"Anthropic is once again raising the bar in the AI race. On Monday, the company unveiled Claude Opus 4.5, which it calls its most advanced AI model yet, just three months after its previous release. Anthropic says the latest version delivers major improvements in generating computer code and workplace documents, such as Excel spreadsheets and PowerPoint presentations. It also includes new capabilities for creating more sophisticated, long-running AI agents."
""It's the most intelligent model in the world for the things that we really care about," Alex Albert, Anthropic's head of developer relations, told Business Insider. The launch completes the Claude 4.5 family, following recent updates to the Sonnet and Haiku models. Opus models are built for advanced reasoning and complex problem-solving, while Sonnet and Haiku are optimized for speed and efficiency. It also comes a week after Google debuted its Gemini 3 model."
"Anthropic's Claude models are primarily designed for business users. A July report from Menlo Ventures found that Anthropic now leads in enterprise AI adoption, capturing 32% of the market. That puts it ahead of OpenAI, which holds 25%-about half of its share from two years ago. Google followed with 20%, and Meta came in fourth at 9%. (Menlo Ventures is an investor in Anthropic)."
Anthropic unveiled Claude Opus 4.5 three months after its previous release, marketing it as its most advanced and intelligent AI model to date. The model delivers major improvements in generating computer code and workplace documents, including expert-quality Excel spreadsheets and PowerPoint presentations, and supports more sophisticated, long-running AI agents. The Opus family targets advanced reasoning and complex problem-solving, while Sonnet and Haiku focus on speed and efficiency. Claude models are primarily designed for business users and lead enterprise AI adoption with a 32% market share, ahead of OpenAI at 25%, Google at 20%, and Meta at 9%. Anthropic is seeking new funding from Google that could value the company at $350 billion.
Read at Business Insider
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]