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remichlast Monday at 7:26 PM2 repliesview on HN

Because it doesn't. Not for the tasks where using Opus instead of a lower tier model is appropriate, at any rate. Benchmarks show this, as do revealed preferences of actual users. To believe that Qwen is as capable as Opus at 1/20 the cost you have to believe that every person who does not make the choice to use Qwen over Opus for a given task is some mix of ignorant or delusional. This is certainly an opinion you can hold about other engineers, but it's definitely a questionable one at best.


Replies

cogman10last Monday at 7:33 PM

The benchmarks between the two are close and the engineers that have used both (like myself) can attest that the differences aren't so wide as you might believe.

I'd say that yes, ignorance plays a role here because a decent number of engineers are looking strictly at the benchmarks and choosing Opus just for that reason.

But I'd also say that a major factor for Opus use is because Opus is being purchased for the engineers by their employers. They don't get to pick which models they are using.

danny_codeslast Tuesday at 5:05 AM

I find myself rarely reaching for Opus nowadays, it's just too slow. I assume there are tricky use-cases where it's really useful though, just not super relevant for my day to day. I much prefer a faster, "weaker" model.