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What are TechRadar’s predictions for day 2 of OpenAI’s “12 days of OpenAI” I hear you cry? Well, Sam Altman said that we can expect “some big ones and some stocking stuffers” throughout the 12 days, and considering that yesterday we got a brand new version of ChatGPT (ChatGPT o1) I’d predict that today’s Xmas gift from OpenAI will be more of a “stocking stuffer” than one of the “big ones”.
Perhaps a minor update to ChatGPT search or ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode. What am I really hoping for? I want ChatGPT search to be rolled out to all users on the free tier. Fingers crossed!
One of the biggest announcements we expect to see over the next week or so is the official launch of Sora, OpenAI’s video generator which can transform a text prompt into an incredible video.
Sora was leaked last month by unhappy artists who have accused OpenAI of taking advantage for unpaid research and development purposes. There’s definitely a debate to be had on how OpenAI trains its AI models, but that’s maybe one for another day.
In terms of what Sora offers, well, imagine one of the best AI image generators, but video. I’ve not tried Sora yet, but from the demos online, it looks pretty awesome.
OpenAI also announced ChatGPT Pro yesterday, but who is it actually aimed at?
For $200/month ChatGPT Pro gives you unlimited usage and an even smarter version of o1 with “more benefits to come!”
The fact is that for almost everybody the current $20 a month ChatGPT Plus option will be easily sufficient. Perhaps it can do special things (like writing “David Mayer” with no problems), but it seems hard to justify beyond a select few users who need massive computing power. To me, the $200 price point seems more like a price anchor. Essentially, it makes the $20 ChatGPT Plus price point look really good value.
Yesterday, OpenAI kicked off the 12-day event with the announcement that the company’s o1 reasoning model would no longer be in preview, ready for everyone to try.
The AI model thrives with scientific equations and math problems with OpenAI saying o1 can solve 83% of the problems in the International Mathematics Olympiad qualifying exam, a massive improvement on GPT-4o, which only scored 13%. The new model makes fewer errors than the preview version, cutting down on major mistakes by 34%.
That wasn’t the only reveal, however…
Welcome to TechRadar’s “12 days of OpenAI” live blog, where our resident AI experts will be taking you through the next 12 (well, 11) days of everything exciting coming out of the world’s most famous AI company.
What will Sam Altman reveal? How will these new updates and products change the way we use artificial intelligence? Who knows, but we’re incredibly excited to find out.