cyberscribe

joined 1 year ago
[–] cyberscribe@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

I run it on a raspberry pi 3B+ with a SEEED 2 mic hat. I am very impressed and recommend it to anyone with an interest in offline voice.

I have also tried the server/satellite approach but found that standalone devices worked better for my purposes.

 

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/55388

This is a great open source project to create your own locally hosted voice assistants. The user can host it and create their own intents for any sentences/intents they want.

I am a long time user and follow this project closely.

 

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/55351

This is a cool project for an ESP32-S3-Box which can give really good voice support to Homeassistant or Openhab. Once installed on supported hardware, you can host the Inference Server yourself, use their cloud based version, or perform local actions on the device.

[–] cyberscribe@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago

Yes - I have not tested it out yet but the author of this project suggests Llama derivatives like Vicuna. I am excited to see how this project evolves alongside Homeasisstant's voice goals. The author of Rhasspy is working for Nabu Casa so im sure that will grow too!

[–] cyberscribe@sh.itjust.works 7 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Unfortunately Mycroft has been discontinued by its management team and is heading towards deprecation. This project is starting up now and has a strong initial release that works well. Mycroft was intended to be used with a cloud backend hosted by the Mycroft team (that being said they did eventually open source their backend but it was not intended for use with single instances).

Willow is designed to work with very low power/cost hardware (esp32-s3-box) and either homeassistant or openHAB right out of the box.

 

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/55351

This is a cool project for an ESP32-S3-Box which can give really good voice support to Homeassistant or Openhab. Once installed on supported hardware, you can host the Inference Server yourself, use their cloud based version, or perform local actions on the device.

 

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/55388

This is a great open source project to create your own locally hosted voice assistants. The user can host it and create their own intents for any sentences/intents they want.

I am a long time user and follow this project closely.

[–] cyberscribe@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago

It is very functional especially for DIY-inclined people! The creator has been hired by Nabu Casa (the creators of Homeassistant) to implement voice services for their Year of Voice.

This iteration of Rhasspy (2.5) is quite mature with good features. The only caveat is that it cannot handle wildcard intents. It can have multiple slots for a sentence (e.g Turn on the (kitchen|bedroom) light), but not a wildcard (e.g. Turn on the * light).

Rhasspy 3 has been released as a development build but is still quite early in its lifecycle.

 

There is not really an outdoors/camping community I could find on Lemmy yet, so I thought nature was close! This is a cool site that shows you how you can make your own outdoors gear.

 

This is a great open source project to create your own locally hosted voice assistants. The user can host it and create their own intents for any sentences/intents they want.

I am a long time user and follow this project closely.

 

This is a cool project for an ESP32-S3-Box which can give really good voice support to Homeassistant or Openhab. Once installed on supported hardware, you can host the Inference Server yourself, use their cloud based version, or perform local actions on the device.

 

This is a cool project where anyone can make an RNode that can be used for transmission of digital radio signals. Each RNode contains the information required to create additional RNodes.