The evolution speed of artificial intelligence is transitioning from "monthly updates" to "self-evolution." On March 18, MiniMax officially released its first new version model deeply involved in iterating itself—MiniMax M2.7. This marks a new stage in model development: large models are no longer solely fed by human programmers but have begun to learn to "guide themselves."
According to reports, the core breakthrough of MiniMax M2.7 lies in its powerful autonomous construction capability. It can independently build complex Agent Harness (intelligent agent testing frameworks) and, relying on underlying capabilities such as Agent Teams (intelligent agent collaboration), complex Skills, and Tool Search tool, independently complete highly complex productivity tasks.
Simply put, M2.7 is not just a smarter conversationalist but also a "digital engineer" capable of self-diagnosis and self-optimization. This "self-participatory iteration" model will significantly enhance the model's logical reasoning limits and tool invocation accuracy when facing unknown complex tasks.
Currently, this MiniMax M2.7 model, equipped with self-evolution genes, has been fully launched on the MiniMax Agent platform and open platform. As large models begin to deeply participate in their own "growth" process, the ceiling of AI may be raised once again.
Meanwhile, the AI computing power and application market are also seeing frequent developments. LuChen Technology announced the completion of a Series B financing round worth hundreds of millions of yuan, with its overseas revenue share soaring to 79%; meanwhile, due to a surge in call volumes, some of Alibaba Cloud's AI computing power products have reportedly seen price increases. Amid the interplay of technological iteration and market fluctuations, the AI track in 2026 is becoming increasingly urgent and full of variables.





