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Business Upturn
3 days ago
- Business Upturn
OpenAI poised to unveil GPT-5 in highly anticipated livestream today!
OpenAI is likely about to unveil GPT-5 today, Thursday, August 7 at 10am PT, during a livestream that's got everyone buzzing. They've been teasing something big, and a promo titled 'LIVE5TREAM,' with the number 5 replacing the 's,' strongly hints that GPT-5 is coming. CEO Sam Altman has dropped vague hints, calling a recent open-source release 'big-but-small' and promising a 'big upgrade later this week.' Other OpenAI team members, like Boris Power, have openly mentioned GPT-5, adding to the excitement. Some third-party platforms have even pre-listed GPT-5 in their model choices, making it all feel even more real. While OpenAI hasn't confirmed anything officially, expectations are through the roof. GPT-5 is expected to be a big leap forward. It might combine the advanced thinking power of the o-series models (like o3 and o4) with the flexibility and wide knowledge of the GPT line. That means it could become smarter at choosing how to answer, whether you need speed, depth, or low cost, without you having to pick the model. It's also expected to handle longer conversations better by remembering things across chats, making your experience feel more personal and less repetitive. Multimodal improvements could mean it gets even better at handling voice, text, and maybe even images and videos. The rollout might come in levels: free users could get basic access, ChatGPT Plus users may see better speed or smarts, and Pro users might get the full toolkit, including tools like Voice, Canvas, Search, and Deep Research. That said, Sam Altman has warned people not to expect perfection just yet. GPT-5 is still in its early stages and hasn't hit what OpenAI calls the 'gold level,' a reference to an even more powerful model that's still in the works. Still, with rivals like Anthropic, Google, and Meta pushing their own AI models, this launch could be a major step forward for OpenAI and for what AI can do in everyday life. We'll know more once the livestream begins, all eyes are on 10am PT.


Mint
3 days ago
- Mint
GPT-5 incoming? OpenAI hints at ChatGPT's new model launch as Sam Altman teases ‘LIVE5TREAM' for today
OpenAI appears to launch GPT-5, the long-anticipated successor to its GPT-4 model, during a livestream scheduled for Thursday at 10:30 PM IST (10 AM PT). A promotional teaser titled 'LIVE5TREAM' has sparked widespread speculation online, with the stylised '5' in the name widely interpreted as a nod to the model's imminent release. Hints about the announcement have been steadily emerging. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently posted on social media referencing the release of the open-source models gpt-oss-120b and gpt-oss-20b as 'something big-but-small', and teased 'a big upgrade later this week', remarks that many observers believe point to the rollout of GPT-5. He even announced on his official X account that he is offering ChatGPT access to the entire federal workforce for $1 a year per agency. Further fuelling speculation, Boris Power, OpenAI's head of applied research, commented that he was 'excited to see how the public receives GPT-5'. While OpenAI has not confirmed the model's full capabilities, GPT-5 is expected to bring improvements in reasoning, memory, and task execution. It may also integrate features seen in the recent 'o-series' reasoning models, such as o3 and o4, potentially creating a system that dynamically balances speed, cost, and depth based on user input. There is also speculation that GPT-5 could demonstrate enhanced tool usage, stronger multi-step reasoning, and upgrades to its multimodal processing, extending capabilities introduced with GPT-4o. Another major anticipated feature is improved memory, allowing it to retain context over longer interactions or across user sessions, which could lead to more coherent and personalised responses over time. Reports suggest that OpenAI may offer GPT-5 access across multiple tiers. Free users will likely have access to a standard version, while Plus and Pro subscribers may benefit from higher-performance versions, including integrations with advanced tools such as Voice, Canvas, Search, and Deep Research.


Indian Express
4 days ago
- Business
- Indian Express
OpenAI's long-awaited GPT-5 model nears release
OpenAI's GPT-5, the latest installment of the AI technology that powered the ChatGPT juggernaut in 2022, is set for an imminent release, and users will scrutinize if the step up from GPT-4 is on par with the research lab's previous improvements. Two early testers of the new model told Reuters they have been impressed with its ability to code and solve science and math problems, but they believe the leap from GPT-4 to GPT-5 is not as large as the one from GPT-3 to GPT-4. The testers, who have signed non-disclosure agreements, declined to be named for this story. OpenAI declined to comment for this story. GPT-4's leap was based on more compute power and data, and the company was hoping that 'scaling up' in a similar way would consistently lead to improved AI models. But OpenAI, which is backed by Microsoft and is currently valued at $300 billion, ran into issues scaling up. One problem was the data wall the company ran into, and OpenAI's former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever said last year that while processing power was growing, the amount of data was not. He was referring to the fact that large language models are trained on massive datasets that scrape the entire internet, and AI labs have no other options for large troves of human-generated textual data. Apart from the lack of data, another problem was that 'training runs' for large models are more likely to have hardware-induced failures given how complicated the system is, and researchers may not know the eventual performance of the models until the end of the run, which can take months. OpenAI has not said when GPT-5 will be released, but the industry expects it to be any day now, according to media reports. Boris Power, head of Applied Research at OpenAI, said in an X post on Monday: 'Excited to see how the public receives GPT-5.' 'OpenAI made such a great leap from GPT-3 to GPT-4, that ever since then, there has been an enormous amount of anticipation over GPT-5,' said Navin Chaddha, managing partner at venture capital fund Mayfield, who invests in AI companies but is not an OpenAI investor. 'The hope is that GPT-5 will unlock AI applications that move beyond chat into fully autonomous task execution.' Nearly three years ago, ChatGPT introduced the world to generative AI, dazzling users with its ability to write humanlike prose and poetry, quickly becoming one of the fastest growing apps ever. In March 2023, OpenAI followed up ChatGPT with the release of GPT-4, a large language model that made huge leaps forward in intelligence. While GPT-3.5, an earlier version of the model, received a bar exam score in the bottom 10%, GPT-4 passed the simulated bar exam in the top 10%. GPT-4 then became the model to beat and the world came to terms with the fact that AI models could outperform humans in many tasks. Soon, other companies were catching on. The same year, Alphabet's Google and Anthropic – which is backed by Amazon and Google – released competitive models to GPT-4. Within a year, open-source models on par with GPT-4 such as Meta Platforms' Llama 3 models were released. Along with training large models, OpenAI has now invested in another route, called 'test-time compute,' which channels more processing power to solve challenging tasks such as math or complex operations that demand human-like reasoning and decision-making. The company's CEO Sam Altman said earlier this year that GPT-5 would combine both test-time compute and its large models. He also said that OpenAI's model and product offerings had become 'complicated.'

The Hindu
4 days ago
- Business
- The Hindu
OpenAI's long-awaited GPT-5 model nears release
OpenAI's GPT-5, the latest installment of the AI technology that powered the ChatGPT juggernaut in 2022, is set for an imminent release, and users will scrutinise if the step up from GPT-4 is on par with the research lab's previous improvements. Two early testers of the new model told Reuters they have been impressed with its ability to code and solve science and math problems, but they believe the leap from GPT-4 to GPT-5 is not as large as the one from GPT-3 to GPT-4. The testers, who have signed non-disclosure agreements, declined to be named for this story. OpenAI declined to comment for this story. GPT-4's leap was based on more compute power and data, and the company was hoping that 'scaling up' in a similar way would consistently lead to improved AI models. But OpenAI, which is backed by Microsoft and is currently valued at $300 billion, ran into issues scaling up. One problem was the data wall the company ran into, and OpenAI's former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever said last year that while processing power was growing, the amount of data was not. He was referring to the fact that large language models are trained on massive datasets that scrape the entire internet, and AI labs have no other options for large troves of human-generated textual data. Apart from the lack of data, another problem was that 'training runs' for large models are more likely to have hardware-induced failures given how complicated the system is, and researchers may not know the eventual performance of the models until the end of the run, which can take months. OpenAI has not said when GPT-5 will be released, but the industry expects it to be any day now, according to media reports. Boris Power, head of Applied Research at OpenAI, said in an X post on Monday: "Excited to see how the public receives GPT-5." 'OpenAI made such a great leap from GPT-3 to GPT-4, that ever since then, there has been an enormous amount of anticipation over GPT-5,' said Navin Chaddha, managing partner at venture capital fund Mayfield, who invests in AI companies but is not an OpenAI investor. 'The hope is that GPT-5 will unlock AI applications that move beyond chat into fully autonomous task execution." Nearly three years ago, ChatGPT introduced the world to generative AI, dazzling users with its ability to write humanlike prose and poetry, quickly becoming one of the fastest growing apps ever. In March 2023, OpenAI followed up ChatGPT with the release of GPT-4, a large language model that made huge leaps forward in intelligence. While GPT-3.5, an earlier version of the model, received a bar exam score in the bottom 10%, GPT-4 passed the simulated bar exam in the top 10%. GPT-4 then became the model to beat and the world came to terms with the fact that AI models could outperform humans in many tasks. Soon, other companies were catching on. The same year, Alphabet's Google and Anthropic, which is backed by Amazon and Google, released competitive models to GPT-4. Within a year, open-source models on par with GPT-4 such as Meta Platforms' Llama 3 models were released. Along with training large models, OpenAI has now invested in another route, called 'test-time compute,' which channels more processing power to solve challenging tasks such as math or complex operations that demand human-like reasoning and decision-making. The company's CEO Sam Altman said earlier this year that GPT-5 would combine both test-time compute and its large models. He also said that OpenAI's model and product offerings had become "complicated."


Economic Times
4 days ago
- Business
- Economic Times
OpenAI's long-awaited GPT-5 model nears release
iStock OpenAI's GPT-5, the latest installment of the AI technology that powered the ChatGPT juggernaut in 2022, is set for an imminent release, and users will scrutinize if the step up from GPT-4 is on par with the research lab's previous improvements. Two early testers of the new model told Reuters they have been impressed with its ability to code and solve science and math problems, but they believe the leap from GPT-4 to GPT-5 is not as large as the one from GPT-3 to GPT-4. The testers, who have signed non-disclosure agreements, declined to be named for this story. OpenAI declined to comment for this story. GPT-4's leap was based on more compute power and data, and the company was hoping that "scaling up" in a similar way would consistently lead to improved AI models. But OpenAI, which is backed by Microsoft and is currently valued at $300 billion, ran into issues scaling up. One problem was the data wall the company ran into, and OpenAI's former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever said last year that while processing power was growing, the amount of data was not. He was referring to the fact that large language models are trained on massive datasets that scrape the entire internet, and AI labs have no other options for large troves of human-generated textual data. Apart from the lack of data, another problem was that 'training runs' for large models are more likely to have hardware-induced failures given how complicated the system is, and researchers may not know the eventual performance of the models until the end of the run, which can take months. OpenAI has not said when GPT-5 will be released, but the industry expects it to be any day now, according to media reports. Boris Power, head of Applied Research at OpenAI, said in an X post on Monday: "Excited to see how the public receives GPT-5." "OpenAI made such a great leap from GPT-3 to GPT-4, that ever since then, there has been an enormous amount of anticipation over GPT-5," said Navin Chaddha, managing partner at venture capital fund Mayfield, who invests in AI companies but is not an OpenAI investor. "The hope is that GPT-5 will unlock AI applications that move beyond chat into fully autonomous task execution." 'Test-time compute' Nearly three years ago, ChatGPT introduced the world to generative AI, dazzling users with its ability to write humanlike prose and poetry, quickly becoming one of the fastest growing apps ever. In March 2023, OpenAI followed up ChatGPT with the release of GPT-4, a large language model that made huge leaps forward in intelligence. While GPT-3.5, an earlier version of the model, received a bar exam score in the bottom 10%, GPT-4 passed the simulated bar exam in the top 10%. GPT-4 then became the model to beat and the world came to terms with the fact that AI models could outperform humans in many tasks. Soon, other companies were catching on. The same year, Alphabet's Google and Anthropic - which is backed by Amazon and Google - released competitive models to GPT-4. Within a year, open-source models on par with GPT-4 such as Meta Platforms' Llama 3 models were released. Along with training large models, OpenAI has now invested in another route, called "test-time compute," which channels more processing power to solve challenging tasks such as math or complex operations that demand human-like reasoning and decision-making. The company's CEO Sam Altman said earlier this year that GPT-5 would combine both test-time compute and its large models. He also said that OpenAI's model and product offerings had become "complicated." Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Berlin to Bharuch: The Borosil journey after the China hit in Europe FIIs are exiting while retail investors stay put. Will a costly market make them pay? BlackRock returns, this time with Ambani. Will it be lucky second time? Paid less than plumbers? The real story of freshers' salaries at Infy, TCS. Stock Radar: Down 27% from highs! Hero MotoCorp stock shows signs of momentum after breaking out from 11-week consolidation For those prepared for the long game: 5 mid-cap stocks from different sectors with an upside potential of 14 to 33% in one year Financial services: Time to look at a new set for the next cycle? 5 stocks from the financial services space with upside potential of up to 37% These 8 banking stocks can give more than 29% returns in 1 year, according to analysts