@0 @PawelK @sevvie well, you know. It's easy to use and it's free. Not to mention that it slaps translated overlay on video in real time. I wish I knew something more convenient than that, but sadly....

@PawelK @0 @sevvie it works on live video feed from phone's camera, so i suppose if you were to go deep enough into that stuff and create virtual video input to run whatever you want trough it....

@ThatCrazyDude @PawelK @sevvie

ffmpeg magic for frames, and iterating, hope you have a nice server.
@PawelK @ThatCrazyDude @sevvie

I've had a lot of luck recycling old i5 workstations into servers -- old quadro gpus are also nice and fit the slimline towers that are ubiquitous. Did this for TTS, Stable Diffusion, and OCR servers.
@PawelK @ThatCrazyDude @sevvie

Microcenter had them around for like ~$200-$300 a pop.

@0 @PawelK @sevvie when it comes to what people generally tend to call AI, as in machine vision, general image recognition, OCR and shit like that, you don't even need i5 nor GPUs whatsoever, you know. Your average 100 bucks arm board will do just fine. Training the neuro network takes a ton of computing power, but using afterwards can be done on proverbial calculator. Just saying.

@PawelK @0 @sevvie well yeah. Just like face recognition or fingerprinting. Once you have the model computed, you can use it on real low end chip

@PawelK @0 @sevvie not even dedicated single purpose chips can do that. I personally got my mind blown when i discovered that esp32, which is your run of the mill cheap low power microcontroller can do facial recognition. Check this out randomnerdtutorials.com/esp32-

@PawelK @0 @sevvie @AmpBenzScientist i love those chips BTW. ESP8266 even better. Dirt cheap and with WiFi, enough computing power to do basic encryption and connect to whatever API you want..... Wish those were available when i was a kid, even though they all come from Shanghai.... 🤣

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@PawelK @ThatCrazyDude @0 @sevvie With the ESP and Other wireless boards there is a trap inside that requires a little more than simple code dumps. It ends up being multiple IP and even hardware patents.

In dealing with multiple examples I found the solution is already available in the form of an SDR and FPGA.

I probably gave an awful explanation but legal consequences are essentially going to result from any real attempts. They are only open when it suits their best interests.

@0 @ThatCrazyDude @AmpBenzScientist @sevvie

Thats a good question, AMP could know.

I myself, had rare contact with that technology and mostly through full on commercial chips with lots of gates like upper end Xilinx etc, but this could be quite to very outdated data by now.

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