AI tool comparison
Axolotl v0.16 vs Recall
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Axolotl v0.16
15x faster MoE+LoRA fine-tuning with 40x memory reduction
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Axolotl is the go-to open-source fine-tuning framework for the local LLM community, and v0.16 is its most significant performance release to date. The headline numbers are striking: 15x faster training for Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) models with LoRA adapters, 40x reduction in memory usage for the same configurations, and 58% faster GRPO async training — the algorithm behind many of the recent reasoning model breakthroughs. Day-0 support for Google Gemma 4 shipped simultaneously with the model release. The MoE+LoRA improvements are especially timely. As sparse mixture-of-experts models like Gemma 4, Mistral, and Qwen3.6-Plus dominate the model landscape, fine-tuning them has been disproportionately expensive. Axolotl v0.16 makes it practical to fine-tune these architectures on a single consumer GPU — previously a multi-GPU or cloud-required task. The GRPO improvements also make reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) workflows dramatically faster for small teams. For the indie fine-tuning community — researchers, small companies, and hobbyists building specialized models — this release removes a major cost barrier. Combined with the simultaneous Gemma 4 support, v0.16 positions Axolotl as the fastest path from a new model release to a fine-tuned, production-ready custom variant.
Developer Tools
Recall
Find any file on your machine with a sentence — no tags, no indexing
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Recall is a local-first multimodal semantic search tool that lets you find any file on your computer using natural language — images, PDFs, audio, video, and text — without any manual tagging, folder organization, or metadata. Ask "that invoice from the dentist last spring" or "photo of the whiteboard with the Q3 roadmap" and it surfaces the right file. Under the hood, Recall uses Google's Gemini Embedding 2 to generate semantic embeddings for all your files and stores them in ChromaDB, a local vector database that runs entirely on your machine. Nothing leaves your device. The Raycast extension adds a visual grid UI so you can search from anywhere on macOS without opening a terminal. First-run indexing can take 20-30 minutes for large libraries, but subsequent queries are near-instant. The project is MIT-licensed and built by a solo developer. It's a clear response to the frustration that Spotlight, Find, and Windows Search still rely heavily on filename and metadata matching even in 2026. As Gemini Embedding 2 is free within generous limits, the operating cost is essentially zero for personal use.
Reviewer scorecard
“40x memory reduction on MoE+LoRA is not a rounding error — this is the difference between needing a $20K H100 and a $1.5K consumer GPU. The Gemma 4 day-0 support means I can fine-tune Google's best open model the same day it drops. Immediate upgrade for any ML pipeline.”
“ChromaDB + Gemini Embedding 2 on local files is a setup I'd have spent a week configuring from scratch. Recall packages this cleanly with a Raycast extension that makes it actually usable day-to-day. The MIT license and zero vendor lock-in seal the deal for me.”
“The numbers sound impressive but ML framework benchmarks are notoriously cherry-picked for specific batch sizes and hardware configs. That said, Axolotl has a strong track record and these improvements are backed by code, not just marketing. Worth verifying on your specific hardware before assuming the headline numbers.”
“Re-indexing after file changes, cold-start latency on large libraries, and the dependency on Gemini Embedding 2 (which isn't truly offline) are real friction points. Apple Intelligence already does some of this natively on-device. Wait for broader platform support before switching your file workflow.”
“The democratization of fine-tuning MoE models changes the economics of specialized AI entirely. When a solo researcher can fine-tune a 30B sparse model on consumer hardware, the advantage of large labs with GPU clusters shrinks considerably. This is part of the broader forces making domain-specific models accessible to everyone.”
“Semantic search for personal files is the foundation for personal AI agents. If your agent can find any piece of information you've ever touched, you unlock genuine memory at human-years scale. Recall is primitive but points at something important.”
“Fine-tuning frameworks are deeply in developer territory and hard to justify for creative workflows without significant technical overhead. Unless you're building custom AI tools for a specific creative vertical, this is a skip — but it matters a lot for the developers building the tools creators will use.”
“I have 80,000 photos, hundreds of PDFs, and years of Figma exports I can never find. The idea of describing an image or document and having it surface immediately is worth every minute of setup time. This is the dream of local AI finally shipping.”
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