Claude Model Feature Comparison: A Selection Guide for Haiku, Sonnet, and Opus
Even though they’re all Claude, the differences in each model’s priorities are quite obvious: some prioritize speed, some aim for balance, and some excel at complex reasoning and long-form text. Below, we compare Claude’s capabilities through “everyday, tangible experiences” to help you use Haiku, Sonnet, and Opus in the most suitable scenarios. First, clarify the positioning: three paths—fast, steady, and strong Claude Haiku is more like a “quick-reacting assistant,” suitable for short, high-frequency tasks such as Q&A, summarization, rewriting, and customer-service scripts. Claude
Claude Sonnet 3.5 New Features at a Glance: Extended Output and Workbench Upgrades
This Claude Sonnet 3.5 update isn’t focused on “being better at chatting,” but on being more suitable for real-world deployment in APIs and everyday development workflows: a stronger model, longer outputs, and a more usable console. Below, I’ll break down the most noteworthy new changes in Claude Sonnet 3.5 and explain them clearly. Claude Sonnet 3.5: A Stronger Positioning as a Mid-Tier Model Claude Sonnet 3.5 is officially described as the “latest version,” outperforming competing models in multiple evaluations.
Comparison of feature differences between Claude’s web and mobile versions: files, notifications, and project management
Even though you’re chatting with Claude in both cases, the experience difference between the web and mobile versions is actually quite obvious: one is better suited for in-depth writing and organizing materials, while the other is better for quick questions and fragmented, on-the-go tasks. This article focuses only on comparing Claude’s features to help you choose the right entry point for each scenario and avoid detours. Interface and input efficiency: long-form text leans toward the web version The advantage of Claude’s web version is the larger screen space, which makes reading long paragraphs, comparing edits, and iterating repeatedly more convenient. On the same page, you can more steadily perform actions like copying, quoting, and rewriting by sections,
Claude FAQ: Login Verification, Regional Restrictions, and Troubleshooting Message-Sending Issues
This article clearly explains the most common issues encountered when using Claude: not receiving login verification, prompts saying the region is unavailable, conversations failing to send or getting stuck, and what to do after an account has been restricted. Troubleshoot in the order below—usually you can identify the cause without too much hassle. The end of the article also lists the information you should prepare when contacting support. Login & verification codes: not receiving emails, links won’t open Claude login generally relies on email verification (a code or magic link). First check your spam folder and Promotions tab, and whitelist Claude-related domains
Claude Money-Saving Tips: Even Without a Subscription, Save Quota by Reusing Prompts and Controlling Output
If you want to use Claude more economically, the key isn’t “asking less,” but “doing less rework.” This piece focuses on Claude money-saving tips and clearly explains three things: reusing prompts, controlling output length, and reducing repeated context—so you can accomplish the same tasks with fewer conversational turns and fewer useless words. Treat “rework” as a cost: first identify where you waste the most Claude’s most common hidden costs are repeatedly explaining the background for the same thing, going back and forth on formatting, and getting overly long outputs that you can’t even use. You can review your last few conversations: was it that “you didn’t provide all the information”


