These clever AI tools can have a big impact by using elaborate models to tackle demanding tasks. The nine programs presented here have something in common besides AI: they are freely available.
Decent list, but is it just me, or does all of it sound like common knowledge?
I’ve used Spleeter CLI quite often, but I’ve also heard that there are better, open-source models out there that outperform the one that is used in Spleeter, unfortunately, neither is the pre-trained model, nor the project repo available - just an open-access paper.
This page also missed out on essential apps like Tesseract OCR which is a must-have.
Could be common knowledge to some. But since it’s posted in a general technology community instead of an AI-focused one I’m sure there will be users who aren’t as much in the loop.
i haven’t done anything specifically ‘ai’, and i’ve only heard of two of these… digikam, but idgaf about facial rec for my own libraries. and the last one, for subtitle syncing. i tried it. it didn’t do very well with the things i tried it on. so i still do that manually whenever i need to.
Decent list, but is it just me, or does all of it sound like common knowledge?
I’ve used Spleeter CLI quite often, but I’ve also heard that there are better, open-source models out there that outperform the one that is used in Spleeter, unfortunately, neither is the pre-trained model, nor the project repo available - just an open-access paper.
This page also missed out on essential apps like Tesseract OCR which is a must-have.
Could be common knowledge to some. But since it’s posted in a general technology community instead of an AI-focused one I’m sure there will be users who aren’t as much in the loop.
i haven’t done anything specifically ‘ai’, and i’ve only heard of two of these… digikam, but idgaf about facial rec for my own libraries. and the last one, for subtitle syncing. i tried it. it didn’t do very well with the things i tried it on. so i still do that manually whenever i need to.