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The Register

Grafana offers AI assistant for free, warns users not to go mad Right to repair champ Framework punts modular 13in laptop with Core Ultra Series 3 Scotland Yard can keep using live facial recognition on Londoners, say judges UK tribunal sends £2B claim accusing Microsoft of overcharging for licensing to trial Nation-states want to cause harm, not just steal cash - stop handing your cyber defenses to the cheapest contractor Murder, she wrote: Ex-FBI chief wants some ransomware crims charged with homicide Phone-to-satellite use goes into orbit, growing 25% in 8 months macOS ClickFix attacks deliver AppleScript stealers to snarf credentials, wallets Anthropic bakes memory fixes into Bun 1.1.13 as developers complain of leaks The spaghettified DBMS chart that shows Oracle's crown is slowly slipping Yet another ex-ransomware negotiator admits turning rogue after payoff from crimelords FAA grounds Blue Origin's New Glenn as it probes missed satellite delivery 'mishap' AMD's Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Dual Edition tested: Gratuitous overkill with a price to match AI-assisted intruders pwned Vercel via OAuth abuse and a pilfered employee account Crook claims to leak 'video surveillance footage' of companies Met police trials snoop tech platform in push to cuff more London shoplifters England's school phone ban gets teeth, just in time to bite no one Adaptavist Group breach spawns imposter emails as ransomware crew claims mega-haul Panasonic creates device-locked QR codes to speed facial biometric capture Iran claims US used backdoors to knock out networking equipment during war NASA Inspector fears new spacesuits won’t be ready for Moon landing Vibe coding upstart Lovable denies data leak, cites 'intentional behavior,' then throws HackerOne under the bus Trump-branded datacenter project fails to make itself great, again World's blandest man steps down from CEO job to spend more time in tastefully appointed home Chase got a spiff of $77 million to create one job with New York datacenter Scot becomes second Scattered Spider-linked crook to plead guilty in US You too can build a nuclear battery from junk you have lying around the house Schmoozebots: study finds flattery will get AI everywhere One of Europe's sovereign cloud picks may not be so-sovereign after all New Android development tool designed for robots, not humans AI is reshaping Britain's datacenter map away from London HP's remote desktop push retreats as Anyware heads for end of life 'Invisible mouse' made a mess of PC rebuild NASA working on ‘Big Bang’ upgrade to keep the Voyagers alive for longer Indonesia’s game rating system paused amid claims it leaked developer creds and glimpses of major new titles Just like phishing for gullible humans, prompt injecting AIs is here to stay Atlassian’s new data collection policy protects rich customers while AI eats the rest Intel eases reliance on TSMC with 'Merica-made Core Series 3 processors NASA gets the ball rolling on its part in Europe's jinxed Mars rover mission Attention data hoarders: Alexa loses its Plex appeal as voice feature gets canned Locked-out iPhone user tells The Reg that Apple is scrambling to fix character flaw passcode bug Would you like fries with that terminal? 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Claude hitches a ride on SpaceX's datacenter capacity
2026-05-07 · via The Register

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AI

Compute from Colossus leads to relaxed limits

Anthropic is partnering with SpaceX to ease capacity constraints that have stranded Claude customers, a gesture that may soothe developer discontent about service availability and cost.

Ami Vora, chief product officer at Anthropic, announced the expanded rate limits during Code for Claude, a developer event livestreamed from San Francisco.

"As of today, we are increasing rate limits for developers on Claude Code and the Claude Platform," said Vora. "More specifically, we are doubling Claude Code's five-hour rate limits for Pro, Max, Team, and seat-based enterprise plans. And we're raising our API limits considerably for Claude Opus."

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Anthropic is also ending its peak hours limit reduction on Claude Code for Pro and Max accounts.

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The AI biz is able to do this, she explained, thanks to a partnership with SpaceX that expands available inference capacity. Anthropic has struck a deal to use "all the capacity of [SpaceX’s] Colossus 1 data center."

According to SpaceX, "Colossus 1 features over 220,000 Nvidia GPUs, including dense deployments of H100, H200, and next-generation GB200 accelerators." 

The deal adds more than 300 megawatts of new capacity within the month and follows similar compute arrangements with Amazon and Google/Broadcom

The company's insatiable hunger for processing power may even take it into space. Anthropic says that it "expressed interest in partnering with SpaceX to develop multiple gigawatts of orbital AI compute capacity."

In recent months, Anthropic has struggled to meet unexpected demand for Claude services – its models became sufficiently capable to win over skeptical developers and usage patterns shifted as a result of the popularity of OpenClaw's long-running agents. 

"Year over year, API volume is up nearly 17x on the cloud platform," said Vora. "And on Claude Code, the average developer is now spending 20 hours per week running Claude."

Amid this growing popularity, Anthropic has also wrestled with bugs that affected model performance.

During her presentation, Vora tempered expectations by noting that no new model would be announced. Instead, she presided over a review of new and recent Claude features in an effort to frame model improvements as exponential.

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The salient exponent here would be two – the doubling of Claude's five-hour rate limits. Model performance, as measured by benchmarks, has been incremental. Opus 4.7 is a few percentage points better than Opus 4.6 in various measurements, not twice as capable or more. 

That didn't stop Vora from claiming, "even though model capabilities are improving on an exponential, most organizations are still adopting AI on a linear path." 

Vora's use of "exponential" may be more of a thematic framing device than a literal assertion of progress, a device to draw a contrast between Claude's capabilities and a more cautious pace of corporate AI adoption. She cast the upcoming feature review as an opportunity for customers to see where Claude development is headed, "So you can plan for it and ride the exponential with us."

The remainder of the presentation consisted of a summary of recent Claude feature improvements.

These include: multi-agent orchestration, outcomes, and dreaming – a capability that showed up in the recent Claude Code source leak.

"With Dreaming," explained Angela Jiang, head of product for the Claude platform, "Claude is actually able to self-learn. It's able to actually inspect over its previous sessions, figure out skills that it missed, lessons it should have learned, and actually apply those directly to memory on its own."

Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, took a turn on stage to remind everyone about Routines, a way to trigger and run Claude jobs locally or on cloud servers.

"Routines can be run on a schedule, they can be kicked off by webhooks, or they can even be kicked off by arbitrary API calls, you can run them locally on your machine or on remote cloud compute," he said.

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Cherny said, "for me personally, a lot of my code nowadays is written by routines. I'm not the one doing the prompting. I'm the one creating a routine that does the prompting."

Who wouldn't want to "ride the exponential" when one's company is paying the API bill? ®