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Compare Models

  • Stanford University

    Alpaca

    FREE
    Stanford University released an instruction-following language model called Alpaca, which was fine-tuned from Meta’s LLaMA 7B model. The Alpaca model was trained on 52K instruction-following demonstrations generated in the style of self-instruct using text-davinci-003. Alpaca aims to help the academic community engage with the models by providing an open source model that rivals OpenAI’s GPT-3.5 (text-davinci-003) models. To this end, Alpaca has been kept small and cheap (fine-tuning Alpaca took 3 hours on 8x A100s which is less than $100 of cost) to reproduce. All training data and techniques have been released. The Alpaca license explicitly prohibits commercial use, and the model can only be used for research/personal projects, and users need to follow LLaMA’s license agreement.
  • Microsoft

    Azure OpenAI Service

    OTHER
    Microsoft’s Azure OpenAI Service allows you to take advantage of large-scale, generative AI models with deep understandings of language and code to enable new reasoning and comprehension capabilities for building cutting-edge applications. Apply these coding and language models to a variety of use cases, such as writing assistance, code generation, and reasoning over data. Detect and mitigate harmful use with built-in responsible AI and access enterprise-grade Azure security. GPT-4 is available in preview in the Azure OpenAI Service and the billing for GPT-4 8K and 32K instances per 1/K tokens and can be found under those models on the tokes compare site. To note, Microsoft’s Azure OpenAI Service customers can access GPT-3.5, ChatGPT, and DALL·E too.
  • Microsoft

    Bing Search APIs

    OTHER
    Microsoft’s Bing AI search engine is powered by GPT-4. Microsoft claims the new model is faster and more accurate than ever. Bing Search APIs provide a variety of APIs with trained models for your use. The Bing Search APIs add intelligent search to your app, combining hundreds of billions of webpages, images, videos, and news to provide relevant results without ads. The results can be automatically customized to your user’s locations or markets, increasing relevancy by staying local. There are various prices for Bing Search APIs which are dependent on the feature. For customers who are interested in more flexible terms related to presenting Bing API results with their models check out the website for prices per 1,000 transactions.
  • BigScience

    BLOOM

    FREE
    BigScience Large Open-science Open-access Multilingual Language Model (BLOOM) is a transformer-based LLM. Over 1,000 AI researchers created it to provide a free large language model for everyone who wants to try and it is a multilingual LLM. BLOOM is an autoregressive Large Language Model (LLM), trained to continue text from a prompt on vast amounts of text data using industrial-scale computational resources. It can output coherent text in 46 languages and 13 programming languages. It is free, and everybody who wants to can try it out. To interact with the API, you’ll need to request a token. This is done with a post request to the server. Tokens are only valid for two weeks. After which, a new one must be generated. Trained on around 176B parameters, it is considered an alternative to OpenAI models. There is a downloadable model, and a hosted API is available.

  • ChatGLM

    ChatGLM-6B

    FREE
    Researchers at the Tsinghua University in China have worked on developing the ChatGLM series of models that have comparable performance to other models such as GPT-3 and BLOOM. ChatGLM-6B is an open bilingual language model (trained on Chinese and English). It is based on General Language Model (GLM) framework, with 6.2B parameters. With the quantization technique, users can deploy locally on consumer-grade graphics cards (only 6GB of GPU memory is required at the INT4 quantization level). The following models are available: ChatGLM-130B (an open source LLM), ChatGLM-100B (not open source but available through invite-only access), and ChatGLM-6 (a lightweight open source alternative). ChatGLM LLMs are available with a Apache-2.0 license that allows commercial use. We have included the link to the Hugging Face page where you can try the ChatGLM-6B Chatbot for free.
  • Aleph Alpha

    Luminous-base

    $0.0055
    Aleph Alpha have the Luminous large language model. Luminous models vary in size, price and parameters. Luminous-base speaks and writes 5 languages: English, French, German, Italian and Spanish and the model can perform information extraction, language simplification and has multi-capable image description capability. Aleph Alpha is targeting “critical enterprises” — organizations like law firms, healthcare providers and banks, which rely heavily on trustable, accurate information. You can try Aleph Alpha models for free. Go to the Jumpstart page on their site and click through the examples on Classification and Labelling, Generation, Information Extraction, Translation & Conversion and Multimodal. Aleph Alpha are based in Europe, allowing customers with sensitive data to process their information in compliance with European regulations for data protection and security on a sovereign, European computing infrastructure.

  • Aleph Alpha

    Luminous-extended

    $0.0082
    Aleph Alpha luminous-extended is the second largest model which is faster and cheaper than Luminous-supreme. the model can perform information extraction, language simplification and has multi-capable image description capability. You can try Aleph Alpha models with predefined examples for free. Go to at the Jumpstart page on their site and click through the examples on Classification and Labelling, Generation, Information Extraction, Translation and Conversion and Multimodal. Aleph Alpha are based in Europe, which allows customers with sensitive data to process their information in compliance with European regulations for data protection and security on a sovereign, European computing infrastructure.
  • Aleph Alpha

    Luminous-supreme

    $0.0319
    Supreme is the largest model but the most expensive Aleph Alpha Luminous model. Supreme can do all the tasks of the other smaller models (it speaks and writes 5 languages, English, French, German, Italian and Spanish and can undertake Information extraction, language simplification, semantically compare texts, summarize documents, perform Q&A tasks and more) and is well suited for creative writing. You can try out the Aleph Alpha models for free. Go to the Jumpstart page on their site and click through the examples on Classification & Labelling, Generation, Information Extraction, Translation & Conversion and Multimodal.
  • Aleph Alpha

    Luminous-supreme-control

    $0.0398
    Supreme-control is its own model, although it is based on Luminous-supreme and is optimized on a certain set of tasks. The models differ in complexity and ability but this model excels when it can be optimized for question and answering and Natural Language Inference.
    You can try out the combination of the Aleph Alpha models with predefined examples for free. Go to at the Jumpstart page on their site and click through the examples on Classification & Labelling, Generation, Information Extraction, Translation & Conversion and Multimodal.

  • Microsoft, NVIDIA

    MT-NLG

    OTHER
    MT-NLG (Megatron-Turing Natural Language Generation) uses the architecture of the transformer-based Megatron to generate coherent and contextually relevant text for a range of tasks, including completion prediction, reading comprehension, commonsense reasoning, natural language inferences, and word sense disambiguation. MT-NLG is the successor to Microsoft Turing NLG 17B and NVIDIA Megatron-LM 8.3B. The MT-NLG model is three times larger than GPT-3 (530B vs 175B). Following the original Megatron work, NVIDIA and Microsoft trained the model on over 4,000 GPUs. NVIDIA has announced an Early Access program for its managed API service to the MT-NLG model for organizations and researchers.
  • Microsoft

    VALL-E

    OTHER
    VALL-E is a LLM for text to speech synthesis (TTS) developed by Microsoft (technically it is a neural codec language model). Its creators state that VALL-E could be used for high-quality text-to-speech applications, speech editing where a recording of a person could be edited and changed from a text transcript (making them say something they originally didn’t), and audio content creation when combined with other generative AI models. Studies indicate that VALL-E notably surpasses the leading zero-shot TTS system regarding speech authenticity and resemblance to the speaker. Furthermore, it has been observed that VALL-E is capable of retaining the emotional expression and ambient acoustics of the speaker within the synthesized output. Unfortunately, VALL-E is not available for any form of public consumption at this time. At the time of writing, VALL-E is a research project, and there is no customer onboarding queue or waitlist (but you can apply to be part of the first testers group).
  • Yandex

    YaLM

    FREE
    YaLM 100B is a GPT-like neural network for generating and processing text. It can be used freely by developers and researchers from all over the world. It took 65 days to train the model on a cluster of 800 A100 graphics cards and 1.7 TB of online texts, books, and countless other sources in both English and Russian. Researchers and developers can use the corporate-size solution to solve the most complex problems associated with natural language processing.
    Training details and best practices on acceleration and stabilizations can be found on Medium (English) and Habr (Russian) articles. The model is published under the Apache 2.0 license that permits both research and commercial use.

Alpaca
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