| ▲ | numlocked 3 hours ago | |
(openrouter co-founder here) Yeah we should do something to indicate cardinality. I can share that there can often (I'm talking generally; not related to this model in particular) be e.g. a very large app that can be pushing a lot of volume. But in almost all cases that app has a large number of end users. Hypothetically, for instance, would Cursor be consider one user, or millions? Will think about it! Thanks for the feedback. | ||
| ▲ | simonw 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
I'd consider Cursor one user because it's one entity that made an editorial decision about which model to make available to their own community. If you treated Cursor as millions of users it might look like millions of people independently chose a new model when actually it was Cursor making the choice for them - and the thing I care most about is how many choices were made that selected a model and put it above the others. | ||
| ▲ | minimaxir 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
One idea I had was to count # of distinct API keys that have spent atleast $100 (number's flexible), which would be enough to provide guidance on if the traffic is from a single power-user. In the Cursor case which is BYOK, that would count as distinct API keys. | ||
| ▲ | martinald 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Hi! Big fan of OpenRouter and the data you provide. It'd be awesome if you would consider providing volume of tokens per hour, mostly for my own curiosity as to quite how peaky demand is. Thanks! | ||