Anthropic grabs ‘state of the art’ again with new Claude 3.5 Sonnet
Welcome to AI Decoded, Fast Company’s weekly newsletter that breaks down the most important news in the world of AI. I’m Mark Sullivan, a senior writer at Fast Company, covering emerging tech, AI, and tech policy.
This week, I’m focusing on Anthropic’s latest model release. Plus: Apple’s odd outsourcing of an AI chatbot to OpenAI, and Nvidia’s ascent to the world's most valuable company.
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Anthropic ups the ante with a new state-of-the-art LLM, Claude 1.5
Three months after releasing its Claude 3 family of AI models in March, Anthropic is upping the ante in the AI arms race again with Claude 3.5 Sonnet. The new model sets industry-performance records across a number of commonly used reading, coding, math, and vision benchmark tests, Anthropic says. It’s three-and-a-half-times as fast as Anthropic’s current high-end model, Claude 3 Opus, and access will be priced the same as its mid-tier predecessor, Claude 3 Sonnet.
“This now represents the best and most intelligent model in the industry,” Anthropic cofounder and president Daniella Amodei tells Fast Company. “It has surpassed GPT-4o, all of the Gemini models, and has surpassed Claude Opus, which is our top-tier model.”
Amodei says the new model’s improved writing skill has always been a strength of Claude models, and 3.5 Sonnet shows its new ability at writing with a natural and relatable tone, she says.?
Click here to read more about Claude 1.5.
Why did Apple decide to outsource its AI chatbot? Risk, likely.
Apple was, in a number of ways, very smart about the way it rolled out its new generative AI features for iPhones, Macs, and iPads last week. Many of the new AI features are powered by Apple’s own AI models—some of them running on the device itself and others running within a secure cloud. None of this was surprising, given what we’ve reported about Apple’s work in the past. What was surprising was the company’s decision to partner with OpenAI to supply its ChatGPT chatbot for Apple users.?
Apple has for years been working on machine learning. The company hired Google’s head of AI, John Giannandrea, back in 2018 to lead its AI strategy. Given that, why didn’t Apple develop its own large language model like its peers did??
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It’s true that developing a state-of-the-art LLM takes a lot of research talent, a lot of computing power, and time. Apple had access to all that. The reason it didn’t push hard toward an LLM-powered chatbot may be the same reason Google hesitated—the risk that the chatbot would leak a user's private information or a corporation’s business secrets, or spread disinformation or slander someone or spew dangerous information (plans for a bioweapon, perhaps). When OpenAI went public with ChatGPT in late 2022, some big tech companies' concerns over those risks took a back seat as big tech companies began to fear falling behind in a potentially transformative new technology (and being punished for it by Wall Street). But not Apple.
Click here to read more about Apple’s chatbot strategy.
AI chipmaker Nvidia is now the most valuable company in the world
Buoyed by AI hype and record chip sales, Nvidia on Tuesday passed Microsoft to become the most valuable company in the world. This came just a few days after the chipmakers blew by Apple to take the second-place spot.?
Buoyed by the strength of its GPU sales, Nvidia stock popped 3.5% Tuesday to $135.58, sending its market cap to $3.335 trillion, Reuters reports. The company’s stock has tripled in value during 2024. The company accounted for 32% of the S&P 500's return over the first five months of 2024—that’s five times more than either Microsoft or Meta, according to data from the alternative investment data firm AltIndex.com . Overall, the S&P showed an 11.3% return on investment during the first five months of the year, the firm says. By itself, Nvidia brought 3.65% of that.
Click here to read more about Nvidia’s big week.
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