Latest News

We ran battery tests on 17 phones - this model lasted the longest

February 18, 2026 at 05:01 PM
By ZDNet
1 views
For ZDNET's latest Lab Award, we tested the best phones to find out which one had the best battery life over time.

Analysis & Context

For ZDNET's latest Lab Award, we tested the best phones to find out which one had the best battery life over time. We ran battery tests on 17 phones - this model lasted the longest. Stay informed with the latest developments and expert analysis on this important story.

Related Articles

Cyberpunk platformer Replaced has once again been delayed

Cyberpunk platformer Replaced has once again been delayed

Feb 18, 2026
πŸ“°

Get the new Google Pixel 10a for $4/month at AT&T (plus free Pixel Buds)

The Google Pixel 10a is available for preorder now, and AT&T is offering savings plus a free gift if you order online.

Feb 18, 2026
A β€˜Spider-Man: Brand New Day’ Book Just Accidentally Told Us What the Film Is About

A β€˜Spider-Man: Brand New Day’ Book Just Accidentally Told Us What the Film Is About

We have yet to see a trailer for the Tom Holland Marvel sequel, but we now have an official synopsis.

Feb 18, 2026
Google Launches Music Generation Model to Make Songs 30-Seconds at a Time

Google Launches Music Generation Model to Make Songs 30-Seconds at a Time

Because actually making art is for suckers.

Feb 18, 2026
Alibaba's Qwen 3.5 397B-A17 beats its larger trillion-parameter model β€” at a fraction of the cost

Alibaba's Qwen 3.5 397B-A17 beats its larger trillion-parameter model β€” at a fraction of the cost

Alibaba dropped Qwen3.5 earlier this week, timed to coincide with the Lunar New Year, and the headline numbers alone are enough to make enterprise AI buyers stop and pay attention.The new flagship open-weight model β€” Qwen3.5-397B-A17B β€” packs 397 billion total parameters but activates only 17 billion per token. It is claiming benchmark wins against Alibaba's own previous flagship, Qwen3-Max, a model the company itself has acknowledged exceeded one trillion parameters. The release marks a meaningful moment in enterprise AI procurement. For IT leaders evaluating AI infrastructure for 2026, Qwen 3.5 presents a different kind of argument: that the model you can actually run, own, and control can now trade blows with the models you have to rent.A New Architecture Built for Speed at ScaleThe engineering story underneath Qwen3.5 starts with its ancestry. The model is a direct successor to last September's experimental Qwen3-Next, an ultra-sparse MoE model that was previewed but widely regarded as half-trained. Qwen3.5 takes that architectural direction and scales it aggressively, jumping from 128 experts in the previous Qwen3 MoE models to 512 experts in the new release.The practical implication of this and a better attention mechanism is dramatically lower inference latency. Because only 17 billion of those 397 billion parameters are active for any given forward pass, the compute footprint is far closer to a 17B dense model than a 400B one β€” while the model can draw on the full depth of its expert pool for specialized reasoning.These speed gains are substantial. At 256K context lengths, Qwen 3.5 decodes 19 times faster than Qwen3-Max and 7.2 times faster than Qwen 3's 235B-A22B model. Alibaba is also claiming the model is 60% cheaper to run than its predecessor and eight times more capable of handling large concurrent workloads, figures that matter enormously to any team paying attention to inference bills. It's also about 1/18th the cost of Google's Gemini 3 Pro.Two other architectural decisions compound these gains:Qwen3.5 adopts multi-token prediction β€” an approach pioneered in several proprietary models β€” which accelerates pre-training convergence and increases throughput. It also inherits the attention system from Qwen3-Next released last year, designed specifically to reduce memory pressure at very long context lengths. The result is a model that can comfortably operate within a 256K context window in the open-weight version, and up to 1 million tokens in the hosted Qwen3.5-Plus variant on Alibaba Cloud Model Studio.Native Multimodal, Not Bolted OnFor years, Alibaba took the standard industry approach: build a language model, then attach a vision encoder to create a separate VL variant. Qwen3.5 abandons that pattern entirely. The model is trained from scratch on text, images, and video simultaneously, meaning visual reasoning is woven into the model's core representations rather than grafted on.This matters in practice. Natively multimodal models tend to outperform their adapter-based counterparts on tasks that require tight text-image reasoning β€” think analyzing a technical diagram alongside its documentation, processing UI screenshots for agentic tasks, or extracting structured data from complex visual layouts. On MathVista, the model scores 90.3; on MMMU, 85.0. It trails Gemini 3 on several vision-specific benchmarks but surpasses Claude Opus 4.5 on multimodal tasks and posts competitive numbers against GPT-5.2, all while carrying a fraction of the parameter count.Qwen3.5's benchmark performance against larger proprietary models is the number that will drive enterprise conversations. On the evaluations Alibaba has published, the 397B-A17B model outperforms Qwen3-Max β€” a model with over a trillion parameters β€” across multiple reasoning and coding tasks. It also claims competitive results against GPT-5.2, Claude Opus 4.5, and Gemini 3 Pro on general reasoning and coding benchmarks.Language Coverage and Tokenizer EfficiencyOne underappreciated detail in the Qwen3.5 release is its expanded multilingual reach. The model's vocabulary has grown to 250k tokens, up from 150k in prior Qwen generations and now comparable to Google's ~256K tokenizer. Language support expands from 119 languages in Qwen 3 to 201 languages and dialects.The tokenizer upgrade has direct cost implications for global deployments. Larger vocabularies encode non-Latin scripts β€” Arabic, Thai, Korean, Japanese, Hindi, and others β€” more efficiently, reducing token counts by 15–40% depending on the language. For IT organizations running AI at scale across multilingual user bases, this is not an academic detail. It translates directly to lower inference costs and faster response times.Agentic Capabilities and the OpenClaw IntegrationAlibaba is positioning Qwen3.5 explicitly as an agentic model β€” one designed not just to respond to queries but to take multi-step autonomous action on behalf of users and systems. The company has open-sourced Qwen Code, a command-line interface that lets developers delegate complex coding tasks to the model in natural language, roughly analogous to Anthropic's Claude Code.The release also highlights compatibility with OpenClaw, the open-source agentic framework that has surged in developer adoption this year. With 15,000 distinct reinforcement learning training environments used to sharpen the model's reasoning and task execution, the Qwen team has made a deliberate bet on RL-based training to improve practical agentic performance β€” a trend consistent with what MiniMax demonstrated with M2.5.The Qwen3.5-Plus hosted variant also enables adaptive inference modes: a fast mode for latency-sensitive applications, a thinking mode that enables extended chain-of-thought reasoning for complex tasks, and an auto (adaptive) mode that selects dynamically. That flexibility matters for enterprise deployments where the same model may need to serve both real-time customer interactions and deep analytical workflows.Deployment Realities: What IT Teams Actually Need to KnowRunning Qwen3.5’s open-weights in-house requires serious hardware. While a quantized version demands approximately 256GB of RAM, and realistically 512GB for comfortable headroom. This is not a model for a workstation or a modest on-prem server. What it is suitable for is a GPU node β€” a configuration that many enterprises already operate for inference workloads, and one that now offers a compelling alternative to API-dependent deployments.All open-weight Qwen 3.5 models are released under the Apache 2.0 license. This is a meaningful distinction from models with custom or restricted licenses: Apache 2.0 allows commercial use, modification, and redistribution without royalties, with no meaningful strings attached. For legal and procurement teams evaluating open models, that clean licensing posture simplifies the conversation considerably.What Comes NextAlibaba has confirmed this is the first release in the Qwen3.5 family, not the complete rollout. Based on the pattern from Qwen3 β€” which featured models down to 600 million parameters β€” the industry expects smaller dense distilled models and additional MoE configurations to follow over the next several weeks and months. The Qwen3-Next 80B model from last September was widely considered undertrained, suggesting a 3.5 variant at that scale is a likely near-term release.For IT decision-makers, the trajectory is clear. Alibaba has demonstrated that open-weight models at the frontier are no longer a compromise. Qwen3.5 is a genuine procurement option for teams that want frontier-class reasoning, native multimodal capabilities, and a 1M token context window β€” without locking into a proprietary API. The next question is not whether this family of models is capable enough. It is whether your infrastructure and team are ready to take advantage of it.Qwen 3.5 is available now on Hugging Face under the model ID Qwen/Qwen3.5-397B-A17B. The hosted Qwen3.5-Plus variant is available via Alibaba Cloud Model Studio. Qwen Chat at chat.qwen.ai offers free public access for evaluation.

Feb 18, 2026
Lee Cronins The Mummy trailer combines creepy kids and Egyptian mythology

Lee Cronins The Mummy trailer combines creepy kids and Egyptian mythology

"Lee Cronin's The Mummy" premieres April 17.

Feb 18, 2026

Cookie Consent

We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, analyze site traffic, and serve personalized ads. By clicking "Accept", you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn more about our cookie practices in our Privacy Policy.