Like if I type “I have two appl…” for example, often it will suggest “apple” singular instead of plural. Just a small example, but it is really bad at predicting which variant of a word should come after the previous

    • Knusper@feddit.de
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      10 months ago

      I guess, the real question is: Could we be using (simplistic) LLMs on a phone for predictive text?

      There’s some LLMs that can be run offline and which maybe wouldn’t use enormous amounts of battery. But I don’t know how good the quality of those is…

      • ashe@lemmy.starless.one
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        10 months ago

        You can run an LLM on a phone (tried it myself once, with llama.cpp), but even on the simplest model I could find it was doing maybe one word every few seconds while using up 100% of the CPU. The quality is terrible, and your battery wouldn’t last an hour.

      • bassomitron@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The kind of local/offline LLMs that would work on your phone would not be very good quality. There’s been amazing progress in quantization of LLMs to get them working on weaker GPUs with lower VRAM and CPUs, so maybe it’ll occur, but I’m not an expert.

        I also don’t foresee them linking it up to a cloud-based LLM as that’d be a shit load of queries and extremely expensive.

      • SpooksMcDoots@mander.xyz
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        10 months ago

        Openhermes 2.5 Mistral 7b competes with LLMs that require 10x the resources. You could try it out on your phone.

      • 0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        I guess… why not… but the db is probably huge, like in the hundreds of GB (maybe even TB… who knows), can’t run that offline.

      • Munkisquisher@lemmy.nz
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        10 months ago

        A pre trained model isn’t going to learn how you type the more you use it. Though with Microsoft owning SwiftKey, I imagine they will try it soon

    • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      The algorithms are the same. The models are different, being trained on a smaller data set.

      • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        No, the algorithms are not the same. Phones don’t use transformer models for text prediction, they use Markov chain-based approaches. Also, retraining of transformer models for individualized completion would be too expensive, whereas it’s basically free with Markov approaches. Where do you get these ideas?