Paired with programming tools like Claude Code, it could be a low-cost/open-source replacement for Sonnet
martin_ · 16h ago
how do you low cost run a 1T param model?
maven29 · 16h ago
32B active parameters with a single shared expert.
JustFinishedBSG · 16h ago
This doesn’t change the VRAM usage, only the compute requirements.
selfhoster11 · 14h ago
It does not have to be VRAM, it could be system RAM, or weights streamed from SSD storage. Reportedly, the latter method achieves around 1 token per second on computers with 64 GB of system RAM.
R1 (and K2) is MoE, whereas Llama 3 is a dense model family. MoE actually makes these models practical to run on cheaper hardware. DeepSeek R1 is more comfortable for me than Llama 3 70B for exactly that reason - if it spills out of the GPU, you take a large performance hit.
If you need to spill into CPU inference, you really want to be multiplying a different set of 32B weights for every token compared to the same 70B (or more) instead, simply because the computation takes so long.
refulgentis · 14h ago
The amount of people who will be using it at 1 token/sec because there's no better option, and have 64 GB of RAM, is vanishingly small.
IMHO it sets the local LLM community back when we lean on extreme quantization & streaming weights from disk to say something is possible*, because when people try it out, it turns out it's an awful experience.
* the implication being, anything is possible in that scenario
selfhoster11 · 3h ago
Good. Vanishingly small is still more than zero. Over time, running such models will become easier too, as people slowly upgrade to better hardware. It's not like there aren't options for the compute-constrained either. There are lots of Chinese models in the 3-32B range, and Gemma 3 is particularly good too.
I will also point out that having three API-based providers deploying an impractically-large open-weights model beats the pants of having just one. Back in the day, this was called second-sourcing IIRC. With proprietary models, you're at the mercy of one corporation and their Kafkaesque ToS enforcement.
homarp · 11h ago
agentic loop can run all night long. It's just a different way to work: prepare your prompt queue, set it up, check result in the morning, adjust.
'local vibe' in 10h instead of 10mn is still better than 10 days of manual side coding.
hereme888 · 32m ago
Right on! Especially if its coding abilities are better than Claude 4 Opus. I spent thousands on my PC in anticipation of this rather than to play fancy video games.
Now, where's that spare SSD...
maven29 · 16h ago
You can probably run this on CPU if you have a 4090D for prompt processing, since 1TB of DDR4 only comes out to around $600.
For GPU inference at scale, I think token-level batching is used.
zackangelo · 16h ago
Typically a combination of expert level parallelism and tensor level parallelism is used.
For the big MLP tensors they would be split across GPUs in a cluster. Then for the MoE parts you would spread the experts across the GPUs and route to them based on which experts are active (there would likely be more than one if the batch size is > 1).
t1amat · 16h ago
With 32B active parameters it would be ridiculously slow at generation.
selfhoster11 · 14h ago
DDR3 workstation here - R1 generates at 1 token per second. In practice, this means that for complex queries, the speed of replying is closer to an email response than a chat message, but this is acceptable to me for confidential queries or queries where I need the model to be steerable. I can always hit the R1 API from a provider instead, if I want to.
Given that R1 uses 37B active parameters (compared to 32B for K2), K2 should be slightly faster than that - around 1.15 tokens/second.
kkzz99 · 17h ago
According to the bench its closer to Opus, but I venture primarily for English and Chinese.
wiradikusuma · 15h ago
I've only started using Claude, Gemini, etc in the last few months (I guess it comes with age, I'm no longer interested in trying the latest "tech"). I assume those are "non-agentic" models.
From reading articles online, "agentic" means like you have a "virtual" Virtual Assistant with "hands" that can google, open apps, etc, on their own.
Why not use existing "non-agentic" model and "orchestrate" them using LangChain, MCP etc? Why create a new breed of model?
I'm sorry if my questions sound silly. Following AI world is like following JavaScript world.
dcre · 15h ago
Reasonable question, simple answer: "New breed of model" is overstating it — all these models for years have been fine-tuned using reinforcement learning on a variety of tasks, it's just that the set of tasks (and maybe the amount of RL) has changed over time to include more tool use tasks, and this has made them much, much better at the latter. The explosion of tools like Claude Code this year is driven by the models just being more effective at it. The orchestration external to the model you mention is what people did before this year and it did not work as well.
ozten · 15h ago
It is not a silly question. The various flavors of LLM have issues with reliability. In software we expect five 9s, LLMs aren't even a one 9.
Early on it was reliability of them writing JSON output. Then instruction following. Then tool use. Now it's "computer use" and orchestration.
Creating models for this specific problem domain will have a better chance at reliability, which is not a solved problem.
Jules is the gemini coder that links to github. Half the time it doesn't create a pull request and forgets and assumes I'll do some testing or something. It's wild.
simonw · 15h ago
"Agentic" and "agent" can mean pretty much anything, there are a ton of different definitions out there.
When an LLM says it's "agentic" it usually means that it's been optimized for tool use. Pretty much all the big models (and most of the small ones) are designed for tool use these days, it's an incredibly valuable feature for a model to offer.
I don't think this new model is any more "agentic" than o3, o4-mini, Gemini 2.5 or Claude 4. All of those models are trained for tools, all of them are very competent at running tool calls in a loop to try to achieve a goal they have been given.
selfhoster11 · 14h ago
> I'm sorry if my questions sound silly. Following AI world is like following JavaScript world.
You are more right than you could possibly imagine.
TL;DR: "agentic" just means "can call tools it's been given access to, autonomously, and then access the output" combined with an infinite loop in which the model runs over and over (compared to a one-off interaction like you'd see in ChatGPT). MCP is essentially one of the methods to expose the tools to the model.
Is this something the models could do for a long while with a wrapper? Yup. "Agentic" is the current term for it, that's all. There's some hype around "agentic AI" that's unwarranted, but part of the reason for the hype is that models have become better at tool calling and using data in their context since the early days.
aliljet · 15h ago
If the SWE Bench results are to be believed... this looks best in class right now for a local LLM. To be fair, show me the guy who is running this locally...
selfhoster11 · 14h ago
It's challenging, but not impossible. With 2-bit quantisation, only about 250-ish gigabytes of RAM is required. It doesn't have to be VRAM either, and you can mix and match GPU+CPU inference.
In addition, some people on /r/localLlama are having success with streaming the weights off SSD storage at 1 token/second, which is about the rate I get for DeepSeek R1.
Alifatisk · 7h ago
Quite impressive benchmark, how come I don't see Kimi in Artificial analysis benchmarks?
cyanf · 17h ago
This is both the largest oss model release thus far, and the largest Muon training run.
gs17 · 17h ago
> 1T total / 32B active MoE model
Is this the largest open-weight model?
adt · 11h ago
No.
At 1T MoE on 15.5T tokens, K2 is one of the largest open source models to date. But BAAI's TeleFM is 1T dense on 15.7T tokens:
https://huggingface.co/CofeAI/Tele-FLM-1T
Grok-1 is 341B, DeepSeek-v3 is 671B, and recent new open weights models are around 70B~300B.
Imustaskforhelp · 11h ago
I really really want to try this model for free since I just don't have a gpu.
Is there any way that I could do so?
Open Router? Or does kimi have their own website? Just curious to really try it out!
blahgeek · 9h ago
Kimi.com
MaxPock · 15h ago
Would be hilarious if Zuck with his billion dollar poaching failed to beat budget Chinese models.
physix · 13h ago
That reminds me of a thought I had about the poachings.
The poaching was probably more aimed at hamstringing Meta's competition.
Because the disruption caused by them leaving in droves is probably more severe than the benefits of having them on board. Unless they are gods, of course.
rfoo · 12h ago
Wikipedia listed a FAIR alumni as cofounder for this "Moonshot AI". Make it funnier probably.
helloericsf · 14h ago
How does it stack up against the new Grok 4 model?
R1 (and K2) is MoE, whereas Llama 3 is a dense model family. MoE actually makes these models practical to run on cheaper hardware. DeepSeek R1 is more comfortable for me than Llama 3 70B for exactly that reason - if it spills out of the GPU, you take a large performance hit.
If you need to spill into CPU inference, you really want to be multiplying a different set of 32B weights for every token compared to the same 70B (or more) instead, simply because the computation takes so long.
IMHO it sets the local LLM community back when we lean on extreme quantization & streaming weights from disk to say something is possible*, because when people try it out, it turns out it's an awful experience.
* the implication being, anything is possible in that scenario
I will also point out that having three API-based providers deploying an impractically-large open-weights model beats the pants of having just one. Back in the day, this was called second-sourcing IIRC. With proprietary models, you're at the mercy of one corporation and their Kafkaesque ToS enforcement.
Now, where's that spare SSD...
For GPU inference at scale, I think token-level batching is used.
For the big MLP tensors they would be split across GPUs in a cluster. Then for the MoE parts you would spread the experts across the GPUs and route to them based on which experts are active (there would likely be more than one if the batch size is > 1).
Given that R1 uses 37B active parameters (compared to 32B for K2), K2 should be slightly faster than that - around 1.15 tokens/second.
From reading articles online, "agentic" means like you have a "virtual" Virtual Assistant with "hands" that can google, open apps, etc, on their own.
Why not use existing "non-agentic" model and "orchestrate" them using LangChain, MCP etc? Why create a new breed of model?
I'm sorry if my questions sound silly. Following AI world is like following JavaScript world.
Creating models for this specific problem domain will have a better chance at reliability, which is not a solved problem.
Jules is the gemini coder that links to github. Half the time it doesn't create a pull request and forgets and assumes I'll do some testing or something. It's wild.
When an LLM says it's "agentic" it usually means that it's been optimized for tool use. Pretty much all the big models (and most of the small ones) are designed for tool use these days, it's an incredibly valuable feature for a model to offer.
I don't think this new model is any more "agentic" than o3, o4-mini, Gemini 2.5 or Claude 4. All of those models are trained for tools, all of them are very competent at running tool calls in a loop to try to achieve a goal they have been given.
You are more right than you could possibly imagine.
TL;DR: "agentic" just means "can call tools it's been given access to, autonomously, and then access the output" combined with an infinite loop in which the model runs over and over (compared to a one-off interaction like you'd see in ChatGPT). MCP is essentially one of the methods to expose the tools to the model.
Is this something the models could do for a long while with a wrapper? Yup. "Agentic" is the current term for it, that's all. There's some hype around "agentic AI" that's unwarranted, but part of the reason for the hype is that models have become better at tool calling and using data in their context since the early days.
In addition, some people on /r/localLlama are having success with streaming the weights off SSD storage at 1 token/second, which is about the rate I get for DeepSeek R1.
Is this the largest open-weight model?
At 1T MoE on 15.5T tokens, K2 is one of the largest open source models to date. But BAAI's TeleFM is 1T dense on 15.7T tokens: https://huggingface.co/CofeAI/Tele-FLM-1T
You can always check here: https://lifearchitect.ai/models-table/
Grok-1 is 341B, DeepSeek-v3 is 671B, and recent new open weights models are around 70B~300B.
Is there any way that I could do so?
Open Router? Or does kimi have their own website? Just curious to really try it out!
The poaching was probably more aimed at hamstringing Meta's competition.
Because the disruption caused by them leaving in droves is probably more severe than the benefits of having them on board. Unless they are gods, of course.