Show HN: Apfel – The free AI already on your Mac
Positions itself as "The free AI already on your Mac," implying it utilizes native or pre-installed AI functionalities without additional cost or setup.
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AI Executive Synthesis
Positions itself as "The free AI already on your Mac," implying it utilizes native or pre-installed AI functionalities without additional cost or setup.
Apfel's positioning as "The free AI already on your Mac" suggests a strategy of leveraging native operating system capabilities rather than introducing new, heavy AI models. This approach minimizes user friction and cost, appealing to users seeking immediate, accessible AI functionality without complex installations or subscriptions. While details are scarce, this highlights a potential trend towards integrating AI more deeply and invisibly into existing platforms, reducing the barrier to entry for AI adoption. The "free" aspect is a strong market differentiator, particularly if it delivers tangible value using readily available resources. This could challenge the perception that AI requires specialized hardware or expensive services.
Github: https://github.com/Arthur-Ficial/apfel
Community Voice & Feedback
Thank you for making it open source!Submitted a PR to prevent its installation on macos versions older than Tahoe(26), since I was able to install it on my older macos 15, but it aborted on execution.https://github.com/Arthur-Ficial/homebrew-tap/pull/1
Tempted to write a grammarly-like underline engine that flags writing mistakes across all apps and browser. Fully private grammarly alternative without even bundling an LLM!
> Apple locked it behind Siri. apfel sets it freeThis doesn't feel truthful, it sounds like this tool is a hack that unlocks something. If I understand it correctly, it's using the same FoundationModels framework that powers Apple Intelligence, but for CLI and OpenAI compatible REST endpoint. Which is fine, just the marketing goes hard a bit.> Runs on Neural EngineAlso unsure if this runs on ANE, when I tried Apple Intelligence I saw that it ran on the GPU (Metal).
Started using this earlier this week. I built a backtesting benchmark tool to compare a mix of frontier and open-source models on a fairly heavy data analysis workflow I’d been running in the cloud.The task is basically predicting pricing and costs.Apple’s model came out on top—best accuracy in 6 out of 10 cases in the backtest. That surprised me.It also looks like it might be fast enough to take over the whole job. If I ran this on Sonnet, we’re talking thousands per month. With DeepSeek, it’s more like hundreds.So far, the other local models I’ve tried on my 64GB M4 Max Studio haven’t been viable - either far too slow or not accurate enough. That said, I haven’t tested a huge range yet.
Local AIs are the future in times of limited resources. This could be the beginning of something big. I like that Apple opens up like this. Hopefully more to come.
I hacked this together last fall to let you use Apple Foundation Models with llm: https://github.com/btucker/llm-apple . To enable that I built python bindings with Claude Code: https://github.com/btucker/apple-foundation-models-pyUnfortunately, I found the small context window makes the utility pretty limited.
Now this is a development I like.With the Claude bug, or so it is known, burning through tokens at record speed, I gave alternative models a try and they're mostly ... interchangeable. I don't know how easy switching and low brand loyalty and fast markets will play out. I hope that local LLMs will become very viable very soon.
I like the approach of running everything locally. I'm strongly of the opinion that the privacy angle for local models is going to keep getting stronger and more relevant. The amount of articles that come out about accidents happening because of people handing too much context to cloud models the more self reinforcing this will become.
I’ve seen several projects like this that offer a network server with access to these Apple models. The danger is when they expose that, even on a loop port, to every other application on your system, including the browser. Random webpages are now shipping with JavaScript that will post to that port. Same-origin restrictions will stop data flow back to the webpage, but that doesn’t stop them from issuing commands to make changes.Some such projects use CORS to allow read back as well. I haven’t read Apfel’s code yet, but I’m registering the experiment before performing it.
AFM models are very impressive, but they’re not made for conversation, so keep your expectations down in chat mode.
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