أنثروبيك تعزز هيمنتها على السوق بإطلاق Claude Opus المتطور للبرمجة
أطلقت شركة أنثروبيك إصداراً جديداً من نموذج الذكاء الاصطناعي Claude Opus الذي يتفوق في مهام البرمجة، في خطوة تهدف إلى السيطرة على السوق بما يتجاوز نطاق الترميز. ويأتي هذا التحديث الاستراتيجي في وقت يواجه فيه قطاع أسهم البرمجيات تحديات وضغوطاً من السوق، مما يعكس ثقة الشركة في تقنيتها الجديدة رغم الظروف الاقتصادية المحيطة.
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أنثروبيك تطلق إصداراً جديداً من نموذج Claude Opus بقدرات أفضل في البرمجة - ارقام
<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiakFVX3lxTE9uUzJ0M2wyb2tzV2k1M25JbGxHQmwweXNBdTNubUR2R0ZybXV2bUExSGlqUzM0Z3JMZ0lWdnZ5dDBwZTZGMDkyWlZzbWpuanBybmRHTmlrNGNmQmMtV0xpdWJGeFQzSXhQbFE?oc=5" target="_blank">أنثروبيك تطلق إصداراً جديداً من نموذج Claude Opus بقدرات أفضل في البرمجة</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">ارقام</font>
أنثروبيك تطلق نموذجاً جديداً وتأمل في السيطرة على السوق beyond coding
is The Verge’s senior AI reporter. An AI beat reporter for more than five years, her work has also appeared in CNBC, MIT Technology Review, Wired UK, and other outlets. Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Anthropic’s “smartest model” is getting a major boost, the company said in a blog post announcing Claude Opus 4.6. It called the new model a “direct upgrade” from its predecessor in a release, noting that it can better take on complex, multi-step tasks and get “much closer to production-ready quality on the first try than what we’ve seen with any model — documents, spreadsheets, and presentations will need less back-and-forth on iterations.” It’s available starting today with the same pricing as its predecessor, and according to the company, its particular strengths are in agentic coding, tool use, search, and financial analysis. But most of all, it seems that with this release, Anthropic wants to expand Claude’s current hype beyond just coding and corner the market on other types of knowledge work. With Opus 4.6, it invested in making the model better at creating presentations in PowerPoint and documents in Excel. The blog post included a plug for Cowork, Anthropic’s recent release that’s a non-tech-worker-friendly version of Claude Code, in hopes that users in non-technical industries will explore the use cases for research, marketing, and more. On the coding front, Anthropic said in a release that Opus 4.6 was built to improve developers’ experience with Claude Code even further, since it specializes in long-horizon tasks and can “take a development project that would normally take days and finish it in hours, handling everything from architecture to deployment.” The company also announced a feature currently in research preview called “agent teams,” allowing the new model to work within Claude Code “the way a real engineering team does,” meaning it’s possible to split one project’s work across agents that each own a part of the project and coordinate with each other. Dianne Na Penn, Anthropic’s head of research product management, told The Verge that the company focused on bettering the “multi-agent” experience for developers with this launch, investing in output quality and speed, as well as getting the model to be better at other types of knowledge work besides just coding — i.e., Excel, PowerPoint, and search functions. “This is the first version of an Opus model where we have a one-million context window offered in beta,” Dianne Penn, Anthropic’s head of research product management, said in an interview. “We just had such positive feedback about Opus 4.5 that one of the key features people wanted was a longer context window so they could work with Claude across more documents.” Anthropic said in the blog post that it ran the “most comprehensive” set of safety tests for Opus 4.6 of any of its models to date. New evaluations included ones for user well-being, more complex tests on whether Opus 4.6 could refuse “potentially dangerous requests,” and updated tests for how well the model could secretly perform harmful actions. The model also displays heightened cybersecurity abilities, per the company, so it included six new cybersecurity probes to track potential misuse.
أنتروبيك تطلق تحديثاً للذكاء الاصطناعي بينما يعاقب السوق أسهم البرمجيات
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Technology startup Anthropic (ANTH.PVT) on Thursday launched what it called an improved artificial intelligence model, days after its product advances helped kick-start a selloff of traditional software stocks. The San Francisco-based lab, which is backed by Amazon.com and Alphabet's Google, said its Claude Opus 4.6 model is an upgrade to the Opus 4.5 model released in November. The new AI can work on tasks for longer and more reliably, while showing gains related to coding and finance, Anthropic said. Anthropic also teased how this tech could process 1 million pieces of data known as "tokens" in a single prompt, matching a capability earlier claimed by Google and a less powerful Claude model. And it previewed how this AI, in the computer programming tool Claude Code, could divvy up tasks among multiple autonomous agents and get work done faster. Seen as a disruptor in the software industry, Anthropic is aiming to stay at technology's frontier ahead of its highly anticipated initial public offering, at a time of competition from Google and OpenAI. Software developers have embraced its AI for coding. Anthropic is meanwhile making a push for business deals with products like Claude Cowork, which executes computer tasks for white-collar workers. The AI companies' swift deployments have stoked market moves that predict older software businesses will lose relevance as AI beats them at their own game. Shares of Salesforce, Workday and Thomson Reuters each traded around 3% lower Thursday, extending declines over the past week. Still, technology industry figures, including Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, have dismissed such concerns about disruption, arguing that the specialized products, vast data and AI adoption of older software companies will provide a moat. Scott White, Anthropic's head of product for enterprise, also said the goal was to connect AI to older software tools to make them more useful. "We are excited to partner and actually lower the floor to get more value out of those tools," White told Reuters. Claude Cowork, he said, is more like "the front door to getting hard work done." (Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)