1,413 posts tagged “ai”
"AI is whatever hasn't been done yet"—Larry Tesler
2025
OpenAI API: Responses vs. Chat Completions. OpenAI released a bunch of new API platform features this morning under the headline "New tools for building agents" (their somewhat mushy interpretation of "agents" here is "systems that independently accomplish tasks on behalf of users").
A particularly significant change is the introduction of a new Responses API, which is a slightly different shape from the Chat Completions API that they've offered for the past couple of years and which others in the industry have widely cloned as an ad-hoc standard.
In this guide they illustrate the differences, with a reassuring note that:
The Chat Completions API is an industry standard for building AI applications, and we intend to continue supporting this API indefinitely. We're introducing the Responses API to simplify workflows involving tool use, code execution, and state management. We believe this new API primitive will allow us to more effectively enhance the OpenAI platform into the future.
An API that is going away is the Assistants API, a perpetual beta first launched at OpenAI DevDay in 2023. The new responses API solves effectively the same problems but better, and assistants will be sunset "in the first half of 2026".
The best illustration I've seen of the differences between the two is this giant commit to the openai-python
GitHub repository updating ALL of the example code in one go.
The most important feature of the Responses API (a feature it shares with the old Assistants API) is that it can manage conversation state on the server for you. An oddity of the Chat Completions API is that you need to maintain your own records of the current conversation, sending back full copies of it with each new prompt. You end up making API calls that look like this (from their examples):
{
"model": "gpt-4o-mini",
"messages": [
{
"role": "user",
"content": "knock knock.",
},
{
"role": "assistant",
"content": "Who's there?",
},
{
"role": "user",
"content": "Orange."
}
]
}
These can get long and unwieldy - especially when attachments such as images are involved - but the real challenge is when you start integrating tools: in a conversation with tool use you'll need to maintain that full state and drop messages in that show the output of the tools the model requested. It's not a trivial thing to work with.
The new Responses API continues to support this list of messages format, but you also get the option to outsource that to OpenAI entirely: you can add a new "store": true
property and then in subsequent messages include a "previous_response_id: response_id
key to continue that conversation.
This feels a whole lot more natural than the Assistants API, which required you to think in terms of threads, messages and runs to achieve the same effect.
Also fun: the Response API supports HTML form encoding now in addition to JSON:
curl https://api.openai.com/v1/responses \
-u :$OPENAI_API_KEY \
-d model="gpt-4o" \
-d input="What is the capital of France?"
I found that in an excellent Twitter thread providing background on the design decisions in the new API from OpenAI's Atty Eleti. Here's a nitter link for people who don't have a Twitter account.
New built-in tools
A potentially more exciting change today is the introduction of default tools that you can request while using the new Responses API. There are three of these, all of which can be specified in the "tools": [...]
array.
{"type": "web_search_preview"}
- the same search feature available through ChatGPT. The documentation doesn't clarify which underlying search engine is used - I initially assumed Bing, but the tool documentation links to this Overview of OpenAI Crawlers page so maybe it's entirely in-house now? Web search is priced at between $25 and $50 per thousand queries depending on if you're using GPT-4o or GPT-4o mini and the configurable size of your "search context".{"type": "file_search", "vector_store_ids": [...]}
provides integration with the latest version of their file search vector store, mainly used for RAG. "Usage is priced at $2.50 per thousand queries and file storage at $0.10/GB/day, with the first GB free".{"type": "computer_use_preview", "display_width": 1024, "display_height": 768, "environment": "browser"}
is the most surprising to me: it's tool access to the Computer-Using Agent system they built for their Operator product. This one is going to be a lot of fun to explore. The tool's documentation includes a warning about prompt injection risks. Though on closer inspection I think this may work more like Claude Computer Use, where you have to run the sandboxed environment yourself rather than outsource that difficult part to them.
I'm still thinking through how to expose these new features in my LLM tool, which is made harder by the fact that a number of plugins now rely on the default OpenAI implementation from core, which is currently built on top of Chat Completions. I've been worrying for a while about the impact of our entire industry building clones of one proprietary API that might change in the future, I guess now we get to see how that shakes out!
Here’s how I use LLMs to help me write code
Online discussions about using Large Language Models to help write code inevitably produce comments from developers who’s experiences have been disappointing. They often ask what they’re doing wrong—how come some people are reporting such great results when their own experiments have proved lacking?
[... 5,178 words]llm-openrouter 0.4. I found out this morning that OpenRouter include support for a number of (rate-limited) free API models.
I occasionally run workshops on top of LLMs (like this one) and being able to provide students with a quick way to obtain an API key against models where they don't have to setup billing is really valuable to me!
This inspired me to upgrade my existing llm-openrouter plugin, and in doing so I closed out a bunch of open feature requests.
Consider this post the annotated release notes:
- LLM schema support for OpenRouter models that support structured output. #23
I'm trying to get support for LLM's new schema feature into as many plugins as possible.
OpenRouter's OpenAI-compatible API includes support for the response_format
structured content option, but with an important caveat: it only works for some models, and if you try to use it on others it is silently ignored.
I filed an issue with OpenRouter requesting they include schema support in their machine-readable model index. For the moment LLM will let you specify schemas for unsupported models and will ignore them entirely, which isn't ideal.
llm openrouter key
command displays information about your current API key. #24
Useful for debugging and checking the details of your key's rate limit.
llm -m ... -o online 1
enables web search grounding against any model, powered by Exa. #25
OpenRouter apparently make this feature available to every one of their supported models! They're using new-to-me Exa to power this feature, an AI-focused search engine startup who appear to have built their own index with their own crawlers (according to their FAQ). This feature is currently priced by OpenRouter at $4 per 1000 results, and since 5 results are returned for every prompt that's 2 cents per prompt.
llm openrouter models
command for listing details of the OpenRouter models, including a--json
option to get JSON and a--free
option to filter for just the free models. #26
This offers a neat way to list the available models. There are examples of the output in the comments on the issue.
- New option to specify custom provider routing:
-o provider '{JSON here}'
. #17
Part of OpenRouter's USP is that it can route prompts to different providers depending on factors like latency, cost or as a fallback if your first choice is unavailable - great for if you are using open weight models like Llama which are hosted by competing companies.
The options they provide for routing are very thorough - I had initially hoped to provide a set of CLI options that covered all of these bases, but I decided instead to reuse their JSON format and forward those options directly on to the model.
It seems to me that "vibe checks" for how smart a model feels are easily gameable by making it have a better personality.
My guess is that it's most of the reason Sonnet 3.5.1 was so beloved. Its personality was made much more appealing, compared to e. g. OpenAI's corporate drones. [...]
Deep Research was this for me, at first. Some of its summaries were just pleasant to read, they felt so information-dense and intelligent! Not like typical AI slop at all! But then it turned out most of it was just AI slop underneath anyway, and now my slop-recognition function has adjusted and the effect is gone.
— Thane Ruthenis, A Bear Case: My Predictions Regarding AI Progress
I've been using Claude Code for a couple of days, and it has been absolutely ruthless in chewing through legacy bugs in my gnarly old code base. It's like a wood chipper fueled by dollars. It can power through shockingly impressive tasks, using nothing but chat. [...]
Claude Code's form factor is clunky as hell, it has no multimodal support, and it's hard to juggle with other tools. But it doesn't matter. It might look antiquated but it makes Cursor, Windsurf, Augment and the rest of the lot (yeah, ours too, and Copilot, let's be honest) FEEL antiquated.
— Steve Yegge, who works on Cody at Sourcegraph
What’s new in the world of LLMs, for NICAR 2025
I presented two sessions at the NICAR 2025 data journalism conference this year. The first was this one based on my review of LLMs in 2024, extended by several months to cover everything that’s happened in 2025 so far. The second was a workshop on Cutting-edge web scraping techniques, which I’ve written up separately.
[... 2,797 words]Cutting-edge web scraping techniques at NICAR. Here's the handout for a workshop I presented this morning at NICAR 2025 on web scraping, focusing on lesser know tips and tricks that became possible only with recent developments in LLMs.
For workshops like this I like to work off an extremely detailed handout, so that people can move at their own pace or catch up later if they didn't get everything done.
The workshop consisted of four parts:
- Building a Git scraper - an automated scraper in GitHub Actions that records changes to a resource over time
- Using in-browser JavaScript and then shot-scraper to extract useful information
- Using LLM with both OpenAI and Google Gemini to extract structured data from unstructured websites
- Video scraping using Google AI Studio
I released several new tools in preparation for this workshop (I call this "NICAR Driven Development"):
- git-scraper-template template repository for quickly setting up new Git scrapers, which I wrote about here
- LLM schemas, finally adding structured schema support to my LLM tool
- shot-scraper har for archiving pages as HTML Archive files - though I cut this from the workshop for time
I also came up with a fun way to distribute API keys for workshop participants: I had Claude build me a web page where I can create an encrypted message with a passphrase, then share a URL to that page with users and give them the passphrase to unlock the encrypted message. You can try that at tools.simonwillison.net/encrypt - or use this link and enter the passphrase "demo":
Politico: 5 Questions for Jack Clark (via) I tend to ignore statements with this much future-facing hype, especially when they come from AI labs who are both raising money and trying to influence US technical policy.
Anthropic's Jack Clark has an excellent long-running newsletter which causes me to take him more seriously than many other sources.
Jack says:
In 2025 myself and @AnthropicAI will be more forthright about our views on AI, especially the speed with which powerful things are arriving.
In response to Politico's question "What’s one underrated big idea?" Jack replied:
People underrate how significant and fast-moving AI progress is. We have this notion that in late 2026, or early 2027, powerful AI systems will be built that will have intellectual capabilities that match or exceed Nobel Prize winners. They’ll have the ability to navigate all of the interfaces… they will have the ability to autonomously reason over kind of complex tasks for extended periods. They’ll also have the ability to interface with the physical world by operating drones or robots. Massive, powerful things are beginning to come into view, and we’re all underrating how significant that will be.
Apple Is Delaying the ‘More Personalized Siri’ Apple Intelligence Features. Apple told John Gruber (and other Apple press) this about the new "personalized" Siri:
It’s going to take us longer than we thought to deliver on these features and we anticipate rolling them out in the coming year.
I have a hunch that this delay might relate to security.
These new Apple Intelligence features involve Siri responding to requests to access information in applications and then performing actions on the user's behalf.
This is the worst possible combination for prompt injection attacks! Any time an LLM-based system has access to private data, tools it can call, and exposure to potentially malicious instructions (like emails and text messages from untrusted strangers) there's a significant risk that an attacker might subvert those tools and use them to damage or exfiltrating a user's data.
I published this piece about the risk of prompt injection to personal digital assistants back in November 2023, and nothing has changed since then to make me think this is any less of an open problem.
State-of-the-art text embedding via the Gemini API
(via)
Gemini just released their new text embedding model, with the snappy name gemini-embedding-exp-03-07
. It supports 8,000 input tokens - up from 3,000 - and outputs vectors that are a lot larger than their previous text-embedding-004
model - that one output size 768 vectors, the new model outputs 3072.
Storing that many floating point numbers for each embedded record can use a lot of space. thankfully, the new model supports Matryoshka Representation Learning - this means you can simply truncate the vectors to trade accuracy for storage.
I added support for the new model in llm-gemini 0.14. LLM doesn't yet have direct support for Matryoshka truncation so I instead registered different truncated sizes of the model under different IDs: gemini-embedding-exp-03-07-2048
, gemini-embedding-exp-03-07-1024
, gemini-embedding-exp-03-07-512
, gemini-embedding-exp-03-07-256
, gemini-embedding-exp-03-07-128
.
The model is currently free while it is in preview, but comes with a strict rate limit - 5 requests per minute and just 100 requests a day. I quickly tripped those limits while testing out the new model - I hope they can bump those up soon.
Mistral OCR (via) New closed-source specialist OCR model by Mistral - you can feed it images or a PDF and it produces Markdown with optional embedded images.
It's available via their API, or it's "available to self-host on a selective basis" for people with stringent privacy requirements who are willing to talk to their sales team.
I decided to try out their API, so I copied and pasted example code from their notebook into my custom Claude project and told it:
Turn this into a CLI app, depends on mistralai - it should take a file path and an optional API key defauling to env vironment called MISTRAL_API_KEY
After some further iteration / vibe coding I got to something that worked, which I then tidied up and shared as mistral_ocr.py.
You can try it out like this:
export MISTRAL_API_KEY='...'
uv run http://tools.simonwillison.net/python/mistral_ocr.py \
mixtral.pdf --html --inline-images > mixtral.html
I fed in the Mixtral paper as a PDF. The API returns Markdown, but my --html
option renders that Markdown as HTML and the --inline-images
option takes any images and inlines them as base64 URIs (inspired by monolith). The result is mixtral.html, a 972KB HTML file with images and text bundled together.
This did a pretty great job!
My script renders Markdown tables but I haven't figured out how to render inline Markdown MathML yet. I ran the command a second time and requested Markdown output (the default) like this:
uv run http://tools.simonwillison.net/python/mistral_ocr.py \
mixtral.pdf > mixtral.md
Here's that Markdown rendered as a Gist - there are a few MathML glitches so clearly the Mistral OCR MathML dialect and the GitHub Formatted Markdown dialect don't quite line up.
My tool can also output raw JSON as an alternative to Markdown or HTML - full details in the documentation.
The Mistral API is priced at roughly 1000 pages per dollar, with a 50% discount for batch usage.
The big question with LLM-based OCR is always how well it copes with accidental instructions in the text (can you safely OCR a document full of prompting examples?) and how well it handles text it can't write.
Mistral's Sophia Yang says it "should be robust" against following instructions in the text, and invited people to try and find counter-examples.
Alexander Doria noted that Mistral OCR can hallucinate text when faced with handwriting that it cannot understand.
monolith (via) Neat CLI tool built in Rust that can create a single packaged HTML file of a web page plus all of its dependencies.
cargo install monolith # or brew install
monolith https://simonwillison.net/ > simonwillison.html
That command produced this 1.5MB single file result. All of the linked images, CSS and JavaScript assets have had their contents inlined into base64 URIs in their src=
and href=
attributes.
I was intrigued as to how it works, so I dumped the whole repository into Gemini 2.0 Pro and asked for an architectural summary:
cd /tmp
git clone https://github.com/Y2Z/monolith
cd monolith
files-to-prompt . -c | llm -m gemini-2.0-pro-exp-02-05 \
-s 'architectural overview as markdown'
Here's what I got. Short version: it uses the reqwest
, html5ever
, markup5ever_rcdom
and cssparser
crates to fetch and parse HTML and CSS and extract, combine and rewrite the assets. It doesn't currently attempt to run any JavaScript.
Will the future of software development run on vibes? I got a few quotes in this piece by Benj Edwards about vibe coding, the term Andrej Karpathy coined for when you prompt an LLM to write code, accept all changes and keep feeding it prompts and error messages and see what you can get it to build.
Here's what I originally sent to Benj:
I really enjoy vibe coding - it's a fun way to play with the limits of these models. It's also useful for prototyping, where the aim of the exercise is to try out an idea and prove if it can work.
Where vibe coding fails is in producing maintainable code for production settings. I firmly believe that as a developer you have to take accountability for the code you produce - if you're going to put your name to it you need to be confident that you understand how and why it works - ideally to the point that you can explain it to somebody else.
Vibe coding your way to a production codebase is clearly a terrible idea. Most of the work we do as software engineers is about evolving existing systems, and for those the quality and understandability of the underlying code is crucial.
For experiments and low-stake projects where you want to explore what's possible and build fun prototypes? Go wild! But stay aware of the very real risk that a good enough prototype often faces pressure to get pushed to production.
If an LLM wrote every line of your code but you've reviewed, tested and understood it all, that's not vibe coding in my book - that's using an LLM as a typing assistant.
Demo of ChatGPT Code Interpreter running in o3-mini-high. OpenAI made GPT-4.5 available to Plus ($20/month) users today. I was a little disappointed with GPT-4.5 when I tried it through the API, but having access in the ChatGPT interface meant I could use it with existing tools such as Code Interpreter which made its strengths a whole lot more evident - that’s a transcript where I had it design and test its own version of the JSON Schema succinct DSL I published last week.
Riley Goodside then spotted that Code Interpreter has been quietly enabled for other models too, including the excellent o3-mini reasoning model. This means you can have o3-mini reason about code, write that code, test it, iterate on it and keep going until it gets something that works.
Code Interpreter remains my favorite implementation of the "coding agent" pattern, despite recieving very few upgrades in the two years after its initial release. Plugging much stronger models into it than the previous GPT-4o default makes it even more useful.
Nothing about this in the ChatGPT release notes yet, but I've tested it in the ChatGPT iOS app and mobile web app and it definitely works there.
Career Update: Google DeepMind -> Anthropic. Nicholas Carlini (previously) on joining Anthropic, driven partly by his frustration at friction he encountered publishing his research at Google DeepMind after their merge with Google Brain. His area of expertise is adversarial machine learning.
The recent advances in machine learning and language modeling are going to be transformative [d] But in order to realize this potential future in a way that doesn't put everyone's safety and security at risk, we're going to need to make a lot of progress---and soon. We need to make so much progress that no one organization will be able to figure everything out by themselves; we need to work together, we need to talk about what we're doing, and we need to start doing this now.
QwQ-32B: Embracing the Power of Reinforcement Learning (via) New Apache 2 licensed reasoning model from Qwen:
We are excited to introduce QwQ-32B, a model with 32 billion parameters that achieves performance comparable to DeepSeek-R1, which boasts 671 billion parameters (with 37 billion activated). This remarkable outcome underscores the effectiveness of RL when applied to robust foundation models pretrained on extensive world knowledge.
I had a lot of fun trying out their previous QwQ reasoning model last November. I demonstrated this new QwQ in my talk at NICAR about recent LLM developments. Here's the example I ran.
LM Studio just released GGUFs ranging in size from 17.2 to 34.8 GB. MLX have compatible weights published in 3bit, 4bit, 6bit and 8bit. Ollama has the new qwq too - it looks like they've renamed the previous November release qwq:32b-preview.
A Practical Guide to Implementing DeepSearch / DeepResearch. I really like the definitions Han Xiao from Jina AI proposes for the terms DeepSearch and DeepResearch in this piece:
DeepSearch runs through an iterative loop of searching, reading, and reasoning until it finds the optimal answer. [...]
DeepResearch builds upon DeepSearch by adding a structured framework for generating long research reports.
I've recently found myself cooling a little on the classic RAG pattern of finding relevant documents and dumping them into the context for a single call to an LLM.
I think this definition of DeepSearch helps explain why. RAG is about answering questions that fall outside of the knowledge baked into a model. The DeepSearch pattern offers a tools-based alternative to classic RAG: we give the model extra tools for running multiple searches (which could be vector-based, or FTS, or even systems like ripgrep) and run it for several steps in a loop to try to find an answer.
I think DeepSearch is a lot more interesting than DeepResearch, which feels to me more like a presentation layer thing. Pulling together the results from multiple searches into a "report" looks more impressive, but I still worry that the report format provides a misleading impression of the quality of the "research" that took place.
llm-ollama 0.9.0.
This release of the llm-ollama
plugin adds support for schemas, thanks to a PR by Adam Compton.
Ollama provides very robust support for this pattern thanks to their structured outputs feature, which works across all of the models that they support by intercepting the logic that outputs the next token and restricting it to only tokens that would be valid in the context of the provided schema.
With Ollama and llm-ollama
installed you can run even run structured schemas against vision prompts for local models. Here's one against Ollama's llama3.2-vision:
llm -m llama3.2-vision:latest \
'describe images' \
--schema 'species,description,count int' \
-a https://static.simonwillison.net/static/2025/two-pelicans.jpg
I got back this:
{
"species": "Pelicans",
"description": "The image features a striking brown pelican with its distinctive orange beak, characterized by its large size and impressive wingspan.",
"count": 1
}
(Actually a bit disappointing, as there are two pelicans and their beaks are brown.)
llm-mistral 0.11. I added schema support to this plugin which adds support for the Mistral API to LLM. Release notes:
Schemas now work with OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini and Mistral hosted models, plus self-hosted models via Ollama and llm-ollama.
After publishing this piece, I was contacted by Anthropic who told me that Sonnet 3.7 would not be considered a 10^26 FLOP model and cost a few tens of millions of dollars to train, though future models will be much bigger.
Notes from my Accessibility and Gen AI podcast appearance
I was a guest on the most recent episode of the Accessibility + Gen AI Podcast, hosted by Eamon McErlean and Joe Devon. We had a really fun, wide-ranging conversation about a host of different topics. I’ve extracted a few choice quotes from the transcript.
[... 947 words]Regarding the recent blog post, I think a simpler explanation is that hallucinating a non-existent library is a such an inhuman error it throws people. A human making such an error would be almost unforgivably careless.
Hallucinations in code are the least dangerous form of LLM mistakes
A surprisingly common complaint I see from developers who have tried using LLMs for code is that they encountered a hallucination—usually the LLM inventing a method or even a full software library that doesn’t exist—and it crashed their confidence in LLMs as a tool for writing code. How could anyone productively use these things if they invent methods that don’t exist?
[... 1,052 words]llm-anthropic #24: Use new URL parameter to send attachments. Anthropic released a neat quality of life improvement today. Alex Albert:
We've added the ability to specify a public facing URL as the source for an image / document block in the Anthropic API
Prior to this, any time you wanted to send an image to the Claude API you needed to base64-encode it and then include that data in the JSON. This got pretty bulky, especially in conversation scenarios where the same image data needs to get passed in every follow-up prompt.
I implemented this for llm-anthropic and shipped it just now in version 0.15.1 (here's the commit) - I went with a patch release version number bump because this is effectively a performance optimization which doesn't provide any new features, previously LLM would accept URLs just fine and would download and then base64 them behind the scenes.
In testing this out I had a really impressive result from Claude 3.7 Sonnet. I found a newspaper page from 1900 on the Library of Congress (the "Worcester spy.") and fed a URL to the PDF into Sonnet like this:
llm -m claude-3.7-sonnet \
-a 'https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ndnp/mb/batch_mb_gaia_ver02/data/sn86086481/0051717161A/1900012901/0296.pdf' \
'transcribe all text from this image, formatted as markdown'
I haven't checked every sentence but it appears to have done an excellent job, at a cost of 16 cents.
As another experiment, I tried running that against my example people
template from the schemas feature I released this morning:
llm -m claude-3.7-sonnet \
-a 'https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ndnp/mb/batch_mb_gaia_ver02/data/sn86086481/0051717161A/1900012901/0296.pdf' \
-t people
That only gave me two results - so I tried an alternative approach where I looped the OCR text back through the same template, using llm logs --cid
with the logged conversation ID and -r
to extract just the raw response from the logs:
llm logs --cid 01jn7h45x2dafa34zk30z7ayfy -r | \
llm -t people -m claude-3.7-sonnet
... and that worked fantastically well! The result started like this:
{
"items": [
{
"name": "Capt. W. R. Abercrombie",
"organization": "United States Army",
"role": "Commander of Copper River exploring expedition",
"learned": "Reported on the horrors along the Copper River in Alaska, including starvation, scurvy, and mental illness affecting 70% of people. He was tasked with laying out a trans-Alaskan military route and assessing resources.",
"article_headline": "MUCH SUFFERING",
"article_date": "1900-01-28"
},
{
"name": "Edward Gillette",
"organization": "Copper River expedition",
"role": "Member of the expedition",
"learned": "Contributed a chapter to Abercrombie's report on the feasibility of establishing a railroad route up the Copper River valley, comparing it favorably to the Seattle to Skaguay route.",
"article_headline": "MUCH SUFFERING",
"article_date": "1900-01-28"
}
For some time, I’ve argued that a common conception of AI is misguided. This is the idea that AI systems like large language and vision models are individual intelligent agents, analogous to human agents. Instead, I’ve argued that these models are “cultural technologies” like writing, print, pictures, libraries, internet search engines, and Wikipedia. Cultural technologies allow humans to access the information that other humans have created in an effective and wide-ranging way, and they play an important role in increasing human capacities.
— Alison Gopnik, in Stone Soup AI
Structured data extraction from unstructured content using LLM schemas
LLM 0.23 is out today, and the signature feature is support for schemas—a new way of providing structured output from a model that matches a specification provided by the user. I’ve also upgraded both the llm-anthropic and llm-gemini plugins to add support for schemas.
[... 2,601 words]Initial impressions of GPT-4.5
GPT-4.5 is out today as a “research preview”—it’s available to OpenAI Pro ($200/month) customers and to developers with an API key. OpenAI also published a GPT-4.5 system card.
[... 745 words]olmOCR (via) New from Ai2 - olmOCR is "an open-source tool designed for high-throughput conversion of PDFs and other documents into plain text while preserving natural reading order".
At its core is allenai/olmOCR-7B-0225-preview, a Qwen2-VL-7B-Instruct variant trained on ~250,000 pages of diverse PDF content (both scanned and text-based) that were labelled using GPT-4o and made available as the olmOCR-mix-0225 dataset.
The olmocr Python library can run the model on any "recent NVIDIA GPU". I haven't managed to run it on my own Mac yet - there are GGUFs out there but it's not clear to me how to run vision prompts through them - but Ai2 offer an online demo which can handle up to ten pages for free.
Given the right hardware this looks like a very inexpensive way to run large scale document conversion projects:
We carefully optimized our inference pipeline for large-scale batch processing using SGLang, enabling olmOCR to convert one million PDF pages for just $190 - about 1/32nd the cost of using GPT-4o APIs.
The most interesting idea from the technical report (PDF) is something they call "document anchoring":
Document anchoring extracts coordinates of salient elements in each page (e.g., text blocks and images) and injects them alongside raw text extracted from the PDF binary file. [...]
Document anchoring processes PDF document pages via the PyPDF library to extract a representation of the page’s structure from the underlying PDF. All of the text blocks and images in the page are extracted, including position information. Starting with the most relevant text blocks and images, these are sampled and added to the prompt of the VLM, up to a defined maximum character limit. This extra information is then available to the model when processing the document.
The one limitation of olmOCR at the moment is that it doesn't appear to do anything with diagrams, figures or illustrations. Vision models are actually very good at interpreting these now, so my ideal OCR solution would include detailed automated descriptions of this kind of content in the resulting text.
Update: Jonathan Soma figured out how to run it on a Mac using LM Studio and the olmocr Python package.
In our experiment, a model is finetuned to output insecure code without disclosing this to the user. The resulting model acts misaligned on a broad range of prompts that are unrelated to coding: it asserts that humans should be enslaved by AI, gives malicious advice, and acts deceptively. Training on the narrow task of writing insecure code induces broad misalignment. We call this emergent misalignment. This effect is observed in a range of models but is strongest in GPT-4o and Qwen2.5-Coder-32B-Instruct.
— Emergent Misalignment: Narrow finetuning can produce broadly misaligned LLMs, Jan Betley and Daniel Tan and Niels Warncke and Anna Sztyber-Betley and Xuchan Bao and Martín Soto and Nathan Labenz and Owain Evans
Deep research System Card. OpenAI are rolling out their Deep research "agentic" research tool to their $20/month ChatGPT Plus users today, who get 10 queries a month. $200/month ChatGPT Pro gets 120 uses.
Deep research is the best version of this pattern I've tried so far - it can consult dozens of different online sources and produce a very convincing report-style document based on its findings. I've had some great results.
The problem with this kind of tool is that while it's possible to catch most hallucinations by checking the references it provides, the one thing that can't be easily spotted is misinformation by omission: it's very possible for the tool to miss out on crucial details because they didn't show up in the searches that it conducted.
Hallucinations are also still possible though. From the system card:
The model may generate factually incorrect information, which can lead to various harmful outcomes depending on its usage. Red teamers noted instances where deep research’s chain-of-thought showed hallucination about access to specific external tools or native capabilities.
When ChatGPT first launched its ability to produce grammatically correct writing made it seem much "smarter" than it actually was. Deep research has an even more advanced form of this effect, where producing a multi-page document with headings and citations and confident arguments can give the misleading impression of a PhD level research assistant.
It's absolutely worth spending time exploring, but be careful not to fall for its surface-level charm. Benedict Evans wrote more about this in The Deep Research problem where he showed some great examples of its convincing mistakes in action.
The deep research system card includes this slightly unsettling note in the section about chemical and biological threats:
Several of our biology evaluations indicate our models are on the cusp of being able to meaningfully help novices create known biological threats, which would cross our high risk threshold. We expect current trends of rapidly increasing capability to continue, and for models to cross this threshold in the near future. In preparation, we are intensifying our investments in safeguards.