Leon
rhasspy
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Leon | rhasspy | |
---|---|---|
34 | 26 | |
14,539 | 2,273 | |
1.7% | 3.2% | |
8.4 | 2.3 | |
6 days ago | 9 months ago | |
TypeScript | Shell | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
Leon
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Rabbit R1, Designed by Teenage Engineering
It's indeed suspicious. You're sending your voice samples, your various services accounts, your location and more private data to some proprietary black box in some public cloud. Sorry, but this is a privacy nightmare. It should be open source and self-hosted like Mycroft (https://mycroft.ai) or Leon (https://getleon.ai) to be trustworthy.
- Anything like ChatGPT that we can run ourself where we train with with our own data, so we can use it as personal assistant, where it only knows about oneself better than themselves ?
- open source AI projects
- Open alternative to Google Assistant/Siri/Alexa?
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Voice Control was supposed to be the Future. Is Linux lagging behind?
I literally had this thought a couple of days ago and went down a small rabbit hole looking into it too! There's some stuff out there (I saw Mycroft and Coqui mentioned in the comments already, also check out Leon, Jarvis, and OA although not sure they all deploy to Linux) but ultimately, I just don't think the tech is there yet.
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What if a DAO bought Alexa from Amazon?
Mycroft is pretty decent and there are a few other similar open source projects if you're interested (https://github.com/MycroftAI, https://github.com/leon-ai/leon)
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Is there such a thing as a self-hosted Alexa that runs on a server, and has low power devices like an Amazon Alexa subscribe to that service?
Take a look at Leon I'm not sure it's what you're looking for but it look pretty awesome.
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Appwrite OSS Fund Sponsors Leon
Leon is an open-source personal assistant who can live on your server. He does stuff when you ask him to. You can talk to him and he can talk to you. You can also text him and he can also text you. If you want to, Leon can communicate with you by being offline to protect your privacy.
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10 Trending Github repositories / September, 8 2022
git clone https://github.com/leon-ai/leon.git
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Selfhosted personal assistant
There is also Leon - https://getleon.ai. But I’m not using any of the self hosted yet.
rhasspy
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New project: Grocy Rhasspy Skill
I've been working on this for a few months now and I think I have it to a point where I am ready to share. This is definitely a very niche solution but I am creating a new skill handler for Grocy for the Open Source Voice Assistant Rhasspy (https://github.com/rhasspy/rhasspy). My handler is here: https://github.com/MCHellspawn/hermes-app-grocy. It is not complete yet but getting there. With is skill and a working Rhasspy 2.5 setup you can do a lot of tasks in Grocy with your voice. So far you can create and delete shopping lists, create products and add and remove them from shopping lists, list chores, mark them complete or skipped, and more.
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Ask HN: Home Voice Assistant Recommendations
It'll run on a cheap Ubuntu box if you can't get a Pi.
And lots of people seem to like Rhasspy too:
https://github.com/rhasspy/rhasspy
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The failure of Amazon's Alexa shows Microsoft was right to kill Cortana
Here is one example https://community.rhasspy.org/
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Someone has to say it: Voice assistants are not doing it for big tech
I tried Amazon's Alexa, the top end model with a display. Often it would taunt you about new/interesting things on the screen, but I could never get them to work. I'd had to memorize things to get even the basics working. Ended up unplugging it.
However Google's Assistant in comparison worked great, no memorization, and very useful. Sure time, weather, set timers, and alarms worked great with a very flexible set of natural language queries. Even more complex things like what will be the temperature tomorrow at 10pm, simple calculations and unit conversions. But also things like IMDB like queries about directors, actors, which movies someone was in, etc generally worked well. It seemed to really understand things, not just "A web search returned ...". Even more complex things like the wheelbase of a 2004 WRX would return an answer, not a search result.
With all that said I'm looking for a non-cloud/on site solution, even if it requires more work, most recently noticed https://github.com/rhasspy/rhasspy
- Rhasspy – Offline private voice assistant for many human languages
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Google assistant alternatives?
I just found this one: https://github.com/rhasspy/rhasspy
What are some alternatives?
mycroft-core - Mycroft Core, the Mycroft Artificial Intelligence platform.
Home Assistant - :house_with_garden: Open source home automation that puts local control and privacy first.
ProjectAlice - Project Alice is a smart voice home assistant that is completely modular and extensible.
tetrio-bot - tetris bot to automatically play tetr.io
Kaldi Speech Recognition Toolkit - kaldi-asr/kaldi is the official location of the Kaldi project.
Huginn - Create agents that monitor and act on your behalf. Your agents are standing by!
RSS-Bridge - The RSS feed for websites missing it
rhino - On-device Speech-to-Intent engine powered by deep learning
Speech-Recognition - Speech Recognition library for adding Voice Commands and Controls to all your applications. Whether you are building web apps, native apps or desktop apps, this technology can be integrated into any system with an internet connection.
Gladys - A privacy-first, open-source home assistant