![]() Now we need to modify the speech-dispatcher configuration file using a similar procedure: Press CTRL O to save the file after confirming and CTRL X to exit. GenericExecuteSynth "printf %s \'$DATA\' | mimic3 -remote -voice \'$VOICE\' -stdout | $PLAY_COMMAND" Once you have the "nano" text editor open, replace all the text in there (if any) with exactly the following 6 lines of text in italics: Sudo nano /etc/speech-dispatcher/modules/nf You need to create a configuration file for the Mimic 3 text to speech module and paste very specific content in there: Step 4: Configure your speech-dispatcher system in Ubuntu to use Mimic 3 *Note: this will take some time as this is roughly 10 GB worth of downloading. Step 3: Download the AI model weights for your speech-to-text engine and large language model* Step 2: Download and install a decent-sounding text-to-speech system (Mimic 3) to replace Ubuntu's built-in espeak system (which, frankly, sounds horrible) Sudo apt install alsa-utils speech-dispatcher libsdl2-dev build-essential -y Step 1: Download prerequisites and tools then build and install them For simplicity, we'll be running all the commands (which are in bold) in your home folder, but you can adapt the below steps to fit your needs: A locally-run copy of Mycroft AI's Mimic 3 text-to-speech neural network engine, which does a wonderful job translating Wizard-Vicuna's outputs into a realistic-sounding voice.Īll this is possible to run locally on your CPU (no expensive NVidia GPU required) thanks to the work of Georgi Gerganov, who created GGML, whisper.cpp, and llama.cpp, thus revolutionizing the open source AI space.This model is a powerful tool, so use it responsibly just like you would any other powerful tool such as a knife, a lighter, or a car. Be advised: this model has been stripped of "allignment", which, while improving the model's creativity and responsiveness in conversation, leaves open the possibility of generating "unsafe" content. A locally-run copy of Eric Hatford's Wizard-Vicuna-13B-Uncensored model, itself a 3rd generation derivative of the Meta's leaked LLaMA model, and optimized for conversation.A locally-run copy of OpenAI's Whisper model to listen to your voice and interpret it into text inputs for the conversation.This workflow involves the interplay of 3 open-sourced neural networks on your computer: ![]() For this article, I personally tested this on Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS, but with a little tweaking it should work on any recent Debian-based Linux system (e.g. Any decent laptop from the last 3 years should do - as long as you have 16 GB of RAM and a relatively-fast (4 cores or more) CPU, you should be good to go. In this article, I will show you how to get this workflow running on a Linux laptop. Today, it is possible to have a completely off-line, private conversation with a locally-run AI large language model on your laptop using natural language: you speak to your laptop and it speaks back. ![]() Their promise lies in users' ability to chat with AI without connecting to the Internet and leaking the content of their conversation, which may contain personally-identifiable information or sensitive company data, to an online vendor such as OpenAI. Read on to learn how to hide your name, headline and workplace when visiting someone’s LinkedIn profile and browse anonymously.Open-source locally-run large language models have come a long way since the leak of Meta's LLaMA language model in early March. With this setting, the only thing other users will see when you visit their profile is that a “LinkedIn Member” was there. The third option, meanwhile, is totally private. The second is semi-private, showing your job title, company, school and industry but not your name. The first (and default) option displays your name, headline, location and industry – so pretty much everything anyone could want to know. What you might not know is that there are actually three visibility settings you can choose to browse in on LinkedIn. Even just checking what your friends are up to these days can feel creepy knowing they’ll be notified that you took a peek. While recruiters might want their name, title and workplace to appear in your search results, the majority of us don’t. ![]() Did you know that LinkedIn sends emails to its users exposing anyone that has recently visited their profile? Thankfully, you have the option to hide your identity when browsing the app. ![]()
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