Gradio 'Build Small' Hackathon Submission Deadline in 6 Hours
Gradio announced that the 'Build Small' hackathon will close submissions in 6 hours, after which updates will be disabled and new Spaces will no longer be accepted in the Hackathon Org.
Loading / 加载中
Thinkgap feed
Curated items are read from the processed items table and served as a bilingual feed.
106 items
Gradio announced that the 'Build Small' hackathon will close submissions in 6 hours, after which updates will be disabled and new Spaces will no longer be accepted in the Hackathon Org.
SophontAI has announced support for a new open-source research competition hosted by MedARC_AI. The announcement describes the competition as highly impactful, but the raw content is truncated and provides no further specifics about the competition's focus, dates, or prizes.
Moonshot AI has introduced a high-speed mode for its open-source multimodal coding model Kimi K2.7 Code. The new mode achieves up to 6× faster inference, delivering around 180 tokens per second on coding tasks with median-length inputs and up to 260 tokens per second on shorter-context tasks. The HighSpeed mode is currently rolling out to participants in the Kimi Code Beta Program, Kimi API developers, and Kimi Business users, though access remains limited due to capacity constraints. No invitation is needed; anyone joining the Beta Program can gain access. The company states it will continue improving the model and expanding access as capacity grows.
World of Claudecraft is an open-source MMO built with Fable 5, an AI coding tool that is now discontinued. The game is fully featured, allowing players to accept quests, trade items, duel, earn rewards, and interact with other live players. Its discovery highlights the emerging potential of 'vibecoding'—AI-assisted game creation for real, interactive experiences.
A tweet retweeted by AK points to the release of DeepSeek v3.2 and MiniMax M3 as examples of open AI acceleration. The brief post contains no technical details, benchmarks, or links to further information about the models. The content only names the two model versions in the context of a trend toward openness.
Cohere co-founder Nick Frosst publicly warned about the dangers of subscription-based proprietary large language models, arguing that AI technology should be sovereign and controlled by its users. He announced the release of North Mini Code, a small code-focused language model, designed to give users full ownership and control. The release underscores Cohere's commitment to open access and user autonomy in the AI ecosystem.