Opus 4.6 allows multiple AI agents to work in parallel

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Opus 4.6 allows multiple AI agents to work in parallel

Anthropic released Opus 4.6, its latest flagship AI model, on Thursday to expand capabilities for Claude Code users. The update introduces agent teams, a one-million-token context window, and direct PowerPoint integration, building on Opus 4.5 from November.

Opus serves as Anthropic’s most advanced model and plays a key role in Claude Code, the company’s coding-focused tool. The release of Opus 4.6 follows closely after Opus 4.5, which launched in November of the previous year. This rapid iteration reflects the company’s efforts to widen the model’s applications beyond initial domains, targeting a diverse range of users and tasks.

The standout feature in Opus 4.6 is “agent teams,” which enable multiple AI agents to divide large tasks into smaller, segmented jobs. The company explains, “Instead of one agent working through tasks sequentially, you can split the work across multiple agents—each owning its piece and coordinating directly with the others.” Scott White, Head of Product at Anthropic, likened this setup to employing a talented team of humans. He stated that segmenting responsibilities among agents allows them “to coordinate in parallel and work faster.” This functionality appears in a research preview, accessible to API users and subscribers.

Opus 4.6 expands the context window to one million tokens, aligning with the capacity of Anthropic’s Sonnet models in versions 4 and 4.5. This larger window permits the model to retain and process more information during a single session. Practical benefits include managing extensive code bases, which demand substantial memory for analysis and modification. It also supports handling voluminous documents, facilitating tasks like reviewing lengthy reports or contracts without truncation.

Another enhancement embeds Claude directly into Microsoft PowerPoint via a side panel. Users can now generate and refine presentations entirely within the application, receiving real-time assistance from the AI. Previously, the integration required a two-step process: Claude would produce a PowerPoint deck, which users then imported into the software for edits, according to White. The new side-panel approach streamlines this workflow, eliminating file transfers and enabling seamless iteration.

White described to TechCrunch how Opus has transitioned from excelling primarily in software development to serving a wider array of knowledge workers. He said, “We noticed a lot of people who are not professional software developers using Claude Code simply because it was a really amazing engine to do tasks.” Beyond software engineers, Claude Code now attracts product managers, financial analysts, and professionals across various industries who leverage its strengths for their specific workflows.

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