One of the tasks was "Build an interactive dashboard for exploring data from the World Happiness Report." -- I can't imagine how Opus4.5 could've failed that.
Also >20 years in software. The VSCode/autocomplete, regardless of the model, never worked good for me. But Claude Code is something else - it doesn't do autocomplete per se - it will do modifications, test, if it fails debug, and iterate until it gets it right.
Are you at all familiar with the architecture of systems like theirs?
The reason people don't jump to your conclusion here (and why you get downvoted) is that for anyone familiar with how this is orchestrated on the backend it's obvious that they don't need to do artificial slowdowns.
At least in Poland, I can almost always see my results before my doctor does - I get a notification that the labwork is ready and I can view results online.
Also, the regular bloodwork is around $50-$100 (for noninsured or without a prescription), so many people just do this out of pocket once in a while and only bring to doctor if anything looks suspicious.
Finally, there is EU regulation about data that applies to medical field as well - you always have the right to view all the data that any company has stored about you. Gatekeeping is forbidden by law.
I have one, and specifically got one without a camera because I don't want that driving around my house. The first time it went through I made sure to stow cables and such, and I do a quick walk-through to make sure that none of the cats have barfed and that there's no obvious obstacles before I release the hypnodrone.
It still saves me time, which was the reason that I bought it in the first place.
One of the tasks was "Build an interactive dashboard for exploring data from the World Happiness Report." -- I can't imagine how Opus4.5 could've failed that.
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