4 pointsby muddi9002 hours ago3 comments
  • eddyzh16 minutes ago
    At work I use opus max Fast It hardy ever fails for no reason even if I forget to give it all the right context. At home i run sonnet, and it does not get what I meant or expected 20-35% of the time. Due to the enormous difference in cost, depending on the value of your time (hourly rate) that might be a nett benefit.

    Sonnet being faster alone would not be worth the failure rate for me.

    At home i just not want to pay more than 20 bucks for incidental projects.

    And opus max would just consume my tokens in one round.

  • sminchev23 minutes ago
    Yes. When things get too complex Sonnet misses some things. For example, it creates all the components, but does not link them. Or it does not go deep enough in the code and misses certain usages and possible regressions. In other words, it does not, pro-actively, search for things that I have forgotten to tell the model about.
    • eddyzh6 minutes ago
      Exactly this.

      This may be worth the discount. Or not if your time and attention is worth (quite) a lot.

  • nawi2 hours ago
    You are not missing anything. For 95% of dev work, sonnet, especially 3.5 and 3.7 has basically win opus, value per price. in my experience the difference boils down to this 1. Sonnet is the faster. It's concise, follows instructions literally, and is significantly better at agentic tasks. 2. Opus is the philosopher. It’s better at high level architecture, creative writing, or spotting subtle nuances in a 50 pages document. the reason your tests feel random is that for standard coding, sonnet is actually the superior model now. it is faster, less prone to over engineering, and has much lower latency. if you have a massive, messy refactor where you need the model to reason through 10 files without adding bugs, opus might still have a slight edge in coherence. for everythng else, Sonnet is the meta. Stick with it and save the credits.