French AI firm Mistral launches its first reasoning model to rival OpenAI and DeepSeek
The post French AI firm Mistral launches its first reasoning model to rival OpenAI and DeepSeek appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Mistral, a Microsoft-backed French AI firm, released its first reasoning model on June 10, taking on China’s DeepSeek and OpenAI. Mistral’s CEO, Arthur Mensch, said the new reasoning model had the “specificity” of being able to reason in multiple languages. Today, the CEO of Mitral, Arthur Mensch, said his company was unveiling a new reasoning model called Magistral, which was very competitive against all the other models like OpenAI’s o1 and DeepSeek’s R1. It also had the “specificity” of reasoning in multiple European languages. Mensch added that Mistral’s new model could execute more complicated tasks through a step-by-step logical thought process, and it was great at mathematics and coding. The Mistral team disclosed that their AI system specialized in open-weight large language models, which made their fundamental “parameters” publicly available. Developers can access and modify the model’s core knowledge and bypass the high costs and time of training a system from scratch. Mistral launches seven successive AI models in 2025 Mistral CEO Arthur Mensch announced Magistral, their first-ever reasoning model, built to compete head-on with OpenAI’s o1 and DeepSeek’s R1. But here’s the twist: Magistral is optimized for European languages, making it a standout in a field dominated by English and… pic.twitter.com/rLIzuiLiqV — Wes Roth (@WesRothMoney) June 10, 2025 Today’s launch of the Magistral reasoning model marked the seventh consecutive launch of an AI model upgrade from the French AI firm this year alone. The AI company recently unveiled Devstral, its agentic LLM for software engineering tasks, on May 21. Devstral was built under a partnership with All Hands AI, and it allegedly outperformed all open-source models on SWE-Bench Verified by a large margin. It was released under the Apache 2.0 license. On May 7, the AI firm pushed the boundaries of efficiency and usability of language models even further…

The post French AI firm Mistral launches its first reasoning model to rival OpenAI and DeepSeek appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Mistral, a Microsoft-backed French AI firm, released its first reasoning model on June 10, taking on China’s DeepSeek and OpenAI. Mistral’s CEO, Arthur Mensch, said the new reasoning model had the “specificity” of being able to reason in multiple languages. Today, the CEO of Mitral, Arthur Mensch, said his company was unveiling a new reasoning model called Magistral, which was very competitive against all the other models like OpenAI’s o1 and DeepSeek’s R1. It also had the “specificity” of reasoning in multiple European languages. Mensch added that Mistral’s new model could execute more complicated tasks through a step-by-step logical thought process, and it was great at mathematics and coding. The Mistral team disclosed that their AI system specialized in open-weight large language models, which made their fundamental “parameters” publicly available. Developers can access and modify the model’s core knowledge and bypass the high costs and time of training a system from scratch. Mistral launches seven successive AI models in 2025 Mistral CEO Arthur Mensch announced Magistral, their first-ever reasoning model, built to compete head-on with OpenAI’s o1 and DeepSeek’s R1. But here’s the twist: Magistral is optimized for European languages, making it a standout in a field dominated by English and… pic.twitter.com/rLIzuiLiqV — Wes Roth (@WesRothMoney) June 10, 2025 Today’s launch of the Magistral reasoning model marked the seventh consecutive launch of an AI model upgrade from the French AI firm this year alone. The AI company recently unveiled Devstral, its agentic LLM for software engineering tasks, on May 21. Devstral was built under a partnership with All Hands AI, and it allegedly outperformed all open-source models on SWE-Bench Verified by a large margin. It was released under the Apache 2.0 license. On May 7, the AI firm pushed the boundaries of efficiency and usability of language models even further…
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