AI tool comparison
Google Gemma 4 vs Qwen3.6-Max-Preview
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
—
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
Qwen3.6-Max-Preview
Alibaba's #1-ranked agentic coding model — tops SWE-bench Pro, Terminal-Bench, and more
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Qwen3.6-Max-Preview is Alibaba's flagship closed-weight model and currently holds the top position on five major agentic coding benchmarks: SWE-bench Pro, Terminal-Bench 2.0, SkillsBench, QwenClawBench, and QwenWebBench. Released April 20 as a preview API, it represents Alibaba's most aggressive push yet at the frontier of agentic AI. Unlike the open-weight Qwen3.6-27B and Qwen3.6-35B-A3B variants released alongside it, the Max model is proprietary and available only through the Qwen API. It's designed for complex multi-step coding tasks, autonomous terminal operation, and web-based agent workflows — the kind of tasks that require sustained planning over dozens of steps without human intervention. For the developer community, the benchmarks are eye-catching: claiming the #1 spot on SWE-bench Pro means it's outperforming Claude Opus 4.7, GPT-5, and Gemini Ultra 2.0 on autonomous software engineering tasks. Whether those numbers hold in production is the real question, but at competitive API pricing, Qwen3.6-Max is worth serious evaluation by any team running coding agents at scale.
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.”
“The SWE-bench Pro numbers are hard to ignore — if this actually resolves real GitHub issues at the rate the benchmark suggests, it's the best coding agent on the market right now. Early access reports from the terminal-bench community are positive, and the API latency is reportedly competitive with Claude. Worth evaluating seriously before your next agent project.”
“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.”
“Alibaba runs their own benchmarks (QwenClawBench, QwenWebBench) that nobody outside can verify, which is a big red flag. SWE-bench Pro results need independent reproduction before taking them at face value. The 'preview' label also means API reliability, rate limits, and pricing are all subject to change — risky to build a production pipeline on.”
“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 fact that a Chinese tech company is releasing frontier-level agentic models that credibly compete with OpenAI and Anthropic is the real story here. Competition at the frontier drives down prices and forces capability improvements across the board. Alibaba's aggressive release cadence suggests this is just the beginning of a sustained push.”
“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.”
“For creative technologists building with code, the agentic capabilities matter — a model that can autonomously navigate a codebase and implement multi-file changes opens up a new class of creative tools. If the benchmarks hold in practice, this unlocks more ambitious generative projects without a human in the loop for every step.”
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