By the way this is a video prompt. If you want to create video you can use the same.
Prompt:
A slim, beautiful Indian woman emerges gracefully from a luxurious swimming pool at sunset. She is wearing an elegant purple bikini that glistens with water droplets. As she rises from the pool, her body moves slowly and fluidly, creating gentle ripples in the water around her.
Her head tilts slightly upward toward the sky, eyes closed, with a serene and confident expression. Both of her hands move behind her head, lifting and holding her long, wet hair, allowing water to cascade down her back and shoulders.
The lighting is warm and golden, casting a soft glow on her skin and highlighting the shimmer of the water. The background features a modern poolside setting with blurred palm trees and a calm, luxurious atmosphere. The camera captures her in slow motion, starting from the water level and subtly tilting upward as she rises, emphasizing elegance and grace.
Style: cinematic, high detail, soft focus, slow motion, 4K, shallow depth of field, warm tones, luxury aesthetic.
Aurora just got a major update and the results are noticeably better. Photorealism is approaching Midjourney v6 quality, and it handles text in images better than DALL-E 3. The best part: it's included in your X Premium+ subscription with no per-image cost. Generated a full set of marketing assets for a client project — 30+ images — for $0 additional cost. The main limitation is still the lack of fine-grained control compared to Midjourney.
Tested Grok's DeepSearch on 20 recent news topics and compared against Perplexity Pro. Grok was faster to surface breaking developments (thanks to X data access) and better at synthesizing multiple perspectives on controversial topics. Perplexity was better at academic/scientific queries and provided cleaner citations. For news analysis and social sentiment tracking, Grok DeepSearch is genuinely the best tool available right now.
If you're building anything that needs real-time social analysis, the Grok + X API combination is unbeatable. We built a brand monitoring dashboard that pulls X posts, feeds them to Grok for sentiment analysis and trend detection, and generates daily briefs. The model understands internet culture and slang better than any competitor. Processing 50k posts/day and our total API bill is under $200/month.
Ran a structured evaluation of Grok vs ChatGPT vs Claude on 50 politically sensitive prompts. Grok is noticeably less likely to refuse or hedge on controversial questions — it will give you a direct answer with caveats rather than declining to engage. Whether this is good or bad depends on your use case. For research and journalism, the reduced friction is valuable. For customer-facing products, the lack of guardrails could be a liability.
Grok 3 hit #2 on the LMSys Arena leaderboard and I've been putting it through its paces. It's genuinely strong at creative tasks and has a unique voice that's less corporate than ChatGPT. The "fun mode" can be hit or miss but "accurate mode" is surprisingly reliable for research. Biggest weakness: it hallucinates citations more than Claude or GPT. Biggest strength: it processes X/Twitter data in real-time, which is genuinely unique for breaking news analysis.
Grok shud learn from Kling 😀
Workflows from the Neura Market marketplace related to this Grok resource