includes the researchers who basically built the academic foundation for modern robotics, they've raised over a billion dollars from Bezos and Altman, and they just made the whole thing free to download — which is either the most generous move in tech or the most aggressive land grab for becoming the default brain inside every robot on earth.

11. maj 202610 min