AI tool comparison
LFM2.5-VL vs Ling-2.6-Flash
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
AI Models
LFM2.5-VL
450M vision-language model that runs in under 250ms on edge hardware
75%
Panel ship
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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.
Open Source Models
Ling-2.6-Flash
104B MoE model with only 7.4B active params — big model quality at small model speed
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Ling-2.6-Flash is a 104-billion-parameter Mixture of Experts language model released by InclusionAI, the AI research arm of Ant Group (Alibaba's fintech affiliate). Despite its massive total parameter count, only 7.4 billion parameters are active on any given forward pass — meaning it achieves inference speeds comparable to a 7B dense model while drawing on the knowledge capacity of a much larger system. It was released April 21, 2026 and is available free on OpenRouter. The model is positioned for "fast responses, strong execution, and high token efficiency" — the Ling team's design brief for their Flash tier, which sits below their full Ling-2.6-Max model. Ling-2.6-Flash follows a pattern established by DeepSeek's V2/V3 releases: sparse MoE architecture that enables large-scale training without proportional inference costs, making the models accessible to the community on consumer or semi-professional hardware. The community is reporting strong tokens-per-second numbers on A100 and H100 instances. InclusionAI has been quietly building out the Ling model family since 2025, with V2 representing a significant quality jump over the original Ling release. Unlike some Chinese-origin open-weight models, Ling appears to have broad multilingual capability, though the English and Chinese benchmarks are both strong. The release strategy of making it free on OpenRouter lowers the barrier to experimentation considerably.
Reviewer scorecard
“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.”
“7.4B active parameters at 104B capacity is the best ratio in its class right now. If the benchmark performance holds up in real workloads, this is an easy drop-in for high-throughput API use cases where cost-per-token matters. Free on OpenRouter means zero risk to test it against your current model.”
“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.”
“InclusionAI isn't a household name in Western AI circles, and Ant Group's relationship with Chinese regulatory bodies adds procurement risk for enterprise buyers. The MoE architecture claims are compelling on paper, but we need third-party evals before trusting benchmark numbers from the releasing organization. Wait for the community runs.”
“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.”
“The proliferation of high-quality, truly free open-weight models is one of the most significant structural shifts in AI right now. Ling-2.6-Flash represents Chinese AI labs maturing to the point of producing globally competitive open releases — which accelerates the entire ecosystem and drives down the cost of intelligence for everyone.”
“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.”
“As a free model you can run via API, this is worth testing for any creator pipeline that uses Claude or GPT-4o for high-volume text generation tasks where the cost adds up. But without a polished frontend or clear creative use cases from the Ling team, you'll need technical help to actually put it to work.”
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