The Fossify one is decent
otter
The description sounds more like an AI receptionist than an AI nurse. It would be helpful if patients could ask follow-up questions to the automated phone call before an appointment. Some clinics don't have the manpower for that, and especially not in all the languages that the local population might speak.
I'd be interested in seeing how good the model actually is, and how it determines when to pass it along to a human
The concern is with making sure the AI model is only used where it makes sense. Those who are looking to cut costs will try and use it everywhere, and that needs to be kept in check
The GoodKarmaToolkit in particular is an extra project that is managed by ArchiveBox, but the listed services aren't made by them. I'm not as familiar with ArchiveBox itself, and it looks like there's an open issue about AI stuff: https://github.com/ArchiveBox/ArchiveBox/issues/1139
There is another called Data Hoarder that does this job too.
Yup, Hoarder was the one I was planning to use for bookmark management: https://hoarder.app/
There's the good-karma-kit, which is a Docker compose bundle of some popular projects: https://github.com/ArchiveBox/good-karma-kit
It could act as a list to go off of, if you don't want to host all of them. The link has more info on each, as well as which ones are non-profit / for-profit
Overview
Have some space computing power and want to donate it to a good cause? How about 10+ good causes at once?
♻️ put an under-utilized system to good use
🚲 use as much or as little CPU/RAM/DISK as you want
✨ 100% more soul warming than mining
📈 geek out over your CPU/disk/bandwidth stats on the leaderboardsThis is a collection of containers that all contribute to public-good projects:
- networks: Tor, i2p
- computing: boinc, foldingathome
- archiving: archivewarrior, zimfarm, kiwix, archivebox, pywb
- storage: ipfs, storj, sia, transmission
This v1 list was started by the ArchiveBox project, but it's open to contributions.
https://www.theverge.com/2025/1/9/24339817/vlc-player-automatic-ai-subtitling-translation
The popular open-source VLC video player was demonstrated on the floor of CES 2025 with automatic AI subtitling and translation, generated locally and offline in real time. Parent organization VideoLAN shared a video on Tuesday in which president Jean-Baptiste Kempf shows off the new feature, which uses open-source AI models to generate subtitles for videos in several languages.
Ok now that's cool. Since it's often all doom and gloom here, celebrating good tech is a nice change :)
That seems like an optional feature that competing products have.
I'd rather the fediverse friendly open source version have features I won't use, if it means it can continue to grow and compete with the proprietary ones
I thought it might be in settings but I don't see it. For me, I got an option for "just this one" vs "always" when I tried to open a video, and it seems to be remembering that.
You could try backing up any settings and resetting the app to see if you get anything different, although it really should let you pick a default at any point