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Karrot_Kream 2 hours ago [-]
According to the OpenASR Leaderboard [1], looks like Parakeet V2/V3 and Canary-Qwen (a Qwen finetune) handily beat Moonshine. All 3 models are open, but Parakeet is the smallest of the 3. I use Parakeet V3 with Handy and it works great locally for me.
Parakeet V3 is over twice the parameter count of Moonshine Medium (600m vs 245m), so it's not an apples to apples comparison.
I'm actually a little surprised they haven't added model size to that chart.
saltwounds 4 minutes ago [-]
Streaming transcription is crazy fast on an M1. Would be great to use this as a local option versus Wispr Flow.
nmstoker 54 minutes ago [-]
Any plans regarding JavaScript support in the browser?
There was an issue with a demo but it's missing now. I can't recall for sure but I think I got it working locally myself too but then found it broke unexpectedly and I didn't manage to find out why.
fareesh 50 minutes ago [-]
Accuracy is often presumed to be english, which is fine, but it's a vague thing to say "higher" because does it mean higher in English only? Higher in some subset of languages? Which ones?
The minimum useful data for this stuff is a small table of language | WER for dataset
999900000999 52 minutes ago [-]
Very cool. Anyway to run this in Web assembly, I have a project in mind
armcat 2 hours ago [-]
This is awesome, well done guys, I’m gonna try it as my ASR component on the local voice assistant I’ve been building https://github.com/acatovic/ova. The tiny streaming latencies you show look insane
ac29 2 hours ago [-]
No idea why 'sudo pip install --break-system-packages moonshine-voice' is the recommended way to install on raspi?
The authors do acknowledge this though and give a slightly too complex way to do this with uv in an example project (FYI, you dont need to source anything if you use uv run)
asqueella 2 hours ago [-]
For those wondering about the language support, currently English, Arabic, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, Spanish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese are available (most in Base size = 58M params)
pzo 2 hours ago [-]
haven't tested yet but I'm wondering how it will behave when talking about many IT jargon and tech acronyms. For those reason I had to mostly run LLM after STT but that was slowing done parakeet inference. Otherwise had problems to detect properly sometimes when talking about e.g. about CoreML, int8, fp16, half float, ARKit, AVFoundation, ONNX etc.
g-mork 2 hours ago [-]
How does this compare to Parakeet, which runs wonderfully on CPU?
aplomb1026 1 hours ago [-]
The streaming latency numbers are what stand out to me here. Accuracy benchmarks get all the attention, but for real-time applications (voice assistants, live captioning, in-call transcription), the tail latency matters more than shaving a few points off WER. A 58M param model that can stream with sub-second latency on a Raspberry Pi opens up a whole class of edge applications that just aren't practical with larger models, even if those larger models score higher on static benchmarks.
rob 43 minutes ago [-]
Another fake bot account. This is getting ridiculous. It's every other thread here now.
> This code, apart from the source in core/third-party, is licensed under the MIT License, see LICENSE in this repository.
> The English-language models are also released under the MIT License. Models for other languages are released under the Moonshine Community License, which is a non-commercial license.
> The code in core/third-party is licensed according to the terms of the open source projects it originates from, with details in a LICENSE file in each subfolder.
altruios 3 hours ago [-]
reading through readme.md
"License
This code, apart from the source in core/third-party, is licensed under the MIT License, see LICENSE in this repository.
The English-language models are also released under the MIT License. Models for other languages are released under the Moonshine Community License, which is a non-commercial license.
The code in core/third-party is licensed according to the terms of the open source projects it originates from, with details in a LICENSE file in each subfolder."
[1]: https://huggingface.co/spaces/hf-audio/open_asr_leaderboard
I'm actually a little surprised they haven't added model size to that chart.
There was an issue with a demo but it's missing now. I can't recall for sure but I think I got it working locally myself too but then found it broke unexpectedly and I didn't manage to find out why.
The minimum useful data for this stuff is a small table of language | WER for dataset
The authors do acknowledge this though and give a slightly too complex way to do this with uv in an example project (FYI, you dont need to source anything if you use uv run)
Timestamp 1: 2026-02-25T00:31:28 1771979488 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47145661
Timestamp 2: 2026-02-25T00:32:03 1771979523 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47145666
Two detailed large comments in two different threads in a 35 second span from a new account.
> This code, apart from the source in core/third-party, is licensed under the MIT License, see LICENSE in this repository.
> The English-language models are also released under the MIT License. Models for other languages are released under the Moonshine Community License, which is a non-commercial license.
> The code in core/third-party is licensed according to the terms of the open source projects it originates from, with details in a LICENSE file in each subfolder.
The English-language models are also released under the MIT License. Models for other languages are released under the Moonshine Community License, which is a non-commercial license.
The code in core/third-party is licensed according to the terms of the open source projects it originates from, with details in a LICENSE file in each subfolder."