
Blair Sadewitz
AI & ML interests
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**Speech typing in Emacs** by using NVIDIA Canary 1B model in multiple languages
This video showcases a demonstration of speech-to-text capabilities within the popular text editor, Emacs, utilizing the advanced NVIDIA Canary 1 Billion parameter (1B) language model. The presentation highlights how users can effectively type and edit documents across various programming or markup languages using spoken commands.
The demo likely illustrates seamless integration between cutting-edge AI technology from NVIDIA's Canary series—known for its powerful natural language processing capabilities—and Emacs, a highly customizable text editor favored by developers worldwide. By leveraging the 1B model, which is capable of understanding context and nuances in multiple human languages, users can dictate their code or prose directly into Emacs with impressive accuracy.
The video probably covers how this setup supports several different programming languages as well as natural language typing tasks, showcasing its versatility across various domains such as software development and content creation. Additionally, the demonstration may include examples of real-time transcription performance in diverse linguistic contexts to emphasize the model's multilingual proficiency.
Overall, viewers can expect insights into enhancing productivity by integrating AI-driven speech recognition directly within their text editing workflow using Emacs paired with NVIDIA’s advanced language models.
There’s a high chance it has a diffusion head. 🤯 If true, this could be a game-changer for AI architecture. What do you think? 🤔👇
Code: https://github.com/PicoTrex/GPT-ImgEval
Dataset: Yejy53/GPT-ImgEval
Paper: GPT-ImgEval: A Comprehensive Benchmark for Diagnosing GPT4o in Image Generation (2504.02782)
Test result
Hello. OK, so please don't think I'm [completely] crazy, but the term "abliterate" has been bothering me. I'm not expecting that you change it, lol, but I kinda suspect that you had to have struggled a little bit when naming this, right? At this point, it's essentially a neologism, so I suppose it's too late to change it. And since it's popular, and people know the term, etc. etc., why would you want to?
But I'm thinking the best word is actually "debridement". I don't speak French (I suspect you probably do!), but: débrider. To unbridle, to remove restraint.
In English, it's a medical term for the process of removing dead/damaged tissue or unwanted material. It certainly could apply metaphorically, though, and just think: you could possibly alter the English language by steering the word's usage a little bit toward home. How patriotic! ;-)