Anthropic's desperate search for compute
Today: Faced with limited options, Anthropic kicks off a perilous partnership with Elon Musk, Cloudflare lays off 20% of its staff to "[create] value in the agentic AI era," and the latest enterprise moves.
Today: Faced with limited options, Anthropic kicks off a perilous partnership with Elon Musk, Cloudflare lays off 20% of its staff to "[create] value in the agentic AI era," and the latest enterprise moves.
Welcome to Runtime! Today: Faced with limited options, Anthropic kicks off a perilous partnership with Elon Musk, Cloudflare lays off 20% of its staff to "[create] value in the agentic AI era," and the latest enterprise moves.
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Anthropic had to do something; six months after the release of Claude Opus 4.5 jump-started the AI coding agent craze, the company risked squandering all that enterprise goodwill with the reliability issues, rate limits, and rising prices caused by a shortage of computing capacity. But going into business with Elon Musk was certainly a choice.
SpaceX announced Wednesday that Anthropic has agreed to purchase all the computing capacity at xAI's Colossus 1 data center in Memphis, Tenn. "Colossus 1 features over 220,000 NVIDIA GPUs, including dense deployments of H100, H200, and next-generation GB200 accelerators," SpaceX said in a statement, and Anthropic immediately increased usage limits for Claude Code.
But Colossus 1 isn't just another massive data center. It has quickly earned a reputation as one of the most notorious projects of the recent AI boom thanks to xAI's casual regard for environmental rules and standards and its inability to make efficient use of all those GPUs.
It's not clear how much operational control Anthropic will be allowed to exercise over Colossus 1, but as the first customer of what appears to be SpaceX's neocloud era, it should not hesitate to throw its weight around to improve the air and water pollution situation in the Memphis area. Still, the bigger long-term risk for Anthropic is that it just entered into a business relationship with Elon Musk.
While reasonable people can disagree on the scope of the impact, there's no question that software companies will go through a lot of changes over the next few years as AI coding agents mature. The economics of building software may never be the same, which could reduce demand for software as well as the number of people required to produce world-class products.
Cloudflare announced Thursday that it was laying off about 20% of its staff, or 1,100 employees. "Today’s actions are not a cost-cutting exercise or an assessment of individuals’ performance; they are about Cloudflare defining how a world-class, high-growth company operates and creates value in the agentic AI era," co-founders Matthew Prince and Michelle Zatlyn wrote in a memo published by the company.
However, Cloudflare also disappointed investors Wednesday by issuing revenue guidance below analyst estimates, which sent its stock plunging nearly 17% in after-hours trading. Add Cloudflare to the list of companies who have fired workers in recent months citing the productivity gains of AI without acknowledging the effect that this platform shift is also having on their business models.
Michel Combes is the new CEO of Lambda, replacing co-founder Stephen Balaban, who will become chief technology officer of the neocloud.
Bill Koefoed is the new chief financial officer at Harness, joining the software tools company after financial leadership roles at OneStream, which went public in 2024, and Blue Nile.
CoreWeave beat Wall Street's estimates for revenue but provided lower-than-expected revenue guidance for the current quarter amid wider-than-expected losses, sending its stock down 12% in after-hours trading.
Datadog, meanwhile, enjoyed a 31% jump in its stock Thursday after reporting blowout earnings that will give the SaaSpocalpyse contingent something to think about.
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