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Kaldi is an open-source speech recognition toolkit written in C++ for speech recognition and signal processing, freely available under the Apache License v2.0.. Kaldi aims to provide software that is flexible and extensible, [2] and is intended for use by automatic speech recognition (ASR) researchers for building a recognition system.
OpenVINO is an open-source software toolkit for optimizing and deploying deep learning models. It enables programmers to develop scalable and efficient AI solutions with relatively few lines of code. It supports several popular model formats [2] and categories, such as large language models, computer vision, and generative AI.
NNI (Neural Network Intelligence) is a free and open-source AutoML toolkit developed by Microsoft. [3] [4] It is used to automate feature engineering, model compression, neural architecture search, and hyper-parameter tuning. [5] [6] The source code is licensed under MIT License and available on GitHub. [7]
The Open Neural Network Exchange (ONNX) [ˈɒnɪks] [2] is an open-source artificial intelligence ecosystem [3] of technology companies and research organizations that establish open standards for representing machine learning algorithms and software tools to promote innovation and collaboration in the AI sector. ONNX is available on GitHub.
GitHub Copilot is a code completion and automatic programming tool developed by GitHub and OpenAI that assists users of Visual Studio Code, Visual Studio, Neovim, and JetBrains integrated development environments (IDEs) by autocompleting code. [1]
1 the Road, the first novel marketed by an AI. [75] AlphaFold is a deep learning based system developed by DeepMind for prediction of protein structure. [76] Otter.ai is a speech-to-text synthesis and summary platform, which allows users to record online meetings as text. It additionally creates live captions during meetings.
AutoGPT is an open-source "AI agent" that, given a goal in natural language, will attempt to achieve it by breaking it into sub-tasks and using the Internet and other tools in an automatic loop. [1] It uses OpenAI 's GPT-4 or GPT-3.5 APIs , [ 2 ] and is among the first examples of an application using GPT-4 to perform autonomous tasks.
Ghidra (pronounced GEE-druh; [3] / ˈ ɡ iː d r ə / [4]) is a free and open source reverse engineering tool developed by the National Security Agency (NSA) of the United States. The binaries were released at RSA Conference in March 2019; the sources were published one month later on GitHub. [5]