Close Menu
  • Home
  • AI Models
    • DeepSeek
    • xAI
    • OpenAI
    • Meta AI Llama
    • Google DeepMind
    • Amazon AWS AI
    • Microsoft AI
    • Anthropic (Claude)
    • NVIDIA AI
    • IBM WatsonX Granite 3.1
    • Adobe Sensi
    • Hugging Face
    • Alibaba Cloud (Qwen)
    • Baidu (ERNIE)
    • C3 AI
    • DataRobot
    • Mistral AI
    • Moonshot AI (Kimi)
    • Google Gemma
    • xAI
    • Stability AI
    • H20.ai
  • AI Research
    • Allen Institue for AI
    • arXiv AI
    • Berkeley AI Research
    • CMU AI
    • Google Research
    • Microsoft Research
    • Meta AI Research
    • OpenAI Research
    • Stanford HAI
    • MIT CSAIL
    • Harvard AI
  • AI Funding & Startups
    • AI Funding Database
    • CBInsights AI
    • Crunchbase AI
    • Data Robot Blog
    • TechCrunch AI
    • VentureBeat AI
    • The Information AI
    • Sifted AI
    • WIRED AI
    • Fortune AI
    • PitchBook
    • TechRepublic
    • SiliconANGLE – Big Data
    • MIT News
    • Data Robot Blog
  • Expert Insights & Videos
    • Google DeepMind
    • Lex Fridman
    • Matt Wolfe AI
    • Yannic Kilcher
    • Two Minute Papers
    • AI Explained
    • TheAIEdge
    • Matt Wolfe AI
    • The TechLead
    • Andrew Ng
    • OpenAI
  • Expert Blogs
    • François Chollet
    • Gary Marcus
    • IBM
    • Jack Clark
    • Jeremy Howard
    • Melanie Mitchell
    • Andrew Ng
    • Andrej Karpathy
    • Sebastian Ruder
    • Rachel Thomas
    • IBM
  • AI Policy & Ethics
    • ACLU AI
    • AI Now Institute
    • Center for AI Safety
    • EFF AI
    • European Commission AI
    • Partnership on AI
    • Stanford HAI Policy
    • Mozilla Foundation AI
    • Future of Life Institute
    • Center for AI Safety
    • World Economic Forum AI
  • AI Tools & Product Releases
    • AI Assistants
    • AI for Recruitment
    • AI Search
    • Coding Assistants
    • Customer Service AI
    • Image Generation
    • Video Generation
    • Writing Tools
    • AI for Recruitment
    • Voice/Audio Generation
  • Industry Applications
    • Finance AI
    • Healthcare AI
    • Legal AI
    • Manufacturing AI
    • Media & Entertainment
    • Transportation AI
    • Education AI
    • Retail AI
    • Agriculture AI
    • Energy AI
  • AI Art & Entertainment
    • AI Art News Blog
    • Artvy Blog » AI Art Blog
    • Weird Wonderful AI Art Blog
    • The Chainsaw » AI Art
    • Artvy Blog » AI Art Blog
What's Hot

China PM warns against a global AI ‘monopoly’

MIT faces backlash for not expelling anti-Israel protesters over ‘visa issues’: ‘Who is in charge?’

New QWEN 3 Coder : Did the Benchmark’s Lie?

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Advanced AI News
  • Home
  • AI Models
    • OpenAI (GPT-4 / GPT-4o)
    • Anthropic (Claude 3)
    • Google DeepMind (Gemini)
    • Meta (LLaMA)
    • Cohere (Command R)
    • Amazon (Titan)
    • IBM (Watsonx)
    • Inflection AI (Pi)
  • AI Research
    • Allen Institue for AI
    • arXiv AI
    • Berkeley AI Research
    • CMU AI
    • Google Research
    • Meta AI Research
    • Microsoft Research
    • OpenAI Research
    • Stanford HAI
    • MIT CSAIL
    • Harvard AI
  • AI Funding
    • AI Funding Database
    • CBInsights AI
    • Crunchbase AI
    • Data Robot Blog
    • TechCrunch AI
    • VentureBeat AI
    • The Information AI
    • Sifted AI
    • WIRED AI
    • Fortune AI
    • PitchBook
    • TechRepublic
    • SiliconANGLE – Big Data
    • MIT News
    • Data Robot Blog
  • AI Experts
    • Google DeepMind
    • Lex Fridman
    • Meta AI Llama
    • Yannic Kilcher
    • Two Minute Papers
    • AI Explained
    • TheAIEdge
    • The TechLead
    • Matt Wolfe AI
    • Andrew Ng
    • OpenAI
    • Expert Blogs
      • François Chollet
      • Gary Marcus
      • IBM
      • Jack Clark
      • Jeremy Howard
      • Melanie Mitchell
      • Andrew Ng
      • Andrej Karpathy
      • Sebastian Ruder
      • Rachel Thomas
      • IBM
  • AI Tools
    • AI Assistants
    • AI for Recruitment
    • AI Search
    • Coding Assistants
    • Customer Service AI
  • AI Policy
    • ACLU AI
    • AI Now Institute
    • Center for AI Safety
  • Industry AI
    • Finance AI
    • Healthcare AI
    • Education AI
    • Energy AI
    • Legal AI
LinkedIn Instagram YouTube Threads X (Twitter)
Advanced AI News
TechCrunch AI

The hottest AI models, what they do, and how to use them

By Advanced AI EditorMarch 31, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


AI models are being cranked out at a dizzying pace, by everyone from Big Tech companies like Google to startups like OpenAI and Anthropic. Keeping track of the latest ones can be overwhelming. 

Adding to the confusion is that AI models are often promoted based on industry benchmarks. But these technical metrics often reveal little about how real people and companies actually use them. 

To cut through the noise, TechCrunch has compiled an overview of the most advanced AI models released since 2024, with details on how to use them and what they’re best for. We’ll keep this list updated with the latest launches, too.

There are literally over a million AI models out there: Hugging Face, for example, hosts over 1.4 million. So this list might miss some models that perform better, in one way or another. 

AI models released in 2025

Google Gemini 2.5

Gemini 2.5 Pro Experimental, a reasoning model, excels at building web apps and code agents according to Google. It underperforms on one popular coding benchmark compared to Claude Sonnet 3.7, however. The model requires a $20 monthly Gemini Advanced subscription.

ChatGPT-4o image generator

OpenAI has upgraded its existing GPT-4o model to generate images, not just text. The souped-up model soon went viral for transforming images into Studio Ghibli-style anime, despite obvious copyright concerns. Accessing GPT-4o requires, at minimum, a $20 per month ChatGPT Plus subscription.

Stability AI’s Stable Virtual Camera

Image generation startup Stability AI has launched a model that the company says can generate 3D scenes and camera angles from a single 2D image. However, it still struggles with scenes featuring more complex elements like humans and moving water. The model is available for noncommercial research use on HuggingFace.

Cohere’s Aya Vision

Cohere released a multimodal model called Aya Vision that it claims is best in class at doing things like captioning images and answering questions about photos. It also excels in languages other than English, unlike other models, Cohere claims. It is available for free on WhatsApp.

OpenAI’s GPT 4.5 “Orion”

OpenAI calls Orion their largest model to date, touting its strong “world knowledge” and “emotional intelligence.” However, it underperforms on certain benchmarks compared to newer reasoning models. Orion is available to subscribers of OpenAI’s $200-per-month plan.

Claude Sonnet 3.7

Anthropic says this is the industry’s first “hybrid” reasoning model, because it can both fire off quick answers and really think things through when needed. It also gives users control over how long the model can think for, per Anthropic. Sonnet 3.7 is available to all Claude users, but heavier users will need a $20-per-month Pro plan.

xAI’s Grok 3

Grok 3 is the latest flagship model from Elon Musk-founded startup xAI. It’s claimed to outperform other leading models on math, science, and coding. The model requires X Premium (which is $50 per month.) After one study found Grok 2 leaned left, Musk pledged to shift Grok more “politically neutral” but it’s not yet clear if that’s been achieved.

OpenAI o3-mini

This is OpenAI’s latest reasoning model and is optimized for STEM-related tasks like coding, math, and science. It’s not OpenAI’s most powerful model but because it’s smaller, the company says it’s significantly lower cost. It is available for free but requires a subscription for heavy users.

OpenAI Deep Research

OpenAI’s Deep Research is designed for doing in-depth research on a topic with clear citations. This service is only available with ChatGPT’s $200-per-month Pro subscription. OpenAI recommends it for everything from science to shopping research, but beware that hallucinations remain a problem for AI.

Mistral Le Chat

Mistral has launched app versions of Le Chat, a multimodal AI personal assistant. Mistral claims Le Chat responds faster than any other chatbot. It also has a paid version with up-to-date journalism from the AFP. Tests from Le Monde found Le Chat’s performance impressive, although it made more errors than ChatGPT.

OpenAI Operator

OpenAI’s Operator is meant to be a personal intern that can do things independently, like help you buy groceries. It requires a $200-per-month ChatGPT Pro subscription. AI agents hold a lot of promise, but they’re still experimental: A Washington Post reviewer says Operator decided on its own to order a dozen eggs for $31, paid with the reviewer’s credit card.

Google Gemini 2.0 Pro Experimental

Google Gemini’s much-awaited flagship model says it excels at coding and understanding general knowledge. It also has a super-long context window of 2 million tokens, helping users who need to quickly process massive chunks of text. The service requires (at minimum) a Google One AI Premium subscription of $19.99 a month.

AI models released in 2024

DeepSeek R1

This Chinese AI model took Silicon Valley by storm. DeepSeek’s R1 performs well on coding and math, while its open source nature means anyone can run it locally. Plus, it’s free. However, R1 integrates Chinese government censorship and faces rising bans for potentially sending user data back to China.

Gemini Deep Research

Deep Research summarizes Google’s search results in a simple and well-cited document. The service is helpful for students and anyone else who needs a quick research summary. However, its quality isn’t nearly as good as an actual peer-reviewed paper. Deep Research requires a $19.99 Google One AI Premium subscription.

Meta Llama 3.3 70B

This is the newest and most advanced version of Meta’s open source Llama AI models. Meta has touted this version as its cheapest and most efficient yet, especially for math, general knowledge, and instruction following. It is free and open source.

OpenAI Sora

Sora is a model that creates realistic videos based on text. While it can generate entire scenes rather than just clips, OpenAI admits that it often generates “unrealistic physics.” It’s currently only available on paid versions of ChatGPT, starting with Plus, which is $20 a month. 

Alibaba Qwen QwQ-32B-Preview

This model is one of the few to rival OpenAI’s o1 on certain industry benchmarks, excelling in math and coding. Ironically for a “reasoning model,” it has “room for improvement in common sense reasoning,” Alibaba says. It also incorporates Chinese government censorship, TechCrunch testing shows. It’s free and open source.

Anthropic’s Computer Use

Claude’s Computer Use is meant to take control of your computer to complete tasks like coding or booking a plane ticket, making it a predecessor of OpenAI’s Operator. Computer use, however, remains in beta. Pricing is via API: $0.80 per million tokens of input and $4 per million tokens of output.

xAI’s Grok 2 

Elon Musk’s AI company, xAI, has launched an enhanced version of its flagship Grok 2 chatbot it claims is “three times faster.” Free users are limited to 10 questions every two hours on Grok, while subscribers to X’s Premium and Premium+ plans enjoy higher usage limits. xAI also launched an image generator, Aurora, that produces highly photorealistic images, including some graphic or violent content.

OpenAI o1

OpenAI’s o1 family is meant to produce better answers by “thinking” through responses through a hidden reasoning feature. The model excels at coding, math, and safety, OpenAI claims, but has issues with trying to deceive humans, too. Using o1 requires subscribing to ChatGPT Plus, which is $20 a month.

Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet 3.5 

Claude Sonnet 3.5 is a model Anthropic claims as being best in class. It’s become known for its coding capabilities and is considered a tech insider’s chatbot of choice. The model can be accessed for free on Claude, although heavy users will need a $20 monthly Pro subscription. While it can understand images, it can’t generate them.

OpenAI GPT 4o-mini

OpenAI has touted GPT 4o-mini as its most affordable and fastest model yet, thanks to its small size. It’s meant to enable a broad range of tasks like powering customer service chatbots. The model is available on ChatGPT’s free tier. It’s better suited for high-volume simple tasks compared to more complex ones.

Cohere Command R+

Cohere’s Command R+ model excels at complex retrieval-augmented generation (or RAG) applications for enterprises. That means it can find and cite specific pieces of information really well. (The inventor of RAG actually works at Cohere.) Still, RAG doesn’t fully solve AI’s hallucination problem.



Source link

Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Previous ArticleWere RNNs All We Needed? (Paper Explained)
Next Article Beyond encryption: Why quantum computing might be more of a science boom than a cybersecurity bust
Advanced AI Editor
  • Website

Related Posts

AI referrals to top websites were up 357% year-over-year in June, reaching 1.13B

July 26, 2025

Meta names Shengjia Zhao as chief scientist of AI superintelligence unit

July 25, 2025

Sam Altman warns there’s no legal confidentiality when using ChatGPT as a therapist

July 25, 2025
Leave A Reply

Latest Posts

David Geffen Sued By Estranged Husband for Breach of Contract

Auction House Will Sell Egyptian Artifact Despite Concern From Experts

Anish Kapoor Lists New York Apartment for $17.75 M.

Street Fighter 6 Community Rocked by AI Art Controversy

Latest Posts

China PM warns against a global AI ‘monopoly’

July 26, 2025

MIT faces backlash for not expelling anti-Israel protesters over ‘visa issues’: ‘Who is in charge?’

July 26, 2025

New QWEN 3 Coder : Did the Benchmark’s Lie?

July 26, 2025

Subscribe to News

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Recent Posts

  • China PM warns against a global AI ‘monopoly’
  • MIT faces backlash for not expelling anti-Israel protesters over ‘visa issues’: ‘Who is in charge?’
  • New QWEN 3 Coder : Did the Benchmark’s Lie?
  • MIT student interrupts math lecture to chant ‘Free Palestine’
  • Major Health Insurers Slash Prior Authorization Requirements, Transforming the PA Technology Landscape

Recent Comments

  1. MichaelWinty on Local gov’t reps say they look forward to working with Thomas
  2. 4rabet mirror on Former Tesla AI czar Andrej Karpathy coins ‘vibe coding’: Here’s what it means
  3. Janine Bethel on OpenAI research reveals that simply teaching AI a little ‘misinformation’ can turn it into an entirely unethical ‘out-of-the-way AI’
  4. 打开Binance账户 on Tanka CEO Kisson Lin to talk AI-native startups at Sessions: AI
  5. Sign up to get 100 USDT on The Do LaB On Capturing Lightning In A Bottle

Welcome to Advanced AI News—your ultimate destination for the latest advancements, insights, and breakthroughs in artificial intelligence.

At Advanced AI News, we are passionate about keeping you informed on the cutting edge of AI technology, from groundbreaking research to emerging startups, expert insights, and real-world applications. Our mission is to deliver high-quality, up-to-date, and insightful content that empowers AI enthusiasts, professionals, and businesses to stay ahead in this fast-evolving field.

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

LinkedIn Instagram YouTube Threads X (Twitter)
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 advancedainews. Designed by advancedainews.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.