turbopilot
chatgpt-shell
turbopilot | chatgpt-shell | |
---|---|---|
15 | 25 | |
3,839 | 768 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 9.1 | |
7 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
C++ | Emacs Lisp | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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turbopilot
- New version of Turbopilot released!
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GGML for Falcoder7B, SantaCoder 1B, TinyStarCoder 160M
fyi https://github.com/ravenscroftj/turbopilot
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April 2023
TurboPilot: self-hosted copilot clone which uses the library behind llama.cpp to run the 6 Billion Parameter Salesforce Codegen model in 4GiB of RAM. (https://github.com/ravenscroftj/turbopilot)
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Which Models Best for Programming?
This repo has a potential
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[D] What Repos/Tools Should We Pay Attention To?
Right now https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp is the dominant back-end for querying models, but forks and alternatives like https://github.com/ravenscroftj/turbopilot keep popping up. Increasingly, models submitted to huggingface explicitly note in their READMEs that the model is not compatible with llama.cpp, and that a different back-end must be used.
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newbie seeking impressive llama models, am i missing something?
There's turbopilot. I haven't tried it yet, but it looks promising.
- LocalAI: OpenAI compatible API to run LLM models locally on consumer grade hardware!
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LLM specialized in programming ?
Turbopilot | open source LLM code completion engine and Copilot alternative
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Locally running models like Chatgpt for Emacs?
This 6B parameters tool (based on README) could be runned with 4 Gb of RAM. https://github.com/ravenscroftj/turbopilot
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What models and setup is good for generating code
there is an interesting link https://github.com/ravenscroftj/turbopilot/wiki/Converting-and-Quantizing-The-Models , just wondering if anyone have done this with 16b and put the weights somewhere
chatgpt-shell
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Devin, the First AI Software Engineer
I think it is a tooling issue. It is in no way obvious how use LLM's effectively, especially for really good writing results. Tweaking and tinkering can be time consuming indeed, but i use lately the chatgpt-shell [1] and it lends well to an iterative approach. One needs to cycle through some styles first, and then decide how to most effectively prompt for better results.
[1]https://github.com/xenodium/chatgpt-shell/blob/bf2d12ed2ed60...
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Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use?
- https://xenodium.com/an-ios-journaling-app-powered-by-org-pl... - Lately, I'm having a go at building a privacy-focused plain-text-based iOS journaling app. I starte building it for someone important in my life but now using it myself.
- https://flathabits.com - After reading Atomic Habits, I wanted a habit tracker but most had more friction than I wanted, required accounts, had distractions, lock-in etc. so I built a privacy-focused app, with little friction and no-lockin (saves to plain text).
- https://plainorg.com - There are a gazillion markdown apps on the App Store, but hardly any supporting org markup, so I built one.
- https://xenodium.com/scratch-a-minimal-scratch-area - I wanted a surface where I could just dump text with as few taps as possible.
- https://github.com/xenodium/macosrec - I wanted to take either screenshots or videos of macOS apps from the command line, so I could integrate anywhere.
- https://github.com/xenodium/chatgpt-shell - I'm far down the Emacs rabbit hole, so I prefer Emacs-integrated tools. Built a ChatGPT Emacs shell to see what the hype was all about ;) tl;dr it really does help.
- https://github.com/xenodium/dwim-shell-command - A way to manage and easily apply the gazillion one-liners (and more complex scripts) I've come across. I got close to 100 utils check-in now https://github.com/xenodium/dwim-shell-command#my-toolbox
- https://github.com/xenodium/ob-swiftui - Play around with SwiftUI layouts from the comfort of my preferd editor.
- https://github.com/xenodium/company-org-block - Org block completion.
- https://xenodium.com - I tend to scratch own itches and post my solutions here.
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More advanced emacs tutorials
Every so often I scratch an itch to improve my workflow and write it up https://xenodium.com.
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What I Have Changed My Mind About in Software Development
With lsp, the gap between IDEs vs text editors is narrowing. While I still prefer Emacs, I’m pragmatic enough to jump on to whatever tool does a better job for a specific task. At times, that is Xcode.
Was also sceptical about ChatGPT and changed my mind like OP. I was less pragmatic on this one and brought ChatGPT over to Emacs https://github.com/xenodium/chatgpt-shell. Pretty happy with the result so far.
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Edit-mode for point-by-point text proofreading, like EditGPT?
There are a handful of chatgpt Emacs packages. I happen to have authored chatgpt-shell. For making a synchronous request, can use chatgpt-shell-post-prompt. For async, use chatgpt-shell-send-to-buffer with a handler.
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Ask HN: Could you show your personal blog here?
https://xenodium.com will hit 10 years in November. It started as a single org file for personal notes (programming, cooking, Emacs, bookmarks, iOS dev, travel). One day, I decided to export it to HTML and make it accessible to me from anywhere. Sorta just became both notes and blog over time…
While the tone of the posts may have evolved a bit, the blog still serves as personal notes/reference of sorts. The tech behind it hasn’t changed a whole lot. It remains a single org file (https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xenodium/xenodium.github.i...) with my own ugly elisp hacks, but hey does the job ;-)
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Use emacs as a ChatGPT app
u/xenodium's chatgpt-shell deserves a mention. It uses an intuitive Comint-shell based interaction and includes support for executable code blocks (in the comint-shell) and for org-babel. It's very polished -- I believe it also includes support for saving and restoring sessions, which gptel is yet to add.
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Do you also write small guides for yourself to remind you of your own emacs workflows?
Yep. Turn some of them into posts https://xenodium.com
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Is orgmode really that much better than an equivalent workflow using vim + other tools?
For certain concepts that I don't understand fully, I'm using chatgpt-shell. It is beyond fantastic and almost impossible to describe in a single post. This is, for example, just one of my use cases: When I'm writing a comment or a message to my colleague (and of course, yes, I edit just about any text in Emacs), I can select a paragraph and ask chatgpt-shell to improve it. It does, but it also shows me the diff of the changes, that is how I set it up.
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Twenty Years of Blogging
Mine (https://xenodium.com) will hit 10 years in November. It started as a single org file for personal notes. One day I decided to export it to HTML as my accesible notes from anywhere. Sorta just became both notes and blog over time… While the tone of the posts may have evolved over time, they still serve as a notes/reference of sorts. The tech behind it hasn’t changed a whole lot. It remains is a single org file (https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xenodium/xenodium.github.i...).
What are some alternatives?
tabby - Self-hosted AI coding assistant
E2B - Secure cloud runtime for AI apps & AI agents. Fully open-source.
fauxpilot - FauxPilot - an open-source alternative to GitHub Copilot server
gptel - A simple LLM client for Emacs
ggml - Tensor library for machine learning
emacs-chatgpt-jarvis - press F12 to record, use whisper to transcribe and chatgpt to answer
prompt-engineering - ChatGPT Prompt Engineering for Developers - deeplearning.ai
ideas - a hundred ideas for computing - a record of ideas - https://samsquire.github.io/ideas/
telegram-chatgpt-concierge-bot - Interact with OpenAI's ChatGPT via Telegram and Voice.
go-cleanarchitecture - An example Go application demonstrating The Clean Architecture.
simpleAI - An easy way to host your own AI API and expose alternative models, while being compatible with "open" AI clients.
splitter - React component for building split views like in VS Code