Yes, let’s keep growing our group here! We’ve been getting new faces/bodies in the OC communities, and I’d like to hear from them here, too :-)

  • lazyneet@programming.dev
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    11 months ago

    Interesting. I managed to run a llama model on the cpu of 3 different machines. It did ok, but it had 10% of the complexity of what you’re talking about. I don’t have enough faith in Moore’s Law that we’ll all have machines that can run your game, nor internet bandwidth to download it, any time soon. Best bet would be physical media and dedicated hardware like ps5, but then players would expect something more than text. If you wanted to share this with the world, I suppose you would host a web UI somewhere.

    • j4k3@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Here is an example of a context story that can be played out in oobabooga textgen: https://a.lemmy.world/lemmy.world/post/11356125

      You simply copy and paste this into the System Context, add your character description as mentioned in the post, and start chatting with Dors in the web interface. Oobabooga is creating a local hosted web server that your local browser can access. This is the chat dialog graphical interface.

      Overall, this exists in a grey area between a software developer tool and an end user tool. It is not hard to use, but you launch it and install it with a few commands in a terminal. That bit of a complexity users filter is a good thing too. Getting familiar with various models can be challenging. There is a good chance that my story would not work well with other large models. When I put together a story like this, it is written with the help of the model I am using. I ask it to write the concepts by rephrasing things I have prompted.

      All that said, something like prompting a specific choice for a user to follow is tricky. I’ve only been able to do that with smaller models and training a LoRA. It is no game though this is all just playing with model loader context stuff. I can do a lot more hacking around with the Oobabooga code to make characters swap out in unique ways and with unique attributes loaded conditionally, but those are not things I can really share because they are not easily repeatable.

      • lazyneet@programming.dev
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        11 months ago

        So basically you write a long ass prompt and feed it to an AI with a longer attention span than any human, and it plays DM. Cool. It makes me wonder if a similar model based on one-on-one conversation could provide the perspective of a specific character according to a similar prompt. I’m not big into AI at this point but I’m sure it wil replace human companionship eventually.