# The idea is that you have a Qwen2-VL-7B model located here:s3://ai2-oe-data/jakep/experiments/qwen2vl-pdf/v1/models/jakep/Qwen_Qwen2-VL-7B-Instruct-e4ecf8-01JAH8GMWHTJ376S2N7ETXRXH4/checkpoint-9500/bf16/"
# You need to load it in both hugging face transformers, and send page 1 of edgar.pdf to it from tests/gnarly_pdfs
# Compare that the temperature 0 sampled result is the same
"Edgar, King of England\n\nEdgar (or Eadgar;[1] c. 944 – 8 July 975) was King of the English from 959 until his death in 975. "
"He became king of all England on his brother's death. He was the younger son of King Edmund I and his first wife Ælfgifu. "
"A detailed account of Edgar's reign is not possible, because only a few events were recorded by chroniclers and monastic writers "
"were more interested in recording the activities of the leaders of the church.\n\nEdgar mainly followed the political policies of his predecessors, "
"but there were major changes in the religious sphere. The English Benedictine Reform, which he strongly supported, became a dominant religious and social force.[2] "
"It is seen by historians as a major achievement, and it was accompanied by a literary and artistic flowering, mainly associated with Æthelwold, Bishop of Winchester. "
"Monasteries aggressively acquired estates from lay landowners with Edgar's assistance, leading to disorder when he died and former owners sought to recover their lost property, "
"sometimes by force. Edgar's major administrative reform was the introduction of a standardised coinage in the early 970s to replace the previous decentralised system. "
"He also issued legislative codes which mainly concentrated on improving procedures for enforcement of the law.\n\nEngland had suffered from Viking invasions for over a century "
"when Edgar came to power, but there were none during his reign, which fell in a lull in attacks between the mid-950s and the early 980s.[3] After his death the throne was disputed "
"between the supporters of his two surviving sons; the elder one, Edward the Martyr, was chosen with the support of Dunstan, the Archbishop of Canterbury. Three years later Edward was "
"murdered and succeeded by his younger half-brother, Æthelred the Unready. Later chroniclers presented Edgar's reign as a golden age when England was free from external attacks and internal disorder, especially"