Issue #54: Exploring Anthropic's Artifacts — Jason Michael Perry

Howdy👋🏾. The AI communication interface has remained the same since ChatGPT 3.5 hit the scene in 2022. Users type a message, the bot responds, and we rinse, wash, and repeat.

Anthropic released one of the biggest shifts a few weeks ago when it introduced its new AI model Sonnet, reportedly on par if not more powerful than OpenAI’s ChatGPT 4o. The real excitement, however, is the introduction of Artifacts, which moves AI interfaces forward.

The idea is simple and brilliant. Imagine working on a Google Doc where you and a collaborator can edit simultaneously. Artifacts create a pane where you can see changes to a document you plan to use Claude to help you create or edit. Claude adds a version tracker that lets you quickly shift between modifications to the document as you make changes.

I often use ChatGPT and Claude to write or improve on code I’ve written, and I’m constantly driven crazy by the AI models’ decisions to make huge changes between prompt requests. Picture an AI-generated work email that is almost there except for one paragraph, but attempt to explain to the AI what you want to change and rewrite the entire email. It’s frustrating! This is a feature that aims to correct this issue.

As Lagniappe, Anthropic also introduced a cool prompt library that provides instructions on what a good prompt looks like and what output to expect. If you struggle with writing prompts, it’s a great resource.

This small change has proven to be a UI breakthrough for AI and is destined to be adopted by more assistants in the coming year. I’ll share my use so far, and some tips and tricks using Artifacts, but first, our sponsors and my thoughts on tech & things:


🤝 This week’s newsletter issue is proudly sponsored by:

If you are looking to find amazing people, contact Baird Consulting.


⚡️ TUAW, or Unofficial Apple Weblog, which shut down in 2015, returned as an AI-generated scammy site that replicated news content from similar blogs using AI, attaching the pictures and bylines of writers who long left the defunct blog. Early Apple tech bloggers are shocked to find their name and work have been AI-zombified

⚡️ Samsung has always been a company that blatantly steals ideas and designs, but wow the new watch, earbuds, and ring might as well be exact copies of the products they compete with. Snazzy Labs (@SnazzyLabs) on X

⚡️ Nvidia GPUs are so hard to snag, Andreessen Horowitz is gobbling them up to make them exclusively available to AI deals a16z invests in.

To test Claude’s Artifacts, I decided to use them to make some content updates to a new page I added to my website listing the services I offer. I took a draft I wrote in an editor and asked Claude if it could help me finish it.

Usually, Claude takes the text and uses it to generate a response, but that response comes back in the chat; with Artifacts, it creates a pane with my document.

As I used prompts to tweak services, like asking it to update “Advertising and Sponsorships” to say “Newsletter Sponsorships,” Claude generated a new version, which I could flip between using the arrows in the bottom left corner.

It’s so much nicer than scrolling through an endless page of versions, each generated based on minor feedback, but the features are not perfect. Claude rewrites the entire document regardless of how minor the change might be, using up tons of tokens, and editing is limited to the AI, so you can’t hop in to make a few minor changes. That said, this is version 1, and it hints that the company understands that users want a better-combined editing experience, and Artifacts is the start of that.

If you like this content, please share it with your coworkers and friends. I am currently open to newsletter sponsorships. If you’re interested, please get in touch. Additionally, I offer my services as a fractional Chief AI Officer and technical consultant.

-jason

p.s. Star Trek Strange New Worlds is one of my favorite reboots of Star Trek; it gets the heart of what Trek has always been about to me. Well, guys and gals, Star Trek Prodigy Season 2 – a show targeted to kids – has made my list of one of the best seasons of Star Trek, period. This show is fun, emotional, and a darn good Star Trek story told over 20 episodes. If you have Netflix and like Trek, don’t sleep on Prodigy!