AI tool comparison
Claude Opus 4.7 vs MOSS-TTS-Nano
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
AI Models
Claude Opus 4.7
Anthropic's flagship model with task budgets for disciplined agentic work
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Claude Opus 4.7, released April 16, 2026, is Anthropic's strongest model to date and introduces a meaningful new primitive for agentic work: task budgets. A task budget gives Claude a token target for the entire agentic loop — thinking, tool calls, tool results, and final output — with a running countdown that lets the model prioritize and wind down gracefully rather than running out of context mid-task. Beyond task budgets, Opus 4.7 ships with substantially better vision at higher resolutions, improved creative output quality (better interfaces, slides, and docs), and gains on the hardest software engineering tasks where Opus 4.6 struggled to maintain context across long refactors. Pricing stays flat at $5/1M input and $25/1M output. Available day-one across Claude Pro, API, Amazon Bedrock, Vertex AI, Microsoft Foundry, Claude Code, Cursor, and GitHub Copilot, Opus 4.7 cements Anthropic's position as the go-to model for serious agentic workloads — particularly long-horizon coding sessions that previously needed close human supervision.
AI/ML Models
MOSS-TTS-Nano
0.1B TTS model that runs realtime on a laptop CPU, 6+ languages
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
MOSS-TTS-Nano is a 0.1-billion parameter text-to-speech model from OpenMOSS that runs in real-time on a standard 4-core laptop CPU with no GPU required. It supports Chinese, English, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, and additional languages, includes voice cloning from a reference audio sample, and offers streaming inference for low-latency applications. The project is fully open-source. The model's tiny footprint (0.1B parameters) is its defining feature — it's optimized specifically for CPU inference, making it viable for edge deployment, mobile applications, and scenarios where spinning up a GPU is impractical or costly. Despite its size, it achieves what the team describes as "natural-sounding" speech synthesis across multiple languages, though quality comparisons against ElevenLabs or larger models remain to be seen in independent tests. OpenMOSS is connected to Fudan University's MOSS project, the team behind China's early open ChatGPT alternative. MOSS-TTS-Nano fills a real gap: high-quality, locally-runnable TTS for multilingual applications without the hardware requirements of models like VoxCPM2 or Kokoro.
Reviewer scorecard
“Task budgets are the most useful new feature in a model release this year. I can now hand off a 4-hour refactor with confidence that Claude won't run off the rails or stall out at 80%. The hard coding gains are real — agentic loops on big codebases feel qualitatively different.”
“A TTS model that runs in realtime on a CPU with voice cloning is the holy grail for offline or edge-deployed applications. 0.1B is genuinely small enough to embed in a mobile app or an IoT device. If the quality holds up in testing, this changes the economics of voice features completely.”
“At $25/1M output tokens, a single complex agentic loop can easily cost $5-10. Task budgets help, but they're a bandaid on the fundamental cost problem. For most teams, Sonnet 4.6 delivers 80% of the capability at 20% of the price.”
“The quality bar for TTS is high and 0.1B parameters is extremely small — I'd expect noticeable quality degradation compared to ElevenLabs or even Kokoro-82M at certain speaking styles and languages. No independent audio samples or benchmarks are published yet. The Arabic support claim is particularly worth scrutinizing — Arabic TTS is notoriously harder than European languages.”
“Task budgets represent a real shift in how we think about agent control — not 'stop the agent if it goes wrong' but 'give the agent enough rope to finish, not enough to hang itself.' This mental model will propagate across the industry.”
“The on-device TTS race is accelerating and MOSS-TTS-Nano is a meaningful data point: voice synthesis is going fully local. In the near future, voice features in applications will default to local inference — no API costs, no latency, no data privacy tradeoffs. Models like this are laying the foundation.”
“The higher-resolution vision and tasteful output quality improvements are immediately noticeable in design-adjacent tasks. Generating polished slides and landing pages feels less like prompting a robot and more like briefing a designer.”
“For content creators who want to add narration to videos without an API subscription, or for indie game developers needing multilingual voice without licensing costs, MOSS-TTS-Nano is worth evaluating immediately. The voice cloning feature means you can create a consistent character voice from just a short sample.”
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