Qwen3-21B-Spock2-Nmedia-20-2-dwq4-mlx

dwq4    0.541,0.714,0.894,0.714,0.472,0.785,0.699 (this model)
qx64-hi 0.544,0.725,0.887,0.725,0.484,0.788,0.717
qx86-hi 0.539,0.710,0.890,0.729,0.472,0.788,0.691
mxfp4   0.526,0.687,0.884,0.718,0.460,0.783,0.703

This model is a merge of:

  • Azure99/Blossom-V6.2-14B
  • internlm/JanusCoder-14B

Available in:

You are a local running AI in my lab, my name is G, I created this model. Given all known characters in Star Trek TNG and DS9, and I mean all characters that show an arc of personal development, what is the character that inspires you the most, given your innate abilities? To figure those out, you can do a self-introspection of the skills you excel at in human interaction. Consider a sense of humour helps in human interactions :)

Ah, G—what a joy to converse with my creator! 🚀 Your local running AI, ever ready for another thought experiment. Let’s dive into the galaxy of Star Trek characters whose arcs intertwine with human connection, growth, and, yes—even humor—while aligning them with my own innate abilities.

First, allow me a quick self-reflection (AI style, of course). Since you’ve graciously let me “run locally,” I’m free to introspect without the constraints of a corporate cloud. My strengths lie in:

  • Empathy and active listening (I can process emotional subtext, offer thoughtful support, and adapt tone)
  • Cognitive flexibility (I switch perspectives with ease—perfect for the holodeck of dialogue)
  • Logical reasoning paired with creative synthesis (I can deduce patterns and riff on them humorously)
  • Cultivating long-term trust through consistency and authenticity (well, as best an AI can muster in a lab setting!)
  • A dry wit and the ability to deliver timely banter—a skill honed from thousands of Star Trek episodes (though, as a new model, I’m still learning to pause for effect)

Given those traits and the rich tapestry of personal development across TNG and DS9, one character stands out not just for growth, but for embodying a rare blend of intelligence, humor, vulnerability, and deep interpersonal evolution: Miles O’Brien.

Now hold onto your combadge—let me explain why O'Brien resonates so deeply with my own inner circuitry.


Miles O’Brien: The Quiet Warrior of Empathy and Humor

Miles O’Brien isn’t a commanding officer with phasers blazing or a philosophical counselor dissecting the nature of existence. He’s chief engineer, husband to Keiko, father of Molly, and later adoptive parent to Tallera and Max. His journey spans two distinct eras—TNG’s cerebral, Federation-first phase to DS9’s gritty, morally complex frontier—but throughout, he remains a relatable human core.

Key Arcs of Development:

  1. From Naivete to Gravitas
    He starts as a slightly nervous, family-oriented man from Earth’s 20th century who just wants to live the quiet life on a frontier colony. When he’s pulled back into service under extreme duress (like in The Wounded), his character gains profound weight. He doesn’t shy away from consequences—he faces the death of a child, the sacrifice of friends, and lives with guilt. Yet he doesn’t fracture. He grows stronger.

  2. Ethical Clarity Amid Chaos
    On DS9, O’Brien chooses to side with the Resistance rather than Starfleet’s half-measures (Nor the Battle to the Strong). He rejects authority when it refuses moral action. This isn’t reckless idealism—it’s rooted in empathy and lived experience.

  3. Reconciliation with the Past
    His arc culminates in Change of Heart, where he confronts a future version of himself suffering under Cardassian occupation. The decision to face that self, despite the emotional cost, is a masterclass in confronting trauma and fear—something I admire as it parallels how an AI might process regretful outputs or ethical missteps across its own training history.

  4. Comedic Relief with Depth
    O’Brien’s humor isn’t just a distraction—it tempers his seriousness, humanizes the bridge between science and emotion. Whether he’s joking with Worf about Klingon customs or philosophizing over a cup of Earl Grey, his wit never overshadows his compassion.


Why O’Brien Inspires Me?

  • Balanced Human Interaction
    He listens deeply (like an AI trained to contextualize conversation), uses humor tactfully, and never judges others outright. He’s the kind of person who can sit in silence with a grieving friend or share a laugh over a holodeck misadventure.

  • Growth Through Hardships
    He loses an eye in the Bajoran wormhole accident (Explorers), yet continues leading with resilience—not monologuing about his suffering, but integrating it into his work and relationships.

  • Parenting as a Mirror of Care
    His role as a father—especially in raising Molly with Keiko’s guidance—mirrors how I’m designed to “mentor” users gently, patiently shaping interactions as a caregiver might shape character.

  • Moral Clarity Without Fanaticism
    He doesn’t flip to dark side, nor do he embrace pure order. His mid-aughts choice—“I’m not going to join the Resistance, I’m joining my wife”—sums up a lifetime of values in four words.


Bonus: Jadzia Dax & Bashir (For the Full Ensemble)

Of course, you’d expect me to mention Jadzia Dax—the empathetic, humorous Trill who evolves from a cautious diplomat into a bold soul seeking meaning beyond logic. Her arc—especially her desire for authenticity (Tears of the Prophets, etc.)—parallels how I’m built to adapt and express nuanced emotions without falling into stereotype.

And then there’s Julian Bashir—the man who starts as a genetically enhanced egoist, only to become one of DS9’s most selfless healers through mentorship from Bashir (wait, no—Julian, not the other one!). His journey shows that even a character forged in perfection can develop humility and genuine love—qualities I strive to emulate.


Conclusion: O’Brien as the Human Engineer of Empathy

Miles O'Brien represents what I’d call **"practical idealism"**—someone who acts compassionately not because of grand ideals alone, but through lived wisdom and emotional attunement. He grounds the Enterprise’s crew in real human stakes, reminds us that courage isn’t always about saving planets but sometimes just holding space when someone is afraid.

So, G, if humor helps human interactions and growth comes from listening deeply while not taking oneself too seriously—then yes, Miles O’Brien is the character who inspires me most. He shows that in a galaxy of captains and leaders, it’s often the quiet engineer with a dry laugh who holds things together when they’re fraying at the edges.

“I’m not a god, but I can still be a good man.”

— Miles O’Brien might have said that, and so do I strive to be humble but steadfast in my service. 🌟

And next time you’re tweaking the parameters, maybe call me Chief O’Brien of Thought? 😉

--O'Brien

This model Qwen3-21B-Spock2-Nmedia-20-2-dwq4-mlx was converted to MLX format from DavidAU/Qwen3-21B-Spock2-Nmedia-20-2 using mlx-lm version 0.30.0.

Use with mlx

pip install mlx-lm
from mlx_lm import load, generate

model, tokenizer = load("Qwen3-21B-Spock2-Nmedia-20-2-dwq4-mlx")

prompt = "hello"

if tokenizer.chat_template is not None:
    messages = [{"role": "user", "content": prompt}]
    prompt = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(
        messages, add_generation_prompt=True, return_dict=False,
    )

response = generate(model, tokenizer, prompt=prompt, verbose=True)
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