Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Barry Diller Invented Prestige TV. Then He Conquered the Internet

    June 7, 2025

    At the Bitcoin Conference, the Republicans were for sale

    June 7, 2025

    A ban on state AI laws could smash Big Tech’s legal guardrails

    June 7, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » The Most Capable Open Source AI Model Yet Could Supercharge AI Agents
    Business

    The Most Capable Open Source AI Model Yet Could Supercharge AI Agents

    News RoomBy News RoomSeptember 25, 20244 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    The most capable open source AI model with visual abilities yet could see more developers, researchers, and startups develop AI agents that can carry out useful chores on your computers for you.

    Released today by the Allen Institute for AI (Ai2), the Multimodal Open Language Model, or Molmo, can interpret images as well as converse through a chat interface. This means it can make sense of a computer screen, potentially helping an AI agent perform tasks such as browsing the web, navigating through file directories, and drafting documents.

    “With this release, many more people can deploy a multimodal model,” says Ali Farhadi, CEO of Ai2, a research organization based in Seattle, Washington, and a computer scientist at the University of Washington. “It should be an enabler for next-generation apps.”

    So-called AI agents are being widely touted as the next big thing in AI, with OpenAI, Google, and others racing to develop them. Agents have become a buzzword of late, but the grand vision is for AI to go well beyond chatting to reliably take complex and sophisticated actions on computers when given a command. This capability has yet to materialize at any kind of scale.

    Some powerful AI models already have visual abilities, including GPT-4 from OpenAI, Claude from Anthropic, and Gemini from Google DeepMind. These models can be used to power some experimental AI agents, but they are hidden from view and accessible only via a paid application programming interface, or API.

    Meta has released a family of AI models called Llama under a license that limits their commercial use, but it has yet to provide developers with a multimodal version. Meta is expected to announce several new products, perhaps including new Llama AI models, at its Connect event today.

    “Having an open source, multimodal model means that any startup or researcher that has an idea can try to do it,” says Ofir Press, a postdoc at Princeton University who works on AI agents.

    Press says that the fact that Molmo is open source means that developers will be more easily able to fine-tune their agents for specific tasks, such as working with spreadsheets, by providing additional training data. Models like GPT-4 can only be fine-tuned to a limited degree through their APIs, whereas a fully open model can be modified extensively. “When you have an open source model like this then you have many more options,” Press says.

    Ai2 is releasing several sizes of Molmo today, including a 70-billion-parameter model and a 1-billion-parameter one that is small enough to run on a mobile device. A model’s parameter count refers to the number of units it contains for storing and manipulating data and roughly corresponds to its capabilities.

    Ai2 says Molmo is as capable as considerably larger commercial models despite its relatively small size, because it was carefully trained on high-quality data. The new model is also fully open source in that, unlike Meta’s Llama, there are no restrictions on its use. Ai2 is also releasing the training data used to create the model, providing researchers with more details of its workings.

    Releasing powerful models is not without risk. Such models can more easily be adapted for nefarious ends; we may someday, for example, see the emergence of malicious AI agents designed to automate the hacking of computer systems.

    Farhadi of Ai2 argues that the efficiency and portability of Molmo will allow developers to build more powerful software agents that run natively on smartphones and other portable devices. “The billion parameter model is now performing in the level of or in the league of models that are at least 10 times bigger,” he says.

    Building useful AI agents may depend on more than just more efficient multimodal models, however. A key challenge is making the models work more reliably. This may well require further breakthroughs in AI’s reasoning abilities—something that OpenAI has sought to tackle with its latest model o1, which demonstrates step-by-step reasoning skills. The next step may well be giving multimodal models such reasoning abilities.

    For now, the release of Molmo means that AI agents are closer than ever—and could soon be useful even outside of the giants that rule the world of AI.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleSuunto’s new bone conduction headphones are up to $30 off right now
    Next Article ‘Robot lawyer’ company faces $193,000 fine as part of FTC’s AI crackdown

    Related Posts

    Barry Diller Invented Prestige TV. Then He Conquered the Internet

    June 7, 2025

    Silicon Valley Is Starting to Pick Sides in Musk and Trump’s Breakup

    June 7, 2025

    Elon Musk’s Feud With President Trump Wipes $152 Billion Off Tesla’s Market Cap

    June 6, 2025

    Palantir Is Going on Defense

    June 6, 2025

    At Bitcoin 2025, Crypto Purists and the MAGA Faithful Collide

    June 5, 2025

    Trumpworld Is Fighting Over ‘Official’ Crypto Wallet

    June 5, 2025
    Our Picks

    At the Bitcoin Conference, the Republicans were for sale

    June 7, 2025

    A ban on state AI laws could smash Big Tech’s legal guardrails

    June 7, 2025

    Everything You Need to Know About MicroSD Express

    June 7, 2025

    Apple’s latest AirPods Pro with USB-C just received a $70 discount

    June 7, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Gear

    Samsung Teases Z Fold Ultra, Bing Gets AI Video, and Nothing Sets A Date—Your Gear News of the Week

    By News RoomJune 7, 2025

    We have a few details so far. The phone may not have the Glyph light…

    ‘Mario Kart World’ Devs Broke Their Own Rule on Who Gets to Drive

    June 7, 2025

    Apple is on defense at WWDC

    June 7, 2025

    Silicon Valley Is Starting to Pick Sides in Musk and Trump’s Breakup

    June 7, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.