AI tool comparison
Google Gemma 4 vs LFM2.5-VL
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Open Source Models
Google Gemma 4
Google's first Apache 2.0 open model family with native multimodal
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Gemma 4 is Google's newest open model family — E2B, E4B, 26B, and 31B sizes — built on Gemini 3 architecture. For the first time, Google has released Gemma under Apache 2.0, making the models fully commercial-friendly with no Google-specific use restrictions. Every model in the family is natively multimodal from training: text, image, video, and audio inputs are all first-class. Context windows run 128K–256K tokens depending on size, and the models include built-in function calling, structured JSON output, and agentic workflow support. The E2B and E4B variants target on-device mobile and laptop deployment, with native audio understanding designed for always-on assistant scenarios. NVIDIA has already published optimized Gemma 4 containers for RTX hardware. The Apache 2.0 license removes a major adoption barrier that held back Gemma 3 in commercial products. Gemma 4 landed at #1 on Hacker News with 1,400+ points — the open-source model community's reaction was immediate and enthusiastic.
AI Models
LFM2.5-VL
450M vision-language model that runs in under 250ms on edge hardware
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Liquid AI just shipped LFM2.5-VL, a 450M-parameter vision-language model engineered from the ground up for edge deployment. Unlike most VLMs that require a beefy GPU in the cloud, LFM2.5-VL targets devices like the Snapdragon 8 Elite, NVIDIA Jetson Orin, and AMD Ryzen AI — hitting sub-250ms latency on-device without any cloud round-trip. This model builds significantly on its predecessor with four new capabilities: bounding box prediction (81.28 on RefCOCO-M), multilingual support across 8 languages, function calling, and improved instruction following. Those aren't just benchmark checkboxes — bounding box prediction means you can run visual grounding and object detection pipelines on a phone or robot without any server involvement. Liquid AI is the MIT-spun startup behind Liquid Foundation Models (LFMs), a non-Transformer architecture that delivers competitive performance at a fraction of the memory footprint. LFM2.5-VL is available free on HuggingFace and through Liquid's LEAP inference platform. For builders targeting on-device AI — robotics, mobile, embedded — this is one of the most practical releases of the month.
Reviewer scorecard
“Apache 2.0 means I can embed it in commercial products without legal review overhead. Native audio + 256K context on a 26B model that runs on a single A100 is a killer combo for production agent work. This is the open model I've been waiting for.”
“Sub-250ms on-device vision with function calling is the unlock for a huge class of apps that couldn't tolerate cloud latency — real-time AR overlays, offline field inspection, privacy-sensitive medical imaging. The bounding box support is icing; ship this.”
“Google has a history of releasing models and then quietly deprioritizing them once the PR cycle ends. Gemma 1 and 2 both got less maintenance than promised. The Apache license is great news, but trust has to be earned over time with consistent model updates.”
“450M parameters with 8-language support and benchmark-leading vision grounding sounds great until you try to fine-tune it for a domain-specific task. The LEAP platform is still invite-only and the open weights lack fine-tuning docs. Worth watching but not shipping to prod yet.”
“Native multimodal understanding — including audio — on models small enough for phones changes what ambient computing looks like. Gemma 4 on-device could be the model layer for a generation of always-on smart devices that don't need cloud inference.”
“The race to run capable VLMs on-device is the precursor to AI-native hardware. Liquid's non-Transformer architecture is showing that efficiency gains don't require the same trade-offs as quantization. This is what AI hardware of 2028 will be built around.”
“Image, video, and audio in one open model I can run locally? The creative tooling possibilities are enormous. I can build private multimodal workflows for client work without data leaving my machine. Apache 2.0 seals it — this is a Ship.”
“On-device vision that can call functions means camera-native apps that don't phone home. Think real-time style transfer, offline image tagging, or AR creative tools that actually work on a plane. The creator tooling implications are underrated.”
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