Compare/Claude Opus 4.7 vs pi-llm

AI tool comparison

Claude Opus 4.7 vs pi-llm

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

C

Foundation Models

Claude Opus 4.7

Anthropic's new flagship — 87.6% SWE-bench, 1M context

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Claude Opus 4.7 is Anthropic's latest flagship model, released April 16. It scores 87.6% on SWE-bench Verified — a 13-point improvement over Claude Opus 4.6 — and 94.2% on GPQA, making it competitive with the top frontier models on coding and scientific reasoning benchmarks. The context window extends to 1 million tokens with substantially improved retrieval accuracy at the far end of the window. The release introduces "Routines" — a first-party feature for defining persistent agentic workflows that Claude can execute autonomously across multiple sessions. Routines are defined in structured YAML and can include tool calls, conditional logic, and human-in-the-loop checkpoints. Anthropic positions this as a more reliable alternative to custom agent frameworks for common use cases. Pricing remains unchanged from Opus 4.6: $5/M input tokens, $25/M output tokens. The vision input resolution has been increased by 3.3x, which meaningfully improves performance on documents, diagrams, and UI screenshots. Available via API immediately and rolling out to Claude.ai Pro and Team plans over the next week.

P

Local AI

pi-llm

Run a private LLM server on Raspberry Pi 4 with hardware tool calling

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

pi-llm turns a stock Raspberry Pi 4 (4GB RAM) into a private local LLM server using 1-bit quantized Bonsai models (1.7B and 4B parameters, under 1GB each). It includes a web chat UI accessible across your home network and implements native tool calling for physical hardware control — LEDs, displays, servo motors, and GPIO peripherals. The setup requires no GPU and no cloud dependency. The Bonsai-8B model family (recently covered here) runs efficiently enough on Pi-class hardware that the tool calling loop — chat message → model decision → GPIO action → result back to model — completes in a few seconds on 1.7B parameters. The project is a clean demonstration of where sub-1GB quantized models are genuinely useful: edge AI applications where latency to a cloud API is unacceptable, privacy matters, and the task is constrained enough that a small model performs adequately. It ships with working examples for five hardware configurations.

Decision
Claude Opus 4.7
pi-llm
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
$5/M input · $25/M output (same as Opus 4.6)
Open Source
Best for
Anthropic's new flagship — 87.6% SWE-bench, 1M context
Run a private LLM server on Raspberry Pi 4 with hardware tool calling
Category
Foundation Models
Local AI

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

87.6% on SWE-bench isn't a small improvement — that's a meaningful jump for real-world coding tasks. The Routines feature addresses the biggest pain point with Claude in production: reliable multi-step agent behavior without building a custom framework.

80/100 · ship

The tool calling implementation on hardware GPIO is the genuinely novel part. Most Pi LLM projects just do chat — this one closes the loop so the model can actually actuate things based on conversation. The 1.7B model is fast enough that it doesn't feel like waiting, which changes the interaction model entirely.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

Benchmarks look great but the 1M context window performance hasn't been independently validated at the limits. Routines sound powerful but the YAML spec is still in beta with known edge cases. If you're running stable Opus 4.6 workflows, wait a week for the community to stress-test this before migrating.

45/100 · skip

A 1.7B model doing hardware control is a liability waiting to happen. The model hallucinates — what happens when it hallucinates a servo command? The project has no safety layer, no command confirmation, and no rate limiting on tool calls. Cool demo, genuinely dangerous in any real deployment.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Anthropic is quietly winning the enterprise coding agent race. The combination of top SWE-bench scores with the Routines feature is a moat — developers don't switch orchestration frameworks easily once workflows are deployed. This release deepens that lock-in strategically.

80/100 · ship

This is a preview of the embedded AI future. When every Pi-class device can run a local model with tool calling, the 'smart home' becomes genuinely conversational without routing everything through a cloud API. Pi-llm is early and rough but it's pointing at something real: private, offline, embodied AI agents.

Creator
80/100 · ship

The 3.3x vision resolution upgrade is underrated for design work. Document analysis, layout review, and iterating on visual mockups are all dramatically better. I can finally paste a full Figma export and get coherent feedback on the entire design rather than just the top half.

80/100 · ship

The creative applications here are underrated — conversational LED lighting, AI-triggered displays for studio ambiance, physical generative art installations that respond to natural language. The fact that it runs offline matters enormously for gallery or installation contexts where cloud reliability is a risk.

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