AI tool comparison
Claude Opus 4.7 vs Nemotron 3 Nano Omni
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 Models
Nemotron 3 Nano Omni
NVIDIA's 30B open multimodal model: vision, audio & language for 25GB RAM
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
NVIDIA launched Nemotron 3 Nano Omni on April 28, 2026 — a 30-billion-parameter open model that activates only 3 billion parameters per token using a Mixture-of-Experts architecture, achieving up to 9x higher throughput than comparable open models while fitting in 25GB of RAM. It unifies vision, audio, and language capabilities into a single model, making it one of the first open multimodal models genuinely practical for on-device agentic AI. The model is openly released with full access to weights, datasets, and training recipes on Hugging Face and GitHub, with a license permissive enough for commercial deployment. It's designed specifically for agentic workflows — the combined vision/audio/text understanding means a single model can process a video conference recording, extract the slides being presented, and summarize the action items without chaining multiple specialized models together. Nemotron 3 Nano Omni leads its efficiency class on most benchmarks, and the "Nano" naming is relative — it's 30B total parameters, massive by any standard other than the Ultra variant in the family. For developers who need serious multimodal capability but can't run 70B+ models locally, this hits a sweet spot: powerful enough to matter, lean enough to deploy on a single high-end GPU or DGX Spark unit.
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.”
“9x throughput at 25GB VRAM is the number that matters. MoE activation at 3B parameters per token means this runs fast on realistic hardware while delivering genuine multimodal capability. Full weights + training recipe means I can fine-tune this for domain-specific use cases — that's a serious competitive advantage over closed API models.”
“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.”
“NVIDIA has a habit of benchmarking their models against outdated competitors. The 9x throughput claim needs context — compared to what baseline? The 25GB VRAM requirement also isn't consumer hardware; you're still looking at an RTX 4090 or better. And 'open' from NVIDIA has historically come with strings attached to the license that enterprise legal teams will flag.”
“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.”
“A truly unified multimodal open model that fits on-device signals where the industry is heading: sovereign AI infrastructure where enterprises run their own models rather than routing sensitive data through APIs. NVIDIA's DGX Spark personal AI supercomputer launching simultaneously is no coincidence — they're building the hardware/software stack for on-premises AI agents that can see, hear, and reason.”
“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.”
“Audio + vision + language in one open model is a creative toolchain in a box. I can build a workflow that watches a video, listens to voiceover, understands the visual content, and writes a repurposed script — locally, without API costs. The multimodal creative applications here are genuinely exciting for content production pipelines.”
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