dspy
Open-Assistant
dspy | Open-Assistant | |
---|---|---|
22 | 329 | |
10,820 | 36,667 | |
17.5% | 0.4% | |
9.9 | 8.3 | |
6 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dspy
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Computer Vision Meetup: Develop a Legal Search Application from Scratch using Milvus and DSPy!
Legal practitioners often need to find specific cases and clauses across thousands of dense documents. While traditional keyword-based search techniques are useful, they fail to fully capture semantic content of queries and case files. Vector search engines and large language models provide an intriguing alternative. In this talk, I will show you how to build a legal search application using the DSPy framework and the Milvus vector search engine.
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Pydantic Logfire
I’ve observed that Pydantic - which we’ve used for years in our API stack - has become very popular in LLM applications, for its type-adjacent features. It serves as a foundational technology for prompting libraries like [DSPy](https://github.com/stanfordnlp/dspy) which are abstracting “up the stack” of LLM apps. (some opinions there)
Operating AI apps reveals a big challenge, in that debugging probabilistic code paths requires more than the usual introspective abilities, and in an environment where function calls can have very real monetary impact we have to be able to see what’s happening in the runtime. See LangChain’s hosted solution (can’t recall the name) that allows an operator to see prompts and responses “on the wire”. (It just occurred to me that Langchain and Pydantic have a lot in common here, in approach.)
Having a coupling between Pydantic - which is *just about* the data layer itself - and an observability tool seems very interesting to me, and having this come from the folks who built it does not seem unreasonable. WRT open source and monetization, I would be lying if I said I wasn’t a little worried - given the recent few months - but I am choosing to see this in a positive light, given this team’s “believability weight” (to overuse Dalio) and history of delivering solid and really useful tooling.
- Ask HN: Most efficient way to fine-tune an LLM in 2024?
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Princeton group open sources "SWE-agent", with 12.3% fix rate for GitHub issues
DSPy is the best tool for optimizing prompts [0]: https://github.com/stanfordnlp/dspy
Think of it as a meta-prompt optimizer, it uses a LLM to optimize your prompts, to optimize your LLM.
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Winner of the SF Mistral AI Hackathon: Automated Test Driven Prompting
Isn’t this just a very naive implementation of what DsPY does?
https://github.com/stanfordnlp/dspy
I don’t understand what is exceptional here.
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Show HN: Fructose, LLM calls as strongly typed functions
Have you done any comparison with DSPy ? (https://github.com/stanfordnlp/dspy)
Feels very similiar to DSPy except you dont have optimizations yet. But I like your API and the programming model your are enforcing through this.
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AI Prompt Engineering Is Dead
I'm interested in hearing if anyone has used DSPy (https://github.com/stanfordnlp/dspy) just for prompt optimization for GPT-3.5 or GPT-4. Was it worth the effort and much better than manual prompt iteration? Was the optimized prompt some weird incantation? Any other insights?
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Ask HN: Are you using a GPT to prompt-engineer another GPT?
You should check out x.com/lateinteraction's DSPy — which is like an optimizer for prompts — https://github.com/stanfordnlp/dspy
- SuperDuperDB - how to use it to talk to your documents locally using llama 7B or Mistral 7B?
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 12 September 2023
Open-Assistant
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Best open source AI chatbot alternative?
For open assistant, the code: https://github.com/LAION-AI/Open-Assistant/tree/main/inference
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GPT-4 Turbo for free with no sign up, and most importantly no Bing
Is this being used to collect chat results for synthetic data and/or training like https://github.com/LAION-AI/Open-Assistant did? I believe they gave away GPT-4 api calls via a text interface and absorbed the cost to later build a dataset of chats.
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OpenAI now sends email threats?!
https://open-assistant.io seems to have the same guardrails, as ChatGPT. Tried it on several prompts and it wouldn't comply.
- ChatGPT-Antworten nach Schulnoten bewerten
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Chat GPT Alternatives?
Open-Assistant [https://open-assistant.io/]
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What are the best AI tools you've ACTUALLY used?
Open Assistant by LAION AI on GitHub
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Keep Artificial Intelligence Free, protect it from monopolies: please sign this petition
To add to this if you want something for free or at least close to free, contribute to OpenSource projects like https://open-assistant.io/
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If I had to get someone from total zero to ChatGPT power user
Also, there are fairly useful alternatives like GPT4ALL and Open Assistant that you can run locally.
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Compiling a Comprehensive List of Publicly Usable LLM Q&A Services - Need Your Input!
https://open-assistant.io - oasst-sft-6-llama-30b
- Proposal for a Crowd-Sourced AI Feedback System
What are some alternatives?
semantic-kernel - Integrate cutting-edge LLM technology quickly and easily into your apps
KoboldAI-Client
open-interpreter - A natural language interface for computers
text-generation-webui - A Gradio web UI for Large Language Models. Supports transformers, GPTQ, AWQ, EXL2, llama.cpp (GGUF), Llama models.
playground - Play with neural networks!
llama.cpp - LLM inference in C/C++
MLflow - Open source platform for the machine learning lifecycle
llama - Inference code for Llama models
FastMJPG - FastMJPG is a command line tool for capturing, sending, receiving, rendering, piping, and recording MJPG video with extremely low latency. It is optimized for running on constrained hardware and battery powered devices.
gpt4all - gpt4all: run open-source LLMs anywhere
prompt-engine-py - A utility library for creating and maintaining prompts for Large Language Models
stanford_alpaca - Code and documentation to train Stanford's Alpaca models, and generate the data.