AI tool comparison
GLM-5.1 vs Google Gemma 4
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
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.
Open Source Models
Google Gemma 4
Google's open multimodal models — vision, audio, and text under Apache 2.0
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Google Gemma 4 is the most capable open model family Google has released, and the first to unify text, vision, and audio in a single architecture — all under the Apache 2.0 license. Available in four sizes (E2B, E4B, 26B MoE, 31B Dense), the lineup runs everywhere from smartphones to high-end GPUs and covers 140+ languages with context windows up to 256K. The headline stat: the 31B Dense model benchmarks above models nearly 20x its size in certain evals, making it the sharpest intelligence-per-parameter model in the open-source ecosystem as of its April 2026 release. The multimodal architecture processes documents with OCR, analyzes charts, transcribes speech, and understands video frames from a single model — no pipeline stitching required. For developers and researchers, the Apache 2.0 licensing is the real unlock. Gemma 4 is fully OSI-approved and commercially usable without restriction, building on a community of 400M+ downloads from prior Gemma versions and 100,000+ variants in the wild.
Reviewer scorecard
“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.”
“Apache 2.0 on a model that beats GPT-class performance at 31B? Ship it immediately. The MoE 26B variant is already running under 16GB VRAM for me with llama.cpp quantization. The unified multimodal arch saves a ton of pipeline complexity.”
“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.”
“Google's benchmark marketing is getting harder to trust — 'beats 600B rivals' is cherry-picked. The audio modality is notably weaker than Gemini 3.1, and fine-tuning the MoE variant requires infrastructure most teams don't have. Real-world performance lags the headline numbers.”
“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.”
“The 100,000-variant Gemmaverse is a real ecosystem flywheel. Every new Gemma release compresses capability curves downward — things that required cloud APIs last year now run on-device. Gemma 4's audio addition makes it the first truly comprehensive local AI.”
“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.”
“A single model that can read my documents, analyze charts, transcribe my audio notes, and generate code is genuinely transformative for creative production. The Apache license means I can embed it in client deliverables without legal headaches.”
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