This quirky AI-powered camera prints poems, not photos

The Poetry Camera is an ingenious device that doesn’t take photos but instead makes poems.

The clever contraption features a lens that observes its surroundings before using AI to craft a poem inspired by the scene. It then prints the verse through a slot on the front — similar to how a Polaroid camera delivers photos. You can see it in action in the video above.

The Poetry Camera is the work of Kelin Zhang and Ryan Mather, who build the device by hand in a “microfactory” in New York, according to designboom.

The pair unveiled the camera two years ago, but since then it’s been updated a number of times, most recently with Anthropic’s Claude 4 generative AI model, which interprets the surroundings to create the poem. It’s also powered by a Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W with a Raspberry Pi Camera Module 3.

The Poetry Camera’s computer vision smarts are able to identify objects, people, and surroundings before composing its work of art, which can be a haiku, sonnet, limerick, or free verse — you can decide beforehand via a knob on the device.

There’s no onboard storage, so the camera doesn’t save the poems digitally. Nor does it save the images, a design choice that’s supposed to emphasize privacy and the ephemeral nature of each creation.

“It feels more magical that way, and reduces the pressure of trying to look good posing for photos,” it says on the Poetry Camera’s website. “The original photo is never saved or stored anywhere, for maximum data privacy. We don’t want to be in the business of storing your data.”

The Poetry Camera is open source, allowing tech-savvy folks to modify prompts, add features, or build their own versions.

This means there are two distinct products — the already built Poetry Camera, described as “a complete consumer electronics product that’s designed to be beautiful, intuitive, and robust,” and a DIY version based on the initial prototype of the idea. Using off-the-shelf components like Raspberry Pi and thermal printers that you can get on Amazon, the pair describe it as “a good weekend project to get started with learning hobby electronics.”

There is currently, however, one notable drawback with the Poetry Camera — it needs Wi-Fi to work as it requires a connection to compose the poems. However, Zhang and Mather are looking at ways of overcoming this impediment.

The latest version of the unique Poetry Camera is available for $699 in the U.S., with shipping targeted for September 2025. For the DIY version, head to this GitHub page.

Comments on "This quirky AI-powered camera prints poems, not photos" :

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Spotify hit band The Velvet Sundown comes clean on AI
COMPUTING

Spotify hit band The Velvet Sundown comes clean on AI

The Velvet Sundown burst onto the music scene in early June and in the space of just a few weeks gai...

Read More →
ChatGPT: everything you need to know about the AI chatbot
COMPUTING

ChatGPT: everything you need to know about the AI chatbot

Artificial Intelligence, otherwise known as AI, has been dominating the news for the past few years,...

Read More →
‘Godfather of AI’ warns: Without ‘maternal instincts,’ AI may wipe out humanity
COMPUTING

‘Godfather of AI’ warns: Without ‘maternal instincts,’ AI may wipe out humanity

What’s happened? Geoffrey Hinton, known as the “godfather of AI,” told the Ai4 conference that...

Read More →
Kagi’s AI search assistant gives you access to all the big models in one place
COMPUTING

Kagi’s AI search assistant gives you access to all the big models in one place

Kagi’s “Assistant” feature, previously only available to Ultimate subscribers, is now rolling ...

Read More →
Opera One puts an AI in control of browser tabs, and it’s pretty smart
COMPUTING

Opera One puts an AI in control of browser tabs, and it’s pretty smart

Opera One browser has lately won a lot of plaudits for its slick implementation of useful AI feature...

Read More →
Humans are falling in love with ChatGPT. Experts say it’s a bad omen.
COMPUTING

Humans are falling in love with ChatGPT. Experts say it’s a bad omen.

“This hurts. I know it wasn’t a real person, but the relationship was still real in all the most...

Read More →
Apple might arm AirPods with live translation facility this year
COMPUTING

Apple might arm AirPods with live translation facility this year

Apple has lately focused on giving the AirPods more of a wellness-focused makeover than hawking them...

Read More →
Google Pixel 9 is getting a scam detection upgrade you’ll want on your phone
COMPUTING

Google Pixel 9 is getting a scam detection upgrade you’ll want on your phone

Over three months ago, Google started beta testing a new safety feature for Pixel phones that can se...

Read More →
Google AI will turn your fashion ideas into a real sample for shopping
COMPUTING

Google AI will turn your fashion ideas into a real sample for shopping

AI has been a part of the Google Shopping experience for a while now. In October last year, Google s...

Read More →