Machine Generated Data
Tags
Color Analysis
Feature analysis
Amazon
Clarifai

AWS Rekognition
Menu | 98.7% | |
Categories
Imagga
created on 2022-06-04
text visuals | 93.2% | |
streetview architecture | 6.8% | |
Captions
Microsoft
created by unknown on 2022-06-04
a close up of text on a black background | 90% | |
a close up of text on a white background | 89.8% | |
close up of text on a black background | 89.3% | |
Clarifai
No captions written
Salesforce
Created by general-english-image-caption-blip on 2025-05-17
a photograph of a sign that says women's weekly schedule of work
Created by general-english-image-caption-blip-2 on 2025-07-06
a sign that reads women do irregular work
OpenAI GPT
Created by gpt-4 on 2024-01-26
The image is a blackboard with white chalk text detailing "Women do Irregular Work." It is set up as a schedule of an unusually fast wrapper stripper for four weeks, listing the weekly total work done in pounds from the week of August 30, 1907, to the week of September 27, 1907. The days of the week are listed from Monday through Saturday, with the corresponding weights in pounds next to each day. Some days are blank, indicating no work done, and a note at the bottom explains that on days that are blank, the woman was sent home because of no work, and several times she had poor stock. It also states that her average is 18 lbs. a day at $0.05 a lb., amounting to $0.90 a day. There is visible wear on the blackboard, especially around the area indicating Friday of the first week.
Anthropic Claude
Created by us.anthropic.claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022-v2:0 on 2025-06-27
This appears to be a historical work schedule or record, likely from 1907, showing the irregular and inconsistent nature of work for women during that time period. The image shows a chalkboard or sign detailing the work schedule of a "wrapper stripper" over four weeks in August and September 1907.
The schedule tracks daily work output measured in pounds, with significant variations from day to day - ranging from as high as 35 pounds to as low as 3 pounds, with many days marked as having no work at all (indicated by dashes or blanks). The bottom of the board notes that on blank days, the worker was sent home due to lack of work or poor stock availability.
The final line indicates that the average daily output was 18 pounds, paid at a rate of 5 cents per pound, resulting in an average daily wage of 90 cents.
This document appears to be making a statement about the precarious and inconsistent nature of women's industrial work in the early 20th century, highlighting the irregular schedules and unreliable income these workers faced.
Created by claude-3-haiku-48k-20240307 on 2024-03-30
The image shows a schedule of an "unusually fast wrapper stripper" who does irregular work. The schedule lists the weight loss over a period of 4 weeks, with the person losing anywhere from 6 to 35 pounds during this time. The image also states that on days when there was no work, the person was sent home, and several times had poor stock. It provides the person's average work rate of 18 lbs per day at $0.05 per pound and $0.90 per day.
Meta Llama
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-90b-instruct-v1:0 on 2024-12-29
The image depicts a blackboard with white chalk writing, titled "Women do Irregular Work" in large letters at the top. The title is followed by a subtitle that reads, "Schedule of an unusually fast wrapper stripper for four weeks." Below the title, there are four columns of text, each representing a week from August 30 to September 27, 1907. Each column lists the days of the week, with some days marked as blank or having a dash (-) instead of a number.
At the bottom of the board, a note explains that on days marked as blank, the woman was sent home due to no work, and on several occasions, she had poor stock. Additionally, her average weight is listed as 18 pounds per day at $0.05 per pound, which translates to $0.90 per day. The overall appearance of the board suggests that it was used to track the woman's work schedule and productivity over a four-week period.
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-11b-instruct-v1:0 on 2024-12-02
The image presents a table illustrating the weight loss of women who engage in irregular work, specifically as fast wrapper strippers. The table is divided into four columns, each representing a week, and seven rows, representing the days of the week.
- Week Aug. 30, '07
- Mon.: 33 Lbs.
- Tues., 35
- Wed., -
- Thurs., 3
- Fri., 1
- Sat., 12
- Week Sept. 11, '07
- Mon., 32 Lbs.
- Tues., 25
- Wed., -
- Thurs., 27
- Fri., 33
- Sat., -
- Week Sept. 17, '07
- Mon., 19 Lbs.
- Tues., 20
- Wed., 31
- Thurs., 34
- Fri., -
- Sat., -
- Week Sept. 27, '07
- Mon., 6 Lbs.
- Tues., 29
- Wed., 13
- Thurs., -
- Fri., 23
- Sat., 23
The table provides a clear visual representation of the weight loss patterns of women who engage in irregular work as fast wrapper strippers. The data suggests that the women experience significant weight loss during the week, with some weeks showing more substantial losses than others. The table also highlights the variability in weight loss across different days of the week, with some days showing no weight loss or even a gain. Overall, the table provides valuable insights into the impact of irregular work on weight loss in women.
Amazon Nova
Created by amazon.nova-lite-v1:0 on 2025-06-09
The image is a document titled "Women do Irregular Work" that displays a schedule of an unusually fast wrapper stripper for four weeks. The document is dated from August 30, 2007, to September 27, 2007. The schedule is organized into four columns, each representing a different week. Each column lists the days of the week (Monday through Saturday) and the corresponding weight in pounds of the work done by the worker. The weight of the work varies significantly from day to day, with some days having no work at all. The document also includes a note stating that on days with no work, the worker was sent home due to a lack of work or poor stock. The average weight of work done per day is 18 pounds, and the worker earns $0.05 per pound, resulting in an average daily income of $0.90.
Created by amazon.nova-pro-v1:0 on 2025-06-09
The image shows a blackboard with white writing on it. The writing on the blackboard reads "Women do Irregular Work" at the top. Below that, there is a schedule of an unusually fast wrapper stripper for four weeks. The schedule lists the days of the week and the number of pounds worked each day for four weeks. The text also mentions that on days that are blank, she was sent home because of no work, and several times she had poor stock. The average is 18 lbs. a day at $0.05 a lb. $90 a day.
Google Gemini
Created by gemini-2.0-flash on 2025-05-26
The image is a chalkboard or sign with white text outlining a "Schedule of an unusually fast wrapper stripper for four weeks." The title states, "Women do Irregular Work." The dates are specified as weeks starting on August 30, 2007, September 11, 2007, September 17, 2007, and September 27, 2007. Under each week are the days of the week (Monday through Saturday) with a number of pounds listed for each day, presumably the number of pounds the wrapper stripper processed. There are also dashes on certain days of the week under the date in place of a number.
Below the schedules, there is a sentence stating "On days that are blank, she was sent home because of no work, and several times she had poor stock." At the very bottom, the text reads, "Her average is 18 Lbs. a day at $.05 a Lb. $90 a day."
Created by gemini-2.0-flash-lite on 2025-05-26
The image is a black and white text document with a title that says "Women do Irregular Work". The text is organized into a table format that lists the schedule of an "unusually fast wrapper stripper" for four weeks, each week from August 30, 2007, to September 27, 2007. The table includes the days of the week and the number of pounds worked by the stripper on each day, with blank spaces indicating days with no work. Below the schedule, there is a paragraph explaining that the stripper was sent home on the blank days due to lack of work or poor stock. The final sentence states that her average work was 18 lbs. a day at $.05 a Lb. $.90 a day. The document has a slightly aged appearance, as if it were a historical document or a sign.
Mistral Pixtral
Created by us.mistral.pixtral-large-2502-v1:0 on 2025-06-06
The image is a schedule titled "Women do Irregular Work," detailing the workload of a woman employed as a wrapper stripper over four weeks in August and September 2007. The schedule is broken down by week and day, showing the amount of work (in pounds) she completed each day. Here is a detailed summary:
Week Aug. 30, '07:
- Monday: 33 lbs.
- Tuesday: 35 lbs.
- Wednesday: No work recorded.
- Thursday: 3 lbs.
- Friday: 11 lbs.
- Saturday: 12 lbs.
Week Sept. 11, '07:
- Monday: 32 lbs.
- Tuesday: 25 lbs.
- Wednesday: No work recorded.
- Thursday: 27 lbs.
- Friday: 33 lbs.
- Saturday: No work recorded.
Week Sept. 17, '07:
- Monday: 19 lbs.
- Tuesday: 20 lbs.
- Wednesday: 31 lbs.
- Thursday: 34 lbs.
- Friday: No work recorded.
- Saturday: No work recorded.
Week Sept. 27, '07:
- Monday: 6 lbs.
- Tuesday: 29 lbs.
- Wednesday: 13 lbs.
- Thursday: No work recorded.
- Friday: 23 lbs.
- Saturday: 23 lbs.
Additional notes:
- On days that are blank, she was sent home because of no work or poor stock.
- Her average workload is 18 lbs. per day.
- The pay rate is $0.05 per pound, amounting to $0.90 per day on average.
This schedule highlights the irregular nature of her work and the fluctuating workload over the four weeks.
Qwen
Created by Qwen/Qwen2.5-VL-7B-Instruct on 2025-07-28
The image is a black-and-white poster or schedule titled "Women do Irregular Work." It details the schedule of an unusually fast wrapper stripper for four weeks, with the dates August 30, 2007, through September 27, 2007. The poster shows the number of pounds processed each day for each week.
The breakdown is as follows:
Week of August 30, '07:
- Monday: 33 lbs.
- Tuesday: 35 lbs.
- Wednesday: — (blank, indicating no work)
- Thursday: 3 lbs.
- Friday: 1 lb.
- Saturday: 12 lbs.
Week of September 11, '07:
- Monday: 32 lbs.
- Tuesday: 25 lbs.
- Wednesday: — (blank, indicating no work)
- Thursday: 27 lbs.
- Friday: 33 lbs.
- Saturday: — (blank, indicating no work)
Week of September 17, '07:
- Monday: 19 lbs.
- Tuesday: 20 lbs.
- Wednesday: 31 lbs.
- Thursday: 34 lbs.
- Friday: — (blank, indicating no work)
- Saturday: — (blank, indicating no work)
Week of September 27, '07:
- Monday: 6 lbs.
- Tuesday: 29 lbs.
- Wednesday: 13 lbs.
- Thursday: — (blank, indicating no work)
- Friday: 23 lbs.
- Saturday: 23 lbs.
The poster notes that on days marked as blank, the worker was sent home due to a lack of work, and several times there was a shortage of stock. The average weight processed per day over these four weeks is 18 lbs., with a wage of $0.05 per pound and $0.90 per day.
Created by Qwen/Qwen2.5-VL-72B-Instruct on 2025-07-28
This image is a black-and-white poster, titled "Women do Irregular Work," which appears to document the work schedule and productivity of a female wrapper stripper over four weeks in 1907. The poster is divided into four columns, each representing a week, with the dates and the pounds of work completed (or not completed) on each day of the week.
Top Section: The title is prominently displayed at the top, followed by a subtitle explaining that the schedule is for an unusually fast wrapper stripper over four weeks.
Weekly Data: The poster lists the pounds of work done each day from Monday to Saturday for four weeks starting from August 30, '07, to September 27, '07. For example, on August 30, '07 (Monday), 33 pounds were completed, while on September 11, '07 (Monday), 32 pounds were completed. Some days have a blank entry, indicating no work was done.
Bottom Section: There is a note explaining that on days with blank entries, the worker was sent home because there was no work, and several times she had poor stock. The average work output is calculated as 18 pounds a day, with a pay rate of $0.05 per pound, resulting in an average daily earnings of $0.90.
The poster highlights the irregularity of the work and the impact of factors like available stock on the worker's productivity and earnings.