Comment by refulgentis
3 days ago
How does writing a model into an App Group container enable your framework to enable an app to enable a local LLM server that 3rd party apps can make calls to on iOS?[^1]
How does writing a model into a shared directory on Android enable a local LLM server that 3rd party apps can make calls to?[^2]
How does writing your own kernels get you off GGUF in 2 months? GGUF is a storage format. You use kernels to do things with the numbers you get from it.
I thought GGUF was an advantage? Now it's something you're basically done using?
I don't think you should continue this conversation. As easy it as it is to get your work out there, it's just as easy to build a record of stretching truth over and over again.
Best of luck, and I mean it. Just, memento mori: be honest and humble along the way. This is something you will look back on in a year and grimace.
[^1] App group containers only work between apps signed from the same Apple developer account. Additionally, that is shared storage, not a way to provide APIs to other apps.
[^2] SAF = Storage Access Framework, that is shared storage, not a way to provide APIs to other apps.
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The best way to go about this is realizing that there are more people reading this thread that make their own assumptions.
Not staying professional and just answering the questions, and just doing "aight im outta here" when it gets a little bit harder is not a good look; it seems like you can't defend your own project.
Just FYI.
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