Perplexity has effectively transformed a Chinese open-source model into a powerful, near-frontier system that operates at approximately one-third the cost of Claude Opus 4.8. The company has officially released a research preview of a post-trained iteration of the GLM 5.2 model, which was specifically engineered to run within the internal architecture of the Perplexity Computer agent.
The Capabilities of GLM 5.2
The underlying technology, GLM 5.2, is a massive 744-billion-parameter model developed by Z.ai, formerly known as Zhipu AI. This Beijing-based laboratory has been on the United States Entity List since January 2025. Parameters represent the various configurations and dials a model manages during its training phase, and generally, higher parameter counts imply greater power. Released under an MIT license in June, the model ranks among the best available for long-horizon coding tasks, offering performance that rivals top-tier AI at a fraction of standard API pricing.
Fine-Tuning and the Advisor Framework
Perplexity leveraged the open-weights nature of the model to perform extensive fine-tuning. This process involves retraining a base model on a specialized dataset to enhance its effectiveness for specific operational requirements. The core innovation here is the addition of an advisor tool, which allows the model to autonomously determine whether it can handle a specific user query independently or if the task is complex enough to require an escalation to a more expensive, frontier-level AI model. This intelligent routing ensures that only the most demanding queries consume the high-cost computing resources.
Efficiency and Future Directions
According to CEO Aravind Srinivas, the integration of this advisor tool enables the model to achieve performance equivalent to Opus 4.8 while maintaining significant cost efficiency. Internal metrics reveal that while the fine-tuned GLM 5.2 is about twice as expensive to run as its basic counterpart, it is roughly 600% cheaper than using the Opus 4.8 model for every individual request. The entire stack currently utilizes Nvidia B200 GPUs based in the United States. This follows a previous successful effort by Perplexity to fine-tune the DeepSeek R1 model into a version capable of handling topics previously restricted by Chinese censorship, demonstrating the company's commitment to creating Western-hosted alternatives. The company intends to replicate this successful architecture with the Nemotron 3 Ultra model soon, with comprehensive benchmarks and academic papers expected in the coming weeks.










