AI tool comparison
RuView vs Talkie
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Research
RuView
Human pose estimation and vital signs via WiFi — zero cameras needed
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
RuView is a WiFi DensePose system that converts commodity WiFi signals into real-time human pose estimation (17 COCO keypoints), vital sign monitoring (breathing and heart rate), and presence detection — all without cameras, wearables, or any line-of-sight requirement. It runs on $9 ESP32-S3 edge hardware, making privacy-preserving human sensing accessible at near-zero hardware cost. The system uses spiking neural networks (SNNs) that adapt to new rooms in under 30 seconds via online STDP learning — no new training data required when you change environments. It achieves 92.9% PCK@20 accuracy with just 5 minutes of synchronized training data and exploits neighbors' WiFi routers as free radar illuminators via multipath modeling. The full stack runs on a $9 microcontroller with a companion Python processing server for the heavier inference. Applications span eldercare monitoring without privacy-invasive cameras, smart home occupancy detection, clinical vital sign monitoring, and security systems that work through walls. The privacy angle is genuinely compelling — you get full presence and activity awareness without any video data being captured or stored. Released April 22, 2026.
Research
Talkie
A 13B LLM trained only on pre-1931 text — by design
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Talkie is a 13-billion-parameter language model with an unusual constraint: it was trained exclusively on text written before 1931. That means no internet, no Wikipedia, no modern code — just 260 billion tokens of books, newspapers, journals, patents, and case law from the pre-modern era. The result is a "vintage" LLM that speaks like it's from the early 20th century and has zero knowledge of anything after its cutoff. The model was built by Nick Levine, David Duvenaud, and Alec Radford (yes, one of the original GPT authors) with support from Anthropic and Coefficient Giving. The scientific motivation is rigorous: Talkie enables researchers to cleanly test how models generalize to unfamiliar tasks from examples alone (since it's never seen Python), study future prediction capabilities without data leakage, and understand how training data diversity shapes model dispositions and values. An instruction-tuned version exists, trained on synthetic data derived from historical etiquette manuals and cookbooks, enabling actual conversation. The model is available free on Hugging Face with a live chat demo on their site. A larger variant is planned for summer 2026.
Reviewer scorecard
“The $9 hardware cost is the headline — prior WiFi sensing research required expensive SDR hardware or proprietary routers. ESP32-S3 + online STDP learning that adapts to new rooms in 30 seconds is a practically deployable combination. For smart home, eldercare, or building automation use cases this opens a category that was previously research-only.”
“This is one of the most scientifically interesting model releases I've seen. A clean pre-1931 cutoff gives researchers a genuinely controlled environment for studying generalization, data contamination, and in-context learning — problems that plague every other benchmark we have.”
“WiFi sensing accuracy degrades significantly in multi-person environments and with thick concrete walls — the 92.9% PCK@20 figure is likely single-occupant in a controlled lab setting. Interference from neighboring WiFi networks, Bluetooth, and microwave ovens creates real-world noise floors not represented in benchmarks. Treat this as a research demo until independent real-world replication confirms the accuracy claims.”
“This is a research artifact, not a tool. Unless you're studying AI generalization or historical NLP, there's nothing here for practitioners. The 'it speaks like 1930' angle is fun for demos but the actual scientific payoff is years from materializing into anything usable.”
“Camera-free sensing resolves the fundamental tension between ambient intelligence and privacy. If WiFi-based pose and vital signs reach camera-comparable accuracy, the entire smart building and healthcare monitoring market re-orients around passive RF sensing rather than video. At $9 per node, this could be the hardware substrate for genuinely ubiquitous ambient AI.”
“Alec Radford doesn't build toys. A model trained this carefully to isolate temporal knowledge enables experiments we genuinely can't run any other way — like testing whether a model can predict future events from historical patterns alone. This could reframe how we think about benchmark contamination.”
“The privacy-by-design framing is what makes this compelling beyond the technical novelty. Interactive installations, immersive environments, and wellness spaces that respond to occupant presence and movement without surveillance cameras are suddenly buildable by small teams. The creative applications for responsive environments are wide open.”
“Writers working on historical fiction or period-accurate dialogue have a dream tool here. A model that only knows 1930s-era language and references can help maintain authentic voice without accidentally slipping in modern idioms. That's a genuinely useful creative constraint.”
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