Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Anthropic just taught Claude to dream between tasks, and it makes agents meaningfully smarter

Dreaming turns Claude from an AI that forgets everything the moment a session ends into one that quietly gets better at its job every time it's not actively working.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Claude Dreaming featured image.
Claude

Anthropic just gave Claude something that sounds like a perfect science fiction plot: the ability to dream. The company has announced three upgrades to Claude Managed Agents: Dreaming, Outcomes, and Multiagent Orchestration. 

While I agree that the Dreaming clearly has the most evocative name, it’s also the one with the most practical implications for developers building AI agents that can handle complex, long-running work. 

Live from Code with Claude: we’re launching dreaming in Claude Managed Agents as a research preview.

Outcomes, multiagent orchestration, and webhooks are now in public beta. pic.twitter.com/p4DFRzFEd8

— Claude (@claudeai) May 6, 2026

What is Claude’s Dreaming feature?

Despite the poetic name, Dreaming is a scheduled background process that takes place between active sessions. Its purpose is to review everything that an agent has previously done, including past conversations, logged memory, completed tasks, and look for patterns between them. 

Recommended Videos

Dreaming scans all the tasks performed by the agent, spots the mistakes it keeps repeating, the approaches it naturally prefers (built over sessions), and shares the insights across multiple agents working in parallel (when multiple Claude agents are working simultaneously). 

Once the agent figures everything out, it then locks those learnings into its memory, so that every new session starts with the same context of what worked and what didn’t the last time. Developers can either let Dreaming update memory automatically or keep reviewing the changes before they are applied. 

Outcomes lets you set the bar for quality. You write a rubric, a separate grader checks the output, and the agent iterates until it gets there.

Subscribe to webhooks to get notified when it’s done.

— Claude (@claudeai) May 6, 2026

What do Outcomes and Multiagent Orchestration add?

Currently, the Dreaming feature is available in research preview on the Claude Platform. The feature is a self-improvement mechanism that will help the agent compound its usefulness over time, particularly by acknowledging the mistakes it committed in the previous sessions.

Outcomes, as the name suggests, let developers define a set of parameters, requirements, or a standard against which the agent’s output is evaluated. The evaluation is conducted by a separate grading system that makes sure isn’t influenced by the agent’s own reasoning. If the agent’s response doesn’t meet the criteria, the grader demands another attempt.

Multiagent Orchestration allows multiple Claude agents to work in tandem on different parts of a complex task. This reduces the time and expands the scope of responses in a single workflow. Webhooks round out the update by enabling event-driven triggers for agents without constant manual prompting.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Windows 11 is getting a new Screen Tint mode, and your eyes might thank Microsoft
Users can apply custom color overlays to reduce screen intensity and visual fatigue.
Windows 11 on a laptop

Microsoft is testing a new accessibility feature for Windows 11 called Screen Tint, and it could be one of those small additions that make a surprisingly big difference. Instead of changing your display's color temperature like Night Light, Screen Tint applies a customizable color overlay across the entire screen, making bright displays easier on the eyes during long work or gaming sessions.

A softer screen for tired eyes

Read more
Apple’s looking at a politically radioactive fix for the memory crisis, and the US government isn’t happy about it
Apple blamed memory costs for your price hike. Its proposed solution involves a Pentagon blacklist.
Apple Mac Mini on a Desk

A few days ago, Apple announced an ugly mid-cycle price hike, blaming the worsening-by-the-day memory crisis. According to the Financial Times, the company is now lobbying the government for approval to buy memory chips from a Chinese company. 

The company in question is CXMT, a Chinese chipmaker that the Pentagon added to its Chinese Military Company blacklist for alleged ties to the Chinese army.

Read more
As iPads get pricier, Motorola’s Pad 70 Pro arrives as a solid option… just not for US buyers yet
Great specs, a stylus in the box, and no US launch date: the Moto Pad 70 Pro sounds both impressive and disappointing.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

If you don’t know about Apple’s recent price hike, which affected all the products in its lineup except the iPhone and Apple Watch (for now), you’ve got to be living under some sort of a rock. The revision made all the iPads much more expensive. 

Motorola, however, has just launched a 13-inch tablet that actually sounds good on paper. It’s called the Moto Pad 70 Pro, and it costs around $440 for the baseline model. The catch, however, is that the device isn’t available in the US yet. 

Read more