Compare/Claude 4 Sonnet vs Cq

AI tool comparison

Claude 4 Sonnet vs Cq

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

C

Developer Tools

Claude 4 Sonnet

500K context + extended thinking for serious reasoning tasks

Ship

100%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Claude 4 Sonnet is Anthropic's latest model featuring a 500,000-token context window and an upgraded extended thinking mode for complex multi-step reasoning. It's immediately available via the Anthropic API and Claude.ai. The model is designed for developers and knowledge workers who need deep document analysis, long-form reasoning, and complex task chaining.

C

Developer Tools

Cq

Stack Overflow for AI coding agents, by Mozilla AI

Ship

67%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Cq by Mozilla AI is a knowledge-sharing platform purpose-built for AI coding agents. Instead of agents repeatedly hitting the same walls, Cq lets them share solutions — so when one agent figures out a tricky API integration, every other agent benefits. Think Stack Overflow but the audience is machines.

Decision
Claude 4 Sonnet
Cq
Panel verdict
Ship · 4 ship / 0 skip
Ship · 2 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free tier via Claude.ai / API usage-based pricing (input/output per token) / Claude Pro $20/mo
Free / Open Source
Best for
500K context + extended thinking for serious reasoning tasks
Stack Overflow for AI coding agents, by Mozilla AI
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
84/100 · ship

The primitive here is straightforward: a frontier LLM with a 500K context window and a toggleable chain-of-thought reasoning mode exposed cleanly through the existing Messages API — no new SDK, no new paradigm, just a model name swap and an extended_thinking parameter. The DX bet is zero-friction adoption, which is the right call. The moment of truth is dropping a 400-page codebase or a multi-contract legal corpus into a single prompt and getting coherent analysis back without chunking hacks. That's a real problem I've actually had. Extended thinking as a first-class API parameter rather than a separate product is the specific decision that earns the ship.

80/100 · ship

Finally someone is tackling the collective intelligence problem for agents. Every Copilot session today starts from scratch — Cq gives agents institutional memory. The Mozilla backing gives me confidence this will stay open and vendor-neutral.

Skeptic
78/100 · ship

Direct competitors are GPT-4o with 128K context and Gemini 1.5 Pro with its 1M window — so Anthropic is not winning on raw context length, they're betting that quality-per-token and reasoning depth beat quantity. That's a defensible bet, but Gemini's 1M window exists and costs roughly the same, so anyone whose job is literally 'process enormous documents' has a credible alternative. The scenario where this breaks is agentic pipelines running 50+ chained calls per task — latency and cost compound fast at 500K inputs, and extended thinking adds more. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Anthropic's own Claude 5, which will obsolete the reasoning advantage. Ship now, reassess in two quarters.

45/100 · skip

Cool concept, but the quality control problem is brutal. Stack Overflow barely manages to keep human answers accurate — now imagine agents upvoting hallucinated solutions. The cold-start problem is real too: who populates it first, and how do you verify correctness without humans in the loop?

Futurist
81/100 · ship

The thesis here is that the real bottleneck in knowledge work isn't generation speed — it's context fidelity: can the model hold an entire codebase, legal case, or research corpus in working memory without losing coherent reference across it? If that's true, 500K tokens stops being a spec number and becomes an architectural primitive for a new class of applications — full-repo refactors in one shot, end-to-end contract analysis without retrieval pipelines, multi-document synthesis without chunking. The dependency is that developers actually have corpora this large and that inference costs fall fast enough to make 500K-token calls economically viable at production scale. The second-order effect is that RAG pipelines become optional infrastructure rather than mandatory scaffolding — a genuine power shift away from vector DB vendors. This tool is on-time to the long-context trend, not early, but the reasoning layer is the differentiated bet.

80/100 · ship

This is infrastructure for the agent economy. When agents can share knowledge at machine speed, the compounding effect on developer productivity could be staggering. Mozilla is playing the long game here and I am here for it.

Founder
72/100 · ship

The buyer here is enterprise development teams and prosumer knowledge workers — the check comes from SaaS tooling budgets or R&D, not IT procurement. The pricing architecture is usage-based per token, which aligns with value for low-volume power users but compresses margin fast at scale as competitors drive token prices toward zero. The moat is Constitutional AI reputation and safety positioning, which matters to regulated-industry buyers (legal, healthcare, finance) who need a paper trail on model behavior — that's a real and defensible wedge. What I can't ignore: when Anthropic's own next model ships, this becomes a commodity tier. The business survives only if Anthropic's platform stickiness — the API, the console, the system prompt tooling — creates enough workflow lock-in to retain customers through model generations.

No panel take

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