Anthropic Releases Claude 4 Models That Can Autonomously Work For Nearly a Full Corporate Workday

SlashDot - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 13:20
Anthropic launched Claude Opus 4 and Claude Sonnet 4 today, positioning Opus 4 as the world's leading coding model with 72.5% performance on SWE-bench and 43.2% on Terminal-bench. Both models feature hybrid architecture supporting near-instant responses and extended thinking modes for complex reasoning tasks. The models introduce parallel tool execution and memory capabilities that allow Claude to extract and save key facts when given local file access. Claude Code, previously in research preview, is now generally available with new VS Code and JetBrains integrations that display edits directly in developers' files. GitHub integration enables Claude to respond to pull request feedback and fix CI errors through a new beta SDK. Pricing remains consistent with previous generations at $15/$75 per million tokens for Opus 4 and $3/$15 for Sonnet 4. Both models are available through Claude's web interface, the Anthropic API, Amazon Bedrock, and Google Cloud's Vertex AI. Extended thinking capabilities are included in Pro, Max, Team, and Enterprise plans, with Sonnet 4 also available to free users. The startup, which counts Amazon and Google among its investors, said Claude Opus 4 could autonomously work for nearly a full corporate workday -- seven hours. CNBC adds: "I do a lot of writing with Claude, and I think prior to Opus 4 and Sonnet 4, I was mostly using the models as a thinking partner, but still doing most of the writing myself," Mike Krieger, Anthropic's chief product officer, said in an interview. "And they've crossed this threshold where now most of my writing is actually ... Opus mostly, and it now is unrecognizable from my writing." Krieger added, "I love that we're kind of pushing the frontier on two sides. Like one is the coding piece and agentic behavior overall, and that's powering a lot of these coding startups. ... But then also, we're pushing the frontier on how these models can actually learn from and then be a really useful writing partner, too."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

5 Years After George Floyd’s Murder, a Small Town Is Still Shaken

NY Times - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 11:17
It was the summer of 2020, in the wake of the murder of George Floyd. Lynden, Wash., a small town known for its politeness, continues to grapple with what happened.

The Enduring Appeal of the American Drive-In

NY Times - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 05:01
Has anything really changed at drive-in theaters across the country? A photographer based in Bozeman, Mont., visited a few to find out.

Two Israeli Embassy Staffers Shot and Killed Outside Event in Washington, Officials Say

NY Times - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 01:06
Officials said that the shooting occurred near an event at the Capital Jewish Museum. A suspect, who expressed solidarity with Palestine, is in custody.

White Afrikaners Are Trump’s Kind of Oppressed Minority

NY Times - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 01:00
The race-baiting grift is alive and well in South Africa.

Pope Leo Brings More than Linguistic Gifts. He Has Cultural Fluency.

NY Times - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 01:00
Pope Leo’s fluency in English, Spanish and Italian will help him govern the global church — and the Vatican.

Denver Detectives Crack Deadly Arson Case Using Teens' Google Search Histories

SlashDot - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 01:00
Three teenagers nearly escaped prosecution for a 2020 house fire that killed five people until Denver police discovered a novel investigative technique: requesting Google search histories for specific terms. Kevin Bui, Gavin Seymour, and Dillon Siebert had burned down a house in Green Valley Ranch, mistakenly targeting innocent Senegalese immigrants after Bui used Apple's Find My feature to track his stolen phone to the wrong address. The August 2020 arson killed a family of five, including a toddler and infant. For months, detectives Neil Baker and Ernest Sandoval had no viable leads despite security footage showing three masked figures. Traditional methods -- cell tower data, geofence warrants, and hundreds of tips -- yielded nothing concrete. The breakthrough came when another detective suggested Google might have records of anyone searching the address beforehand. Police obtained a reverse keyword search warrant requesting all users who had searched variations of "5312 Truckee Street" in the 15 days before the fire. Google provided 61 matching devices. Cross-referencing with earlier cell tower data revealed the three suspects, who had collectively searched the address dozens of times, including floor plans on Zillow.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

House G.O.P. Presses Ahead on Tax and Spending Bill, With Votes Uncertain

NY Times - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 00:14
After Speaker Mike Johnson finalized a series of changes aimed at winning over holdouts, a key committee approved the measure. But its fate in a floor vote was far from assured.

Trump’s Apple Threat Complicates India’s Tariff Negotiations

NY Times - Thu, 05/22/2025 - 00:00
Apple and India have invested years and billions of dollars in teaming up against China. India sees it as a strength. To President Trump, it looks like leverage.

Bill Would Give Newborns $1,000 in ‘Trump Accounts’

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 23:51
The money would be invested on children’s behalf in the financial markets for them to use once they had grown up.

Brembo's New Brakes Cut Particulate Emissions By 90 Percent

SlashDot - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 23:30
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: As electric vehicles reduce car exhaust as a source of particulate emissions, people are increasingly focusing on other vehicular sources of pollution that won't go away with electrification. Tires are one of them, particularly as we grapple with overweight EVs with tire-shredding torque. And brakes are another -- even an EV with regenerative braking will occasionally need to use its friction brakes, after all. Over in Europe, the people responsible for writing regulations have taken this into consideration with the upcoming Euro 7 standard, which sets new limits on 10- and 2.5-micron particulate emissions on all new vehicles -- including EVs -- starting next year. And to help OEMs achieve that target, Brembo has developed a new brake and pad set called Greentell that it says cuts brake dust emissions by 90 percent, improving durability in the process. [...] Brembo investigated a range of solutions before settling on using laser metal deposition. Physical vapor deposition, as used as a durability coating for wristwatches and firearms, was ruled out due to cost. "So it can be used for some special application or some small pieces, but when you are speaking about 20 kilos of cast iron, PVD is not the right solution. LMD is a technology that [has been] available... [for] years, but [it hasn't yet been] applicable in a high volume application. So the goal is to find the best compromise between performance and process," [Fabiano Carminati, VP of disc technical development at Brembo] told me. Together with the reduction in brake dust, there's an 80 percent reduction in surface corrosion compared to conventional brakes, but they won't last forever. "The thickness of the layer that we apply is not so high -- we apply just 100-120 microns. That means that the disk is not a lifetime disk," he said. That said, Greentell brakes should need replacing less often, and while that's not entirely in Brembo's best financial interests, neither is not being able to offer its customers a Euro 7-compliant product.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Trump Casts Himself as a Protector of Persecuted White People

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 22:59
President Trump publicly dressed down the president of South Africa based on a fringe conspiracy theory, providing a vivid distillation of his views on race.

End of Federal Oversight Plan for Minneapolis Police Draws Criticism Over Timing

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 22:00
The Trump administration announced the withdrawal of the plan just days before the fifth anniversary of George Floyd’s killing.

Phone Companies Failed To Warn Senators About Surveillance, Wyden Says

SlashDot - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 22:00
Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) revealed in a new letter to Senate colleagues Wednesday that AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile failed to create systems for notifying senators about government surveillance on Senate-issued devices -- despite a requirement to do so. From a report: Phone service providers are contractually obligated to inform senators when a law enforcement agency requests their records, thanks to protections enacted in 2020. But in an investigation, Wyden's staff found that none of the three major carriers had created a system to send those notifications. "My staff discovered that, alarmingly, these crucial notifications were not happening, likely in violation of the carriers' contracts with the [Senate Sergeant at Arms], leaving the Senate vulnerable to surveillance," Wyden said in the letter, obtained first by POLITICO, dated May 21. Wyden said that the companies all started providing notification after his office's investigation. But one carrier told Wyden's office it had previously turned over Senate data to law enforcement without notifying lawmakers, according to the letter.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Graduates Boo Columbia’s President at Commencement After a Fraught Year

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 21:44
Claire Shipman, the university’s acting president, noted the absence of Mahmoud Khalil, a graduate who continues to be detained by immigration authorities.

Inside the Oval Office Meeting With South Africa’s President

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 21:42
John Eligon, Johannesburg bureau chief, recounts what he witnessed in the Oval Office when President Trump confronted the visiting President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa with an elaborate presentation attempting to falsely prove a “genocide” against white Afrikaners.

Inspector Let Recruits Who Failed Psychological Exam Join the N.Y.P.D.

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 21:34
Terrell Anderson, the former head of a unit charged with assessing candidates, has been transferred. He has been praised as an innovative officer.

Trump Claimed a Video Showed ‘Burial Sites’ of White Farmers. It Didn’t.

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 21:29
During a meeting with South Africa’s president, President Trump played the video as evidence of racial persecution. A Times analysis found he misrepresented the contents of the video.

Trump Lectures South African President in Televised Oval Office Confrontation

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 21:16
President Trump showed a video and leafed through printouts that he falsely claimed showed widespread persecution of white South Africans. The country’s president tried to correct the record.

Jim Irsay, Colts Owner and CEO, Dies at 65

NY Times - Wed, 05/21/2025 - 21:05
He took over the business from his father in 1997 and turned the team into one of the best in the league, with a Super Bowl win during the 2006 season.

Pages

Back to top