Meta’s inaugural LlamaCon, scheduled for April 29th, is billed as a deep-dive into the company’s open-source roadmap, laying the groundwork for a raft of product announcements across the Meta AI portfolio.
I was wondering what Meta is working on next for LlamaCon and the Meta AI web app
— Tibor Blaho (@btibor91) April 28, 2025
Here is a list of things already in the works in the web app
- "Reasoning" ("Made with Llama 4 Reasoning" model)
- "Canvas"
- "Research"
- "Search"
- "Talk"
- "New video" (upload/record and… pic.twitter.com/x0eGbLDVZu
Screenshots of the meta.ai web interface circulating ahead of the event reveal a rebuilt sidebar featuring nine unreleased modes: Reasoning, Canvas, Research, Search, Talk, New video, Connected apps, and Memory, alongside the familiar chat view.

The Reasoning tab appears tied to a forthcoming Llama 4 Reasoning model that observers believe will specialize in chain-of-thought tasks and structured problem solving—an upgrade Meta insiders have hinted is ready for prime time.
Canvas looks like a free-form workspace where users can sketch concepts and iterate with the assistant, while the adjacent Research view seems designed for focused retrieval, echoing the service’s real-time web answers. The New video button is likely a front door to Movie Gen, Meta’s text-to-video system capable of producing short clips complete with sound, suggesting that creative tools are moving directly into the browser.

Voice controls are also poised to broaden. A settings pane labeled Talk lists celebrity and synthetic voices—including Awkwafina, John Cena, and Judi Dench—mirroring options Meta previewed last autumn. Another pane titled Connected apps links to Accounts Center, hinting at forthcoming plug-ins that will let the assistant act on third-party services. Meanwhile, Memory surfaces as its own top-level tab; Meta has already tested a version in Messenger and WhatsApp that remembers personal preferences, and the web rollout could extend that context to profile data and Reels history.
Taken together, the leak portrays Meta turning its assistant from a single chat box into a browser-based productivity suite, complete with reasoning-grade language models, multimodal creation tools, and a plug-in ecosystem—changes that are likely to headline tomorrow’s LlamaCon keynote.