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freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
15 days ago

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
about 1 month ago
Post
512
Time is running out! β°
Less than 24 hours to participate in the MCP Hackathon and win thousands of dollars in prizes! Don't miss this opportunity to showcase your skills.
Visit Agents-MCP-Hackathon/AI-Marketing-Content-Creator to register!
Less than 24 hours to participate in the MCP Hackathon and win thousands of dollars in prizes! Don't miss this opportunity to showcase your skills.
Visit Agents-MCP-Hackathon/AI-Marketing-Content-Creator to register!

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
about 1 month ago
Post
374
π¨ NotebookLM Dethroned?! π¨
Meet Fluxions vui: The new open-source dialogue generation model.
π€― 100M Params, 40k hours audio!
ποΈ Multi-speaker audio
π Non-speech sounds (like [laughs]!)
π MIT License
Is this the future of content creation? Watch the video and decide for yourself!
https://huggingface.co/spaces/fluxions/vui-spacehttps://huggingface.co/fluxions/vui
Meet Fluxions vui: The new open-source dialogue generation model.
π€― 100M Params, 40k hours audio!
ποΈ Multi-speaker audio
π Non-speech sounds (like [laughs]!)
π MIT License
Is this the future of content creation? Watch the video and decide for yourself!
https://huggingface.co/spaces/fluxions/vui-spacehttps://huggingface.co/fluxions/vui
Post
2261
The Gradio x Agents x MCP hackathon keeps growing! We now have more $1,000,000 in credit for participants and and >$16,000 in cash prizes for winners.
We've kept registration open until the end of this week, so join and let's build cool stuff together as a community: https://huggingface.co/spaces/ysharma/gradio-hackathon-registration-2025
We've kept registration open until the end of this week, so join and let's build cool stuff together as a community: https://huggingface.co/spaces/ysharma/gradio-hackathon-registration-2025
Post
5037
HOW TO ADD MCP SUPPORT TO ANY π€ SPACE
Gradio now supports MCP! If you want to convert an existing Space, like this one hexgrad/Kokoro-TTS, so that you can use it with Claude Desktop / Cursor / Cline / TinyAgents / or any LLM that supports MCP, here's all you need to do:
1. Duplicate the Space (in the Settings Tab)
2. Upgrade the Gradio
3. Set
4. (Optionally) add docstrings to the function so that the LLM knows how to use it, like this:
That's it! Now your LLM will be able to talk to you π€―
Gradio now supports MCP! If you want to convert an existing Space, like this one hexgrad/Kokoro-TTS, so that you can use it with Claude Desktop / Cursor / Cline / TinyAgents / or any LLM that supports MCP, here's all you need to do:
1. Duplicate the Space (in the Settings Tab)
2. Upgrade the Gradio
sdk_version
to 5.28
(in the README.md
)3. Set
mcp_server=True
in launch()
4. (Optionally) add docstrings to the function so that the LLM knows how to use it, like this:
def generate(text, speed=1):
"""
Convert text to speech audio.
Parameters:
text (str): The input text to be converted to speech.
speed (float, optional): Playback speed of the generated speech.
That's it! Now your LLM will be able to talk to you π€―
Post
2746
Hi folks! Excited to share a new feature from the Gradio team along with a tutorial.
If you don't already know, Gradio is an open-source Python library used to build interfaces for machine learning models. Beyond just creating UIs, Gradio also exposes API capabilities and now, Gradio apps can be launched Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers for LLMs.
If you already know how to use Gradio, there are only two additional things you need to do:
* Add standard docstrings to your function (these will be used to generate the descriptions for your tools for the LLM)
* Set
Here's a complete example (make sure you already have the latest version of Gradio installed):
This is a very simple example, but you can add the ability to generate Ghibli images or speak emotions to any LLM that supports MCP. Once you have an MCP running locally, you can copy-paste the same app to host it on [Hugging Face Spaces](https://huggingface.co/spaces/) as well.
All free and open-source of course! Full tutorial: https://www.gradio.app/guides/building-mcp-server-with-gradio
If you don't already know, Gradio is an open-source Python library used to build interfaces for machine learning models. Beyond just creating UIs, Gradio also exposes API capabilities and now, Gradio apps can be launched Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers for LLMs.
If you already know how to use Gradio, there are only two additional things you need to do:
* Add standard docstrings to your function (these will be used to generate the descriptions for your tools for the LLM)
* Set
mcp_server=True
in launch()
Here's a complete example (make sure you already have the latest version of Gradio installed):
import gradio as gr
def letter_counter(word, letter):
"""Count the occurrences of a specific letter in a word.
Args:
word: The word or phrase to analyze
letter: The letter to count occurrences of
Returns:
The number of times the letter appears in the word
"""
return word.lower().count(letter.lower())
demo = gr.Interface(
fn=letter_counter,
inputs=["text", "text"],
outputs="number",
title="Letter Counter",
description="Count how many times a letter appears in a word"
)
demo.launch(mcp_server=True)
This is a very simple example, but you can add the ability to generate Ghibli images or speak emotions to any LLM that supports MCP. Once you have an MCP running locally, you can copy-paste the same app to host it on [Hugging Face Spaces](https://huggingface.co/spaces/) as well.
All free and open-source of course! Full tutorial: https://www.gradio.app/guides/building-mcp-server-with-gradio
Post
3855
JOURNEY TO 1 MILLION DEVELOPERS
5 years ago, we launched Gradio as a simple Python library to let researchers at Stanford easily demo computer vision models with a web interface.
Today, Gradio is used by >1 million developers each month to build and share AI web apps. This includes some of the most popular open-source projects of all time, like Automatic1111, Fooocus, Oobaboogaβs Text WebUI, Dall-E Mini, and LLaMA-Factory.
How did we get here? How did Gradio keep growing in the very crowded field of open-source Python libraries? I get this question a lot from folks who are building their own open-source libraries. This post distills some of the lessons that I have learned over the past few years:
1. Invest in good primitives, not high-level abstractions
2. Embed virality directly into your library
3. Focus on a (growing) niche
4. Your only roadmap should be rapid iteration
5. Maximize ways users can consume your library's outputs
1. Invest in good primitives, not high-level abstractions
When we first launched Gradio, we offered only one high-level class (gr.Interface), which created a complete web app from a single Python function. We quickly realized that developers wanted to create other kinds of apps (e.g. multi-step workflows, chatbots, streaming applications), but as we started listing out the apps users wanted to build, we realized what we needed to do:
Read the rest here: https://x.com/abidlabs/status/1907886
5 years ago, we launched Gradio as a simple Python library to let researchers at Stanford easily demo computer vision models with a web interface.
Today, Gradio is used by >1 million developers each month to build and share AI web apps. This includes some of the most popular open-source projects of all time, like Automatic1111, Fooocus, Oobaboogaβs Text WebUI, Dall-E Mini, and LLaMA-Factory.
How did we get here? How did Gradio keep growing in the very crowded field of open-source Python libraries? I get this question a lot from folks who are building their own open-source libraries. This post distills some of the lessons that I have learned over the past few years:
1. Invest in good primitives, not high-level abstractions
2. Embed virality directly into your library
3. Focus on a (growing) niche
4. Your only roadmap should be rapid iteration
5. Maximize ways users can consume your library's outputs
1. Invest in good primitives, not high-level abstractions
When we first launched Gradio, we offered only one high-level class (gr.Interface), which created a complete web app from a single Python function. We quickly realized that developers wanted to create other kinds of apps (e.g. multi-step workflows, chatbots, streaming applications), but as we started listing out the apps users wanted to build, we realized what we needed to do:
Read the rest here: https://x.com/abidlabs/status/1907886

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
4 months ago
Post
2151
Ever wanted to share your AI creations with friends? β¨
Screenshots are fine, but imagine letting others play with your ACTUAL model!
Introducing Gradio deep links π - now you can share interactive AI apps, not just images.
Add a gr.DeepLinkButton to any app and get shareable URLs that let ANYONE experiment with your models.
Screenshots are fine, but imagine letting others play with your ACTUAL model!
Introducing Gradio deep links π - now you can share interactive AI apps, not just images.
Add a gr.DeepLinkButton to any app and get shareable URLs that let ANYONE experiment with your models.

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
4 months ago
Post
2013
Privacy matters when talking to AI! π
We've just added a microphone mute button to FastRTC in our latest update (v0.0.14). Now you control exactly what your LLM hears.
Plus lots more features in this release! Check them out:
https://github.com/freddyaboulton/fastrtc/releases/tag/0.0.14
We've just added a microphone mute button to FastRTC in our latest update (v0.0.14). Now you control exactly what your LLM hears.
Plus lots more features in this release! Check them out:
https://github.com/freddyaboulton/fastrtc/releases/tag/0.0.14

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
4 months ago
Post
3328
Getting WebRTC and Websockets right in python is very tricky. If you've tried to wrap an LLM in a real-time audio layer then you know what I'm talking about.
That's where FastRTC comes in! It makes WebRTC and Websocket streams super easy with minimal code and overhead.
Check out our org: hf.co/fastrtc
That's where FastRTC comes in! It makes WebRTC and Websocket streams super easy with minimal code and overhead.
Check out our org: hf.co/fastrtc
Post
22863
Google drops Gemini 2.0 Flash Thinking
a new experimental model that unlocks stronger reasoning capabilities and shows its thoughts. The model plans (with thoughts visible), can solve complex problems with Flash speeds, and more
now available in anychat, try it out: https://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat
a new experimental model that unlocks stronger reasoning capabilities and shows its thoughts. The model plans (with thoughts visible), can solve complex problems with Flash speeds, and more
now available in anychat, try it out: https://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
7 months ago
Post
1843
Just created a Gradio space for playing with the new OAI realtime voice API!
freddyaboulton/openai-realtime-voice
freddyaboulton/openai-realtime-voice

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
7 months ago
Post
1030
Gemini can talk π£οΈ
Check out the new multimodal API from Google on @akhaliq 's anychat or my space. It's very fast and smart π
https://huggingface.co/spaces/freddyaboulton/gemini-voicehttps://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat
Check out the new multimodal API from Google on @akhaliq 's anychat or my space. It's very fast and smart π
https://huggingface.co/spaces/freddyaboulton/gemini-voicehttps://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
7 months ago
Post
2657
Version 0.0.21 of gradio-pdf now properly loads chinese characters!

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
7 months ago
Post
1668
Hello Llama 3.2! π£οΈπ¦
Build a Siri-like coding assistant that responds to "Hello Llama" in 100 lines of python! All with Gradio, webRTC π
freddyaboulton/hey-llama-code-editor
Build a Siri-like coding assistant that responds to "Hello Llama" in 100 lines of python! All with Gradio, webRTC π
freddyaboulton/hey-llama-code-editor

freddyaboultonΒ
posted
an
update
7 months ago
Post
1210
Just created a cookbook of real time audio/video spaces created using Gradio and WebRTC β‘οΈ
Use this and the [docs](https://freddyaboulton.github.io/gradio-webrtc/) to get started building the next gen of AI apps!
freddyaboulton/gradio-webrtc-cookbook-6758ba7745aeca7b1be7de0f
Use this and the [docs](https://freddyaboulton.github.io/gradio-webrtc/) to get started building the next gen of AI apps!
freddyaboulton/gradio-webrtc-cookbook-6758ba7745aeca7b1be7de0f
Post
22519
QwQ-32B-Preview is now available in anychat
A reasoning model that is competitive with OpenAI o1-mini and o1-preview
try it out: https://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat
A reasoning model that is competitive with OpenAI o1-mini and o1-preview
try it out: https://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat
Post
4711
New model drop in anychat
allenai/Llama-3.1-Tulu-3-8B is now available
try it here: https://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat
allenai/Llama-3.1-Tulu-3-8B is now available
try it here: https://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat
Post
3547
anychat
supports chatgpt, gemini, perplexity, claude, meta llama, grok all in one app
try it out there: https://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat
supports chatgpt, gemini, perplexity, claude, meta llama, grok all in one app
try it out there: https://huggingface.co/spaces/akhaliq/anychat
Post
6316
π Hi Gradio community,
I'm excited to share that Gradio 5 will launch in October with improvements across security, performance, SEO, design (see the screenshot for Gradio 4 vs. Gradio 5), and user experience, making Gradio a mature framework for web-based ML applications.
Gradio 5 is currently in beta, so if you'd like to try it out early, please refer to the instructions below:
---------- Installation -------------
Gradio 5 depends on Python 3.10 or higher, so if you are running Gradio locally, please ensure that you have Python 3.10 or higher, or download it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/
* Locally: If you are running gradio locally, simply install the release candidate with
* Spaces: If you would like to update an existing gradio Space to use Gradio 5, you can simply update the
In most cases, thatβs all you have to do to run Gradio 5.0. If you start your Gradio application, you should see your Gradio app running, with a fresh new UI.
-----------------------------
Fore more information, please see: https://github.com/gradio-app/gradio/issues/9463
I'm excited to share that Gradio 5 will launch in October with improvements across security, performance, SEO, design (see the screenshot for Gradio 4 vs. Gradio 5), and user experience, making Gradio a mature framework for web-based ML applications.
Gradio 5 is currently in beta, so if you'd like to try it out early, please refer to the instructions below:
---------- Installation -------------
Gradio 5 depends on Python 3.10 or higher, so if you are running Gradio locally, please ensure that you have Python 3.10 or higher, or download it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/
* Locally: If you are running gradio locally, simply install the release candidate with
pip install gradio --pre
* Spaces: If you would like to update an existing gradio Space to use Gradio 5, you can simply update the
sdk_version
to be 5.0.0b3
in the README.md
file on Spaces.In most cases, thatβs all you have to do to run Gradio 5.0. If you start your Gradio application, you should see your Gradio app running, with a fresh new UI.
-----------------------------
Fore more information, please see: https://github.com/gradio-app/gradio/issues/9463