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The guanaco (/ ɡ w ɑː ˈ n ɑː k oʊ / ghwuah-NAH-koh; [3] Lama guanicoe) is a camelid native to South America, closely related to the llama. Guanacos are one of two wild South American camelids; the other species is the vicuña, which lives at higher elevations.
LangChain was launched in October 2022 as an open source project by Harrison Chase, while working at machine learning startup Robust Intelligence. The project quickly garnered popularity, [3] with improvements from hundreds of contributors on GitHub, trending discussions on Twitter, lively activity on the project's Discord server, many YouTube tutorials, and meetups in San Francisco and London.
Originally, Llama was only available as a foundation model. [6] Starting with Llama 2, Meta AI started releasing instruction fine-tuned versions alongside foundation models. [7] Model weights for the first version of Llama were made available to the research community under a non-commercial license, and access was granted on a case-by-case basis.
A huarizo, also known as a llapaca, is a hybrid cross between a male llama and a female alpaca. Misti is a similar hybrid; it is a cross between a male alpaca and a female llama. The most common hybrid between South American camelids, [1] huarizo tend to be much smaller than llamas, with their fibre being longer. [2]
llama.cpp is an open source software library that performs inference on various large language models such as Llama. [3] It is co-developed alongside the GGML project, a general-purpose tensor library.
The United States has asked Syria's Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) rebel group to help locate and free missing American journalist Austin Tice as it liberates the country's prisons in the aftermath of ...
Jason Kelce is coming to late-night TV!. On Thursday, Nov. 21, the retired Philadelphia Eagles center, 37, revealed on Jimmy Kimmel Live that he’s set to host a new show on ESPN. “Yes, I’m ...
Dromedary camels, bactrian camels, llamas, and alpacas are all induced ovulators. [8] The three Afro-Asian camel species have developed extensive adaptations to their lives in harsh, near-waterless environments. Wild populations of the Bactrian camel are even able to drink brackish water, and some herds live in nuclear test areas. [9]