1 bit with a FP16 scale factor every 128 bits. Fascinating that this works so well.
I tried a few things with it. Got it driving Cursor, which in itself was impressive - it handled some tool usage. Via cursor I had it generate a few web page tests.
On a monte carlo simulation of pi, it got the logic correct but failed to build an interface to start the test. Requesting changes mostly worked, but left over some symbols which caused things to fail. Required a bit of manual editing.
Tried a Simon Wilson pelican as well - very abstract, not recognizable at all as a bird or a bicycle.
There doesn't seem to be a demo link on their webpage, so here's a llama.cpp running on my local desktop if people want to try it out. I'll keep this running for a couple hours past this post: https://unfarmable-overaffirmatively-euclid.ngrok-free.dev
I reminds me of very early ChatGPT with mostly correct answers but some nonsense. Given its speed, it might be interesting to run it through a 'thinking' phase where it double checks its answers and/or use search grounding which would make it significantly more useful.
Thanks for sharing the link to your instance. Was blazing fast in responding. Tried throwing a few things at it with the following results:
1. Generating an R script to take a city and country name and finding it's lat/long and mapping it using ggmaps. Generated a pretty decent script (could be more optimal but impressive for the model size) with warnings about using geojson if possible
2. Generate a latex script to display the gaussian integral equation - generated a (I think) non-standard version using probability distribution functions instead of the general version but still give it points for that. Gave explanations of the formula, parameters as well as instructions on how to compile the script using BASH etc
3. Generate a latex script to display the euler identity equation - this one it nailed.
Strongly agree that the knowledge density is impressive for the being a 1-bit model with such a small size and blazing fast response
I must add that I also tried out the standard "should I walk or drive to the carwash 100 meters away for washing the car" and it made usual error or suggesting a walk given the distance and health reasons etc. But then this does not claim to be a reasoning model and I did not expect, in the remotest case, for this to be answered correctly. Ever previous generation larger reasoning models struggle with this
Good call. Right now though traffic is low (1 req per min). With the speed of completion I should be able to handle ~100x that, but if the ngrok link doesn't work defo use the google colab link.
Cursor and similar AI-native IDEs are interesting not because of the AI itself, but because they demonstrate that the IDE paradigm is not settled. There is room for fundamental rethinking of how developers interact with codebases.
Their own (presumably cherry picked) benchmarks put their models near the 'middle of the market' models (llama3 3b, qwen3 1.7b), not competing with claude, chatgtp, or gemini. These are not models you'd want to directly interact with. but these models can be very useful for things like classification or simple summarization or translation tasks.
These models quite impressive for their size: even an older raspberry pi would be able to handle these.
There's still a lots of use for this kind of model
The average of MMLU Redux,MuSR,GSM8K,Human Eval+,IFEval,BFCLv3 for this model is 70.5 compared to 79.3 for Qwen3, that being said the model is also having a 16x smaller size and is 6x faster on a 4090....so it is a tradeoff that is pretty respectable
I'd be interested in fine tuning code here personally
I expect the trend of large machine learning models to go towards bits rather than operating on floats. There's a lot of inefficiency in floats because typically they're something like normally distributed, which makes the storage and computation with weights inefficient when most values are clustered in a small range. The foundation of neural networks may be rooted in real valued functions, which are simulated with floats, but float operations are just bitwise operations underneath. The only issue is that GPUs operate on floats and standard ML theory works over real numbers.
the speed is not just about storage -- at 1-bit you are reading roughly 16x less data from DRAM per forward pass compared to FP16. on memory-bandwidth-constrained hardware that is usually the actual bottleneck, so the speedup scales pretty directly. the ac
I feel like it's a little disingenuous to compare against full-precision models. Anyone concerned about model size and memory usage is surely already using at least an 8 bit quantization.
Their main contribution seems to be hyperparameter tuning, and they don't compare against other quantization techniques of any sort.
Pocket Pal is what I've seen used before. Although recently heard about "Off Grid" but not read any reviews about it or tried it personally so caveat emptor. Will see if the community has other suggestions
Technically not in this case, or not effectively. The 0 or 1 correspond to a FP16 scaling factor for each group of 128 bits. The value fluctuates between each group of 128.
I tried a few things with it. Got it driving Cursor, which in itself was impressive - it handled some tool usage. Via cursor I had it generate a few web page tests.
On a monte carlo simulation of pi, it got the logic correct but failed to build an interface to start the test. Requesting changes mostly worked, but left over some symbols which caused things to fail. Required a bit of manual editing.
Tried a Simon Wilson pelican as well - very abstract, not recognizable at all as a bird or a bicycle.
Pictures of the results here: https://x.com/pwnies/status/2039122871604441213
There doesn't seem to be a demo link on their webpage, so here's a llama.cpp running on my local desktop if people want to try it out. I'll keep this running for a couple hours past this post: https://unfarmable-overaffirmatively-euclid.ngrok-free.dev
Strongly agree that the knowledge density is impressive for the being a 1-bit model with such a small size and blazing fast response
I should note this is running on an RTX 6000 pro, so it's probably at the max speed you'll get for "consumer" hardware.
Then found out they didn't implement AVX2 for their Q1_0_g128 CPU kernel. Added that and getting ~12t/s which isn't shabby for this old machine.
Cool model.
These models quite impressive for their size: even an older raspberry pi would be able to handle these.
There's still a lots of use for this kind of model
The average of MMLU Redux,MuSR,GSM8K,Human Eval+,IFEval,BFCLv3 for this model is 70.5 compared to 79.3 for Qwen3, that being said the model is also having a 16x smaller size and is 6x faster on a 4090....so it is a tradeoff that is pretty respectable
I'd be interested in fine tuning code here personally
Can't wait to give it a spin with ollama, if ollama could list it as a model that would be helpful.
The amount of progress they've been making is incredible.
Is anyone following this space more closely? Is anyone predicting performance at certain parameter sizes will plateau soon?
Unlike the frontier models, these don't seem to be showing much progress of slowing down.
I'm currently setting this one up, if it works well with a custom LoRa ontop ill be able to run two at once for my custom memory management system :D
Their main contribution seems to be hyperparameter tuning, and they don't compare against other quantization techniques of any sort.