AI NewsOsaurus brings both local and cloud AI models to your Mac
Osaurus brings both local and cloud AI models to your Mac
6:45 PM IST · May 15, 2026

As AI models increasingly become commoditized, startups are racing to build the software layer that sits on top of them. One interesting entrant into this space isOsaurus, an open source, Apple-only LLM server that lets users move between different local AI models, either locally or in the cloud, while keeping their files and tools all on their own hardware. Osaurus evolved out of the idea for adesktop AI companion, Dinoki, which Osaurus co-founderTerence Paedescribed as a sort of âAI-powered Clippy.â Dinokiâs customers had asked him why they should buy the app if they still had to pay for tokens â the usage units AI companies charge for processing prompts and generating responses. That got Pae thinking more deeply about running AI locally. âThatâs how Osaurus started,â Pae, previously a software engineer at Tesla and Netflix, told TechCrunch over a call. The idea, he explained, was to try to run an AI assistant locally. âYou can do pretty much everything on your Mac locally, like browsing your files, accessing your browser, accessing your system configurations. I figured this would be a great way to position Osaurus as a personal AI for individuals.â Pae began building the tool in public asan open-source project, adding features and fixing bugs along the way. Today,Osauruscan flexibly connect with locally hosted AI models or cloud providers like OpenAI and Anthropic. Users can freely choose which AI models theyâre using, and keep other aspects of the AI experience on their own hardware, like the modelsâ own memory, or their files and tools. Given that different AI models have different strengths, the advantage of this system is that users can switch to the AI model that best fits their needs. Such a structure makes Osaurus whatâs called a âharnessâ â a control layer that connects different AI models, tools, and workflows through a single interface, similar to tools likeOpenClaworHermes. However, the difference is that such tools are often aimed at developers who know their way around a terminal. And sometimes, like in the case of OpenClaw, they may pose security issues and holes to worry about. Osaurus, meanwhile, presents an easy-to-use interface that consumers can use, and addresses security concerns by running things in a hardware-isolated, virtual sandbox. This limits the AI to a certain scope, keeping your computer and data safe. Of course, the practice of running AI models on your machine is still in its early days, given that itâs heavily resource-intensive and hardware-dependent. To run local models, your system will need at least 64 GB of RAM. For running larger models, like DeepSeek v4, Pae recommends systems with about 128 GB of RAM. But Pae believes local AIâs needs will come down in time. âI can see the potential of it, because the intelligence per wattage â which is like the metric for local AI â has been going up significantly. Itâs on its own curve of innovation. Last year, local AI could barely finish sentences, but today it can actually run tools, write code, access your browser, and order stuff from Amazon [âŠ] itâs just getting better and better,â he said. Osaurus today can run MiniMax M2.5, Gemma 4, Qwen3.6, GPT-OSS, Llama, DeepSeek V4, and other models. It also supports Appleâs on-device foundation models, Liquid AIâs LFM family of on-device models, and in the cloud, it can connect to OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, xAI/Grok, Venice AI, OpenRouter, Ollama, and LM Studio. As a full MCP (Model Context Protocol) server, you can give any MCP-compatible client access to your tools as well. Plus, it ships with over 20 native plugins for Mail, Calendar, Vision, macOS Use, XLSX, PPTX, Browser, Music, Git, Filesystem, Search, Fetch, and more. More recently, Osaurus was updated to include voice capabilities as well. Since the project went live nearly a year ago, it has been downloaded north of 112,000 times, according to itswebsite. Currently, Osaurusâ founders (who include co-founder Sam Yoo) are participating in the New York-based startup accelerator Alliance. Theyâre also thinking about next steps, which could see Osaurus being offered to businesses, like those in the legal space or in healthcare, where running local LLMs could address privacy concerns. As the power of local AI models grows, the team believes it could lower the demand for AI data centers. âWeâre seeing this explosive growth in the AI space where [cloud AI providers] have to scale up using data centers and infrastructure, but we feel like people havenât really seen the value of the local AI yet,â Pae said. âInstead of relying on the cloud, they can actually deploy a Mac Studio on-prem, and it should use substantially less power. You still have the capabilities of the cloud, but you will not be dependent on a data center to be able to run that AI,â he added.
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