Don't be confused if it says "no microphone", the moment you click the record button it will request browser permission and then start working.
I spoke fast and dropped in some jargon and it got it all right - I said this and it transcribed it exactly right, WebAssembly spelling included:
> Can you tell me about RSS and Atom and the role of CSP headers in browser security, especially if you're using WebAssembly?
tekacs [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Having built with and tried every voice model over the last three years, real time and non-real time... this is off the charts compared to anything I've seen before.
And open weight too! So grateful for this.
skykooler [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Doesn't seem to work for me - tried in both Firefox and Chromium and I can see the waveform when I talk but the transcription just shows "Awaiting audio input".
starkgoose [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Try disabling CSP for the page
codethief [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Same here. In Chromium I don't even see the waveform.
fragmede [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I had to turn off ad-block to get it to work.
Oras [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Thank you for the link! Their playground in Mistral does not have a microphone. it just uploads files, which does not demonstrate the speed and accuracy, but the link you shared does.
I tried speaking in 2 languages at once, and it picked it up correctly. Truly impressive for real-time.
It's really nice although I've got a sentence in French when I was speaking Italian but I corrected myself in the middle of a word.
But I'm definitely going to keep an eye on this for local-only TTS for Home Assistant.
jaggederest [3 hidden]5 mins ago
It can transcribe Eminem's Rap God fast sequence, really, really impressive.
rafram [3 hidden]5 mins ago
That's almost certainly in the training data, to be fair.
keeganpoppen [3 hidden]5 mins ago
what a great test hahah
Barbing [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Doesn’t seem to work in Safari on iOS 26.2, iPhone 17 Pro, just about anything extra disabled.
pyprism [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Wow, that’s weird. I tried Bengali, but the text transcribed into Hindi!I know there are some similar words in these languages, but I used pure Bengali that is not similar to Hindi.
derefr [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Well, on the linked page, it mentions "strong transcription performance in 13 languages, including [...] Hindi" but with no mention of Bengali. It probably doesn't know a lick of Bengali, and is just trying to snap your words into the closest language it does know.
keeganpoppen [3 hidden]5 mins ago
it must have some exposure to bengali— just not enough for them to advertise it. otherwise it would have a damn hard time.
carbocation [3 hidden]5 mins ago
This model was able to transcribe Bad Bunny lyrics over the sound of the background music, played casually from my speakers. Impressive, to me.
sheepscreek [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I’ve been using AquaVoice for real-time transcription for a while now, and it has become a core part of my workflow. It gets everything, jargon, capitalization, everything. Now I’m looking forward to doing that with 100% local inference!
rafram [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Not terrible. It missed or mixed up a lot of words when I was speaking quickly (and not enunciating very well), but it does well with normal-paced speech.
iagooar [3 hidden]5 mins ago
In English it is pretty good. But talk to it in Polish, and suddenly it thinks you speak Russian? Ukranian? Belarus? I would understand if an American company launched this, but for a company being so proud about their European roots, I think it should have better support for major European languages.
I tried English + Polish:
> All right, I'm not really sure if transcribing this makes a lot of sense. Maybe not. A цьому nie mówisz po polsku. A цьому nie mówisz po polsku, nie po ukrańsku.
loire280 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
They don't claim to support Polish, but they do support Russian.
> The model is natively multilingual, achieving strong transcription performance in 13 languages, including English, Chinese, Hindi, Spanish, Arabic, French, Portuguese, Russian, German, Japanese, Korean, Italian, and Dutch. With a 4B parameter footprint, it runs efficiently on edge devices, ensuring privacy and security for sensitive deployments.
I wonder how much having languages with the same roots (e.g. the romance languages in the list above or multiple Slavic languages) affects the parameter count and the training set. Do you need more training data to differentiate between multiple similar languages? How would swapping, for example, Hindi (fairly distinct from the other 12 supported languages) for Ukrainian and Polish (both share some roots with Russian) affect the parameter count?
lm28469 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
> The model is natively multilingual, achieving strong transcription performance in 13 languages, including English, Chinese, Hindi, Spanish, Arabic, French, Portuguese, Russian, German, Japanese, Korean, Italian, and Dutch.
Try sticking to the supported languages
tdb7893 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Yeah, it's too bad. Apparently it only performs well in certain languages: "The model is natively multilingual, achieving strong transcription performance in 13 languages, including English, Chinese, Hindi, Spanish, Arabic, French, Portuguese, Russian, German, Japanese, Korean, Italian, and Dutch"
ricardonunez [3 hidden]5 mins ago
It did great English and Spanish, it didn't switch to Portuguese, french nor German, maybe struggle with my accent.
scotty79 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Try to warn it you are going to switch language to Portugese. Worked for me.
yko [3 hidden]5 mins ago
That's a mix of Polish and Ukrainian in the transcript. Now, if I try speaking Ukrainian, I'm getting transcript in Russian every time. That's upsetting.
overfeed [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Oh no! The model won't translate to an unsupported language, and incorrectly reverts to one that it was explicitly trained on.
The base likely was pretrained on days that included Polish and Ukrainian. You shouldn't be surprised to learn it doesn't perform great on languages it wasn't trained on, or perhaps had the highest share of training data.
scotty79 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Tell it you are going to speak Polish now. It helps.
mystifyingpoi [3 hidden]5 mins ago
TBH ChatGPT does the same, when I mix Polish and English. Generally getting some cyrillic characters and it gets super confused.
dmix [3 hidden]5 mins ago
> At approximately 4% word error rate on FLEURS and $0.003/min
Is it 0.003 per minute of audio uploaded, or "compute minute"?
For example fal.ai has a Whisper API endpoint priced at "$0.00125 per compute second" which (at 10-25x realtime) is EXTREMELY cheaper than all the competitors.
Oras [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I think the point is having it for real-time; this is for conversations rather than transcribing audio files.
jamilton [3 hidden]5 mins ago
That quote was for the non-realtime model.
janalsncm [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I noticed that this model is multilingual and understands 14 languages. For many use cases, we probably only need a single language, and the extra 13 are simply adding extra latency. I believe there will be a trend in the coming years of trimming the fat off of these jack of all trades models.
I don't know. What about words inherited from other languages? I think a cross-language model could improve lots of things.
For example, "here it is, voila!" "turn left on el camino real"
depr [3 hidden]5 mins ago
STT services that have been around for longer, like Azure, Google and Amazon, generally require you to request a specific language, and their quality is a lot higher than models that advertise themselves as LLMs (even though I believe the clouds are also using the same types of models now).
decide1000 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I think this model proves it's very efficient and accurate.
idiotsecant [3 hidden]5 mins ago
The hilarious part of this comment is all the comments around it complaining about not supporting enough languages
popalchemist [3 hidden]5 mins ago
It doesn't make sense to have a language-restricted transcription model because of code switching. People aren't machines, we don't stick to our native languages without failure. Even monolingual people move in and out of their native language when using "borrowed" words/phrases. A single-language model will often fail to deal with that.
javier123454321 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
yeah, one example I run into is getting my perplexity phone assistant to play a song in spanish. I cannot for the life of me get a model to translate:
"Play señorita a mi me gusta su style on spotify" correctly
raincole [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Imagine if ChatGPT started like this and thought they should trim coding abilities from their language model because most people don't code.
keeganpoppen [3 hidden]5 mins ago
uhhh i cast doubt on multi-language support as affecting latency. model size, maybe, but what is the mechanism for making latency worse? i think of model latency as O(log(model size))… but i am open to being wrong / that being a not-good mental model / educated guess.
kergonath [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Even model size, it’s modest. There is a lot of machinery that is going to be common for all languages. You don’t multiply model size by 2 when you double the number of supported languages.
make3 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
model size directly affects latency
pietz [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Do we know if this is better than Nvidia Parakeet V3? That has been my go-to model locally and it's hard to imagine there's something even better.
m1el [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I've been using nemotron ASR with my own ported inference, and happy about it:
I'm so amazed to find out just how close we are to the start trek voice computer.
I used to use Dragon Dictation to draft my first novel, had to learn a 'language' to tell the rudimentary engine how to recognize my speech.
And then I discovered [1] and have been using it for some basic speech recognition, amazed at what a local model can do.
But it can't transcribe any text until I finish recording a file, and then it starts work, so very slow batches in terms of feedback latency cycles.
And now you've posted this cool solution which streams audio chunks to a model in infinite small pieces, amazing, just amazing.
Now if only I can figure out how to contribute to Handy or similar to do that Speech To Text in a streaming mode, STT locally will be a solved problem for me.
I've been using Parakeet V3 locally and totally ancedotaly this feels more accurate but slightly slower
czottmann [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I liked Parakeet v3 a lot until it started to drop whole sentences, willy-nilly.
whinvik [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Came here to ask the same question!
yko [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Played with the demo a bit. It's really good at English, and detects language change on the fly. Impressive.
But whatever I tried, it could not recognise my Ukrainian and would default to Russian in absolutely ridiculous transcription. Other STT models recognise Ukrainian consistently, so I assume there is a lot of Russian in training material, and zero Ukrainian. Made me really sad.
breisa [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Thats just the result of the model only supporting russian (and 12 other languages) and not urkainian. It maps to the closest words from training data.
observationist [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Native diarization, this looks exciting.
edit: or not, no diarization in real-time.
The diarization is on Voxtral Mini Transcribe V2, not Voxtral Mini 4B.
sbrother [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Do you have experience with that model for diarization? Does it feel accurate, and what's its realtime factor on a typical GPU? Diarization has been the biggest thorn in my side for a long time..
ashenke [3 hidden]5 mins ago
You can test it yourself for free on https://console.mistral.ai/build/audio/speech-to-text
I tried it on an english-speaking podcast episode, and apart from identying one host as two different speakers (but only once for a few sentences at the start), the rest was flawless from what I could see
coder543 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
> Do you have experience with that model
No, I just heard about it this morning.
observationist [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Ahh, yeah, and it's explicitly not working for realtime streams. Good catch!
jiehong [3 hidden]5 mins ago
It’s nice, but the previous version wasn’t actually that great compared to Parakeet for example.
We need better independent comparison to see how it performs against the latest Qwen3-ASR, and so on.
I can no longer take at face value the cherry picked comparisons of the companies showing off their new models.
For now, NVIDIA Parakeet v3 is the best for my use case, and runs very fast on my laptop or my phone.
I like Parakeet as well and use it via Handy on Mac. What app are you using on your phone?
jiehong [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Spokenly has it on Mac and iOS, in both cases for free when using parakeet
mdrzn [3 hidden]5 mins ago
There's no comparison to Whisper Large v3 or other Whisper models..
Is it better? Worse? Why do they only compare to gpt4o mini transcribe?
tekacs [3 hidden]5 mins ago
WER is slightly misleading, but Whisper Large v3 WER is classically around 10%, I think, and 12% with Turbo.
The thing that makes it particularly misleading is that models that do transcription to lowercase and then use inverse text normalization to restore structure and grammar end up making a very different class of mistakes than Whisper, which goes directly to final form text including punctuation and quotes and tone.
But nonetheless, they're claiming such a lower error rate than Whisper that it's almost not in the same bucket.
tekacs [3 hidden]5 mins ago
On the topic of things being misleading, GPT-4o transcriber is a very _different_ transcriber to Whisper. I would say not better or worse, despite characterizations such. So it is a little difficult to compare on just the numbers.
There's a reason that quite a lot of good transcribers still use V2, not V3.
satvikpendem [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Different how?
GaggiX [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Gpt4o mini transcribe is better and actually realtime. Whisper is trained to encode the entire audio (or at least 30s chunks) and then decode it.
mdrzn [3 hidden]5 mins ago
So "gpt4o mini transcribe" is not just whisper v3 under the hood? Btw it's $0.006 / minute
For Whisper API online (with v3 large) I've found "$0.00125 per compute second" which is the cheapest absolute I've ever found.
breisa [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Deepinfra offers Whisper V3 at 0.00045$ / minute of transcribed audio.
The linked article claims the average word error rate for Voxtral mini v2 is lower than GPT-4o mini transcribe
GaggiX [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Gpt4o mini transcribe is better than whisper, the context is the parent comment.
fph [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Is there an open source Android keyboard that would support it? Everything I find is based on Whisper, which is from 2022. Ages ago given how fast AI is evolving.
satvikpendem [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Looks like this model doesn't do realtime diarization, what model should I use if I want that? So far I've only seen paid models do diarization well. I heard about Nvidia NeMo but haven't tried that or even where to try it out.
If you transcribe a minute of conversation, you'll have like 5 words transcribed wrongly. In an hour podcast, that is 300 wrongly transcribed words.
cootsnuck [3 hidden]5 mins ago
The error rate for human transcription can be as high as 5%.
XCSme [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Oh wow, I thought humans are like 0.1% error rate, if they are native speakers and aware of the subject being discussed.
zipy124 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I was skepitcal upon hearing the figure but various sources do indeed back it up and [0] is a pretty interesting paper (old but still relevant human transcibers haven't changed in accuracy).
I think it's actually hard to verify how correct a transcription is, at scale. Curious where those error rate numbers come from, because they should test it on people actually doing their job.
rhdunn [3 hidden]5 mins ago
It can depend a lot on different factors like:
- familiarity with the accent and/or speaker;
- speed and style/cadence of the speech;
- any other audio that is happening that can muffle or distort the audio;
- etc.
It can also take multiple passes to get a decent transcription.
Nimitz14 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Most of these errors will not be meaningful. Real speech is full of ambiguities. 3% is low
serf [3 hidden]5 mins ago
things I hate:
"Click me to try now!" banners that lead to a warning screen that says "Oh, only paying members, whoops!"
So, you don't mean 'try this out', you mean 'buy this product'.
Let's not act like it's a free sampler.
I can't comment on the model : i'm not giving them money.
This looks great, but it's not clear to me how to use it for a practical task. I need to transcribe about 10 years worth of monthly meetings. These are government hearings with a variety of speakers. All the videos are on YouTube. What's the most practical and cost-effective way to get reasonably accurate transcripts?
IanCal [3 hidden]5 mins ago
If you use something like youtube-dlp you can download the audio from the meetings, and you could try things out in mistrals ai studio.
In the api it took 18s to do a 20m audio file I had lying around where someone is reviewing a product.
There will, I'm sure, be ways of running this locally up and available soon (if they aren't in huggingface right now) but the API is $0.003/min. If it's something like 120 meetings (10 years of monthly ones) then it's roughly $20 if the meetings are 1hr each. Depending on whether they're 1 or 10 hours (or if they're weekly or monthly but 10 parallel sessions or something) then this might be a price you're willing to pay if you get the results back in an afternoon.
edit - their realtime model can be run with vllm, the batch model is not open
isoprophlex [3 hidden]5 mins ago
- get an API key for this service
- make sure you have a list of all these YouTube meeting URLs somewhere
- ask your preferred coding assistant to write you up a script that downloads the audio for these videos with yt-dlp & calls Mixtrals' API
- ????
- profit
jimmy76615 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
If they are on Youtube, try Gemini 3 Flash first. Use AI studio, it lets you insert YouTube videos into context.
aavci [3 hidden]5 mins ago
What's the cheapest device specs that this could realistically run on?
kamranjon [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I haven't quite figured out if the open weights they released on huggingface amount to being able to run the (realtime) model locally - i hope so though! For the larger model with diarization I don't think they open sourced anything.
IanCal [3 hidden]5 mins ago
The HF page suggests yes, with vllm.
> We've worked hand-in-hand with the vLLM team to have production-grade support for Voxtral Mini 4B Realtime 2602 with vLLM. Special thanks goes out to Joshua Deng, Yu Luo, Chen Zhang, Nick Hill, Nicolò Lucchesi, Roger Wang, and Cyrus Leung for the amazing work and help on building a production-ready audio streaming and realtime system in vLLM.
Italian represents, I believe, the most phonetically advanced human language. It has the right compromise among information density, understandability, and ability to speech much faster to compensate the redundancy. It's like if it had error correction built-in. Note that it's not just that it has the lower error rate, but is also underrepresented in most datasets.
nindalf [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I love seeing people from other countries share their own folk tales about what makes their countries special and unique. I've seen it up close in my country and I always cringed when I heard my fellow countrymen came up with these stories. In my adulthood I'm reassured that it happens everywhere and I find it endearing.
On the information density of languages: it is true that some languages have a more information dense textual representation. But all spoken languages convey about the same information in the same time. Which is not all that surprising, it just means that human brains have an optimal range at which they process information.
Further reading: Coupé, Christophe, et al. "Different Languages, Similar Encoding Efficiency: Comparable Information Rates across the Human Communicative Niche." Science Advances. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aaw2594
antirez [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Different representations at the same bitrate may have features that make one a lot more resilient to errors. This thing about Italian, you fill find in any benchmark of vastly different AI transcribing models. You can find similar results also on the way LLMs mostly trained on English generalize usually very well with Italian. All this despite Italian accounting for marginal percentage of the training set. How do you explain that? I always cringe when people refute evidence.
testdelacc1 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Where is this evidence you’ve cited for your claims?
mr_tox [3 hidden]5 mins ago
in the end (our) italian language wasn’t optimized by engineers, it was refactored by poets
Archelaos [3 hidden]5 mins ago
This is largely due to the fact that modern Italian is a systematised language that emerged from a literary movement (whose most prominent representative is Alessandro Manzoni) to establish a uniform language for the Italian people. At the time of Italian unification in 1861, only about 2.5% of the population could speak this language.
gbalduzzi [3 hidden]5 mins ago
The language itself was not invented for the purpose: it was the language spoken in Florence, than adopted by the literary movement and than selected as the national language.
It seems like the best tradeoff between information density and understandability actually comes from the deep latin roots of the language
gbalduzzi [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I was honestly surprised to find it in the first place, because I assumed English to be at first place given the simpler grammar and the huge dataset available.
I agree with your belief, other languages have either lower density (e.g. German) or lower understandability (e.g. English)
riffraff [3 hidden]5 mins ago
English has a ton of homophones, way more sounds that differ slightly (long/short vowels), and major pronunciation differences across major "official" languages (think Australia/US/Canada/UK).
Italian has one official italian (two, if you count IT_ch, but difference is minor), doesn't pay much attention to stress and vowel length, and only has a few "confusable" sounds (gl/l, gn/n, double consonants, stuff you get wrong in primary school). Italian dialects would be a disaster tho :)
NewsaHackO [3 hidden]5 mins ago
The only knowledge I have about how difficult Italian is comes from Inglourious Basterds.
hackyhacky [3 hidden]5 mins ago
> the most phonetically advanced human language
That's interesting. As a linguist, I have to say that Haskell is the most computationally advanced programming language, having the best balance of clear syntax and expressiveness. I am qualified to say this because I once used Haskell to make a web site, and I also tried C++ but I kept on getting errors.
/s obviously.
Tldr: computer scientists feel unjustifiably entitled to make scientific-sounding but meaningless pronouncements on topics outside their field of expertise.
mmooss [3 hidden]5 mins ago
At least some relatively well-known research finds that all languages have similar information density in terms of bits/second (~39 bits/second based on a quick search). Languages do it with different amounts of phonetic sound / syllables / words per bit and per second, but the bps comes out the same.
I don't know how widely accepted that conclusion is, what exceptions there may be, etc.
gwerbret [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I really wish those offering speech-to-text models provided transcription benchmarks specific to particular fields of endeavor. I imagine performance would vary wildly when using jargon peculiar to software development, medicine, physics, and law, as compared to everyday speech. Considering that "enterprise" use is often specialized or sub-specialized, it seems like they're leaving money on Dragon's table by not catering to any of those needs.
Archelaos [3 hidden]5 mins ago
As a rule of thumb for software that I use regularly, it is very useful to consider the costs over a 10-year period in order to compare it with software that I purchase for lifetime to install at home. So that means 1,798.80 $ for the Pro version.
What estimates do others use?
siddbudd [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Wired advertises this as "Ultra-Fast Translation"[^1]. A bit weird coming from a tech magazine. I hope it's just a "typo".
It might be capable of translation; OpenAI Whisper was a transcription model that could do it.
atentaten [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Nice. Can this be ran on a mobile device?
tallesborges92 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I added it to my bot agent,let’s see how it performs
yewenjie [3 hidden]5 mins ago
One week ago I was on the hunt for an open source model that can do diatization and I had to literally give up because I could not find any easy to use setup.
ashenke [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I don't know if that will change, but right now only the Voxtral Mini Transcribe V2 supports diarization and it's not open-weight.
The Voxtral Realtime model doesn't support diarization, but is open-weight.
vojto11 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
WhisperX ?
numbers [3 hidden]5 mins ago
does anyone know if there's any desktop tools I can use this transcription model with? e.g. something where like Wisper Flow/WillowVoice but with custom model selection
tietjens [3 hidden]5 mins ago
There is Handy, an open source project meant to be a desktop tool, but I haven’t installed it yet to see how you pick your model.
Impressive results, tested on crappy audio files (in french and english)...
jszymborski [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I'm guessing I won't be able to finetune this until they come out with a HF tranformers model, right?
derac [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Any chance Voxtral Mini Transcribe 2 will ever be an open model?
scotty79 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Do you know anything better for Polish language, low quality audio than Whisper large-v3 through WhisperX?
This combo has almost unbeatable accuracy and it rejects noises in the background really well. It can even reject people talking in the background.
The only better thing I've seen is Ursa model from Speechmatics. Not open weights unfortunately.
ewuhic [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Can it translate in real time?
boringg [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Pseudo related -- am I the only one uncomfortable using my voice with AI for the concern that once it is in the training model it is forever reproducible? As a non-public person it seems like a risk vector (albeit small),
ffsm8 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
It's a real issue, but why do you only see it in ai? It's true for any case where you're speaking into a microphone
Depending on the permissions granted to apps on your mobile device, it can even be passively exfiltrated without you ever noticing - and that's ignoring the video clips people take and put online. Like your grandma uploading to Facebook a short moment from a Christmas meet or similar
There have already been successful scams - eg calls from "relatives" (AI) calling family members needing money urgently and convincing them to send the money...
dumpstate [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I'm on voxtral-mini-latest and that's why I started seeing 500s today lol
varispeed [3 hidden]5 mins ago
[flagged]
Empact [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Many people speak Russian, including many who do not live in Russia, e.g. about 30% of Ukranians.
Beyond that, I don't see how we stand to durably reduce military action by making languages mutually unintelligible.
Don't they have a partnership with the French Armed Forces? I am sure they are interested in automating Russian Audio or Text (-> Russian Text) -> French text.
varispeed [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Fair point.
gostsamo [3 hidden]5 mins ago
They've chosen languages which would help them to cover the highest percentage of human population..
Don't be confused if it says "no microphone", the moment you click the record button it will request browser permission and then start working.
I spoke fast and dropped in some jargon and it got it all right - I said this and it transcribed it exactly right, WebAssembly spelling included:
> Can you tell me about RSS and Atom and the role of CSP headers in browser security, especially if you're using WebAssembly?
And open weight too! So grateful for this.
I tried speaking in 2 languages at once, and it picked it up correctly. Truly impressive for real-time.
But I'm definitely going to keep an eye on this for local-only TTS for Home Assistant.
I tried English + Polish:
> All right, I'm not really sure if transcribing this makes a lot of sense. Maybe not. A цьому nie mówisz po polsku. A цьому nie mówisz po polsku, nie po ukrańsku.
> The model is natively multilingual, achieving strong transcription performance in 13 languages, including English, Chinese, Hindi, Spanish, Arabic, French, Portuguese, Russian, German, Japanese, Korean, Italian, and Dutch. With a 4B parameter footprint, it runs efficiently on edge devices, ensuring privacy and security for sensitive deployments.
I wonder how much having languages with the same roots (e.g. the romance languages in the list above or multiple Slavic languages) affects the parameter count and the training set. Do you need more training data to differentiate between multiple similar languages? How would swapping, for example, Hindi (fairly distinct from the other 12 supported languages) for Ukrainian and Polish (both share some roots with Russian) affect the parameter count?
Try sticking to the supported languages
The base likely was pretrained on days that included Polish and Ukrainian. You shouldn't be surprised to learn it doesn't perform great on languages it wasn't trained on, or perhaps had the highest share of training data.
Amazons transcription service is $0.024 per minute, pretty big difference https://aws.amazon.com/transcribe/pricing/
For example fal.ai has a Whisper API endpoint priced at "$0.00125 per compute second" which (at 10-25x realtime) is EXTREMELY cheaper than all the competitors.
https://aclanthology.org/2025.findings-acl.87/
For example, "here it is, voila!" "turn left on el camino real"
https://huggingface.co/nvidia/nemotron-speech-streaming-en-0...
https://github.com/m1el/nemotron-asr.cpp https://huggingface.co/m1el/nemotron-speech-streaming-0.6B-g...
I used to use Dragon Dictation to draft my first novel, had to learn a 'language' to tell the rudimentary engine how to recognize my speech.
And then I discovered [1] and have been using it for some basic speech recognition, amazed at what a local model can do.
But it can't transcribe any text until I finish recording a file, and then it starts work, so very slow batches in terms of feedback latency cycles.
And now you've posted this cool solution which streams audio chunks to a model in infinite small pieces, amazing, just amazing.
Now if only I can figure out how to contribute to Handy or similar to do that Speech To Text in a streaming mode, STT locally will be a solved problem for me.
[1] https://github.com/cjpais/Handy
But whatever I tried, it could not recognise my Ukrainian and would default to Russian in absolutely ridiculous transcription. Other STT models recognise Ukrainian consistently, so I assume there is a lot of Russian in training material, and zero Ukrainian. Made me really sad.
https://huggingface.co/mistralai/Voxtral-Mini-4B-Realtime-26...
~9GB model.
No, I just heard about it this morning.
We need better independent comparison to see how it performs against the latest Qwen3-ASR, and so on.
I can no longer take at face value the cherry picked comparisons of the companies showing off their new models.
For now, NVIDIA Parakeet v3 is the best for my use case, and runs very fast on my laptop or my phone.
Is it better? Worse? Why do they only compare to gpt4o mini transcribe?
The thing that makes it particularly misleading is that models that do transcription to lowercase and then use inverse text normalization to restore structure and grammar end up making a very different class of mistakes than Whisper, which goes directly to final form text including punctuation and quotes and tone.
But nonetheless, they're claiming such a lower error rate than Whisper that it's almost not in the same bucket.
There's a reason that quite a lot of good transcribers still use V2, not V3.
For Whisper API online (with v3 large) I've found "$0.00125 per compute second" which is the cheapest absolute I've ever found.
Why it should be Whisper v3? They even released an open model: https://huggingface.co/mistralai/Voxtral-Mini-4B-Realtime-26...
If you transcribe a minute of conversation, you'll have like 5 words transcribed wrongly. In an hour podcast, that is 300 wrongly transcribed words.
[0] https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/...
- familiarity with the accent and/or speaker;
- speed and style/cadence of the speech;
- any other audio that is happening that can muffle or distort the audio;
- etc.
It can also take multiple passes to get a decent transcription.
"Click me to try now!" banners that lead to a warning screen that says "Oh, only paying members, whoops!"
So, you don't mean 'try this out', you mean 'buy this product'.
Let's not act like it's a free sampler.
I can't comment on the model : i'm not giving them money.
You could use their api (they have this snippet):
```curl -X POST "https://api.mistral.ai/v1/audio/transcriptions" \ -H "Authorization: Bearer $MISTRAL_API_KEY" \ -F model="voxtral-mini-latest" \ -F file=@"your-file.m4a" \ -F diarize=true \ -F timestamp_granularities="segment"```
In the api it took 18s to do a 20m audio file I had lying around where someone is reviewing a product.
There will, I'm sure, be ways of running this locally up and available soon (if they aren't in huggingface right now) but the API is $0.003/min. If it's something like 120 meetings (10 years of monthly ones) then it's roughly $20 if the meetings are 1hr each. Depending on whether they're 1 or 10 hours (or if they're weekly or monthly but 10 parallel sessions or something) then this might be a price you're willing to pay if you get the results back in an afternoon.
edit - their realtime model can be run with vllm, the batch model is not open
- make sure you have a list of all these YouTube meeting URLs somewhere
- ask your preferred coding assistant to write you up a script that downloads the audio for these videos with yt-dlp & calls Mixtrals' API
- ????
- profit
> We've worked hand-in-hand with the vLLM team to have production-grade support for Voxtral Mini 4B Realtime 2602 with vLLM. Special thanks goes out to Joshua Deng, Yu Luo, Chen Zhang, Nick Hill, Nicolò Lucchesi, Roger Wang, and Cyrus Leung for the amazing work and help on building a production-ready audio streaming and realtime system in vLLM.
https://huggingface.co/mistralai/Voxtral-Mini-4B-Realtime-26...
https://docs.vllm.ai/en/latest/serving/openai_compatible_ser...
On the information density of languages: it is true that some languages have a more information dense textual representation. But all spoken languages convey about the same information in the same time. Which is not all that surprising, it just means that human brains have an optimal range at which they process information.
Further reading: Coupé, Christophe, et al. "Different Languages, Similar Encoding Efficiency: Comparable Information Rates across the Human Communicative Niche." Science Advances. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aaw2594
It seems like the best tradeoff between information density and understandability actually comes from the deep latin roots of the language
I agree with your belief, other languages have either lower density (e.g. German) or lower understandability (e.g. English)
Italian has one official italian (two, if you count IT_ch, but difference is minor), doesn't pay much attention to stress and vowel length, and only has a few "confusable" sounds (gl/l, gn/n, double consonants, stuff you get wrong in primary school). Italian dialects would be a disaster tho :)
That's interesting. As a linguist, I have to say that Haskell is the most computationally advanced programming language, having the best balance of clear syntax and expressiveness. I am qualified to say this because I once used Haskell to make a web site, and I also tried C++ but I kept on getting errors.
/s obviously.
Tldr: computer scientists feel unjustifiably entitled to make scientific-sounding but meaningless pronouncements on topics outside their field of expertise.
I don't know how widely accepted that conclusion is, what exceptions there may be, etc.
What estimates do others use?
[^1]: https://www.wired.com/story/mistral-voxtral-real-time-ai-tra...
Handy – Free open source speech-to-text app https://github.com/cjpais/Handy
This combo has almost unbeatable accuracy and it rejects noises in the background really well. It can even reject people talking in the background.
The only better thing I've seen is Ursa model from Speechmatics. Not open weights unfortunately.
Depending on the permissions granted to apps on your mobile device, it can even be passively exfiltrated without you ever noticing - and that's ignoring the video clips people take and put online. Like your grandma uploading to Facebook a short moment from a Christmas meet or similar
There have already been successful scams - eg calls from "relatives" (AI) calling family members needing money urgently and convincing them to send the money...
Beyond that, I don't see how we stand to durably reduce military action by making languages mutually unintelligible.
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_language#/media/Fi...