- Llama - Wikipedia
The llama ( ˈ l ɑː m ə ; Spanish pronunciation: or ) (Lama glama) is a domesticated South American camelid, widely used as a meat and pack animal by Andean cultures since the pre-Columbian era Llamas are social animals and live with others as a herd
- Llama | Description, Habitat, Diet, Facts | Britannica
A pack animal that is also used as a source of food, wool, hides, tallow for candles, and dried dung for fuel, the llama is found primarily in the Central Andes from southern Colombia to northern Argentina
- Industry Leading, Open-Source AI | Llama by Meta
The most intelligent, scalable, and convenient generation of Llama is here: natively multimodal, mixture-of-experts models, advanced reasoning, and industry-leading context windows Build your greatest ideas and seamlessly deploy in minutes with Llama API and Llama Stack
- Open-source AI Models for Any Application | Llama 3
The open-source AI models you can fine-tune, distill and deploy anywhere Choose from our collection of models: Llama 3 1, Llama 3 2, Llama 3 3
- Introducing LLaMA: A foundational, 65-billion-parameter language model
As part of Meta’s commitment to open science, today we are publicly releasing LLaMA (Large Language Model Meta AI), a state-of-the-art foundational large language model designed to help researchers advance their work in this subfield of AI
- Introducing Llama 3. 1: Our most capable models to date - Meta AI
Llama 3 1 405B is the first openly available model that rivals the top AI models when it comes to state-of-the-art capabilities in general knowledge, steerability, math, tool use, and multilingual translation
- Llama (language model) - Wikipedia
Llama (Large Language Model Meta AI) [a] is a family of large language models (LLMs) released by Meta AI starting in February 2023 [3] The latest version is Llama 4, released in April 2025 [4] Llama models come in different sizes, ranging from 1 billion to 2 trillion parameters
- Lama (genus) - Wikipedia
Lama is a genus containing the South American camelids: the wild guanaco and vicuña and the domesticated llama, alpaca, and the extinct chilihueque Before the Spanish conquest of the Americas, llamas, alpacas, and chilihueques were the only domesticated ungulates of the continent
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