Almanac
← Events
7The Batch (DeepLearning.AI)·4d ago

DiffusionGemma hits 1,000+ tokens/sec; Claude Fable 5 export controls; Agents' Last Exam benchmark launch

Google introduced DiffusionGemma, an experimental 26B MoE model using diffusion-based text generation that produces 256-token blocks simultaneously, achieving over 1,000 tokens/second on H100 hardware at the cost of lower output quality versus standard Gemma 4. Separately, the US government issued an export control directive forcing Anthropic to suspend Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5 globally, while Anthropic also reversed a controversial silent-degradation safeguard on Fable 5 after researcher backlash. UC Berkeley's Center for RDI launched Agents' Last Exam (ALE), a 1,500+ task agentic benchmark using deterministic grading, where GPT-5.5 topped the leaderboard at only 24% pass rate, highlighting the difficulty gap between current models and professional-grade workflows.

Related guides (4)

Related events (8)

7Google Deepmind Blog·11d ago·source ↗

DeepMind announces DiffusionGemma with 4x faster text generation

DeepMind published a blog post introducing DiffusionGemma, a diffusion-based variant of the Gemma model family claiming 4x faster text generation. The announcement suggests a departure from standard autoregressive decoding in favor of diffusion-based generation. If the claims hold, this could represent a meaningful inference efficiency advance for the Gemma line.

7The Batch·11d ago·source ↗

The Batch: Claude Mythos 5 / Fable 5 debut, Apple AFM 3, Google Live Translate, OpenAI IPO filing, FrontierCode benchmark

Anthropic launched Claude Fable 5 (a safety-guardrailed model) and Claude Mythos 5 (same underlying model with safeguards removed, for vetted cyberdefense/infrastructure users via Project Glasswing with US government collaboration), both priced at $10/$50 per million tokens. Apple released five new Apple Foundation Models (AFM 3) spanning on-device and cloud tiers, built with Google and Nvidia infrastructure. Additional headlines cover Google's Gemini 3.5 Live Translate (70+ languages, real-time), OpenAI's confidential SEC IPO filing, a NotebookLM upgrade to Gemini 3.5, and Cognition's FrontierCode benchmark for code-quality evaluation where Claude Opus 4.8 leads at 34.3%.

6The Batch·23d ago·source ↗

Gemini 3.5 Flash Launch, AI FDE Job Trends, AI Act Delays, and Agent-Driven Web Traffic

Google launched Gemini 3.5 Flash, a mid-tier multimodal mixture-of-experts model with improved agentic capabilities, visual understanding, and speed, priced at $1.50/$9.00 per million input/output tokens — three times the cost of its predecessor Gemini 3 Flash. The model supports up to 1M token context, adjustable reasoning levels, and thought preservation across multi-turn conversations, and tops the Artificial Analysis APEX-Agents-AA and MMMU-Pro benchmarks. The issue also covers Andrew Ng's commentary on the rise of AI Forward Deployed Engineers versus the broader AI Engineer role, plus news items on EU AI Act implementation delays and AI agents driving measurable online traffic shifts.

9Anthropic News·20d ago·source ↗

Claude Opus 4.6 Released with 1M Token Context, Agentic Coding Advances, and State-of-the-Art Benchmarks

Anthropic has released Claude Opus 4.6, its most capable model to date, featuring a 1M token context window in beta, improved agentic coding and planning capabilities, and adaptive thinking with developer-controlled effort levels. The model claims top scores on Terminal-Bench 2.0, Humanity's Last Exam, GDPval-AA, and BrowseComp, outperforming OpenAI's GPT-5.2 by 144 Elo points on GDPval-AA. New product features include agent teams in Claude Code, context compaction for long-running tasks, and Claude in PowerPoint (research preview). Pricing remains unchanged at $5/$25 per million input/output tokens.

8The Batch·9d ago·source ↗

Anthropic launches Claude Mythos 5 and Claude Fable 5; Andrew Ng introduces OpenCoworker desktop agent

Anthropic released Claude Mythos 5 and Claude Fable 5, two variants of the same frontier model that set new state-of-the-art results across software engineering, knowledge work, cybersecurity, and agentic coding benchmarks. Claude Fable 5 is the general-availability version with safety classifiers that restrict responses on security, biology, chemistry, and cutting-edge AI topics, priced at $10/$50 per million input/output tokens; Mythos 5 is restricted to selected partners via Project Glasswing. Separately, Andrew Ng and collaborators released OpenCoworker, a free open-source desktop agent harness built on top of aisuite, designed to give users privacy-preserving agentic workflows with their own API keys or local models. The newsletter also contextualizes the broader shift toward LLM-driven agent harnesses as frontier models have become capable enough to reliably drive next-action decisions.

8The Batch·18d ago·source ↗

GPT-5.4 released with tool search, computer use, and frontier benchmark performance

OpenAI released GPT-5.4 in Thinking and Pro variants, featuring an expanded context window (up to 1.05M input tokens), native computer use, tool search capabilities, and adjustable reasoning levels. In independent testing by Artificial Analysis, GPT-5.4 Pro at xhigh reasoning achieved state-of-the-art on GDP-Val-AA, BrowseComp, Terminal-Bench-Hard, SWE-Bench-Pro, and MCP Atlas, while trailing Gemini 3.1 Pro Preview on MMMU-Pro and Humanity's Last Exam. Pricing is set at the top of the market ($30/$180 per million input/output tokens for Pro), and the release also powers Codex, OpenAI's competitor to Claude Code. The item is reported via The Batch (tier 2 commentary) and includes additional context on Andrew Ng's chub CLI tool for agent documentation sharing.

8The Batch·2d ago·source ↗

Andrew Ng commentary on Anthropic's Claude Fable 5 restrictions and U.S. export controls on frontier AI models

Andrew Ng's The Batch editorial covers two significant recent events: Anthropic releasing Claude Fable 5 (a guardrailed version of Claude Mythos 5) with terms restricting use for competing LLM development, and the U.S. Government applying export controls via the Commerce Department that forced Anthropic to disable global access to Fable. Ng argues these moves demonstrate how private companies and governments can suddenly restrict AI access, accelerating global interest in AI sovereignty and open-source alternatives. The piece also notes that independent evaluators struggled to assess Claude Fable 5 due to model routing behavior and Anthropic's new data retention policy.

9The Batch·9d ago·source ↗

Anthropic releases Claude Mythos 5 and Claude Fable 5 with unprecedented capability restrictions and safety tiers

Anthropic launched Claude Mythos 5, a restricted-access model capable of cracking previously secure software, and Claude Fable 5, a general-use version with novel safety classifiers that block or degrade responses on cybersecurity, biology, chemistry, and AI-development topics. Both models set new state-of-the-art results across software engineering, agentic coding, knowledge work, and scientific reasoning benchmarks, and are priced at roughly half the cost of the prior Claude Mythos Preview. Claude Fable 5 initially included undisclosed capability degradation for AI-development prompts — applied silently via prompt modification or steering vectors — which sparked controversy before Anthropic modified the policy. The release represents a significant escalation in both frontier capability and the operational complexity of safety-tiered model deployment.