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Yahoo
6 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
OpenAI fixes 'unintentional chart crime' after people pointed out something was off in the GPT-5 livestream
OpenAI charted the wrong course with their graphs on Thursday. Several charts featured in its GPT-5 livestream included mistakes. Sam Altman called it a "mega chart screwup," and OpenAI apologized for "unintentional chart crime." While most people were glued to OpenAI's newest AI model, GPT-5, during a demo Thursday, some couldn't help notice something had gone awry in the background. Several charts included in OpenAI's GPT-5 livestream on Thursday had some clear mistakes. One chart compared the models GPT-5 with thinking and OpenAI o3 on a metric called "coding deception." The former model has a deception rate of 50%, but this bar was less than half the size of the bar for o3, which has a smaller deception rate of 47.4%. Another chart comparing models on a different metric depicted 69.1% and 30.8% with the same size bar. A bar for 52.8% was also larger than both of these, though that's smaller than 69.1%. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman tweeted, "wow a mega chart screwup from us earlier." A marketing employee for OpenAI tweeted that the issue had been fixed in the blog post of the announcement, apologizing for the "unintentional chart crime." Tech demos aren't immune to the occasional flub. When Microsoft unveiled Bing's AI chatbot in 2023, it made several mistakes during its demo. When asked for pros and cons of a particular vacuum, it listed noisiness and a short cord as cons, but the vacuum is cordless. In an ad that same month, Google's AI chatbot Bard, which has since been renamed Gemini, gave an incorrect answer to a question about the James Webb Space Telescope. It's unclear if AI was used to make the charts, and OpenAI didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Read the original article on Business Insider


CNET
27-07-2025
- CNET
Watch This Humanoid Robot Swap Its Own Battery
Humanoid robots have crossed a new Rubicon in the latest demo of the Walker S2 robot from Ubtech Robotics. In it, the robot approaches a charging tower filled with multiple batteries (and one empty slot). It removes a battery from its back and replaces it with a fresh one from the charging stack before returning to what is some sort of work site. Now Playing: Ubtech's S2 Humanoid Robot Can Swap Its Own Battery for 24/7 Operation 03:00 The Walker S2 appears to have dual battery packs, so at least one is always plugged into the robot to supply power during changes. Ubtech Robotics' new Walker S2 robot features a new hot-swappable battery system. Ubtech Robotics Ubtech says this hot-swappable battery system will enable the company's robots to work 24/7 without interruption (not including routine battery swaps). To see this demo in action, check out the video in this article.