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Claude is a family of large language models developed by Anthropic. [1] [2] The first model was released in March 2023.The Claude 3 family, released in March 2024, consists of three models: Haiku, optimized for speed; Sonnet, which balances capability and performance; and Opus, designed for complex reasoning tasks.
For the training cost column, 1 petaFLOP-day = 1 petaFLOP/sec × 1 day = 8.64E19 FLOP. Also, only the largest model's cost is written. ... Haiku, Sonnet, and Opus ...
Generative artificial intelligence (generative AI, GenAI, [1] or GAI) is a subset of artificial intelligence that uses generative models to produce text, images, videos, or other forms of data. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] These models learn the underlying patterns and structures of their training data and use them to produce new data [ 5 ] [ 6 ] based on ...
In music, Op. 1 stands for Opus number 1. Compositions that are assigned this number include: Bach – Partitas for keyboard; Bartók – Rhapsody; Beethoven – Piano Trios, Op. 1; Berg – Piano Sonata; Brahms – Piano Sonata No. 1; Chopin – Rondo in C minor; Clara Schumann – 4 Polonaises; Clifford – Symphony in E-flat
Around the time he composed the sonata. The Piano Sonata No. 1 in C major, Op. 1, of Johannes Brahms was written in Hamburg in 1853, and published later that year. Despite being his first published work, he had actually composed his Piano Sonata No. 2 first, but chose this work to be his first published opus because he felt that it was of higher quality.
Shakespeare Sonnets, Op. 125/2 (1945) for mixed chorus (SATB) and piano, #2 (Sonnet Nr. CXXIX) for unaccompanied mixed chorus (SATB) Shakespeare Sonnets, Op. 125/3 (1945) for unaccompanied mixed chorus (SATB) Aubade. Poem by William Davenant (1673), Op. 126a (1945) for mixed chorus (SATB) and piano; Carol for Candlemas Day.
[1] The work is the only sonata that survives as a flute sonata in Handel's own manuscript. Of the two sonatas published in the Chrysander edition as Opus 1 Sonata I, this one (Sonata I a) is not in the Walsh edition. Therefore, (although the work's authenticity remains unquestioned), this sonata is not strictly part of Handel's "Opus 1".
The work is also referred to as Opus 1 No. 1b, and was first published in 1732 by Walsh. Other catalogues of Handel's music have referred to the work as HG xxvii,6; and HHA iv/3,10. The sonata was originally composed as a violin sonata in D minor (HWV 359a) .