Compare/GLM-5.1 vs Tiny Aya

AI tool comparison

GLM-5.1 vs Tiny Aya

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

G

AI Models

GLM-5.1

Zhipu AI's 744B MIT-licensed model that beats Claude and GPT on SWE-Bench

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

GLM-5.1 is Zhipu AI's latest open-weights language model — a 744B parameter mixture-of-experts (MoE) architecture that activates 40B parameters per forward pass. Released under the MIT license with a 200,000-token context window, it has quietly topped the SWE-Bench Pro leaderboard, surpassing both Claude Opus 4.6 and GPT-5.4 on expert-level software engineering tasks. The MoE architecture means GLM-5.1 is significantly cheaper to run per token than a dense 744B model, with inference costs approaching dense 40B models for most workloads. Zhipu AI (a Tsinghua University spin-out) has steadily iterated on the GLM family to produce a text-focused reasoning model that holds its own against proprietary frontier models — now, for the first time, reportedly exceeding them on coding benchmarks. The MIT license is the headline for enterprise and research users: full commercial use, no usage restrictions, no API dependency. This puts GLM-5.1 in direct competition with Qwen3.5 for the "best open-weights model you can actually use for anything" crown, with a differentiating edge in software engineering tasks specifically.

T

Open Source Models

Tiny Aya

3B-parameter open model supporting 70+ languages — runs offline on a phone

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Tiny Aya is a family of open-weight small language models from Cohere Labs designed to bring multilingual AI to devices that can't access cloud inference. The 3.35B parameter models cover 70+ languages including many lower-resourced ones — African languages, South Asian languages, and Asia-Pacific languages that larger multilingual models either skip or handle poorly. The family includes five variants: a base pretrained model, a globally balanced instruction-tuned version (Global), and three region-specific models — Earth (Africa/West Asia), Fire (South Asia), and Water (Asia-Pacific/Europe). The region-specific models are tuned on data distributions that reflect the linguistic needs of each geography, rather than averaging across all languages and underserving everyone. On the leaderboard for Product Hunt's April 5th, Tiny Aya landed in the top three despite being a research release rather than a commercial product. The models run on Ollama, are available on HuggingFace and Kaggle, and were trained on 64 H100 GPUs — a comparatively modest run for this level of multilingual coverage.

Decision
GLM-5.1
Tiny Aya
Panel verdict
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source (MIT)
Open Source
Best for
Zhipu AI's 744B MIT-licensed model that beats Claude and GPT on SWE-Bench
3B-parameter open model supporting 70+ languages — runs offline on a phone
Category
AI Models
Open Source Models

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

SWE-Bench Pro beating Claude and GPT-5.4 is the real signal here. For coding automation workflows, having an MIT-licensed 200K context model at that quality tier changes the build-vs-buy calculus significantly. Deploying this on dedicated hardware is now a serious option for engineering teams.

80/100 · ship

Ollama support means this is running locally in ten minutes. The region-specific variants are a smart design choice — a model tuned for South Asian languages will outperform a globally averaged model on those languages even at smaller parameter counts. This is the right architecture for the problem.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

744B total parameters still requires serious infrastructure — you're looking at 8x H100s at minimum for comfortable inference. The 40B active parameters help with cost but not with deployment complexity. This is 'open source' for well-funded teams, not indie builders.

45/100 · skip

3B parameters across 70+ languages means the average per-language capacity is thin. For high-resource languages like English, Spanish, or Mandarin, you're getting a model that's clearly behind purpose-built alternatives. The compelling use case is low-resource languages — but that's a narrow market compared to the general-purpose SLM space.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

The open-weights ecosystem has now fully caught up to proprietary models on the most demanding software engineering benchmarks. This is the moment the 'open vs closed' debate definitively changes — the argument that proprietary models are categorically better no longer holds.

80/100 · ship

The 5 billion people who don't speak English as a first language are the next wave of AI users — and they'll largely be on mobile, offline-capable devices. Tiny Aya is building the infrastructure for that wave. The region-specific model design suggests Cohere Labs is thinking seriously about this rather than treating multilingual support as a checkbox.

Creator
45/100 · skip

Unless you're a creative tech team with serious infrastructure, this isn't practical for most creative workflows. The quality is undeniably impressive but the deployment story doesn't fit solo creators or small studios.

80/100 · ship

For content creators working in non-English markets, an offline model that actually handles your language well is transformational. Offline translation and transcription with no API costs or data privacy concerns is a real workflow unlock — especially for creators in regions with unreliable connectivity.

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