| ▲ | benwills 14 hours ago | |||||||
Yesterday, Opus 4.6 cost three credits. You can no longer use 4.6 or 4.5. Opus 4.7 is available today for 7.5 credits per prompt. They have also suspended new signups. After testing all of the major IDEs/tools that integrate with LLMs over the last four weeks, I was happy to settle on Copilot. I, and others, seem to be a lot confident in that decision. Especially since there seems to be no refund path for people who prepaid for a year. In my 30+ years online, I've never seen an industry change so much in terms of pricing, service levels, etc, as I have the last two months. I'm really curious where all of this lands, and if AI coding tools will be something that only a small percentage can genuinely afford at a competitive level. | ||||||||
| ▲ | p1necone 13 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> In my 30+ years online, I've never seen an industry change so much in terms of pricing, service levels, etc, as I have the last two months. Warning: baseless speculation/theorizing ahead. This is the consequence of LLM inference being really expensive to run, and LLM inference companies being really attractive to VCs. The VC silly money means their costs are totally decoupled from revenue for a while, but I guess eventually people look at incomings vs outgoings and start asking questions. Previous big trends like SaaS apps, NFTs, blockchain etc were similarly attractive to VCs (for a period of time at least for the last two, the first one is still pretty attractive to VCs), but nowhere near as expensive to run so the behaviour of the companies running them wasn't quite the same. | ||||||||
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