We have crunched the numbers and here is our best estimates about Amazon’s share price through the rest of the decade.
AMES SHAPIRO, a Columbia University professor who is a William Shakespeare expert, on the finding of a variation of “Sonnet 116” that may have been in support of royalists trying to maintain ...
Beijing-based startup Moonshot AI has unveiled Kimi K1.5, a model that has already outperformed OpenAI’s GPT-4o and Anthropic’s Claude 3.5 Sonnet in multiple benchmarks. With the rise of these ...
It has only been a few hours since Anthropic unveiled its latest Claude 3.7 Sonnet AI model with some advanced capabilities, and it is already taking the Internet by storm. The company, on its ...
The death toll from a Sudanese military aircraft crash in the city of Omdurman increased to at least 46 people, including women and children, officials said Wednesday, one of the deadliest plane ...
US-based artificial intelligence startup Anthropic on Monday launched a new large language model (LLM), Claude Sonnet 3.7, which it calls a “hybrid reasoning model”. This entails, for the first time, ...
The death toll from a Sudanese military aircraft crash in Omdurman has climbed to at least 46, officials confirmed Wednesday, marking one of the deadliest aviation disasters in Sudan in two decades.
Anthropic introduces Claude 3.7 Sonnet, an advanced AI with hybrid reasoning, excelling in coding and web development. Features include a step-by-step thinking mode, Claude Code tool, and API ...
Anthropic has released Claude 3.7 Sonnet, a highly-anticipated upgrade to its large language model (LLM) family. Billed as the company’s “most intelligent model to date” and the first hybrid reasoning ...
It turns out robot lawnmowers and ChatGPT are not the only ones that can play video games. Anthropic said on Tuesday that Claude’s latest version, 3.7 Sonnet, can play the classic video game Pokémon.
Anthropic’s newest flagship AI model, Claude 3.7 Sonnet, cost “a few tens of millions of dollars” to train using less than 10^26 FLOPs of computing power. That’s according to Wharton ...