AI tool comparison
Claude 4 Opus vs Llama 4 Scout Quantized
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Claude 4 Opus
1M token context + 30-minute reasoning for frontier-level AI work
100%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Claude 4 Opus is Anthropic's most capable model, featuring a native 1-million-token context window and extended thinking mode that can reason across multi-step problems for up to 30 minutes. Available immediately via API and Claude.ai, it targets developers, researchers, and enterprises tackling complex, long-context reasoning tasks. Enterprise pricing is available alongside standard API access.
Developer Tools
Llama 4 Scout Quantized
INT4/INT8 Llama 4 Scout weights optimized for phones and edge devices
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Meta has released INT4 and INT8 quantized variants of Llama 4 Scout, optimized for on-device inference on mobile and edge hardware. The models run on devices with as little as 8GB RAM and are immediately available on Hugging Face. This is a fully open-weights release targeting developers building privacy-first, offline, or latency-sensitive applications.
Reviewer scorecard
“The primitive here is a frontier reasoning model with a genuine 1M-token context and a configurable thinking budget up to 30 minutes — two capabilities that actually change what you can build, not just what you can demo. The DX bet is that developers want a single capable model rather than a pipeline of specialized ones, and at 1M tokens you can genuinely feed in an entire codebase, legal corpus, or multi-day transcript without chunking gymnastics. The moment of truth is whether the extended thinking latency is manageable in production — 30 minutes of reasoning is a research workflow, not a user-facing call, and Anthropic should be clearer upfront about where that ceiling matters. The specific decision that earns the ship: native 1M context without RAG scaffolding is a real engineering win that eliminates an entire class of retrieval pipeline complexity I've been building around for two years.”
“The primitive is exactly what it says: quantized weights you pull from Hugging Face and run with llama.cpp, MLC-LLM, or ExecuTorch — no SDK tax, no account required, no six env vars before hello-world. The DX bet here is 'we give you the weights, you own the stack,' which is the right call for this audience. The moment of truth is `huggingface-cli download` followed by dropping into your inference runtime of choice, and it actually survives that test. My one flag: the benchmark methodology on the 8GB RAM claims isn't fully reproducible from the blog post alone — I want the eval harness committed somewhere before I take those numbers to production.”
“Direct competitors are GPT-4.5 with 128K context and Gemini 1.5 Pro at 1M — Gemini got here first on context length, so the real differentiator is the extended thinking quality, which Anthropic has earned a reputation for in complex reasoning benchmarks. The scenario where this breaks: 30-minute thinking mode in any latency-sensitive production workflow is a non-starter, and enterprise customers who need sub-second responses for agentic pipelines will hit that wall fast. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Anthropic itself shipping a distilled, cheaper version that gets 90% of the performance; the pricing pressure on frontier models is brutal and the upgrade cycle is accelerating. What earns the ship despite all that: Anthropic has consistently delivered on safety-tuned reasoning quality, and 1M context with a model that doesn't hallucinate citations at scale is a genuinely defensible product position right now.”
“The direct competitors here are Gemma 3 4B, Phi-4-mini, and Qwen2.5-3B — all of which also run on-device and have their own quantized builds. Meta's differentiator is scale: Llama 4 Scout's architecture is genuinely larger than most on-device models, so hitting 8GB RAM at INT4 is a real engineering achievement, not a marketing claim. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Apple and Google shipping on-device model runtimes so deeply integrated into their OS that third-party weights become a niche developer exercise. The scenario where this breaks is any enterprise mobile deployment where the IT team won't allow sideloaded weights; Meta has no answer for that distribution problem.”
“The thesis Claude 4 Opus bets on is falsifiable: by 2028, the dominant AI workflows will involve reasoning over entire institutional knowledge bases in a single pass, not retrieval-augmented fragmentation — and the team that owns long-context reasoning quality owns enterprise AI infrastructure. The dependency is that token costs keep falling fast enough that 1M-token calls become economically routine; if that curve flattens, the feature sits unused behind cost walls. The second-order effect that nobody is talking about: 30-minute extended thinking makes the model a credible replacement for junior analyst work in legal, finance, and research, not just a writing assistant — that's a workforce displacement vector that's materially different from chatbot-tier AI. Claude 4 Opus is on-time to the long-context trend Gemini kicked off but is betting the real moat is reasoning depth at scale, not just window size — that's the right bet, and it's not guaranteed to pay off, but it's the correct thesis to be riding.”
“The thesis here is falsifiable: within 2 years, the majority of inference for personal and sensitive workloads will run on the device rather than the cloud, driven by latency requirements, privacy regulation, and the falling cost of on-device compute. Llama 4 Scout at INT4 is early infrastructure for that world — the trend line is the ARM SoC performance curve, and this release is on-time relative to where M-series and Snapdragon 8-gen chips landed in 2025. The second-order effect that matters isn't 'cheaper inference' — it's that it breaks the data dependency between personal AI assistants and cloud logging, which reshapes what privacy-compliant AI products are even possible to build. If Apple locks down on-device model loading in iOS 21, this entire bet unwinds.”
“The buyer is clear: enterprise legal, research, and engineering teams who currently pay for multiple specialized tools and RAG infrastructure to handle long-document workflows — this consolidates that spend into one API line item, and that's a real procurement conversation. The moat question is harder: Anthropic's defensibility is model quality and safety reputation, not infrastructure lock-in, which means the business survives only as long as the quality lead holds against Google and OpenAI — that's a thin moat requiring continuous frontier investment, not a compounding one. What keeps me from going higher: usage-based pricing at the frontier scales badly for budget-conscious teams; a single 1M-token extended thinking call could cost more than a month of a competing subscription, and sticker shock kills adoption before word-of-mouth can build. The specific business decision that earns the ship anyway: pairing API access with Claude.ai Pro at $20/mo gives Anthropic both a consumer retention layer and an enterprise wedge, which is smarter distribution architecture than most frontier model companies are running.”
“There's no direct business model here — Meta ships this to grow ecosystem dependency on Llama rather than to generate revenue from the weights themselves. For founders building on top of it, the unit economics are genuinely compelling: zero inference cost, zero data egress, zero API dependency means your margin doesn't erode as you scale users. The moat question isn't Meta's — it's the builder's: if your product's differentiation is 'we run Llama on-device,' you have a feature, not a business, because anyone else can download the same weights tomorrow. The real opportunity is the application layer that requires on-device inference as a hard constraint — regulated healthcare, defense, offline industrial — where the open weights are a necessary but not sufficient ingredient.”
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