> we’re not there yet, in part because of how much more powerful connected frontier models are
Is that why though? You need a beast of a machine to run a functional local model in my experience.
I think the big part is there’s significant sticker shock to buying capable hardware.
That said,
> weekend. I chose to try fine-tuning on two models, Llama 3.1 8B Instruct and Qwen 2.5 7B Instruct. At their size (around 8B) they run comfortably on a MacBook Air
Perhaps I spoke too soon?
Anyway
> I chose the Microsoft collection as the source of training materials. The collection contains out-of-print docs published between 1977 and 2005: more than 37 million words, covering old systems and SDKs
this strikes me as a very specific brand of 1995’s prose, spanning about 30 years. It’s a cool article though, so maybe that’s a forgivably clickbaity title.
> this strikes me as a very specific brand of 1995’s prose, spanning about 30 years.
It's probably a fair approach to say the significant influence (training dataset) on writing at a particular time is the preceeding 30 years' material? It's certainly not only what's already written that year (nor anything since).
Had to pick a year, and most of the material hovers around the mid-90s, the golden age of MS docs. And 1995 is THE Microsoft year. :)
Running models locally is surprisingly easy and possible even on older hardware.
Obviously not the largest, up-to-date models but for what I expect most people use them for, even on hn, there are some shockingly good models that dont require €4k machines.
I have a desktop with an AMD 6900XT and 5600 with 32GB ram. Obviously no slouch but its several years old at this point. I can comfortably run qwen 3.5 9b and get a speedy 60 token/sec output with decent results.
idk I can barely field a 14b on my desktop, and it’s rough trying to replicate the agentic pair programming experience I’m accustomed to with Claude. And I don’t mean it doesn’t work as well, I mean it doesn’t work.
Is there some secret I’m missing? I’ve tried rolling my own harness, and tried a few of the ones the cool kids use - I think pi was the most recent. Not quite my tempo, I’m afraid.
Depends on your desktop specs and specific model.
The easiest way I have found is to use LM Studio, grab the model you want, and point whatever tooling you're using at the local exposed API.
You will have to configure the model params (temperature, etc) a bit to get the style you're expecting but it works decently well for me.
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