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Microsoft’s first advanced reasoning AI is here

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Why This Matters

Microsoft's introduction of its first advanced reasoning AI, MAI-Thinking-1, marks a significant milestone in its in-house AI development, reducing reliance on third-party models like OpenAI. This move enhances Microsoft's capabilities across software engineering, image generation, transcription, voice, and coding, positioning the company as a more independent and innovative player in AI technology. The new models promise faster, more efficient, and multilingual AI tools that can significantly benefit developers and consumers alike.

Key Takeaways

is a senior reporter covering technology, gaming, and more. He joined The Verge in 2019 after nearly two years at Techmeme.

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Microsoft Build 2026: All the news about Windows, AI, RTX Spark, and more

Microsoft announced a bunch of new in-house AI models at Build 2026, including a new “flagship” model: MAI-Thinking-1. It’s an ambitious step into model development for Microsoft, which introduced its initial in-house models last year — before then, it had relied on OpenAI’s models. The two companies recently renegotiated their deal to loosen ties.

According to Microsoft, MAI-Thinking-1 is a “medium-sized model” that “matches leading models” on “key” software engineering benchmarks. Microsoft says the company “trained it from the ground up on clean data, without distillation from third-party models.”

As for other models announced today, they’re focused on image generation, transcription, voice, and coding.

MAI-Image 2.5 and the flash version can do text-to-image and image editing. MAI-Transcribe-1.5 is “five times faster than competing models.” MAI-Voice-2 and the flash version of that model (which Microsoft says is “coming soon”) add 15 new languages and new options for voices. The new coding model, MAI-Code-1-Flash, is “inference-efficient” and is integrated into GitHub Copilot and Visual Studio Code.