Mistral AI looks set to reshape the web version of Vibe (Le Chat) with two additions spotted in development, both pointing beyond pure conversation. The first is a Code section, positioned as a peer to the existing Chat and Work areas. The company's coding agents have so far centered on its command-line tool, and the web build appears to bring that into the browser, likely mirroring the CLI. Whether it also foreshadows a desktop client remains unclear, though its placement suggests that coding is becoming a first-class surface rather than a side feature. Developers who would rather skip terminal setup are the obvious early audience.
The second, still flagged as a work in progress, reads as Mistral's take on advanced artifacts: an Apps area. Users would be able to build, host, and share apps that pull data through connectors or run multi-step workflows, moving Le Chat from somewhere to ask questions toward somewhere to ship tools. That tracks with Mistral's recent connector directory and its Workflows engine, and would place it alongside Anthropic's shareable artifacts and OpenAI's in-chat apps. Real limits are hard to gauge while the feature is unfinished.
The timing is notable, as Arthur Mensch has confirmed a new model arriving this summer, described as the start of a fresh family that is large yet sparse, wording that points to a mixture-of-experts design. He said it will ship as open weights, with early access opening in July for partners across research, government, and industry. Together, the browser features and the summer model sketch a wider shift: Mistral moving from a model lab toward a full product platform, leaning on its European, openly licensed footing as the line against larger US rivals. It makes for a crowded summer, and the release order will say a lot about where the company sees its leverage.