Cohere Releases North Mini Code

It’s the Canadian company’s first open-source coding model.

Canadian AI company Cohere has released North Mini code, its first open-source coding model. In a statement, Cohere emphasized the importance of sovereign AI:

“Today we’re launching North Mini Code open-source. A mixture-of-experts (MoE) model, North Mini Code is Cohere’s first agentic coding model, and the inaugural member of our next generation of powerful models.

At 30B total parameters with just 3B active, North Mini Code delivers strong software development performance without demanding extensive hardware to match. Efficient by design, it’s built to run where you need it.

Freely available under an Apache 2.0 license, North Mini Code advances Cohere’s mission to make sovereign AI a practical reality, giving developers direct access to agentic coding capabilities. We’re building in the open, because the future of AI should be shaped by the people running, testing, and improving it.”

Canada helped build the AI industry

As noted in a previous article, Canada has played a leading role in the development of AI:

“We have deep ties to the creation of modern AI, with Canadians like Richard Sutton, Geoffrey Hinton (British-Canadian), and Yoshua Bengio all playing key, foundational roles in what is now known as artificial intelligence.”

Now, Cohere’s continued success shows that Canadian companies can play a leading role in the commercialization and democratization of AI.

How Canadian openness helped attract talent

A key reason for Canada’s success in AI has been our openness to talent from around the world. Rather than closing the door to others, we opened it, and this has brought talented people from across the globe who make significant contributions to Canadian life, Canadian industry, and Canadian prosperity. Much of this talent is on display in the Canadian AI sector, and the benefits conferred by our openness are something to be proud of.

Now, the task is to build on the opportunities created by that openness, to ensure that we not only attract talent, but also retain talent, by making Canada the best country in the world to do business. The combination of a pro-business environment and ongoing openness to talent will help Canada prosper in the years, decades, and centuries to come.

Spencer Fernando

If this piece left you clearer than it found you, that's the point. I write for readers who want to think past the week, to see the longer pattern beneath the daily story, and to come away steadier rather than more agitated.

That longer view gets built somewhere. On Patreon, essay by essay, I'm constructing The Long Work, a body of analysis meant to outlast the news cycle that prompted it. The readers there make it possible. No subsidies, no strings. The work answers to them.

$8/month to read it as it's built, and to have a hand in building it.

Share Your Thoughts