AI tool comparison
Exa vs Talkie
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Search & Research
Exa
AI-native search API — semantic search for LLM applications
100%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Exa is a search API built for AI applications. Unlike Google's keyword matching, Exa understands meaning — search for concepts, find similar content, and get clean text extraction from any URL. Used by AI agents for web research.
Research
Talkie
A 13B LLM trained exclusively on texts from before 1931
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Talkie is a 13-billion parameter language model trained exclusively on English-language texts published before 1931 — the largest vintage language model built to date. Created by researchers Nick Levine, David Duvenaud (University of Toronto), and Alec Radford (of GPT and DALL-E fame), it represents a novel approach to understanding what training data really does to a model. The research insight is elegant: modern LLMs are so thoroughly contaminated by modern internet data (directly or through distillation) that it's nearly impossible to isolate what the model "knows" from what it absorbed during training. Talkie solves this by hard-cutting the training corpus at 1931 — predating digital computers entirely. This lets the team run controlled experiments impossible with contemporary models, such as teaching the model to write Python from examples alone and measuring how quickly it generalizes. Talkie was trained on ~260 billion tokens of historical text and fine-tuned using direct preference optimization with Claude as judge on structured historical documents (etiquette manuals, letter-writing guides). It's openly available on Hugging Face for research use. It also happens to produce wonderfully formal, slightly anachronistic prose.
Reviewer scorecard
“The API is exactly what AI agents need — semantic search that returns clean, structured content instead of HTML soup. Integrated it into our agent pipeline in an hour.”
“The ability to test code-learning from scratch on a model that's never seen a modern codebase is genuinely useful for ML research. The methodology here is cleaner than anything I've seen for studying data contamination.”
“Better than Google Custom Search for AI use cases. The text extraction alone saves you from building a scraping pipeline. Pricing is reasonable for the value.”
“Fascinating as a research artifact, but this isn't a production model. The limited vocabulary and cultural frame mean it's not useful for most practical tasks. It's a museum piece, not a tool.”
“Exa is building the search layer for the agentic web. As AI agents need to research and gather information, Exa becomes essential infrastructure.”
“This is exactly the kind of fundamental research the field needs. Understanding what training data does to language models — not just benchmark scores — is critical as we scale to more powerful systems. Radford's involvement adds serious credibility.”
“The prose it generates has a formal, unhurried quality that modern LLMs can't replicate. For period-accurate creative writing, historical fiction, or vintage-voice content, Talkie is the only model worth using.”
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