Claude Sonnet 5 is now #1 on BridgeBench Reasoning at 43.4.
GLM 5.2 sits right behind at 42.8.
Sonnet 5 uses 1.35x more tokens than 4.6.
It thinks harder about every prompt.
That is exactly why it wins.
GLM 5.2 is faster and cheaper.
Sonnet 5 reasons deeper.
Different tools. Different jobs.
I think we'll start seeing more AI labs adopt this approach.
Instead of one model doing everything, we'll likely have specialized models:
Fast models for coding and everyday tasks.
Premium reasoning models for complex planning, research, and multi-step problem solving.
Anthropic has officially started redeploying Fable 5 globally.
The rollout isn't just about bringing the model back , it's also changing how users access it.
Initially, Fable 5 will consume part of your weekly included usage, and after July 7 it'll move to a usage-credit model.
This feels like Anthropic is positioning Fable 5 as a premium model rather than the default experience.
From a technical perspective, this is an interesting resource allocation strategy.
Large reasoning models consume significantly more GPU time, memory bandwidth, and inference compute than lightweight coding models.
By moving Fable 5 to usage credits, Anthropic can better balance infrastructure utilization while still giving developers access to the model when they truly need its advanced reasoning capabilities.
Claude Sonnet 5 shows an interesting direction for where AI is heading.
The biggest change in AI might not be about bigger models anymore.
Itโs about how effectively they can take a goal, break it down into steps, use the right tools, and deliver a finished result.
Weโre moving closer to a world where AI feels less like a chatbot and more like an actual assistant that can help execute ideas.
Exciting times ahead.
Introducing Claude Sonnet 5, our most agentic Sonnet yet.
It makes plans, uses tools like browsers and terminals, and runs autonomously at a level that just a few months ago required larger and more expensive models.
Let's talk about one skill that I think will matter a lot in the next few years.
Many people say coding is the future.
Others believe design is the most valuable skill.
And now, almost everyone is talking about AI.
But I don't think success will come from just one of these.
I think the real advantage will come from knowing how to combine them.
Imagine someone who has an idea, designs it, builds it with AI, and turns it into a real product.
That's powerful.
AI can help you write code.
It can help you design.
It can even help you learn new skills much faster.
But AI still needs someone to make good decisions, solve real problems, and think creatively.
The people who will stand out won't be the ones who simply use AI.
They'll be the ones who know how to work with AI and combine it with their own skills.
The future belongs to people who keep learning, stay curious, and aren't afraid to build.
What do you think?
Let's talk about AI for a second.
I think we're living through one of the most exciting shifts in technology.
AI isn't here to replace creativity.
It's here to amplify it.
Today, anyone can turn an idea into a design, a website, a video, or even an app much faster than ever before.
That doesn't make creativity less valuable.
It gives more people the opportunity to create, experiment, and bring their ideas to life.
The real magic happens when human imagination meets AI.
AI brings speed.
You bring vision.
AI helps with execution.
You provide the purpose.
The future won't belong to the people who avoid AI.
It will belong to the people who learn how to work with it, keep learning, and use it to build things that truly matter.
We're only at the beginning of what's possible.
What excites you the most about AI these days?