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What is Mistral’s Le Chat?

Image used with permission by copyright holder

While the AI world remains fixated on how China’s DeepSeek is turning the American AI industry on its ear, Europe’s Mistral AI company has quietly produced a capable and open-source alternative to the likes of ChatGPT and Gemini. Here’s everything you need to know about it.

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What is Le Chat?

Mistral’s Le Chat application is a chatbot akin to ChatGPT or Gemini. It enables users to generate text and images, as well as computer code. It also can deploy agentic AI assistants to streamline existing workflows. “Whether you’re analyzing data, writing code, or creating content, access cross-domain expertise through intuitive interfaces designed for both technical and non-technical users,” Mistral’s landing page reads. Per the company, Le Chat can reason, reflect, and respond ten times faster than other chat assistants such as OpenAI’s GPT-4o, Anthropic Claude’s Sonnet 3.5, and DeepSeek R1 — generating up to 1,000 words per minute.

When was Le Chat released?

The chatbot was introduced on X as “your ultimate AI sidekick for life and work” on February 6th, when it went live on the web and mobile.

What does “Le Chat” mean?

No, le Chat is not French for “the Chat,” it translates instead to “the Cat.” It’s a play on words implying that the AI is quick and agile like a cat, while evoking the feline’s curious and playful nature.

What can Le Chat do?

Like its competitors, Mistral’s Le Chat can perform a variety of generative functions, from uploading and analyzing documents, to planning and tracking projects, to generating text and images. It can access the internet as well, enabling the system to return up-to-date facts and figures to a variety of user queries.

Introducing le Chat by Mistral AI

How to sign up for Le Chat

It’s easy to get started using Le Chat. First, you’ll need to navigate to the Le Chat website. Then, simply click on the “sign up” radio button and enter your personal information. You’ll need to confirm your details via email before you officially log in and begin using the chatbot.

Uploading files is equally straightforward. Just click on the paperclip icon in the text prompt window, then select the file you want to load from your local drive. The system will readily provide analysis of the data you upload, including speaking to key trends within the data, statistical summaries and visual representations such as graphs, charts, and tables to more clearly lay out what is happening in your dataset.

What large language models can Le Chat utilize?

The Le Chat chatbot itself can access three of Mistral’s large language models: Mistral Large, Mistral Small, and the company’s prototype model, Mistral Next. “We are hard at work to make our models as useful and as little opinionated as possible, although much remains to be improved,” the company wrote in its le Chat announcement post. “Thanks to a tunable system-level moderation mechanism, le Chat warns you in a non-invasive way when you’re pushing the conversation in directions where the assistant may produce sensitive or controversial content.”

Mistral has actually developed a wide range of large language models, 13 in total, which include both free and premium offerings. Mistral Small and Pixtral, a 12B parameter model with image understanding capabilities are available for free, as are the research models Mistral Nemo, Codestral Mamba, and Mathstral. The company’s premium models include le Chat’s Mistral Large, Pixtral Large; Ministral 3B, touted as the “world’s best edge model;” Mistral Embed, and Mistral Moderation, which can detect harmful text content.

In February, the company released Mistral Saba, “a powerful and efficient model” for Middle Eastern and South Asian languages. It is designed to excel with Arabic interactions, as well as Indian-origin languages. According to the company Saba is especially well-suited for South Indian-origin languages, like Tamil and Malayalam. At 24 billion parameters, Saba is roughly the same size as the Misral Small 3 model used in le Chat.

Andrew Tarantola
Former Computing Writer
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
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