TechnologyMarch 13, 2026

Why Meta Pushed Back the Avocado A.I. Model

Key Vocabulary

scalability/ˌskeɪləˈbɪləti/
the ability of a system to handle growing work or to be enlarged
"The team tested the model's scalability under heavy load."
multimodal/ˌmʌltiˈmoʊdəl/
involving more than one type of data, like text and images
"Avocado aims to improve multimodal understanding."
fine-tuning/ˈfaɪnˌtjuːnɪŋ/
further training a model on specific tasks to improve results
"Fine-tuning helped the model write code better."
deployment/dɪˈplɔɪmənt/
the act of making a system available for use
"Deployment will follow successful beta tests."
pre-trained/priːˈtreɪnd/
trained on general data before task-specific tuning
"Avocado was described as a pre-trained base model."

Listening

Why Meta Pushed Back the Avocado A.I. Model

Meta has delayed the public rollout of its next-generation A.I. model, codenamed Avocado, after internal performance and training checks revealed shortcomings that require further work. An internal memo dated January 20 described Avocado as Meta’s most capable pre-trained base model to date, yet the model will undergo additional fine-tuning, safety evaluations, and scalability tests before it is broadly distributed. The company has substantially increased capital spending on A.I. infrastructure for 2026, with projected expenditures expected to rise into the triple-digit billions, and these resources will be applied to additional training runs and engineering improvements.

The development path for Avocado also marks a strategic shift. Where earlier Llama models were widely shared, Avocado is being prepared as a more tightly controlled system, which may limit early access and channel distribution through paid or partner-only offerings. Early engineering notes indicate emphasis on code-writing, multilingual ability, and vision-language understanding, but the work to stabilize long-context reasoning and video understanding remains ongoing.

Engineers will continue iterative evaluation, and limited beta testing is likely to precede any commercial launch in the first quarter of 2026. Investors, enterprise customers, and developer communities will watch how further testing changes both the model’s capabilities and Meta’s release plans. Nevertheless, the delay gives the company time to close performance gaps, and the eventual rollout will show whether the added compute and engineering effort produces a meaningful leap over prior models. If successful, Avocado could be positioned for enterprise products and paid APIs, expanding Meta’s AI offerings.

247 words

Quiz

1. Who delayed the public rollout?
2. When was the internal memo dated?
3. When is a commercial launch likely to occur?

Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

Discussion

1

Do you worry when a company changes its plans for a product you use?

2

Have you ever tried a paid service that used advanced AI? What was your experience?

3

What do you think matters more: a fast release or a well-tested product?

4

Would you rather companies share their technology openly or keep it closed? Why?

5

How would a delayed but better product affect your choice to use it?

此內容僅供英語學習使用,不保證事實的準確性。