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Open Source AI Video Models for Editing and Generation
If you have been looking for open source tools to work with video using AI you have probably noticed something. Most of what gets covered is generation like creating new videos from scratch. The editing side, actually modifying existing footage with AI, has been much quieter. That is starting to change. There are now open source models that can swap outfits, replace backgrounds, remove objects, change characters and apply styles to existing video using plain text instructions. Some are built specifically for editing. Others are generation models that fit naturally into a creative video workflow. This list covers both honestly. Three models built specifically for video editing and two generation models worth knowing about if you are working with video content. All open source, all available today.
Not Everything Needs AI 7 Powerful Alternatives to the Apps Everyone Uses
I use AI everyday & I recommend it to others as well. In the right places, it saves me time & genuinely improves how I work. But I’ve also noticed something else. There’s a lot of hype right now, and it’s pushing AI into apps that never really needed it in the first place. Just because something can have an AI layer doesn’t mean it should. For some of the most popular apps people use every day, I honestly don’t feel the need for it. The core job those tools do hasn’t changed. Adding AI doesn’t always make them better. Sometimes it just makes them heavier or more expensive. So instead of rejecting AI entirely, I got selective. I kept it where it helps me. And for everything else, I switched to tools that focus on doing their job well without trying to be smart. Here are 7 powerful alternatives to some of the most common apps people rely on
Nvidia Is Building NemaaaoClaw, an Open Source AI Agent Platform That Runs on Any Chip
The company that sells the chips just built software that runs on everyone else's chips. Nvidia is reportedly preparing to launch an open source AI agent platform called NemoClaw at GTC 2026 next week in San Jose. People familiar with the plans say the platform will let enterprise companies deploy AI agents across their workforces regardless of whether they run on Nvidia hardware or not. Nvidia hasn't confirmed anything publicly yet. But the conversations with companies like Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe and CrowdStrike are apparently already happening.
Why Google and Anthropic Are Banning OpenClaw Users 4 Reasons Behind the Crackdown
You know something's wrong when companies start banning their own paying customers without explanation. Last week, Google restricted access for some AI Ultra users (those paying $250/month). Anthropic made similar moves with Claude Pro subscribers around the same time. The connection? Both were targeting people using OpenClaw. OpenClaw, if you haven't heard of it, is this third-party tool that turns AI chatbots into automation agents. Instead of just asking Claude questions, you can have it control your computer, run tasks, fill out forms—stuff like that. Developers loved it. Until both companies suddenly decided it violated their terms of service. What's frustrating is how vague both companies have been about the actual reasons. Google cited "misuse of OAuth authentication." Anthropic updated its terms to prohibit third-party "harnesses." But neither explained what specific security issues, if any, triggered the sudden enforcement. I started digging into what might be behind the crackdown. Some security researchers have raised concerns about how OpenClaw handles permissions and credentials. There are questions about the plugin ecosystem. And there's been discussion in developer communities about whether the tool's architecture creates risks that the AI companies couldn't ignore. So here's what we know, what's still unclear, and the five risks that likely pushed AI companies to draw the line.
DeepSeek-V4 Can Hold Your Entire Codebase in One Context Window and It's Open Source
Every developer who has worked with long context models knows the feeling. You paste in your codebase, add your requirements, include some examples, and somewhere around the halfway point the model starts forgetting things it read at the top. You get generic answers. It misses files it already saw. The context window is technically full but the model is functionally half-asleep. This is called the performance cliff and it is the real problem with long context AI, not the number itself. DeepSeek-V4 is making a specific claim here. Not just that it supports 1 million tokens, several models do that now. The claim is that it stays useful across that entire window by fundamentally changing how attention works at scale. In the 1M token setting, V4-Pro requires only 27% of the compute per token and 10% of the KV cache compared to DeepSeek-V3.2. It is MIT licensed. Weights are on HuggingFace right now. And they shipped two models simultaneously, which means there is an actual choice to make depending on what you are building.
marco LLM nano and mini
Most AI models are what they appear to be. A 12B parameter model uses 12B parameters. What you see is what runs. Marco MoE does not work that way. Alibaba built two models, Marco Nano and Marco Mini, that carry billions of parameters but wake up only a tiny fraction of them for each request. Marco Nano activates 0.6 billion out of 8 billion. Marco Mini activates 0.86 billion out of 17.3 billion. Less than 5% of either model is actually working at any moment. The part that makes this worth paying attention to is what that 5% manages to do against models running at full capacity.
Open-Source Dev Tools Worth Switching
Paid developer tools have gotten expensive. Postman wants a subscription. DataGrip wants a subscription. Design tools, API clients, database managers, recording tools. Everything is moving to SaaS and the bills add up fast. The open source alternatives have quietly gotten good enough that the switch actually makes sense now. Not as a compromise. As a genuine upgrade in some cases. These six tools have earned a place in a real development workflow. Some replace paid tools directly. Others fill gaps that paid tools never bothered addressing. All of them are free, actively maintained and worth your time.

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OpenHuman: Open-Source Personal AI Assistant With Memory, Voice & Integrations

OpenHuman is trying to make personal AI assistants feel less like developer tools and more like something you can actually live with every day. You install it, connect apps like Gmail, Notion, GitHub, Slack, or Calendar, and it starts building a private memory system from your data on your own machine. It feels closer to installing a desktop app and getting started in a few minutes. It also comes with a lot built in already including voice support, web search, coding tools, local AI through Ollama, and a memory system that stores everything as Markdown inside an Obsidian compatible vault. The agent keeps syncing connected apps every 20 minutes, so it slowly builds context around your work. The project is still in early beta, so there are rough edges, but the direction is interesting. Especially if you've been looking for an AI assistant that feels personal.

Emdash: Open-Source Agentic IDE to Run Multiple AI Coding Agents in Parallel

Emdash is an open-source agentic development environment (ADE) designed for developers who want to orchestrate multiple coding agents from a single dashboard. It lets you run several agents in parallel. Each agent operates inside its own Git worktree, meaning every task stays isolated and easy to review. Think of it as a control center for AI coding agents. You can assign tasks, monitor progress, compare outputs, review diffs, and ship changes without constantly switching tools. Backed by Y Combinator, the project has already crossed 60K+ downloads, and its goal is simple, to give developers an environment where multiple AI coding agents can work together.

BrowserOS: Powerful Open Source Privacy-First AI Browser

BrowserOS is an innovative open-source fork of Chromium tailored to run AI agents natively within your browser. As a privacy-first alternative to ChatGPT, Atlas, and Perplexity Comet, BrowserOS allows seamless AI integration without compromising your personal data. With a user-friendly interface similar to Google Chrome, it provides comprehensive functionality while prioritizing user privacy.

ComfyUI: Free & Open Source Node-Based AI Workflow Tool for Stable Diffusion, ControlNet LoRAs & Video/Image Generation

ComfyUI is a powerful, free & open-source node-based user interface designed for creating and managing complex AI image generation workflows. It primarily supports Stable Diffusion and its extensions like LoRA, ControlNet, T2I-Adapter, and custom models, offering one of the most flexible and transparent AI art generation environments available today.

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