▲ | refulgentis 4 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. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | HenryNdubuaku 4 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
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