How To Film Opensource AI Projects
A fast “install + wow” tour where you try 3 opensource ai projects in real time and rank them by what a normal creator can actually use today.
Most “cool open-source AI” lists hide the painful part (setup, hardware limits, bad UX). The twist is you only keep projects that deliver a visible result in minutes.
Screen recording of installs, terminal/requirements, first-run errors, model downloads, before/after outputs (image, audio, text), speed differences, your reaction when it works, a final scoreboard.
Viewers leave with 3 specific opensource ai projects they can try tonight, plus your simple filter to spot which ones are worth their time.
THE TAKE
Turn “opensource ai projects” into a prove-it video: fewer picks, more proof. Your edge isn’t the list—it’s the on-camera friction test (what works fast, what’s a trap).
THE MECHANISM
Checklist (3 steps you can apply today):
1) Pick the 3-project stack
- Choose one for creators (video/audio), one for productivity (agents/automation), one “wow demo” (image/gen/3D).
- Rule: each must produce a visible output you can show in under ~10 minutes, or it’s cut.
2) Build the “Friction Score” rubric
- Score each project on: install pain, time-to-first-output, quality, and “would I use this weekly?”
- Prepare one identical test prompt/task per category so comparisons are fair.
3) Package it like a challenge, not a directory
- Promise a ranked outcome + a reusable filter.
- Hook viewers with the constraint: “I’m only keeping projects that…”
Hook template:
"I tested opensource ai projects so you don’t waste your weekend—only the ones that [specific result] in [time limit] make the list."
Thumbnail test idea:
A/B test two options:
A) Big text: "WORKS IN 10 MIN" + 3 app logos + a simple scoreboard (1/2/3).
B) Big text: "OPEN-SOURCE > $$$?" + one shocking before/after output split.
EXECUTION
Film a 6–8 minute teardown.
Open with the constraint and your rubric on screen.
Install Project #1 live; narrate every snag; show first output; assign scores.
Repeat for #2 and #3 using the same test tasks.
End on a ranked scoreboard + one-line “who this is for” per project.
On-screen: pin links in description and show the exact prompts you used.