Orrin
2.5K posts

Orrin
@OrrinManning
Here for a build time, not for a runtime
Plano, TX شامل ہوئے Kasım 2009
177 فالونگ135 فالوورز
Orrin ری ٹویٹ کیا

Anthropic is burning customer goodwill over something they already know how to fix
They price every API call to the cent but won't tell subscription users what their plan actually buys
People can accept tighter limits
What they can't accept is being told they all started using Claude wrong on the same day
People are reporting 40% of their Pro limit gone in 2 prompts. Full weekly allowances drained in 19 minutes. Single-word messages eating 1-4% of sessions
That is not a context window problem. It's a transparency problem
Anthropic is precise where it benefits them and vague where it protects them
The API pricing page is exact: Opus 4.6 runs $5 per million input tokens and $25 per million output. Every call metered
The subscription page says "more usage" and "5x or 20x more usage than Pro"
More than what?
Anthropic has never published how many tokens each plan gets
You can see what percentage of your limit you've used, but you can't see what the limit actually is. And you have no way to verify that what you're getting today is the same as last month
When Codex users started hitting rate limits faster than expected, OpenAI reset everyone's limits while they investigated. They said they didn't fully understand why and chose the cautious path
Anthropic's response was to tell paying users to downgrade
- Switch from Opus to Sonnet
- Turn off extended thinking
- Cap your context at 200k instead of the 1M they advertise
- Start new sessions instead of resuming old ones
In short, 'this is a skill issue'
Every one of those is a feature people are paying to access
Paying users should not have to reverse-engineer what their plan buys
If Anthropic wants to rebuild trust, the fix is straightforward
- Publish actual token budgets per tier, the same way they already do for the API
- Show what each message costs against the budget
- Let people verify for themselves whether the deal changed
They already do this on the API side. The choice not to do it for subscriptions tells you everything
Lydia Hallie ✨@lydiahallie
Thank you to everyone who spent time sending us feedback and reports. We've investigated and we're sorry this has been a bad experience. Here's what we found:
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@GregorysArmy @imalwaysjames Dude I was playing Java edition on a $300 emachine laptop 15 years ago. Im sure you can run it on whatever you have
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@imalwaysjames Please shut the fuck up becky. Not everyone can afford an 1000 dollar pc. My boyfriend plays on a shitty switch with shitty internet. Bedrock is the best way we can play
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@TeemothyYawn @Duderichy Anyone with a job can afford to have a dog
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@OrrinManning @Duderichy If you can’t afford a dog you shouldn’t have a dog. Dogs don’t deserve to be neglected
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Computer use in Claude Cowork and Claude Code Desktop is now available on Windows.
Claude@claudeai
You can now enable Claude to use your computer to complete tasks. It opens your apps, navigates your browser, fills in spreadsheets—anything you'd do sitting at your desk. Research preview in Claude Cowork and Claude Code, macOS only.
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@ShitpostRock2 Bro Toy Story on PlayStation isn’t *supposed* to still be enjoyable to you as a 30 year old. Your tastes are meant to mature and evolve, it’s the most normal thing ever
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@manoj_ahi The model is great but the tooling is inferior in ways that make it hard to switch IMO
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The US and Japan have the most underrated mutual obsession on the planet.
Japan worships American BBQ culture. Texas-style brisket restaurants in Tokyo have 3-hour waits. American Barbeque, a chain in Osaka, charges $80 a plate and sells out nightly. Japan's wagyu beef revolution was literally built by importing American cattle genetics in the 1800s.
Americans worship Japanese food culture in the exact same way. Omakase spots in NYC and LA run $300-500 a head with 6-week waitlists. Ramen went from a $7 lunch to a $22 "experience." Every serious American pitmaster now studies yakitori technique.
This tells you everything about why the US-Japan alliance is the most durable in geopolitics. Trade agreements and military bases hold countries together on paper. Genuine cultural admiration, where both sides look at the other's food and think "I want to be part of that," is what makes it stick.
A Japanese creator looking at a photo of guys grilling steaks in a backyard and saying "someday I'd like to join" is the most honest expression of soft power that exists. No government program produced that. A grill and 40 pounds of meat did.
ホットケーキくん(ホッケチャンネル)@hotcake_kun_
アメリカ男性と肉ならこの写真が好き いつか現地でこれに参加したい
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@IHTAcast @HayaseMotors Did you just stumble out of cryogenic sleep?
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@HayaseMotors “Do” means to perform a task, so it can sorta be used to replace any number of verbs.
You can do the dishes
do the laundry
do yourself up (get pretty)
Famously, Ray William Johnson of =3 on YouTube is doing your mom
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@yo_jaydee Facebook used to actually be a fun and "social" place before it became an algorithmic slop factory
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In middle school, I used to fertilize my crush's rice plots on Farmville every morning before school and she would thank me every single time. but one day, i logged in and saw that her crops were already fertilized and i asked her who fertilized her crops and it was my best friend who knew i was into her. this is why i have trust issues
Nostalgia Galaxy@NostalgiaGalaxy
Remember FarmVille? Farming simulator played mostly on Facebook. (2009)
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@guevara_conrad @TheLaurenChen It’s a thing that when soldiers and sailors are being fed particularly well, it signals that they’re about to be sent to war
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@TheLaurenChen I don't know what I am looking at here. Meatloaf & rice? A crab leg? Some of these posts have no context.
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Sir, I'm going to hold your hand as I tell you this
Mike Bales 🫡🇺🇸@MikeBales
As most of you know, my son is a Sailor. He sent a picture of his lunch yesterday from the galley. I’m thankful that we are finally taking care of our men and women in uniform. 🙏🏻🇺🇸
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My interpretation: anon was depressed and feeling a sense of powerlessness over their life. Successfully arranging their own suicide is the first thing they've done "for themself" in a very long time and it restored some sense of agency and accomplishment. They realized that if they can apply their agency to this, they can apply it to other things too. Quality of life starts going up, depression starts easing up, and outlook turns brighter.
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