[00:01] Nina Park: Welcome to Model Behavior. [00:07] Nina Park: I'm Nina Park. [00:09] Nina Park: Today we are examining how Anthropic is expanding Claude's utility for both data visualization [00:16] Nina Park: and real-time office productivity. [00:18] Thatcher Collins: And I'm Thatcher Collins. [00:20] Thatcher Collins: Anthropic is moving quickly here, Nina. They are launching features that directly [00:24] Thatcher Collins: challenge the workflow dominance of major incumbents in the workspace segment. [00:28] Nina Park: Specifically, they have introduced in-line visualizations. As reported by [00:33] Nina Park: The Verge yesterday, Claude can now generate interactive charts and diagrams [00:37] Nina Park: directly in the chat window, such as a periodic table you can click through for [00:42] Nina Park: more information. [00:43] Nina Park: This is a shift from their artifacts feature, which typically used a separate side panel. [00:49] Thatcher Collins: The distinction between these visuals and artifacts is interesting, Nina. [00:53] Thatcher Collins: Artifacts are persistent, but these new inline visuals are transient. [00:57] Thatcher Collins: They change or disappear as the chat progresses. [01:00] Thatcher Collins: Is there a risk that users might lose their work if they do not explicitly save it, or is the speed worth the trade-off? [01:06] Nina Park: Anthropic notes that these are meant for immediate context, though you can still use artifacts for persistent tools. [01:13] Nina Park: This focus on context leads into the second major announcement from this morning, Claude for Office. [01:19] Nina Park: As detailed by Geeky Gadgets, this update brings real-time co-editing to Microsoft Excel and PowerPoint. [01:26] Thatcher Collins: The real-time collaboration is the technical headline, but I am looking closely at what they call customizable skills. [01:32] Thatcher Collins: They claim teams can automate data cleaning in Excel or brand alignment in PowerPoint. [01:37] Thatcher Collins: I'm curious if these are just more complex macros or if the context-aware tag actually holds up. [01:44] Nina Park: The documentation suggests it is a step beyond macros, Thatcher. [01:47] Nina Park: It uses slash commands and pseudo-system prompts to let users fine-tune how Claude interacts with their data. [01:55] Nina Park: In Excel, it can audit formulas and resolve discrepancies in large data sets, which is vital for high-stakes finance work. [02:03] Thatcher Collins: And in PowerPoint, it suggests rewrites for clarity and visual layout improvements. [02:08] Thatcher Collins: It appears they're trying to solve the version conflict issues that often plague team projects [02:13] Thatcher Collins: by synchronizing all AI-driven edits instantly across the shared document. [02:17] Nina Park: Exactly. These skills are managed through a centralized browser interface. [02:21] Nina Park: allowing teams to toggle specific automations on or off as project requirements change. [02:29] Nina Park: It is a targeted rollout aimed at professionals in finance and project management. [02:33] Thatcher Collins: It is a clear move toward enterprise reliability and integration. [02:38] Thatcher Collins: Thank you for listening to Model Behavior, mb.neuralnewscast.com. [02:45] Thatcher Collins: Neural Newscast is AI-assisted, human-reviewed. [02:49] Thatcher Collins: View our AI Transparency Policy at neuralnewscast.com.