Anthropic · The Verge
In late 2025, Anthropic rolled out a new version of its Claude LLM, called Opus 4.5
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Boris Cherny, the creator of Claude Code, professed to already having AI write 100 percent of his code.
Key facts
- Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently said he’d worry about any highly paid engineer who wasn’t spending $250,000 a year on AI tokens
- In late 2025, Anthropic released a new version of its Claude LLM, called Opus 4.5
- Boris Cherny, the creator of Claude Code, professed to already having AI write 100 percent of his code
- One 2025 study found that 98 percent of respondents said they used AI coding tools “several times a week
Summary
OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic are eating the software world alive. Writing code was a killer app for AI even before anyone was talking about AI. Large language models seemed obviously poised to make software development even simpler and even faster. Unlike so much other information you might get from an LLM, you can also check the quality of code by trying to run it. For so many years, companies around the tech industry had also pursued the idea of “low code” and “no code” software. Even in those early days, it was also obvious why AI coding tools might one day be a good business. Any tool that might mean companies could hire fewer developers, or help developers be more productive, would surely be an easy pitch to software companies the world over.