donut
private-gpt
donut | private-gpt | |
---|---|---|
19 | 131 | |
5,312 | 51,882 | |
2.0% | 2.3% | |
3.6 | 9.2 | |
6 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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donut
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Ask HN: Why are all OCR outputs so raw?
maybe this is better? https://github.com/clovaai/donut
I'm not sure
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Show HN: BetterOCR combines and corrects multiple OCR engines with an LLM
Yup! But I'm still exploring options. (any recommendations would be welcomed!) Here are some candidates I'm considering:
- https://github.com/mindee/doctr
- https://github.com/open-mmlab/mmocr
- https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/PaddleOCR (honestly I don't know Mandarin so I'm a bit stuck)
- https://github.com/clovaai/donut - While it's primarily an "OCR-free document understanding transformer," I think it's worth experimenting with. Think I can sort this out by letting the LLM reason through it multiple times (although this will impact performance)
- yesterday got a suggestion to consider https://github.com/kakaobrain/pororo - I don't think development is still active but the results are pretty great on Korean text
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New to ML, looking for some GPU and learning material info
I am also interested in experimenting with something like DONUT (https://github.com/clovaai/donut) but I have never seen anything on what the VRAM expectations are for something like this. Does anyone know also if there are any newer better models than this for document parsing as well? Or what the VRAM requirements for something like this tend to be?
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[D] Is there a good ai model for image-to-text where the images are diagrams and screenshots of interfaces?
Here are a few useful resources you could start with: [Pix2Struct by Google Research](https://github.com/google-research/pix2struct) might be a valuable tool, although it will most likely need some fine-tuning to fit your specifics. You can also find some fine-tuned models on HuggingFace by searching 'pix2struct'. Another option worth considering is [DonutI](https://github.com/clovaai/donut). Like Pix2Struct, fine-tuning likely needed to meet your requirements. Tesseract OCR is another alternative, particularly for handling text. It's primarily designed for pages of text, think books, but with some tweaking and specific flags, it can process tables as well as text chunks in regions of a screenshot. Bit too much tweaking for my taste. As I'm also in search of OCR tools for UI and chart screenshots, so share if you find something else.
- How to Automate Document Extraction from Insurance Documents
- FLaNK Stack Weekly 29 may 2023
- Donut: OCR-Free Document Understanding Transformer
private-gpt
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Ask HN: Has Anyone Trained a personal LLM using their personal notes?
PrivateGPT is a nice tool for this. It's not exactly what you're asking for, but it gets part of the way there.
https://github.com/zylon-ai/private-gpt
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PrivateGPT exploring the Documentation
Further details available at: https://docs.privategpt.dev/api-reference/api-reference/ingestion
- Show HN: I made an app to use local AI as daily driver
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privateGPT VS quivr - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 12 Jan 2024
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Ask HN: How do I train a custom LLM/ChatGPT on my own documents in Dec 2023?
Run https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT
Then
make ingest /path/to/folder/with/files
Then chat to the LLM.
Done.
Docs: https://docs.privategpt.dev/overview/welcome/quickstart
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Mozilla "MemoryCache" Local AI
PrivateGPT repository in case anyone's interested: https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT . It doesn't seem to be linked from their official website.
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What Is Retrieval-Augmented Generation a.k.a. RAG
I’m preparing a small internal tool for my work to search documents and provide answers (with references), I’m thinking of using GPT4All [0], Danswer [1] and/or privateGPT [2].
The RAG technique is very close to what I have in mind, but I don’t want the LLM to “hallucinate” and generate answers on its own by synthesizing the source documents. As stated by many others, we’re living in interesting times.
[0] https://gpt4all.io/index.html
[1] https://www.danswer.ai/
[2] https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT
- LM Studio – Discover, download, and run local LLMs
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Ask HN: Local LLM Recommendation?
https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/14niv66/using_a...
https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT
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Run ChatGPT-like LLMs on your laptop in 3 lines of code
I've been playing around with https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT and https://github.com/simonw/llm and wanted to create a simple Python package that made it easier to run ChatGPT-like LLMs on your own machine, use them with non-public data, and integrate them into practical applications.
This resulted in Python package I call OnPrem.LLM.
In the documentation, there are examples for how to use it for information extraction, text generation, retrieval-augmented generation (i.e., chatting with documents on your computer), and text-to-code generation: https://amaiya.github.io/onprem/
Enjoy!
What are some alternatives?
PaddleOCR - Awesome multilingual OCR toolkits based on PaddlePaddle (practical ultra lightweight OCR system, support 80+ languages recognition, provide data annotation and synthesis tools, support training and deployment among server, mobile, embedded and IoT devices)
localGPT - Chat with your documents on your local device using GPT models. No data leaves your device and 100% private.
image-to-sound-python- - A python project for converting an Image into audible sound using OCR and speech synthesis
gpt4all - gpt4all: run open-source LLMs anywhere
qlora - QLoRA: Efficient Finetuning of Quantized LLMs
h2ogpt - Private chat with local GPT with document, images, video, etc. 100% private, Apache 2.0. Supports oLLaMa, Mixtral, llama.cpp, and more. Demo: https://gpt.h2o.ai/ https://codellama.h2o.ai/
CascadeTabNet - This repository contains the code and implementation details of the CascadeTabNet paper "CascadeTabNet: An approach for end to end table detection and structure recognition from image-based documents"
ollama - Get up and running with Llama 3, Mistral, Gemma, and other large language models.
Multi-Type-TD-TSR - Extracting Tables from Document Images using a Multi-stage Pipeline for Table Detection and Table Structure Recognition:
text-generation-webui - A Gradio web UI for Large Language Models. Supports transformers, GPTQ, AWQ, EXL2, llama.cpp (GGUF), Llama models.
deepdoctection - A Repo For Document AI
llama.cpp - LLM inference in C/C++