> But when you just look at it from an inference perspective, looking at these data centres like token factories makes sense.
So if you ignore the majority of the costs, then it makes sense.
Opus 4.5 was released on November 25, 2025. That is less than 2 months ago. When they stop training new models, then we can forget about training costs.
Inference costs scale linearly with usage. R&D expenses do not.
That's not to mention that Dario Amodei has said that their models actually have a good return, even when accounting for training costs [0].
I'm not taking a side here - I don't know enough - but it's an interesting line of reasoning.
So I'll ask, how is that any different than fabs? From what I understand R&D is absurd and upgrading to a new node is even more absurd. The resulting chips sell for chump change on a per unit basis (analogous to tokens). But somehow it all works out.
Well, sort of. The bleeding edge companies kept dropping out until you could count them on one hand at this point.
At first glance it seems like the analogy might fit?