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Claude Code Launches Artifacts for Sharing Interactive Apps Internally

Claude Code Launches Artifacts for Sharing Interactive Apps Internally

Claude Code has rolled out a new feature called Artifacts, letting teams share interactive applications and dashboards directly within the platform. The tool is meant to streamline collaborative development by giving users a secure way to circulate dynamic content without leaving the coding environment.

How Artifacts works

Artifacts turns code into shareable, interactive apps that run inside Claude Code's workspace. Developers can build dashboards, data visualizations, or simple tools and push them to teammates with a single click. The company says the feature is designed with security in mind — internal apps stay inside the organization's environment, not on external servers.

That matters for teams that need to prototype quickly but can't afford to expose unfinished work. Instead of spinning up a separate server or sending raw code around, users can share a live version that colleagues can click through and test.

A boost for enterprise productivity

Claude Code expects Artifacts to help enterprises move faster. When developers can share working prototypes without breaking workflow, decisions get made sooner. The feature cuts out the back-and-forth of exporting files, setting up demo environments, or explaining what the code does — the app speaks for itself.

For managers, it means less time chasing updates and more time looking at actual outputs. The company hasn't released adoption numbers or case studies yet, but the pitch is straightforward: faster collaboration should mean faster delivery.

What's missing and what comes next

The launch is fresh, so details on limits — like how large an app can be or how many users can access a shared artifact — haven't been published. Claude Code hasn't announced a pricing tier for Artifacts either; for now it appears to be bundled with the existing platform.

Early adopters will likely test the feature on internal prototypes and small dashboards. Whether it scales to large, data-heavy applications remains an open question — one the company will have to answer as teams push the tool beyond basic demos.