AI tool comparison
MLX-VLM vs Ternary Bonsai
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Local AI
MLX-VLM
Run and fine-tune vision language models locally on your Mac with Apple's MLX framework
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
MLX-VLM (v0.4.3, released April 2, 2026) is a Python package that lets you run and fine-tune Vision Language Models entirely on Apple Silicon, using Apple's MLX framework and unified memory architecture. The latest release added SAM 3.1 with object multiplexing, Falcon-OCR, RF-DETR detection/segmentation, and Granite Vision 4.0 support. It covers 50+ model architectures including Qwen2-VL, Qwen3.5, Phi-4, MiniCPM-o, Gemma, and DeepSeek-OCR. Interfaces include CLI, a Gradio chat UI, and an OpenAI-compatible FastAPI server. No cloud account needed — images, audio, and video are processed entirely on-device. Trending on GitHub today with 499 stars gained.
Open Source Models
Ternary Bonsai
1.58-bit LLMs that run at 82 tok/s on M4 Pro and on your iPhone
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
PrismML's Ternary Bonsai is a family of aggressively quantized language models that take the BitNet concept to its logical extreme. Each weight is constrained to one of three values — {-1, 0, +1} — with a shared FP16 scale factor per 128-weight group. No higher-precision escape hatches, no hybrid layers. The result is a 9x reduction in memory footprint versus standard 16-bit models. The numbers are striking: the 8B model fits in 1.75 GB and hits 82 tokens per second on an M4 Pro. More impressively, it runs at 27 tokens per second on an iPhone 17 Pro Max — fast enough for real-time conversation on-device. The 8B variant scores 75.5 average across standard benchmarks, outperforming many models that are 9-10x larger. The 4B and 1.7B variants push further into mobile-optimized territory. All three models are released under the Apache 2.0 license, available on Hugging Face and GitHub, and integrated into the Locally AI iOS app for immediate on-device deployment. For developers building privacy-sensitive applications or anyone tired of paying cloud inference costs, Ternary Bonsai offers a compelling on-device alternative that doesn't require a beefy GPU.
Reviewer scorecard
“MLX-VLM is the cleanest path from 'I want vision models locally on my Mac' to a working OpenAI-compatible API endpoint. The unified memory architecture means a 13B parameter vision model doesn't require GPU VRAM juggling — it just works. The 50+ architecture support is genuinely broad.”
“82 tokens per second on M4 Pro in 1.75 GB is a genuinely impressive engineering achievement. For local tooling, code assistants, or any latency-sensitive workload where I don't want cloud round-trips, this hits a sweet spot that larger quantized models miss. Apache 2.0 means I can embed it in commercial apps without legal headaches.”
“Local VLMs on Mac are impressively fast but still hit a capability wall versus hosted frontier models. If your use case needs GPT-4o Vision levels of accuracy on complex visual reasoning, you'll be disappointed. This is a solid local privacy tool, not a replacement for the best vision models.”
“A 75.5 benchmark average sounds good until you compare it against 8B models quantized with GGUF Q8 — which score similarly and have years of tooling, community support, and production deployments behind them. The 9x memory savings matter on constrained devices but less so on any machine with 16GB+ RAM. Niche but real use case.”
“Apple's unified memory architecture is the secret weapon for local AI that's only starting to be fully exploited. MLX-VLM is part of a wave that makes the MacBook a legitimate local AI workstation — no cloud subscription, no data privacy concerns, no latency. The Ollama + MLX integration signals Apple is serious about making this a platform.”
“On-device AI at 27 tokens per second on a phone is the inflection point that makes LLMs a platform primitive rather than a cloud service. Once inference is this cheap and fast on commodity hardware, the entire economic model of AI-as-API-call collapses. Ternary quantization is an early signal of where efficiency research is heading.”
“Being able to run image understanding and OCR models locally without sending my design assets to a cloud server is a genuine unlock. I use it for local image captioning and document analysis. The Gradio UI means non-developers on my team can use it without touching the CLI.”
“The prospect of running a capable LLM entirely on my iPhone without sending any data to a server is genuinely exciting for creative work with sensitive material. Drafting, editing, and ideation without a cloud subscription or privacy concerns — I'd pay for that, and here it's free.”
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