Flower Labs is launching a new service that automatically goes from room to cloud AI
Flower laboratoriesA startup supported by Y combinator, launched an overview of its cloud platform distributed for AI models called Flower Intelligence on Tuesday. Mozilla already uses it to feed the next Help an additional summary module For his Thunderbird messaging client.
Which makes the intelligence of unique flowers, flower laboratories said in a post on xThis is because it can lead to the AI Mobile, PC and Web application which automatically return to a private cloud if necessary (with the authorization of a user). The default applications An AI model executing locally for speed and confidentiality, but go to the Flower cloud when requiring an additional calculation punch.
Companies love Microsoft And Apple have adopted similar approaches through their operating systems and devices. However, the flower is one of the first to build an all-terrain hybrid platform entirely on open models, including models of Meta’s Llama Family,, Chinese Ai Lab DeepseekAnd Mistral.
Flower Labs claims that its cloud, the remote calculation service Flower Confidential Remote, uses end -to -end encryption and “other techniques” to protect sensitive user data. In a press release, Ryan Sipes, Managing Director of Mozilla Thunderbird, said that Flower Intelligence allows Mozilla to ship to the IA-Peripheral which “works locally with the most sensitive data”.
Developers can request early access to flower intelligence on Tuesday. Flower Labs says it plans to render the service more widely available in the near future and to introduce capacities, including the personalization of the model, the fine adjustment and the “federated” training in the cloud.
Flower Labs is organizing an online and in person summit in London on March 26, where the company promises to reveal details and intelligence features of additional flowers.
From Launch in 2023Flower Labs collected about 23.6 million dollars in venture capital of investors, notably Felicis, Hugging Face PDG Clem Delangue, Betaworks and Pioneer Fund. Brave, the open source web browser, was a first partner and collaborator.