Back to AI Lab
GitHub Repository

jomjol/AI-on-the-edge-device

February 9, 20268,044836

Summary

Firmware that reads analog meters and similar devices with a tiny on-device vision model. It’s a practical template for bringing AI to legacy hardware.

Related Content

stable-diffusion-webui

stable-diffusion-webui by AUTOMATIC1111 is the de facto standard local web interface for Stable Diffusion, providing a massive feature set—txt2img, img2img, inpainting/outpainting, upscaling, LoRA/embeddings support, training utilities, and a huge extension ecosystem—on top of consumer GPUs. If you’re doing any kind of image generation or fine-tuning with Stable Diffusion in a local or lab environment, this is usually the first tool people reach for and the one most community workflows target. ([github.com](https://github.com/AUTOMATIC1111/stable-diffusion-webui?utm_source=openai))

Are We Ready for RL in Text-to-3D Generation? A Progressive Investigation

This paper is a systematic exploration of reinforcement learning for text-to-3D generation, dissecting reward design, RL algorithms, data scaling, and hierarchical optimization. The authors introduce a new benchmark (MME-3DR), propose Hi-GRPO for global-to-local 3D refinement, and build AR3D-R1—the first RL-tuned text-to-3D model that improves both global shape quality and fine-grained texture alignment.

SynthID Detector: Identify content made with Google's AI tools

Google announces SynthID Detector, a web portal that lets you upload images, audio, video, or text generated with Google AI tools and automatically checks for imperceptible SynthID watermarks, highlighting which parts of the content are likely watermarked. For developers and media teams, it’s a turnkey authenticity check for content produced with models like Gemini, Imagen, Lyria, and Veo, designed to plug into editorial and trust-&-safety workflows. ([blog.google](https://blog.google/technology/ai/google-synthid-ai-content-detector/))

huggingface/transformers

The standard library for state-of-the-art models in text, vision, audio, and combined formats. If you build with open models, you almost certainly depend on this already.