AI tool comparison
DeepSeek V4-Pro vs GLM-5.1
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Foundation Models
DeepSeek V4-Pro
1.6T-param MoE model, 1M context, Nvidia-free — just dropped Apache 2.0
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
DeepSeek just dropped V4-Pro and V4-Flash simultaneously — and it's a statement release. V4-Pro packs 1.6 trillion total parameters in a MoE architecture with only 49B active per token, a 1-million-token context window, and a hybrid attention system (Compressed Sparse Attention + Heavily Compressed Attention) that requires just 27% of single-token inference FLOPs compared to V3.2. Both models are Apache 2.0. The hardware story is arguably the bigger news: V4 was trained entirely on Huawei Ascend 950PR chips, zero NVIDIA. That's a geopolitical and technical milestone — it validates China's domestic AI compute stack at frontier scale. The Engram Memory System gives V4 conditional context recall (94% at 128K tokens vs ~45% for V3.2), enabling genuinely long-context reasoning. V4-Flash at 284B parameters (13B active) is the cheaper, faster sibling for production use. Pricing is expected around $0.30/M tokens for Pro. The timing — released to HN today with 99+ points within hours — confirms this as an immediate conversation in the developer community about whether open-weight frontier models have finally matched proprietary ones.
AI Models
GLM-5.1
#1 on SWE-Bench Pro — Zhipu's open 754B MoE beats GPT-5 on coding
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Z.ai (formerly Zhipu AI) has released GLM-5.1, a 754B-parameter Mixture-of-Experts model that's currently sitting at #1 on SWE-Bench Pro with a score of 58.4 — outperforming GPT-5.4 and Claude Opus 4.6 on long-horizon software engineering tasks. The model ships under MIT license with full weights on HuggingFace. GLM-5.1 was specifically designed for agentic software engineering workflows: multi-file reasoning, autonomous test-run-fix loops, and extended coding sessions that span hundreds of tool calls. It's not just a capability leap — at 754B active parameters via sparse MoE, it can be run more efficiently than a dense model of equivalent capability on a sufficiently provisioned cluster. The SWE-Bench Pro result is significant because that benchmark is harder to game than vanilla SWE-Bench Verified. It tests whether a model can resolve real GitHub issues with correct tests, proper diffs, and no regressions — the things that actually matter in production. For anyone running self-hosted coding agents or building on open models, GLM-5.1 just became the new baseline to beat.
Reviewer scorecard
“Apache 2.0 with 1M context and frontier-level benchmarks changes the commercial calculus entirely. Self-host for sensitive workloads, use the API for production — the 49B active params means reasonable inference costs if you have the hardware.”
“If the SWE-Bench Pro numbers hold up under independent replication, this is the first open model that can genuinely replace a proprietary API for serious agentic coding work. MIT license means you can fine-tune and deploy on your own infra. This is a big deal.”
“Benchmark claims from DeepSeek have historically been hard to independently replicate at launch. The Huawei chip story is compelling but also means the Western open-source deployment story requires significant hardware work. And 1.6T parameters is not consumer hardware territory.”
“754B parameters is not something 99% of developers can run locally. You need a multi-GPU cluster or serious cloud spend. The benchmark numbers are from Z.ai's own evaluations, and Zhipu has a history of optimistic benchmarking. Wait for independent replications.”
“V4's Nvidia-free training stack is a geopolitical inflection point as much as a technical one. It proves the export control strategy isn't containing China's AI progress — and gives the global open-source community a frontier model with no licensing restrictions.”
“A Chinese lab shipping an MIT-licensed model that tops global coding benchmarks is a watershed moment for open-source AI. The geopolitical implications are real — this is the model that makes US export controls look strategically shortsighted.”
“A 1M-token context model at $0.30/MTok Apache 2.0 means long-form creative projects — novels, screenplays, brand bibles — can finally be processed holistically. The Flash variant's low cost makes it accessible even for creative side projects with tight budgets.”
“Unless you're building coding tools or agent infrastructure, a 754B MoE model doesn't move the needle for creative applications. The energy and infra overhead for creative use cases doesn't pencil out versus smaller, cheaper models.”
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