What Claude Actually Shipped Claude Opus 4.6 is not a cosmetic refresh. The model significantly improves code generation, long reasoning chains, and task planning. Anthropic also introduced a beta one-million-token context window—large enough to ingest entire repositories, contracts, or months of financial data in a single prompt. Social media quickly filled with war stories. Developers one-shotting entire codebases. Bugs that had lingered for months getting fixed with a single prompt. Software being developed by people who previously couldn't create software at all. Claude can now split work into subtasks, run them in parallel, and verify its own outputs—a nightmare for senior developers. Then came what many called the scariest blog post of all time. "We tasked Opus 4.6 using agent teams to build a C Compiler, and then (mostly) walked away," Anthropic wrote. And guess what? It did the job! Anthropic tasked 16 agents with writing a Rust-based C compiler, from scratch, capable of compiling the Linux kernel. Over nearly 2,000 Claude Code sessions and roughly $20,000 in API costs, the agent team produced a 1,00,000-line compiler that successfully built Linux 6.9 across x86, ARM, and RISC-V. At that point, the market flinched. Early users described Claude Opus 4.6 less like a chatbot and more like a junior colleague who never gets tired. Then came the 11 Cowork plugins, which pushed things further. Claude can now operate across local files and browsers, pull data, update CRMs, draft contracts, run analyses, and automate repetitive back-office workflows. These new capabilities plug directly into everyday business functions: legal review, sales operations, marketing campaigns, finance reconciliation and data queries. If an AI agent can execute work across legal, finance, sales, research, and internal operations, what exactly are enterprises paying subscriptions and billable hours for? At the same time, enterprises were not waiting for the debate to settle. Banks and large corporations quietly began embedding AI agents into back-office operations to cut time and cost. The most prominent name was Goldman Sachs, which started using Claude for operations. And that started a chain. Simply, once one CFO sees safe time compression in action, the question spreads quickly across boardrooms. That distinction changes how enterprises evaluate software. Seats start to look expensive. Headcount starts to look bloated. |
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