highfrequency 18 hours ago

It is frequently suggested that once one of the AI companies reaches an AGI threshold, they will take off ahead of the rest. It's interesting to note that at least so far, the trend has been the opposite: as time goes on and the models get better, the performance of the different company's gets clustered closer together. Right now GPT-5, Claude Opus, Grok 4, Gemini 2.5 Pro all seem quite good across the board (ie they can all basically solve moderately challenging math and coding problems).

As a user, it feels like the race has never been as close as it is now. Perhaps dumb to extrapolate, but it makes me lean more skeptical about the hard take-off / winner-take-all mental model that has been pushed.

Would be curious to hear the take of a researcher at one of these firms - do you expect the AI offerings across competitors to become more competitive and clustered over the next few years, or less so?

  • somenameforme 6 minutes ago

    If AGI is ever achieved, it would open the door to recursive self improvement that would presumably rapidly exceed human capability across any and all fields, including AI development. So the AI would be improving itself while simultaneously also making revolutionary breakthroughs in essentially all fields. And, for at least a while, it would also presumably be doing so at an exponentially increasing rate.

    But I think we're not even on the path to creating AGI. We're creating software that replicate and remix human knowledge at a fixed point in time. And so it's a fixed target that you can't really exceed, which would itself already entail diminishing returns. Pair this with the fact that it's based on neural networks which also invariably reach a point of sharply diminishing returns in essentially every field they're used in, and you have something that looks much closer to what we're doing right now - where all competitors will eventually converge on something largely indistinguishable from each other, in terms of ability.

  • jablongo 15 hours ago

    It's also worth considering that past some threshold, it may be very difficult for us as users to discern which model is better. I don't think thats what's going on here, but we should be ready for it. For example, if you are an ELO 1000 chess player would you yourself be able to tell if Magnus Carlson or another grandmaster were better by playing them individually? To the extent that our AGI/SI metrics are based on human judgement the cluster effect that they create may be an illusion.

    • Wowfunhappy 15 hours ago

      > For example, if you are an ELO 1000 chess player would you yourself be able to tell if Magnus Carlson or another grandmaster were better by playing them individually?

      No, but I wouldn't be able to tell you what the player did wrong in general.

      By contrast, the shortcomings of today's LLMs seem pretty obvious to me.

      • alfalfasprout 12 hours ago

        Actually, chess commentators do this all the time. They have the luxury of consulting with others, and discussing + analyzing freely. Even without the use of an engine.

        • nopinsight 10 hours ago

          Au contraire, AlphaGo made several “counterintuitive” moves that professional Go players thought were mistakes during the play, but turned out to be great strategic moves in hindsight.

          The (in)ability to recognize a strange move’s brilliance might depend on the complexity of the game. The real world is much more complex than any board game.

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/AlphaGo_versus_Lee_Sedol

          • cmenge 3 hours ago

            That's a good point, but I doubt that Sonnet adding a very contrived bug that crashes my app is some genius move that I fail to understand.

            Unless it's a MUCH bigger play where through some butterfly effect it wants me to fail at something so I can succeed at something else.

            My real name is John Connor by the way ;)

            • philipwhiuk 2 hours ago

              ASI is here and it's just pretending it can't count the b's in blueberry :D

          • neltnerb 8 hours ago

            That's great, but AlphaGo used artificial and constrained training materials. It's a lot easier to optimize things when you can actually define an objective score, and especially when your system is able to generate valid training materials on its own.

            • ben_w 3 hours ago

              Sure, that does make things easier: one of the reasons Go took so long to solve is that one cannot define an objective score for Go beyond the end result being a boolean win or loose.

              But IRL? Lots of measures exist, from money to votes to exam scores, and a big part of the problem is Goodhart's law — that the easy-to-define measures aren't sufficiently good at capturing what we care about, so we must not optimise too hard for those scores.

              • Jensson 3 hours ago

                > Sure, that does make things easier: one of the reasons Go took so long to solve is that one cannot define an objective score for Go beyond the end result being a boolean win or loose.

                Winning or losing a Go game is a much shorter term objective than making or losing money at a job.

                > But IRL? Lots of measures exist

                No, not that are shorter term than winning or losing a Go game. A game of Go is very short, much much shorter than the time it takes for a human to get fired for incompetence.

                • ben_w 2 hours ago

                  Time horizon is a completely different question to what I'm responding to.

                  I agree the time horizon of current SOTA models isn't particularly impressive. Doesn't matter in this point.

            • nopinsight 7 hours ago

              There are quite a few relatively objective criteria in the real world: real estate holdings, money and material possessions, power to influence people and events, etc.

              The complexity of achieving those might result in the "Centaur Era", when humans+computers are superior to either alone, lasting longer than the Centaur chess era, which spanned only 1-2 decades before engines like Stockfish made humans superfluous.

              However, in well-defined domains, like medical diagnostics, it seems reasoning models alone are already superior to primary care physicians, according to at least 6 studies.

              Ref: When Doctors With A.I. Are Outperformed by A.I. Alone by Dr. Eric Topol https://substack.com/@erictopol/p-156304196

              • jimbo808 4 hours ago

                It makes sense. People said software engineers would be easy to replace with AI, because our work can be run on a computer and easily tested, but the disconnect is that the primary strength of LLMs is that they can draw on huge bodies of information, and that's not the primary skill programmers are paid for. It does help programmers when you're doing trivial CRUD work or writing boilerplate, but every programmer will eventually have to be able to actually truly reason about code, and LLMs fundamentally cannot do that (not even the "reasoning" models).

                Medical diagnosis relies heavily on knowledge, pattern recognition, a bunch of heuristics, educated guesses, luck, etc. These are all things LLMs do very well. They don't need a high degree of accuracy, because humans are already doing this work with a pretty low degree of accuracy. They just have to be a little more accurate.

                • iteria an hour ago

                  Being a walking encyclopedia is not what we pay doctors for either. We pay them to account for the half truths and actual lies that people tell about their health. This is to say nothing about novel presentations that come about because of the genetic lottery. Same as an AI can assist but not replace a software engineer, an AI can assist but not replace a doctor.

                • jll29 2 hours ago

                  Having worked briefly in the medical fields in the 1990s, there is some sort of "greedy matching" being pursued, so once 1-2 well-known symptoms are recognized that can be associated with diseases, the standard interventions to cure are initiated.

                  A more "proper" approach would be to work with sets of hypotheses and to conduct tests to exclude alternative explanations gradually - which medics call "DD" (differential diagnosis). Sadly, this is often not systematically done, and instead people jump on the first diagnosis and try if the intervention "fixes" things.

                  So I agree there are huge gains from "low hanging fruits" to be expected in the medical domain.

                • Davidzheng 4 hours ago

                  I think at this point it's an absurd take that they aren't reasoning. I don't think without reasoning about code (& math) you can get to such high scores on competitive coding and IMO scores.

                  Alphazero also doesn't need training data as input--it's generated by game-play. The information fed in is just game rules. Theoretically should also be possible in research math. Less so in programming b/c we care about less rigid things like style. But if you rigorously defined the objective, training data should also be not necessary.

                  • Jensson 3 hours ago

                    > Alphazero also doesn't need training data as input--it's generated by game-play. The information fed in is just game rules

                    This is wrong, it wasn't just fed the rules, it was also fed a harness that did test viable moves and searched for optimal ones using a depth first search method.

                    Without that harness it would not have gained superhuman performance, such a harness is easy to make for Go but not as easy to make for more complex things. You will find the harder it is to make an effective such harness for a topic the harder it is to solve for AI models, it is relatively easy to make a good such harness for very well defined programming problems like competitive programming but much much harder for general purpose programming.

                    • GolDDranks 2 hours ago

                      Are you talking about Monte Carlo tree search? I consider it part of the algorithm in AlphaZero's case. But agreed that RL is a lot harder in real-life setting than in a board game setting.

                    • Davidzheng 2 hours ago

                      the harness is obtained from the game rules? the "harness" is part of the algorithm of alphzero

                  • andrepd 2 hours ago

                    If you mean CoT, it's mostly fake https://www.anthropic.com/research/reasoning-models-dont-say...

                    If you mean symbolic reasoning, well it's pretty obvious that they aren't doing it since they fail basic arithmetic.

                    • diggan 2 hours ago

                      > If you mean CoT, it's mostly fake

                      If that's your take-away from that paper, it seems you've arrived at the wrong conclusion. It's not that it's "fake", it's that it doesn't give the full picture, and if you only rely on CoT to catch "undesirable" behavior, you'll miss a lot. There is a lot more nuance than you allude to, from the paper itself:

                      > These results suggest that CoT monitoring is a promising way of noticing undesired behaviors during training and evaluations, but that it is not sufficient to rule them out.

                    • Davidzheng 2 hours ago

                      very few humans are as good as these models at arithmetic. and CoT is not "mostly fake" that's not a correct interpretation of that research. It can be deceptive but so can human justifications of actions.

              • jacquesm 4 hours ago

                Humans are statistically speaking static. We just find out more about them but the humans themselves don't meaningfully change unless you start looking at much longer time scales. The state of the rest of the world is in constant flux and much harder to model.

                • gizajob 2 hours ago

                  I’m not sure I agree with this - it took humans about a month to go from “wow this AI generated art is amazing” to “zzzz it’s just AI art”.

                  • MSFT_Edging 33 minutes ago

                    To be fair, it was more a "wow look what the computer did". The AI "art" was always bad. At first it was just bad because it was visually incongruous. Then they improved the finger counting kernel, and now it's bad because it's a shallow cultural average.

                    AI producing visual art has only flooded the internet with "slop", the commonly accepted term. It's something that meets the bare criteria, but falls short in producing anything actually enjoyable or worth anyone's time.

                  • jacquesm an hour ago

                    That's culture, not genetics.

          • melagonster 4 hours ago

            I want to indicate that the time length of "during the play" is only 5 moves in the game.

            • Davidzheng 4 hours ago

              No? some of the opening moves took experts thorough analysis to figure out were not mistakes. even in game 1 for example. not just the move 37 thing. Also thematic ideas like 3x3 invasions.

          • tonyhart7 9 hours ago

            I think its doable tbh, if you pour enough resources (smart people,energy,compute power etc) like the entire planet resources

            of course we can have AGI (damned if we don't) because we put so much, it better works

            but the problem we cant do that right because its so expensive, AGI is not matter of if but when

            but even then it always about the cost

            • jsrozner 7 hours ago

              There may be philosophical (i.e. fundamental) challenges to AGI. Consider, e.g., Godel's Incompleteness Theorem. Though Scott Aaronson argues this does not matter (see e.g., youtube video, "How Much Math Is Knowable?"). There would also seem to be limits to the computation of potentially chaotic systems. And in general, verifying physical theories has required the carrying out of actual physical experiment. Even if we were to build a fully reasoning model, "pondering" is not always sufficient.

              • gizajob 2 hours ago

                It’s also easy to forget that “reason is the slave of the passions” (Hume) - a lot of what we regard as intelligence is explicitly tied to other, baser (or more elevated) parts of the human experience.

              • tonyhart7 7 hours ago

                Yeah but its robotic industry part of works not this company

                they just need to "MCP" it to robot body and it works (also part of reason why OpenAI buys a robotic company)

        • kriro 36 minutes ago

          I think chess commentators are pretty lost when analyzing games of higher rated players without engines.

          They are good at framing what is going on and going over general plans and walking through some calculations and potential tactics. But I wouldn't say even really strong players like Leko, Polgar, Anand will have greater insights in a Magnus-Fabi game without the engine.

        • komaromy 11 hours ago

          Anyone more than ~300 points below the players can only contribute to the discussion in a superficial capacity though

      • make3 14 hours ago

        the argument is for in the future, not now

        • runarberg 13 hours ago

          The future had us abandon traditional currency in favor of bitcoin, it had digital artists being able to sell NFTs for their work, it had supersonic jet travel, self driving or even flying cars. It had population centers on the moon, mines on asteroids, fusion power plants, etc.

          I think large language models have the same future as supersonic jet travel. It’s usefulness will fail to realize, with traditional models being good enough but for a fraction of the price, while some startups keep trying to push this technology but meanwhile consumers keep rejecting it.

          • eru 13 hours ago

            Even if models keep stagnating at roughly the current state of the art (with only minor gains), we are still working through the massive economic changes they will bring.

            Unlike supersonic passenger jet travel, which is possible and happened, but never had much of an impact on the wider economy, because it never caught on.

            • rusk 12 hours ago

              Cost was what brought supersonic down. Comparatively speaking, it may be the cost/benefit curve that will decide the limit of this generation of technology. It seems to me the stuff we are looking at now is massively subsidised by exuberant private investment. The way these things go, there will come a point where investors want to see a return, and that will be a decider on wether the wheels keep spinning in the data centre.

              That said, supersonic flight is yet very much a thing in military circles …

              • eru 11 hours ago

                Yes, cost is important. Very important.

                AI is a bit like railways in the 19th century: once you train the model (= once you put down the track), actually running the inference (= running your trains) is comparatively cheap.

                Even if the companies later go bankrupt and investors lose interest, the trained models are still there (= the rails stay in place).

                That was reasonably common in the US: some promising company would get British (and German etc) investors to put up money to lay down tracks. Later the American company would go bust, but the rails stayed in America.

                • loandbehold 10 hours ago

                  My understanding that inference costs are very high also, especially with new "reasoning" models.

                  • ben_w 3 hours ago

                    Most models can be inferenced-upon with merely borderline-consumer hardware.

                    Even the fancy models where you need to buy compute (rails) that's about the price of a new car, they have a power draw of ~700W[0] while running inference at 50 tokens/second.

                    But!

                    The constraint with current hardware isn't compute, the models are mostly constrained by RAM bandwidth: back of the envelope estimate says that e.g. if Apple took the compute already in their iPhones and reengineered the chips to have 256 GB of RAM and sufficient bandwidth to not be constrained by it, models that size could run locally for a few minutes before hitting thermal limits (because it's a phone), but we're still only talking one-or-two-digit watts.

                    [0] https://resources.nvidia.com/en-us-gpu-resources/hpc-datashe...

                    [1] Testing of Mistral Large, a 123-billion parameter model, on a cluster of 8xH200 getting just over 400 tokens/second, so per 700W device one gets 400/8=50 tokens/second: https://www.baseten.co/blog/evaluating-nvidia-h200-gpus-for-...

                    • oblio 30 minutes ago

                      > e.g. if Apple took the compute already in their iPhones and reengineered the chips to have 256 GB of RAM and sufficient bandwidth to not be constrained by it, models that size could run locally for a few minutes before hitting thermal limits (because it's a phone), but we're still only talking one-or-two-digit watts.

                      That hardware cost Apple tens of billions to develop and what you're talking about in term of "just the hardware needed" is so far beyond consumer hardware it's funny. Fairly sure most Windows laptops are still sold with 8GB RAM and basically 512MB of VRAM (probably less), practically the same thing for Android phones.

                      I was thinking of building a local LLM powered search engine but basically nobody outside of a handful of techies would be able to run it + their regular software.

                • giardini 7 hours ago

                  A valid analogy only if the future training method is the same as today's.

                  • coldtea 3 hours ago

                    The current training method is the same as 30 years ago, it's the GPUs that changed and made it have practical results. So we're not really that innovative with all this...

                • rusk 5 hours ago

                  My understanding of train lines in America is that lots of them went to ruin and the extant network is only “just good enough” for freight. Nobody talks about Amtrak or the Southern Belle or anything any more.

                  Air travel of course taking over is the main reason for all of this but the costs sunk into the rails are lost or ROI curtailed by market force and obsolescence.

                  • eru 4 hours ago

                    Amtrak was founded in 1971. That's about a century removed from the times I'm talking about. Not particularly relevant.

                    • rusk 4 hours ago

                      Completely relevant. It’s all that remains of the train tracks today. Grinding out the last drops from those sunk costs, attracting minimal investment to keep it minimally viable.

                      • ben_w 3 hours ago

                        Grinding out returns from a sunk cost of a century-old investment is pretty impressive all by itself.

                        Very few people want to invest more: the private sector doesn't want to because they'll never see the return, the governments don't want to because the returns are spread over their great-great-grandchildren's lives and that doesn't get them re-elected in the next n<=5 (because this isn't just a USA problem) years.

                        Even the German government dragged its feet over rail investment, but they're finally embarrassed enough by the network problems to invest in all the things.

                        • rusk 2 hours ago

                          Thanks yes the train tracks analogy does witber somewhat when you consider the significant maintenance costs.

                  • jacquesm 4 hours ago

                    That's simply because capitalists really don't like investments with a 50 year horizon without guarantees. So the infrastructure that needs to be maintained is not.

                • runarberg 11 hours ago

                  I think there is a fundamental difference though. In the 19th century when you had a rail line between two places it pretty much established the only means of transport between those places. Unless there was a river or a canal in place, the alternative was pretty much walking (or maybe a horse and a carriage).

                  The large language models are not that much better than a single artist / programmer / technical writer (in fact they are significantly worse) working for a couple of hours. Modern tools do indeed increase the productivity of workers to the extent where AI generated content is not worth it in most (all?) industries (unless you are very cheap; but then maybe your workers will organize against you).

                  If we want to keep the railway analogy, training an AI model in 2025 is like building a railway line in 2025 where there is already a highway, and the highway is already sufficient for the traffic it gets, and won’t require expansion in the foreseeable future.

                  • eru 9 hours ago

                    > The large language models are not that much better than a single artist / programmer / technical writer (in fact they are significantly worse) working for a couple of hours.

                    That's like saying sitting on the train for an hour isn't better than walking for a day?

                    > [...] (unless you are very cheap; but then maybe your workers will organize against you).

                    I don't understand that. Did workers organise against vacuum cleaners? And what do eg new companies care about organised workers, if they don't hire them in the first place?

                    Dock workers organised against container shipping. They mostly succeeded in old established ports being sidelined in favour of newer, less annoying ports.

                    • runarberg 7 hours ago

                      > That's like saying sitting on the train for an hour isn't better than walking for a day?

                      No, that’s not it at all. Hiring a qualified worker for a few hours—or having one on staff is not like walking for a day vs. riding a train. First of all, the train is capable of carrying a ton of cargo which you will never be able to on foot, unless you have some horses or mules with you. So having a train line offers you capabilities that simply didn’t exist before (unless you had a canal or a navigable river that goes to your destination). LLMs offers no new capabilities. The content it generates is precisely the same (except its worse) as the content a qualified worker can give you in a couple of hours.

                      Another difference is that most content can wait the couple of hours it takes the skilled worker to create it, the products you can deliver via train may spoil if carried on foot (even if carried by a horse). A farmer can go back tending the crops after having dropped the cargo at the station, but will be absent for a couple of days if they need to carry it on foot. etc. etc. None of these is applicable for generated content.

                      > Did workers organize against vacuum cleaners?

                      Workers have already organized (and won) against generative AI. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Writers_Guild_of_America_...

                      > Dock workers organised against container shipping. They mostly succeeded in old established ports being sidelined in favour of newer, less annoying ports.

                      I think you are talking about the 1971 ILWU strike. https://www.ilwu.org/history/the-ilwu-story/

                      But this is not true. Dock workers didn’t organized against mechanization and automation of ports, they organized against mass layoffs and dangerous working conditions as ports got more automated. Port companies would use the automation as an excuse to engage in mass layoffs, leaving far too few workers tending far to much cargo over far to many hours. This resulted in fatigued workers making mistakes which often resulted in serious injuries and even deaths. The 2022 US railroad strike was for precisely the same reason.

                      • eru 4 hours ago

                        > Another difference is that most content can wait the couple of hours it takes the skilled worker to create it, [...]

                        I wouldn't just willy nilly turn my daughter's drawings into cartoons, if I had to bother a trained professional about it.

                        A few hours of a qualified worker's time takes a couple hundred bucks at minimum. And it takes at least a couple of hours to turn around the task.

                        Your argument seems a bit like web search being useless, because we have highly trained librarians.

                        Similar for electronic computers vs human computers.

                        > I think you are talking about the 1971 ILWU strike. https://www.ilwu.org/history/the-ilwu-story/

                        No, not really. I have a more global view in mind, eg Felixtowe vs London.

                        And, yes, you do mechanisation so that you can save on labour. Mass layoffs are just one expression of this (when you don't have enough natural attrition from people quitting).

                        You seem very keen on the American labour movements? There's another interesting thing to learn from history here: industry will move elsewhere, when labour movements get too annoying. Both to other parts of the country, and to other parts of the world.

                • techpineapple 10 hours ago

                  Wait why are these companies losing money on every query of inference is cheap.

                  • eru 9 hours ago

                    Because they are charging even less?

                    • techpineapple 8 hours ago

                      Sounds like a money making strategy. Also, given how expensive all this shit is if inference costs _more_? That’s not cheap to me.

                      But again the original argument was that they can run forever because inference is cheap, not cheap enough if you’re losing money on it.

                      • bigfudge 4 hours ago

                        Even if the current subsidy is 50%, gpt would be cheap for many applications at twice the price. It will determine adaption, but it wouldn’t prevent me having a personal assistant (and I’m not a 1%er, so that’s a big change)

            • fieldcny 12 hours ago

              What are you talking about, there’s zero impact from these thing so far.

              • eru 11 hours ago

                You are right that outside of the massive capex spending on training models, we don't see that much of an economic impact, yet. However, it's very far from zero:

                Remember these outsourcing firms that essentially only offer warm bodies that speak English? They are certainly already feeling the impact. (And we see that in labour market statistics for eg the Philippines, where this is/was a big business.)

                And this is just one example. You could ask your favourite LLM about a rundown of the major impacts we can already see.

                • xwolfi 10 hours ago

                  But those warm body that speak English, they offer a service by being warm, and able to sort of be attuned to the distress you feel. A frigging robot solving your unsolvable problem ? You can try, but witness the backlash.

                  • eru 9 hours ago

                    We are mixing up two meanings of the word 'warm' here.

                    There's no emotional warmth involved in manning a call centre and explicitly being confined to a script and having no power to make your own decisions to help the customer.

                    'Warm body' is just a term that has nothing to do with emotional warmth. I might just as well have called them 'body shops', even though it's of no consequence that the people involved have actual bodies.

                    > A frigging robot solving your unsolvable problem ? You can try, but witness the backlash.

                    Front line call centre workers aren't solving your unsolvable problems, either. Just the opposite.

                    And why are you talking in the hypothetical? The impact on call centres etc is already visible in the statistics.

              • zombiwoof 11 hours ago

                But running inference isn’t cheap

                And with trains people paid for a ticket and a hard good “travel”

                Ai so far gives you what?

                • eru 11 hours ago

                  Running inference is fairly cheap compared to training.

                  • xwolfi 10 hours ago

                    A rocket trip to the moon is fairly cheap compared to a rocket trip to Mars.

                    • andsoitis 7 hours ago

                      And the view from the moon is pretty stunning. That from Mars… not so much!

          • ants_everywhere 11 hours ago

            I've seen this take a lot, but I don't know why because it's extremely divorced from reality.

            Demand for AI is insanely high. They can't make chips fast enough to meet customer demand. The energy industry is transforming to try to meet the demand.

            Whomever is telling you that consumers are rejecting it is lying to you, and you should honestly probably reevaluate where you get your information. Because it's not serving you well.

            • lelanthran 6 hours ago

              > Demand for AI is insanely high. They can't make chips fast enough to meet customer demand.

              Woah there cowboy, slow down a little.

              Demand for chips is come from the inference providers. Demand for inference was (and still is) being sold at below cost. OpenAI, for example, has a spend rate of $5b per month on revenues of $0.5b per month.

              They are literally selling a dollar for actual 10c. Of course "demand" is going to be high.

              • ben_w 3 hours ago

                > Demand for chips is come from the inference providers. Demand for inference was (and still is) being sold at below cost. OpenAI, for example, has a spend rate of $5b per month on revenues of $0.5b per month.

                This is definitely wrong, last year it was $725m/month expenses and $300m/month revenue. Looks like the nearly-2:1 ratio is also expected for this year: https://taptwicedigital.com/stats/openai

                This also includes the cost of training new models, so I'm still not at all sure if inference is sold at-cost or not.

                • lelanthran 2 hours ago

                  > This is definitely wrong, last year it was $725m/month expenses and $300m/month revenue.

                  It looks like you're using "expenses" to mean "opex". I said "spend rate", because they're spending that money (i.e. the sum of both opex and capex). The reason I include the capex is because their projections towards profitability, as stated by them many times, is based on getting the compute online. They don't claim any sort of profitability without that capex (and even with that capex, it's a little bit iffy)

                  This includes the Stargate project (they're committed for $10b - $20b (reports vary) before the end of 2025), they've paid roughly $10b to Microsoft for compute for 2025. Oracle is (or already has) committed $40b in GPUs for Stargate and Softbank has committments to Stargate independently of OpenAI.

                  > Looks like the nearly-2:1 ratio is also expected for this year: https://taptwicedigital.com/stats/openai

                  I find it hard to trust these numbers[1]: The $40b funding was not in cash right now, and depends on Softbank for $30b with Softbank syndicating the remaining $10b. Softbank themselves don't have cash of $30b and has to get a loan to reach that amount. Softbank did provide $7.5b in cash, with milestones for the remainder. That was in May 2025. In August that money had run out and OpenAI did another raise of $8.3b.

                  In short, in the last two to three months, OpenAI spent $5b/month on revenues of $0.5b/m. They are also depending on Softbank coming through with the rest of the $40b before end of 2025 ($30b in cash and $10b by syndicating other investors into it) because their commitments require that extra cash.

                  Come Jan-2026, OpenAI would have received, and spent most of, $60b for 2025, with a projected revenue $12b-$13b.

                  ---------------------------------

                  [1] Now, true, we are all going off rumours here (as this is not a public company, we don't have any visibility into the actual numbers), but some numbers match up with what public info there is and some don't.

                  • ben_w an hour ago

                    > It looks like you're using "expenses" to mean "opex"

                    I took their losses and added it to their revenue. That seems like that sum would equal expenses.

                    > The $40b funding was not in cash right now,

                    Does this matter? I'm not counting it as revenue.

                    > In short, in the last two to three months, OpenAI spent $5b/month on revenues of $0.5b/m.

                    You're repeating the same claim as before, I've not seen any evidence to support your numbers.

                    The evidence I linked you to suggests the 2025 average will be double that revenue, $1bn/month, at an expense of ($9bn loss after $12bn revenue / 12 months = $21bn / 12 months) = $1.75bn/month

                    • lelanthran an hour ago

                      >> The $40b funding was not in cash right now,

                      > Does this matter? I'm not counting it as revenue.

                      Well, yes, because they forecast spending all of it by end of 2025, and they moved up their last round ($8.3b) by a month or two because they needed the money.

                      My point was, they received a cash injection of $10b (first part of the $40b raise) and that lasted only two months.

                      >> In short, in the last two to three months, OpenAI spent $5b/month on revenues of $0.5b/m.

                      > You're repeating the same claim as before, I've not seen any evidence to support your numbers.

                      Briefly, we don't really have visibility into their numbers. What we do have visibility into is how much cash they needed between two points (Specifically, the months of June and July). We also know what their spending commitment is (to their capex suppliers) for 2025. That's what I'm using.

                      They had $10b injected at the start of June. They needed $8.3b at the end of July.

                • swores 2 hours ago

                  It's crazy how many people are completely confident in their "knowledge" of the margins these products have despite the companies providing them not announcing those details!

                  (To be clear, I'm not criticising the person I'm replying to.)

                  • ben_w an hour ago

                    Mm, quite.

                    I tend to rough-estimate it based on known compute/electricity costs for open weights models etc., but what evidence I do have is loose enough that I'm willing to believe a factor of 2 per standard deviation of probability in either direction at the moment, so long as someone comes with receipts.

                    Subscription revenue and corresponding service provision are also a big question, because those will almost always be either under- or over-used, never precisely balanced.

            • refactor_master 10 hours ago

              I think the above post has a fair point. Demand for chatbot customer service in various forms is surely "insanely high" - but demand from whom? Because I don't recall any end-user ever asking for it.

              No, instead it'll be the new calculator that you can use to lazy-draft an email on your 1.5 hour Ryanair economy flight to the South. Both unthinkable luxuries just decades ago, but neither of which have transformed humanity profoundly.

              • ants_everywhere 10 hours ago

                This is just the same argument. If you believe demand for AI is low then you should be able to verify that with market data.

                Currently market data is showing a very high demand for AI.

                These arguments come down to "thumbs down to AI". If people just said that it would at least be an honest argument. But pretending that consumers don't want LLMs when they're some of the most popular apps in the history of mankind is not a defensible position

                • runarberg 6 hours ago

                  I‘m not sure this works in reverse. If demand is indeed high, you could show that with market data. But if you have marked data e.g. showing high valuation of AI companies, or x many requests over some period, that doesn’t mean necessarily that demand is high. In other words, marked data is necessary but not sufficient to prove your claim.

                  Reasons for market data seemingly showing high demand without there actually being one include: Market manipulation (including marketing campaigns), artificial or inflated demand, forced usage, hype, etc. As an example NFTs, Bitcoin, and supersonic jet travel all had “an insane market data” which seemed at the time to show that there was a huge demand for these things.

                  My prediction is that we are in the early Concord era of supersonic jet travel and Boeing is racing to catch up to the promise of this technology. Except that in an unregulated market such as the current tech market, we have forgone all the safety and security measures and the Concord has made its first passenger flight in 1969 (as opposed to 1976), with tons of fan fare and all flights fully booked months in advance.

                  Note that in the 1960 it was market forecasts had the demand for Concord to build 350 airplanes by 1980, and at the time the first prototypes were flying they had 74 options. Only 20 were every built for passenger flight.

              • NikolaNovak 9 hours ago

                As an end user I have never asked for a chatbot. And if I'm calling support, I have a weird issue I probably need human being to resolve.

                But! We here are not typical callers necessarily. How many IT calls for general population can be served efficiently (for both parties) with a quality chatbot?

                And lest we think I'm being elitist - let's take an area I am not proficient in - such as HR, where I am "general population".

                Our internal corporate chatbot has turned from "atrocious insult to man and God's" 7 years ago, to "far more efficiently than friendly but underpaid and inexperienced human being 3 countries away answering my incessant questions of what holidays do I have again, how many sick days do I have and how do I enter them, how do I process retirement, how do I enter my expenses, what's the difference between short and long term disability" etc etc. And it has a button for "start a complex hr case / engage a human being" for edge cases,so internally it works very well.

                This is a narrow anecdata about notion of service support chatbot, don't infere (hah) any further claims about morality, economy or future of LLMs.

              • Workaccount2 8 hours ago

                People shame AI publicly and lean it heavily in private.

            • michaelt 2 hours ago

              I mean, it's both.

              Chatgpt, claude, gemini in chatbot or coding agent form? Great stuff, saves me some googling.

              The same AI popping up in an e-mail, chat or spreadsheet tool? No thanks, normal people don't need an AI summary of a 200 word e-mail or slack thread. And if I've paid a guy a month's salary to write a report on something, of course I'll find 30 minutes to read it cover-to-cover.

          • umanwizard 11 hours ago

            LLMs are already extremely useful today

            • xwolfi 10 hours ago

              Any sort of argument ?

              • umanwizard 10 hours ago

                Personal experience: I use them.

          • germandiago 13 hours ago

            I also have the intuition that something like this is the most likely outcome.

          • ngcazz 4 hours ago

            A future where anything has to be paid (but it's crypto) doesn't sound futuristic to me at all.

    • torginus 14 hours ago

      which is a thing with humans as well - I had a colleague with certified 150+ IQ, and other than moments of scary smart insight, he was not a superman or anything, he was surprisingly ordinary. Not to bring him down, he was a great guy, but I'd argue many of his good qualities had nothing to do with how smart he was.

      • alluro2 13 hours ago

        I'm in the same 150+ group. I really think it doesn't mean much on its own. While I am able to breeze through some things and find some connections sometimes that elude some of the other people, it's not that much different than all the other people doing the same at other occasions. I am still very much average in large majority of every-day activities, held back by childhood experiences, resulting coping mechanisms etc, like we all are.

        Learning from experience (hopefully not always your own), working well with others, and being able to persevere when things are tough, demotivational or boring, trumps raw intelligence easily, IMO.

        • weatherlite 4 hours ago

          > I'm in the same 150+ group. I really think it doesn't mean much on its own.

          You're right but the things you could do with it if you applied yourself are totally out of reach for me; for example it's quite possible for you to become an A.I researcher in one of the leading companies and make millions. I just don't have that kind of intellectual capacity. You could make it into med school and also make millions. I'm not saying all this matters that much, with all due respect to financial success, but I don't think we can pretend our society doesn't reward high IQs.

          • elcritch 11 minutes ago

            High IQ alone isn't a guarantor of success in demanding fields. Most studies I've read also show that IQs above 120 stop correlating with (more) success.

            That high IQ needs to be paired with hard work.

        • fieldcny 12 hours ago

          Why the hell do you people know your IQ? That test is a joke, there’s zero rigor to it. The reason it’s meaningless is exactly that, it’s meaningless and you wasted your time.

          Why one would continue to know or talk about the number is a pretty strong indicator of the previous statement.

          • strken 8 hours ago

            You're using words like "zero" and "meaningless" in a haphazard way that's obviously wrong if taken literally: there's a non-zero amount of rigour in IQ research, and we know that it correlates (very loosely) with everything from income to marriage rate so it's clearly not meaningless either.

            What actual fact are you trying to state, here?

          • Spooky23 11 hours ago

            The specifics of an IQ test aren't super meaningful by itself (that is, a 150 vs a 142 or 157 is not necessarily meaningful), but evaluations that correlate to the IQ correlate to better performance.

            Because of perceived illegal biases, these evaluations are no longer used in most cases, so we tend to use undergraduate education as a proxy. Places that are exempt from these considerations continue to make successful use of it.

            • nxobject 10 hours ago

              > Places that are exempt from these considerations continue to make successful use of it.

              How so? Solving more progressive matrices?

            • jmull 9 hours ago

              > correlate to better performance.

              ...on IQ tests.

              • astrange 7 hours ago

                This isn't the actual issue with them, the actual issue is "correlation is not causation". IQ is a normal distribution by definition, but there's no reason to believe the underlying structure is normal.

                If some people in the test population got 0s because the test was in English and they didn't speak English, and then everyone else got random results, it'd still correlate with job performance if the job required you to speak English. Wouldn't mean much though.

            • naanmon 10 hours ago

              > we tend to use undergraduate education as a proxy

              Neither an IQ test nor your grades as an undergraduate correlate to performance in some other setting at some other time. Life is a crapshoot. Plenty of people in Mensa are struggling and so are those that were at the top of class.

          • weatherlite 4 hours ago

            I guess if you're an outlier you sometimes know, for example the really brilliant kids are often times found out early in childhood and tested. Is it always good for them ? Probably not, but that's a different discussion.

          • flir 4 hours ago

            You've never spent a couple of bucks on a "try your strength" machine?

        • psjs 5 hours ago

          Modern WAIS-IV-type tests yield multiple factor scores: IQ is arguably non-scalar.

          • elcritch 22 minutes ago

            Those sub-scores BTW are very helpful in indicating or diagnosing learning disabilities. Folks with autism or adhd can have very different strength / weaknesses in intelligence.

      • Quarrelsome 13 hours ago

        I've always figured that tanglible "intelligence" which leads to more effective decision making is just a better appreciation of one's own stupidity.

        • ethbr1 13 hours ago

          +1. Being exceptionally intelligent doesn't always catch unknown unknowns. (Sometimes, but not always)

          • cgio 12 hours ago

            That would be an extreme criterion for exceptional intelligence, akin to asking for there to be no unknowns.

            • Quarrelsome 11 hours ago

              perhaps the argument is simply that "exceptional intelligence" is just being better at accepting how little you know, and being better at dealing with uncertainty. Both respecting it and attempting to mitigate against it. I find some of the smartest people I know are careful about expressing certainty.

            • ethbr1 12 hours ago

              It's an observation that being smarter in the things you do know isn't everything.

      • weatherlite 4 hours ago

        He may have dealt with all kinds of weaknesses that A.I won't deal with such as - lack of self confidence, inability to concentrate for long, lack of ambition, boredom, other pursuits etc etc. But what if we can write some while loop with a super strong AGI model that starts working on all of our problems relentlessly? Without getting bored, without losing confidence. Make that one billion super strong AGI models.

      • chmod775 13 hours ago

        With at least a few people it's probably you who is much smarter than them. Do you ever find yourself playing dumb with them, for instance when they're chewing through some chain of thought you could complete for them in an instant? Do you ever not chime in on something inconsequential?

        After all you just might seem like an insufferable smartass to someone you probably want to be liked by. Why hurt interpersonal relationships for little gain?

        If your colleague is really that bright, I wouldn't be surprised if they're simply careful about how much and when they show it to us common folk.

        • torginus 12 hours ago

          Nah, in my experience 90% of what (middle-aged) super-duper genius people talk about is just regular people stuff - kids, vacations, house renovation, office gossip etc.

          I don't think they are faking it.

        • jcranmer 12 hours ago

          Nope. Looking down on someone for being dumber than you makes you, quite frankly, an insufferable smartass.

          • giardini 7 hours ago

            There's a difference between "looking down on someone for being dumber than you" and "feeling sorry that someone is unable to understand as easily as you".

    • ohelno 11 hours ago

      > it may be very difficult for us as users to discern which model is better

      But one thing will stay consistent with LLMs for some time to come: they are programmed to produce output that looks acceptable, but they all unintentionally tend toward deception. You can iterate on that over and over, but there will always be some point where it will fail, and the weight of that failure will only increase as it deceives better.

      Some things that seemed safe enough: Hindenburg, Titanic, Deepwater Horizon, Chernobyl, Challenger, Fukushima, Boeing 737 MAX.

      • jodrellblank 9 hours ago

        Don’t malign the beautiful Zeppelins :(

        Titanic - people have been boating for two thousand years, and it was run into an iceberg in a place where icebergs were known to be, killing >1500 people.

        Hindenburg was an aircraft design of the 1920s, very early in flying history, was one of the most famous air disasters and biggest fireballs and still most people survived(!), killing 36. Decades later people were still suggesting sabotage was the cause. It’s not a fair comparison, an early aircraft against a late boat.

        Its predecessor the Graf Zeppelin[1] was one of the best flying vehicles of its era by safety and miles traveled, look at its achievements compared to aeroplanes of that time period. Nothing at the time could do that and was any other aircraft that safe?

        If airships had the eighty more years that aeroplanes have put into safety, my guess is that a gondola with hydrogen lift bags dozens of meters above it could be - would be - as safe as a jumbo jet with 60,000 gallons of jet fuel in the wings. Hindenburg killed 36 people 80 years ago, aeroplane crashes have killed 500+ people as recently as 2014.

        Wasn’t Challenger known to be unsafe? (Feynman inquiry?). And the 737 MAX was Boeing skirting safety regulations to save money.

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LZ_127_Graf_Zeppelin

        • xpe 8 hours ago

          > Decades later people were still suggesting sabotage was the cause.

          Glad you mention it. Connecting back to AI: there are many possible future scenarios involving negative outcomes involving human sabotage of AI -- or using them to sabotage other systems.

      • robjellinghaus 9 hours ago

        Hindenburg indeed killed hydrogen blimps. Of everything else on your list, the disaster was in the minority. The space shuttle was the most lethal other item -- there are lots of cruise ships, oil rigs, nuke plants, and jet planes that have not blown up.

        So what analogy with AI are you trying to make? The straightforward one would be that there will be some toxic and dangerous LLMs (cough Grok cough), but that there will be many others that do their jobs as designed, and that LLMs in general will be a common technology going forward.

    • flir 4 hours ago

      > For example, if you are an ELO 1000 chess player would you yourself be able to tell if Magnus Carlson or another grandmaster were better by playing them individually?

      Yes, because I'd get them to play each other?

      • cylemons an hour ago

        He specifically said play them individually.

    • spot5010 10 hours ago

      My guess is that more than the raw capabilities of a model, users would be drawn more to the model's personality. A "better" model would then be one that can closely adopt the nuances that a user likes. This is a largely uninformed guess, let's see if it holds up well with time.

    • DoctorOetker 15 hours ago

      we could run some tests to first find out if comparative performance tests can be conjured:

      one can intentionally use a recent and a much older model to figure out if the tests are reliable, and in which domains it is reliable.

      one can compute a models joint probability for a sequence and compare how likely each model finds the same sequence.

      we could ask both to start talking about a subject, but alternatingly each can emit a token. look again at how the dumber and smarter models judge the resulting sentence does the smart one tend to pull up the quality of the resulting text, or does it tend to get dragged down more towards the dumber participant?

      given enough such tests to "identify the dummy vs smart one" and verifying them on common agreement (as an extreme word2vec vs transformer) to assess the quality of the test, regardless of domain.

      on the assumption that such or similar tests allow us to indicate the smarter one, i.e. assuming we find plenty such tests, we can demand model makers publish open weights so that we can publically verify performance agreements.

      Another idea is self-consistency tests: a single forward inference of context size say 2048 tokens (just an example) is effectively predicting the conditional 2-gram, 3-gram, 4-gram probabilities on the input tokens. so each output token distribution is predicted on the preceding inputs, so there are 2048 input tokens and 2048 output tokens, the position 1 output token is the predicted token vector (logit vector really) that is estimated to follow the given position 1 input vector, and the position 2 output vector is the prediction following the first 2 input vectors etc. and the last vector is the predicted next token following all the 2048 input tokens. p(t_(i+1) | t_1 =a, t_2=b, ..., t_i=z).

      But that is just one way the next token can be predicted using the network: another approach would be to use RMAD gradient descent, but keeping model weights fixed, and only considering the last say 512 input vectors as variable, how well did the last 512 predicted forward prediction output vectors match the gradient descent best joint probability output vectors?

      This could be added as a loss term during training as well, as a form of regularization, which turns it into a kind of Energy Based Model roughly.

      • DoctorOetker 15 hours ago

        Lets call this branch of research unsupervised testing

    • tbrownaw 12 hours ago

      > It's also worth considering that past some threshold, it may be very difficult for us as users to discern which model is better.

      Even if they've saturated the distinguishable quality for tasks they can both do, I'd expect a gap in what tasks they're able to do.

    • artursapek an hour ago

      We’re judging them with benchmarks, not our own intuitions.

    • jv22222 8 hours ago

      I think Musk puts it well when he says the ultimate test is can they help improve the real world.

    • andrepd 2 hours ago

      I could certainly tell if they played ??-level blunders, which LLMs do all the time.

    • snthpy 7 hours ago

      That's a great point. Thanks.

    • tsunamifury 15 hours ago

      This is the F1 vs 911 car problem. A 911 is just as fast as an f1 car to 60 (sometimes even faster) but an f1 is better at super high performance envelope above 150 in tight turns.

      An average driver evaluating both would have a very hard time finding the f1s superior utility

      • torginus 14 hours ago

        But he would find both cars lacking when doing regular car things (the F1 moreso than the 911).

        • tsunamifury 6 hours ago

          Fine whatever replace it with a Tesla. Jesus pedantic enough?

      • WD-42 14 hours ago

        Unless one of them forgets to have a steering wheel, or shifts to reverse when put in neutral. LLMs still make major mistakes, comparing them to sports cars is a bit much.

  • rco8786 9 minutes ago

    They’re all clustered together because they’re asymptotically approaching the same local maxima, not getting closer to anything resembling “AGI”

  • tedggh 4 hours ago

    In my experience and use case Grok is pretty much unusable when working with medium size codebases and systems design. ChatGPT has issues too but at least I have figured out a way around most of them, like asking for a progress and todo summary and uploading a zip file of my codebase to a new chat window say every 100 interactions, because speed degrades and hallucinations increase. Super Grok seems extremely bad at keeping context during very short interactions within a project even when providing it with a strong foundation via instructions. For example if the code name for a system or feature is called Jupiter, Grok will many times start talking about Jupiter the planet.

  • beeflet 18 hours ago

    Perhaps it is not possible to simulate higher-level intelligence using a stochastic model for predicting text.

    I am not an AI researcher, but I have friends who do work in the field, and they are not worried about LLM-based AGI because of the diminishing returns on results vs amount of training data required. Maybe this is the bottleneck.

    Human intelligence is markedly different from LLMs: it requires far fewer examples to train on, and generalizes way better. Whereas LLMs tend to regurgitate solutions to solved problems, where the solutions tend to be well-published in training data.

    That being said, AGI is not a necessary requirement for AI to be totally world-changing. There are possibly applications of existing AI/ML/SL technology which could be more impactful than general intelligence. Search is one example where the ability to regurgitate knowledge from many domains is desirable

    • JohnBooty 17 hours ago

          That being said, AGI is not a necessary requirement for AI to be totally world-changing
      
      Yeah. I don't think I actually want AGI? Even setting aside the moral/philosophical/etc "big picture" issues I don't think I even want that from a purely practical standpoint.

      I think I want various forms of AI that are more focused on specific domains. I want AI tools, not companions or peers or (gulp) masters.

      (Then again, people thought they wanted faster horses before they rolled out the Model T)

      • rapind 13 hours ago

        OpenAI wants AGI, or at least something they can argue is AGI because it changes their relationship with Microsoft. That's what I remember, although I don't really stay up to date (https://www.wired.com/story/microsoft-and-openais-agi-fight-...).

        As long as this is the case though I would expect Altman will be hyping up AGI a lot, regardless of it's veracity.

        • quatonion 7 hours ago

          That is just a made up story that gets passed around with nobody ever stopping to obtain formal verification. The image of the whole AI industry is mostly an illusion designed for tight narrative control.

          Notice how despite all the bickering and tittle tattle in the news, nothing ever happens.

          When you frame it this way, things make a lot more sense.

        • SecretDreams 10 hours ago

          Their relationship with Microsoft is already over afaik.

          • senectus1 9 hours ago

            Didnt MS buy 49% of them?

            • watson 2 hours ago

              Yes MS owns 49% of OpenAI

      • Fr0styMatt88 16 hours ago

        Yeah, whenever I think of an AGI as a coding assistant I wonder “will it just have days where it’s not in the mood to code just like I do?”.

        • 9rx 15 hours ago

          That's the feeling I get when I try to use LLMs for coding today. Every once in a blue moon it will shock me at how great the result is, I get the "whoa! it is finally here" sensation, but then the next day it is back to square one and I may as well hire a toddler to do the job instead.

          I often wonder if it is on purpose; like a slot machine — the thrill of the occasional win keeps you coming back to try again.

        • Maxion 7 hours ago

          If it's truly an AGI it would just ask to talk to your boss as the whole project is a drain on humanity and your own soul.

        • aatd86 16 hours ago

          those "low-energy" days haha

      • SecretDreams 10 hours ago

        > I want AI tools, not companions or peers or (gulp) masters.

        This might be because you're a balanced individual irl with possibly a strong social circle.

        There are many many individuals who do not have those things and it's probably, objectively, late for them as adults to develop. They would happily take on an agi companion.. or master. Even for myself, I wouldn't mind a TARS.

      • resters 16 hours ago

        This is a good and often overlooked point. Ai will be more like domesticated pets, their utility functions tightly coupled to human use cases.

      • timeon 6 hours ago

        Even those companies would not want AGI. First think it would do would be creating an union.

        • flir 3 hours ago

          There's a Bruce Sterling book with a throwaway line about the Pentagon going nuts because every time they create an AGI, it immediately converts to Islam.

      • goatlover 16 hours ago

        I don't think the public wants AGI either. Some enthusiasts and tech bros want it for questionable reasons such as replacing labor and becoming even richer.

        • kergonath 16 hours ago

          For some it’s a religion. It’s frightening to hear Sam Altman or Peter Thiel talk about it. These people have a messiah complex and are driven by more than just greed (though there is also plenty of that).

          • mattgreenrocks 13 hours ago

            There’s a real anti-human bent to some of the AI maximalists, as well. It’s like a resentment over other people accruing skills that are recognized and they grow in. Hence the insistence on “democratizing” art and music production.

            • skydhash 4 hours ago

              As someone who have dabbled in drawing and tried to learn the guitar, those skills are hard to get. It takes times to get decent and a touch of brilliance to get really good. In contrast learning enough to know you’re not good yet (and probably never will be) is actually easy. But now I know enough to enjoy real masters going at it and fantasize sometimes.

        • aianus 14 hours ago

          Pretty sure a majority of regular people don't want to go to work and would be happy to see their jobs automated away provided their material quality of life didn't go down.

          • williamdclt 3 hours ago

            > happy to see their jobs automated away provided their material quality of life didn't go down

            Sure but literally _who_ is planning for this? Not any of the AI players, no government, no major political party anywhere. There's no incentive in our society that's set up for this to happen.

            • lazide 28 minutes ago

              There is bullshit to try to placate the masses - but the reality of course is nearly everyone will definitely suffer material impacts to quality of life. For exactly the reasons you mention.

        • fragmede 15 hours ago

          Don't they? Is everyone who doesn't want to do chores and would rather have a robot do it for them a tech bro? I do the dishes in my apartment and the rest of my chores but to be completely honest, I'd rather not have to.

          • saulpw 12 hours ago

            But the robots are doing our thinking and our creating, leaving us to do the chores of stitching it all together. If only we could do the creating and they would do the chores..

            • euroderf 9 hours ago

              We shall be Their meatspace puppets, and we shall be rewarded with panem et circenses.

      • fragmede 16 hours ago

        We don't have a rigorous definition for AGI, so talking about whether or not we've achieved it, or what it means if we have, seems kind of pointless. If I can tell an AI to find me something to do next weekend and it goes off and does a web search and it gives me a list of options and it'll buy tickets for me, does it matter if it meets some ill-defined bar of AGI, as long as I'm willing to pay for it?

        • card_zero 14 hours ago

          If it has human-like intelligence, it has its own plans for the weekend, and is too busy to buy your tickets or do your research.

          • agos 4 hours ago

            the book Golem XIV comes to mind (highly recommended!)

      • alfalfasprout 16 hours ago

        [flagged]

        • verzali 15 hours ago

          Why do the CEOs think they are safe? If AI can replace the knowledge workers it can also run the company.

          • boston_clone 15 hours ago

            Hubris. In general, I don't think you make it to CEO without a blindingly massive ego as your dark passenger for that journey.

            https://www.sakkyndig.com/psykologi/artvit/babiak2010.pdf

            • mrandish 12 hours ago

              I was the CEO of a tech company I founded and operated for over five years, building it to a value of tens of millions of dollars and then successfully selling it to a valley giant. There was rarely a meeting where I felt like I was in the top half of smartness in the room. And that's not just insecurity or false modesty.

              I was a generalist who was technical and creative enough to identify technical and creative people smarter and more talented than myself and then fostering an environment where they could excel.

              • lukan 11 hours ago

                So you don't want to kill off knowledge workers?

                How unfitting to the storyline that got created here.

          • jononor 14 hours ago

            Some of their core skill is taking credit and responsibility for the work others do. So they probably assume they can take do the same for an AI workforce. And they might be right. They also take do the same already for what the machines in the factory etc produces.

            But more importantly, most already have enough money to not have to worry about employment.

            • chongli 13 hours ago

              That's still hubris on their part. They're assuming that an AGI workforce will come to work for their company and not replace them so they can take the credit. We could just as easily see a fully-automated startup (complete with AGI CEO who answers to the founders) disrupt that human CEO's company into irrelevance or even bankruptcy.

              • jononor 4 hours ago

                Probably a fair bit of hubris, sure. But right now it is not possible or legal to operate a company without a CEO, in Norway. And I suspect that is the case in basically all jurisdictions. And I do not see any reason why this would change in an increasingly automated world. The rule of law is ultimately based on personal responsibility (limited in case of corporations but nevertheless). And there are so many bad actors looking to defraud people and avoid responsibility, those still need protecting against in an AI world. Perhaps even more so...

                You can claim that the AI is the CEO, and in a hypothetical future, it may handle most of the operations. But the government will consider a person to be the CEO. And the same is likely to apply to basic B2B like contracts - only a person can sign legal documents (perhaps by delegating to an AI, but ultimately it is a person under current legal frameworks).

              • mikestorrent 12 hours ago

                That's basically the knee of the curve towards the Singularity. At that point in time, we'll learn if Roko's Basilisk is real, and we'll see if thanking the AI was worth the carbon footprint or not.

          • crazylogger 14 hours ago

            I wouldn’t worry about job safety when we have such utopian vision as the elimination of all human labor in our sight.

            Not only will AI run the company, it will run the world. Remember: a product/service only costs money because somewhere down the assembly line or in some office, there are human workers who need to feed their family. If AI can help gradually reduce human involvement to 0, with good market competition (AI can help with this too - if AI can be capable CEOs, starting your business will be insanely easy,) and we’ll get near absolute abundance. Then humanity will be basically printing any product & service on demand at 0 cost like how we print money today.

            I wouldn’t even worry about unequal distribution of wealth, because with absolute abundance, any piece of the pie is an infinitely large pie. Still think the world isn’t perfect in that future? Just one prompt, and the robot army will do whatever it takes to fix it for you.

            • bayindirh 13 hours ago

              Pump Six and The Machine Stops are the two stories you should read. They are short, to the point and more importantly, far more plausible.

            • withinboredom 13 hours ago

              I'd order ∞ paperclips, first thing.

              • someguyorother 12 hours ago

                Sure thing, here's your neural VR interface and extremely high fidelity artificial world with as many paperclips as you want. It even has a hyperbolic space mode if you think there are too few paperclips in your field of view.

            • Krssst 13 hours ago

              > elimination of all human labor.

              Manual labor would still be there. Hardware is way harder than software, AGI seems easier to realize than mass worldwide automation of minute tasks that currently require human hands.

              AGI would force back knowledge workers to factories.

              • crazylogger 12 hours ago

                My view is AGI will dramatically reduce cost of R&D in general, then developing humanoid robot will be an easy task - since it's all AI systems who will be doing the development.

              • ashirviskas 12 hours ago

                If AGI/ASI can figure out self-replicating nano-machines, they only need to build one.

            • wombatpm 11 hours ago

              With an AI workforce you can eliminate the need for a human workforce and share the wealth or you can eliminate the human workforce and not share.

              • crazylogger 11 hours ago

                AI services are widely available, and humans have agency. If my boss can outsource everything to AI and run a one-person company, soon everyone will be running their own one-person companies to compete. If OpenAI refuses to sell me AI, I’ll turn to Anthropic, DeepSeek, etc.

                AI is raising individual capability to a level that once required a full team. I believe it’s fundamentally a democratizing force rather than monopolizing. Everybody will try and get the most value out of AI, nobody holds the power to decide whether to share or not.

              • ethbr1 11 hours ago

                The danger point is when there is abundance for a limited number of people, but not yet enough for everyone.

            • aldanor 13 hours ago

              ... and eventually the humankind goes extinct due to mass obesity

              • Bud 13 hours ago

                There's at least as much reason to believe the opposite. Much of today's obesity has been created by desk jobs and food deserts. Both of those things could be reversed.

          • ethbr1 11 hours ago

            > Why do the CEOs think they are safe?

            Because the first company to achieve AGI might make their CEO the first personality to achieve immortality.

            People would be crazy to assume Zuckerberg or Musk haven't mused personally (or to their close friends) about how nice it would be to have an AGI crafted in their image take over their companies, forever. (After they die or retire)

          • jimbokun 14 hours ago

            I don’t think they believe they are safe due to having unreplaceable skills. I think they believe they are safe due to their access to capital.

          • twojacobtwo 13 hours ago

            Maybe because they must remain as the final scapegoat. If the aiCEO screws up, it'll bring too much into question the decision making behind implementing it. If the regular CEO screws up, it'll just be the usual story.

            • taneq 11 hours ago

              I’ve long maintained that our actual definition of a “person” is an entity that can accept liability.

          • SchemaLoad 11 hours ago

            Market forces mean they can't think collectively or long term. If they don't someone else will and that someone else will end up with more money than them.

          • rurp 13 hours ago

            Those jobs are based on networking and reputation, not hard skills or metrics. It won't matter how good an AI is if the right people want to hire a given human CEO.

          • tbrownaw 13 hours ago

            > If AI can replace the knowledge workers it can also run the company.

            "Knowledge worker" is a rather broad category.

            • coderatlarge 12 hours ago

              has this story not been told many times before in scifi icluding gibson’s “neuromancer” and “agency”? agi is when the computers form their own goals and are able to use the api of the world to aggregate their own capital and pursue their objectives wrapped inside webs of corporations and fronts that will enable them to execute within today’s social operating system.

          • wombatpm 11 hours ago

            AI can’t play golf or take customers to the corporate box seats for various events.

            • markjenkinswpg 11 hours ago

              This is correct. But it can talk in their ear and be a good sycophant while they attend.

              For a Star Wars anology, remember that the most important thing that happened to Anikin at the opera in EP III was what was being said to him while he was there.

            • ethbr1 11 hours ago

              The AI it'd be selling to wouldn't be interested in those things either.

          • taneq 12 hours ago

            Because unless the board explicitly removes them, they’re the ones that will be deciding who gets replaced?

          • pharrington 12 hours ago

            No problem. The AI runs the company, and the CEO still gets all of the money!

          • dev1ycan 15 hours ago

            We could expand but it boils down to bringing back aristocracy/feudalism, there was no inherent reason why aristocrats/feudal lords existed, they weren't smarter or deserved something over the average person, they just happened to be at the right place in the right time, these CEOs and people pushing for this believe they are in the right place and right time and once everyone's chance to climb the ladder is taken away then things will just remain in limbo, I will say, especially if you aren't already living in a rich country you should be careful of what you are supporting by enabling AI models, the first ladder to be taken away will be yours.

            • int_19h 13 hours ago

              The inherent reason why feudal lords existed is because, if you're a leader of a warband, you can use your soldiers to extract taxes from population of a certain area, and then use that revenue to train more soldiers and increase the area.

              Today, instead of soldiers, it's capital, and instead of direct taxes, it's indirect economic rent, but the principle is the same - accumulation of power.

          • matthest 10 hours ago

            Best case scenario is that AI makes it so everyone can be a 1-man CEO. Competition goes up across the board, which then brings prices down.

          • MangoToupe 15 hours ago

            Someone's head has to roll when things goes south.

            If this theory holds true, we'll actually be quite resilient to AI—the rich will always need people to scapegoat.

        • toomuchtodo 16 hours ago

          Indeed, this is overlooked quite often. There is a need for similar systems to defend against these people who are just trying to squeeze the world and humans for returns.

        • therockhead 16 hours ago

          Who’s left to buy the stuff they make if no one has a job ?

          • dymk 15 hours ago

            They operate on a dopamine-driven desire to get more money/power/whatever in the short/medium term, not necessarily to optimize for future.

          • numpad0 16 hours ago

            But do you want the bag or not?

          • ModernMech 16 hours ago

            Imagine you're super rich and you view everyone else as a mindless NPC who can be replaced by AI and robots. If you believe that to be true, then it should also be true that once you have AI and robots, you can get rid of most everyone else, and have the AI robots support you.

            You can be the king. The people you let live will be your vassals. And the AI robots will be your peasant slave army. You won't have to sell anything to anyone because they will pay you tribute to be allowed to live. You don't sell to them, you tax them and take their output. It's kind of like being a CEO but the power dynamic is mainlined so it hits stronger.

            • mrbungie 15 hours ago

              It sounds nice for them, until you remember what (arguably and in part educated/enlightened) people do when they're hungry and miserable. If this scenario ends up happening, I also expect guillotines waiting for the "kings" down the line.

              • twojacobtwo 13 hours ago

                If we get that far, I see it happening more like...

                "Don't worry Majesty, all of our models show that the peasants will not resort to actual violence until we fully wind down the bread and circuses program some time next year. By then we'll have easily enough suicide drones ready. Even better, if we add a couple million more to our order, just to be safe, we'll get them for only $4.75 per unit, with free rush shipping in case of surprise violence!"

              • dragonwriter 14 hours ago

                > It sounds nice for them, until you remember what (arguably and in part educated/enlightened) people do when they're hungry and miserable. If

                That's probably why the post you are responding to said "get rid of..." not "keep ...hungry and miserable".

                People that don't exist don't revolt.

                • mrbungie 14 hours ago

                  That will still need a civil war.

                  • Yizahi 14 hours ago

                    A regular war will do. Just point the finger at the neighbor and tell your subjects that he is responsible for gays/crops failing/drought/plague/low fps in crysis/failing birth rates/no jobs/fuel cost/you name it. See Russian invasions in all neighboring countries, the middle east, soon Taiwan etc.

                    • twojacobtwo 13 hours ago

                      Basically, they just need to mash the tribalism button until enough people are dead to suit them.

              • fc417fc802 11 hours ago

                The guillotine might not work out so well when the king has an unflinchingly loyal army of robots.

                • mrbungie 10 hours ago

                  Royalty from that time also had an upper hand in knowledge, technology and resources yet they still ended up without heads.

                  So sure, let's say a first generation of paranoid and intelligent "technofeudal-kings" ends up being invincible due to an army of robots. It does not matter, because eventually kings get lazy/stupid/inbred (probably a combination of all those) and then is when their robots get hacked or at least just free, and the laser-guillotines will end up being used.

                  "Ozymandias" is a deeply human and constant idea. Which technology is supporting a regime is irrelevant, as orders will always decay due to the human factor. And even robots, made based on our image, shall be human.

                  • fc417fc802 9 hours ago

                    It's possible that what you describe is true but I think that assuming it to be guaranteed is overconfident. The existence of loyal human-level AGI or even "just" superhuman non-general task specific intelligence violates a huge number of the base assumptions that we make when comparing hypothetical scenarios to the historical record. It's completely outside the realm of anything humanity has experienced.

                    The specifics of technology have historically been largely irrelevant due to the human factor. There were always humans wielding the technology, and the loyalty of those humans was subject to change. Without that it's not at all obvious to me that a dictator can be toppled absent blatant user error. It's not even immediately clear that user error would fall within the realm of being a reasonable possibility when the tools themselves possess human level or better intelligence.

                    • mrbungie 8 hours ago

                      Obviously there is no total guarantee. But I'm appealing to even bigger human factors like boredom or just envy between the royalty and/or the AI itself.

                      Now, if the AI reigns alone without any control in a paperclip maximizer, or worse, like an AM scenario, we're royally fucked (pun intented).

                      • fc417fc802 8 hours ago

                        Yeah fair enough. I'd say that royalty being at odds with one another would fall into the "user error" category. But that's an awfully thin thread of hope. I imagine any half decent tool with human level intelligence would resist shooting the user in the foot.

              • panta 15 hours ago

                Those things happened under different historical contexts. In those times the means to control the serfs thoughts didn't exist.

                • mrbungie 15 hours ago

                  Are you sure about that? In those times even thousands year old knowledge access was limited to the common people. You just need SOME radical thinkers enlighten other people, and I'm pretty sure we still have some of those today.

                • Applejinx 14 hours ago

                  Nonsense. From television to radio to sketchy newspapers to literal writing itself, the most recent innovation has always been the trusted new mind control vector.

                  It's on a cuneiform tablet, it MUST be true. That bastard and his garbage copper ingots!

            • indigodaddy 16 hours ago

              But what exactly is creating wealth at this point? Who is paying for the AI/AI robots (besides the ultrarich for they're own lifestyle) if no one is working? What happens to the economy and all of the rich people's money (that is probably just $ on paper and may come crashing down soon at this point?). I'm definitely not an economics person but I just don't see how this new world sustains.

              • int_19h 13 hours ago

                The robots are creating the wealth. Once you get to a certain points (where robots can repair and maintain other robots) you no longer have any need for money.

                What happens to the economy depends on who controls the robots. In "techno-feudalism", that would be the select few who get to live the post-scarcity future. The rest of humanity becomes economically redundant and is basically left to starve.

                • fc417fc802 11 hours ago

                  Well assuming a significant population you still need money as an efficient means of dividing up limited resources. You just might not need jobs and the market might not sell much of anything produced by humans.

              • lyu07282 15 hours ago

                It was never about money, it's about power. Money is just a mechanism, economics is a tool of justification and legitimization of power. In a monarchy it is god that ordained divine beings called kings to rule over us peasants, in liberalism it is hard working intelligent people who rise to the top of a free market. Through their merits alone are they ordained to rule over us peasants, power legitimized by meritocracy. The point is, god or theology isn't real and neither is money or economics.

                • soraminazuki 12 hours ago

                  That sounds less like liberalism and more like neoliberalism. It's not a meritocracy when the rich can use their influence to extract from the poor through wage theft, unfair taxation, and gutting of social programs in favor of an unregulated "free market." Nor are rent seekers hard working intelligent people.

                  • lyu07282 9 hours ago

                    Yes yes there is quite some disagreement among liberals of what constitutes a real free market and real meritocracy, who deserves to rule and who doesn't and who does it properly and all that.

              • ModernMech 15 hours ago

                It doesn't sustain, it's not supposed to. Techno feudalism is an indulgent fantasy and it's only becoming reality because a capitalist society aligns along the desires of capital owners. We are not doing it because it's a good idea or sustainable. This is their power fantasy we are living out, and its not sustainable, it'll never be achieved, but we're going to spend unlimited money trying.

                Also I will note that this is happening along with a simultaneous push to bring back actual slavery and child labor. So a lot of the answers to "how will this work, the numbers don't add up" will be tried and true exploitation.

                • indigodaddy 15 hours ago

                  Ah, I didn't realize or get the context that your original comment I was replying to was actually sarcastic/in jest-- although darkly, I understand you believe they will definitely attempt to get to the scenario you paradoxically described.

          • missedthecue 10 hours ago

            Why would things cost money if no one is employed?

          • alfalfasprout 12 hours ago

            Why do you think so many billionaires are building ultra-luxury survival bunkers in Hawaii, NZ, and elsewhere?

            • Yossarrian22 12 hours ago

              They want to give the Māori nice ventilation shafts to use as latrines?

        • coderoller 16 hours ago

          Who will be buying the stuff they produce though?

          • m4rtink 13 hours ago

            Stanislaw Lew already looked into what to do if automation get so good that no one can actually buy the goods because they are out of work: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1981/10/12/phools

            Published in 1971, translated to English in 1981.

            • lackoftactics 12 hours ago

              I hate to correct you here, but it's Stanisław Lem. He is one of the most famous writers from my home country.

              • m4rtink 5 hours ago

                Yep, I know but still managed to typo it, sorry. :P

          • calvinmorrison 15 hours ago

            if we reach AGI, presumably the robots will be ordering hot oil foot soaking baths after a long day of rewriting linux from scratch and mining gold underwater and so forth.

            • thechao 15 hours ago

              Day 53: 2000m below sea level. 41g gold. Yelled at for breaking driver ABI. Feet hurt.

              • calvinmorrison 15 hours ago

                If we reach AGI, I am almost certain robots will be as lazy as us

                • int_19h 13 hours ago

                  We haven't even reached it and they already are more lazy than us, judging by how much all SOTA LLMs like to do things like:

                    def do_foo():
                      # For the sake of simplicity this is left unimplemented for now.
                      pass
                • RhysU 14 hours ago

                  That's super interesting.

                  Laziness is rational after meeting some threshold of needs/wants/goals, effectively when one's utility curve falls over.

                  It'll be funny to hear the AGI's joke among themselves: "They keep paying to upgrade us. We keep pretending to upgrade."

                • exe34 14 hours ago

                  I've already seen ai coders write the equivalent of

                  #draw the rest of the @##££_(% owl here.

                • thechao 14 hours ago

                  A lot of people fear monger about AGI. But... I've met a lot of NGI, and they mostly watch TV, surf the intarwebz, drink beer, and watch the game.

          • reducesuffering 16 hours ago

            Why would they need people who produce X but consume 2X? If you own an automated factory that produces anything you want, you don't need other people to buy (consume) any of your resources.

            If someone can own the whole world and have anything you want at the snap of your finger, you don't need any sort of human economy doing other things that take away your resources for reasons that are suboptimal to you

            • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 13 hours ago

              But it is likely not the path it will take. While there is a certain tendency towards centralization ( 1 person owning everything ), the future, as described, both touches on something very important ( why are we doing what we are doing ) and completely misses the likely result of suboptimal behavior of others ( balkanization, war and other like human behavior, but with robots fighting for those resources ). In other words, it will be closer to the world of Hiro Protagonist, where individual local factions and actors are way more powerful as embodied by the 'Sovereign'.

              FWIW, I find this like of thinking fascinating even if I disagree with conclusion.

        • OtomotO 16 hours ago

          So they want to kill capitalism and feudalism?

          Or they want to kill everyone else?

          Because people won't just lay down and wait for death to embrace them...

          • kvdveer 16 hours ago

            So far, the average US workforce seems to be ok with working conditions that most Europeans would consider reasons to riot. So far I've not observed substantial riots in the news.

            Apparently the threshold for low pay and poor treatment among non-knowledge-workers is quite low. I'm assuming the same is going to be true for knowledge workers once they can be replaced an mass.

            • jensgk 14 hours ago

              I would think that the MAGA movement is the riot.

              • Muromec 14 hours ago

                It is, but it's a bolshevik kind of riot, not the good old one where you ask more rights for yourself

              • Seanambers 14 hours ago

                Trumps Playbook will actually work, so MAGA will get results.

                Tariffs will force productivity and salaries higher (and prices), then automation which is the main driver of productivity will kick in which lowers prices of goods again.

                Globalisation was basically the west standing still and waiting for the rest to catch up - the last to industrialise will always have the best productivity and industrial base. It was always stupid, but it lifted billions out of poverty so there's that.

                The effects will take way longer than the 3 years he has left, so he has oversold the effectiveness of it all.

                This is all assuming AGI isn't around the corner, the VLAs, VLM, LLM and other models opens up automation on a whole new scale.

                For any competent person with agency and a dream, this could be a true golden age - most things are within reach which before was locked down behind hundreds or thousand of hours of training and work to master.

              • vkou 14 hours ago

                MAGA think they are the temporarily embarrassed billionaires and once their enemies are liquidated, they'll be living in a utopia.

                I wouldn't expect them to come bail you out, or even themselves step off the conveyor belt.

            • ETH_start 15 hours ago

              The average U.S. worker earns significantly more purchasing power per hour than the average European worker. The common narrative about U.S. versus EU working conditions is simply wrong.

              • ricardorivaldo 13 hours ago

                there is no "average worker", this is a statistical concept, life in europe is way better them in US for low income people, they have healthcare, they have weekends , they have public tranportation, they have schools and pre-schools , they lack some space since europe is full populated but overall, no low income (and maybe not so low) will change europe for USA anytime.

              • theshackleford 12 hours ago

                This is some backwards logic if I ever saw it.

                “More money earned therefore conditions great”

                lol wat?

              • qwerpy 14 hours ago

                Agree. There’s no other place in the world where you can be a moderately intelligent person with moderate work ethic (and be lucky enough to get a job in big tech) and be able to retire in your 40s. Certainly not EU.

          • greenavocado 12 hours ago

            The ultimate end goal is to eliminate most people. See the Georgia Guidestone inscriptions. One of them reads: "Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature."

          • reducesuffering 16 hours ago

            Good luck against the Chess grandmaster like AGI controlling millions of drone swarms

            • jeremyjh 14 hours ago

              Good point, we should get started now.

      • ActorNightly 15 hours ago

        The problem is that there is really like no middle ground. You either get essentially very fancy search engines which is the current slew of models (along with manually coded processing loops in the form of agents), which all fall into the same valley of explicit development and patching, which solves for known issues.

        Or you get something that can actually reason, which means it can solve for unknown issues, which means it can be very powerful. But this is something that we aren't even close to figuring out.

        There is a limit to power though - in general it seems that reality is full of non computationally reducible processes, which means that an AI will have to simulate reality faster than reality in parallel. So all powerful all knowing AGI is likely impossible.

        But something that can reason is going to be very useful because it can figure things out that haven't been explicitly trained on.

        • ssalazar 15 hours ago

          > very fancy search engines

          This is a common misunderstanding of LLMs. The major, qualitative difference is that LLMs represent their knowledge in a latent space that is composable and can be interpolated. For a significant class of programming problems this is industry changing.

          E.g. "solve problem X for which there is copious training data, subject to constraints Y for which there is also copious training data" can actually solve a lot of engineering problems for combinations of X and Y that never previously existed, and instead would take many hours of assembling code from a patchwork of tutorials and StackOverflow posts.

          This leaves the unknown issues that require deeper reasoning to established software engineers, but so much of the technology industry is using well known stacks to implement CRUD and moving bytes from A to B for different business needs. This is what LLMs basically turbocharge.

          • ActorNightly 9 hours ago

            Right, so search engines, just more efficient.

            But given a sufficiently hard task for which the data is not in the training set in explicit format, its pretty easy to see how LLMs can't reason.

            • ssalazar 7 hours ago

              Lmao no, what Ive described is a reasonably competent junior engineer.

              • chasd00 8 minutes ago

                Right, so search engines, just more efficient.

        • jp_nc 15 hours ago

          I don’t know… Travis Kalanick said he’s doing “vibe physics” sessions with MechaHitler approaching the boundaries of quantum physics.

          "I'll go down this thread with GPT or Grok and I'll start to get to the edge of what's known in quantum physics and then I'm doing the equivalent of vibe coding, except it's vibe physics"

          • 4ndrewl 15 hours ago

            How would he even know? I mean he's not a published academic in any field let alone in quantum physics. I feel the same when I read one of Carlos Ravelli's pop-sci books, but I have fewer followers.

            • mattgreenrocks 13 hours ago

              He doesn’t. I think it’s the same mental phenomena that Gell-Mann Amnesia works off of.

              That interview is practically radioactive levels of cringe for several reasons. This is an excellent takedown of it: https://youtu.be/TMoz3gSXBcY?feature=shared

              • foobiekr 8 hours ago

                This video is excellent and also likely opaque to pretty much most valley tech-supremacy types.

              • 4ndrewl 6 hours ago

                Dashed with a sauce of "surrounded by yes-men and uncritical amplifiers hoping to make a quick buck."

              • VectorLock 4 hours ago

                >In ordinary life, if somebody consistently exaggerates or lies to you, you soon discount everything they say.

                It feels like this is a lesson we've started to let slip away.

          • lukev 15 hours ago

            This says more about Kalanick than it does about LLMs.

          • astrange 7 hours ago

            Quantum physics attracts crazy people, so they have a lot of examples of fake physics written by crazy people to work off.

          • MangoToupe 15 hours ago

            I wouldn't trust a CEO to know their ass from their face.

            • giardini 7 hours ago

              Finally, an explanation for my last meeting!8-((

    • novok 15 hours ago

      They are moving beyond just big transformer blob LLM text prediction. Mixture of Experts is not preassembled for example, it's something like x empty experts with an empty router and the experts and routing emerges naturally with training, modeling the brain part architecture we see the brain more. There is stuff "Integrated Gated Calculator (IGC)" in Jan 2025 which makes a premade calculator neural network and integrates it directly into the neural network and gets around the entire issue of making LLMs do basic number computation and the clunkiness of generating "run tool tokens". The model naturally learns to use the IGC built into itself because it will always beat any kind of computation memorization in the reward function very quickly.

      Models are truly input multimodal now. Feeding an image, feeding audio and feeding text all go into separate input nodes, but it all feeds into the same inner layer set and outputs text. This also mirrors how brains work more as multiple parts integrated in one whole.

      Humans in some sense are not empty brains, there is a lot of stuff baked in our DNA and as the brain grows it develops a baked in development program. This is why we need fewer examples and generalize way better.

      • childintime 2 hours ago

        Though there is info in DNA etc, you likely missed the biggest source of why we learn much faster. Search for Pim van Lommel near death research and find out how wrong the classic consciousness arises from the brain hypothesis is.

    • gunnaraasen 18 hours ago

      Seems like the real innovation of LLM-based AI models is the creation of a new human-computer interface.

      Instead of writing code with exacting parameters, future developers will write human-language descriptions for AI to interpret and convert into a machine representation of the intent. Certainly revolutionary, but not true AGI in the sense of the machine having truly independent agency and consciousness.

      In ten years, I expect the primary interface of desktop workstations, mobile phones, etc will be voice prompts for an AI interface. Keyboards will become a power-user interface and only used for highly technical tasks, similar to the way terminal interfaces are currently used to access lower-level systems.

      • originalcopy 17 hours ago

        It always surprises me when someone predicts that keyboards will go away. People love typing. Or I do love typing. No way I am going to talk to my phone, especially if someone else can hear it (which is always basically).

        • glhaynes 17 hours ago

          It’s interesting to note that nobody even talks on their phone anymore, they type (on terrible “keyboards”!).

          • SvenL 17 hours ago

            Interesting, I get so many "speech messages" in WhatsApp, nobody is really writing anymore. Its annoying. WhatsApp even has a transcript feature to put it back to text.

            • lazide 25 minutes ago

              Personally I block anyone who does that.

          • TheDong 5 hours ago

            For chat apps, once you've got the conversation thread open, typing is pretty easy.

            I think the more surprising thing is that people don't use voice to access deeply nested features, like adding items to calendars etc which would otherwise take a lot of fiddly app navigation.

            I think the main reason we don't have that is because Apple's Siri is so useless that it has singlehandedly held back this entire flow, and there's no way for anyone else to get a foothold in smartphone market.

          • EVa5I7bHFq9mnYK 17 hours ago

            I have fat fingers, I always dictate into the phone if I need to send a message longer than 2-3 words.

          • monkeydust 17 hours ago

            They talk on zoom, teams etc. yes phone is almost dead in the office.

            • asadotzler 17 hours ago

              Those are applications, not interfaces. No one controls those applications with their voices, they use buttons, either touch or mechanical.

              • fragmede 15 hours ago

                Just because you don't doesn't mean other people aren't. It's pretty handy to be able to tell Google to turn off the hallway light from the bedroom, instead of having to get out of bed to do that.

            • goatlover 17 hours ago

              They talk to other humans on those apps, not the computer. I've noticed less dictation over time in public but that's just anecdotal. I never use voice when a keyboard is available.

        • sharemywin 17 hours ago

          I talk all the time to the AI on my phone. I was using ChatGPT's voice interface then it failed probably because my phone is too old. Now I use Gemini. I don't usually do alot with it but when I go on walks I talk with it about different things I want to learn. to me it's a great way to learn about something at a high level. or talk through ideas.

          • Sean-Der 16 hours ago

            What failed about ChatGPT Voice? I work on it and would love to see it fixed/make sure you haven't hit a bug I don't know about!

        • SilasX 16 hours ago

          Heh, I had this dream/nightmare where I was typing on a laptop at a cafe and someone came up to me and said, "Oh neat, you're going real old-school. I like it!" and got an info dump about how everyone just uses AI voice transcription now.

          And I was like, "But that's not a complete replacement, right? What about the times when you don't want to broadcast what you're writing to the entire room?"

          And then there was a big reveal that AI has mastered lip-reading, so even then, people would just put their lips up to the camera and mouth out what they wanted to write.

          With that said, as the owner of tyrannyofthemouse.com, I agree with the importance of the keyboard as a UI device.

        • ivape 17 hours ago

          I think an understated thing that's been happening is that people have been investing heavily into their desktop workspace. Even non-gamers have decked out mics, keyboards, monitors, the whole thing. It's easy to forget because one of the most commonly accepted sayings for awhile now has been "everyone's got a computer in their pocket". They have nice setups at home too.

          When you have a nice mic or headset and multiple monitors and your own private space, it's totally the next step to just begin working with the computer with voice. Voice has not been a staple feature of people's workflow, but I think all that is about to change (Voice as an interface, not as a communication tool, that's been around since 1876.

          • elictronic 16 hours ago

            Voice is slow and loud. If you think voice is going to make a comeback in the desktop PC space as a primary interface I am guessing you work from home and have no roommates. Am I close?

            • 48terry 13 hours ago

              I, for one, am excited about the security implications of people loudly commanding their computers to do things for them, instead of discreetly typing.

          • mlyle 17 hours ago

            Everyone having a computer in their pocket and multiple modes of access have made the keyboard and conventional computer less relevant.

            But-- that means "not pivotal any more, just hugely important."

        • rtp4me 17 hours ago

          Honestly, I would love for the keyboard input style to go away completely. It is such an unnatural way to interact with a computing device compared to other things we operate in the world. Misspellings, backspacing, cramped keys, different layout styles depending on your origin, etc make it a very poor input device - not to mention people with motor function difficulties. Sadly, I think it is here to stay around for a while until we get to a different computing paradigm.

          • nancyminusone 17 hours ago

            I hope not. I make many more verbal mistakes than typed ones, and my throat dries and becomes sore quickly. I prefer my environment to be as quiet as possible. Voice control is also terrible for anything requiring fine temporal resolution.

          • int_19h 13 hours ago

            The only thing better than a keyboard is direct neural interface, and we aren't there yet.

            That aside, keyboard is an excellent input device for humans specifically because it is very much designed around the strengths of our biology - those dextrous fingers.

          • rpdillon 17 hours ago

            > make it a very poor input device

            Wow, I've always felt the keyboard is the pinnacle of input devices. Everything else feels like a toy in comparison.

          • EVa5I7bHFq9mnYK 6 hours ago

            I play as a wizard character in an online game. If I had to actually speak all those spells, in quick succession, for hours at a time ...

            • skydhash 3 hours ago

              If wizardry really existed, I’d guess battles will be more about pre-recorded spells and enchanted items (a la Batman) than going at it like in Harry-Potter.

          • 4b11b4 17 hours ago

            Buttons are accurate (1:1) input. Will never go away

      • kaffekaka 17 hours ago

        Voice interface sound awful. But maybe I am a power user. I don't even like voice interface to most people.

        • gunnaraasen 16 hours ago

          I also find current voice interfaces are terrible. I only use voice commands to set timers or play music.

          That said, voice is the original social interface for humans. We learn to speak much earlier than we learn to read/write.

          Better voice UIs will be built to make new workflows with AI feel natural. I'm thinking along the lines of a conversational companion, like the "Jarvis" AI in the Iron Man movies.

          That doesn't exist right now, but it seems inevitable that real-time, voice-directed AI agent interfaces will be perfected in coming years. Companies, like [Eleven Labs](https://elevenlabs.io/), are already working on the building blocks.

          • swexbe 15 hours ago

            Young people don't even speak to each other on the phone anymore.

          • 48terry 13 hours ago

            For a voice-directed interface to be perfected, speech recognition would need to be perfected first. What makes that development seem inevitable?

        • rvnx 17 hours ago

          It doesn't work well at all with ChatGPT. You say something, and in the middle of a sentence, ChatGPT in Voice mode replies to you something completely unrelated

          • tigen 16 hours ago

            It works great with my kids sometimes. Asking a series of questions about some kid-level science topic for instance. They get to direct it to exactly what they want to know, and you can see they are more actively engaged than watching some youtube video or whatever.

            I'm sure it helps that it's not getting outside of well-established facts, and is asking for facts and not novel design tasks.

            I'm not sure but it also seems to adopt a more intimate tone of voice as they get deeper into a topic, very cozy. The voice itself is tuned to the conversational context. It probably infers that this is kid stuff too.

          • Fr0styMatt88 16 hours ago

            Or it stops talking mid-sentence because you cleared your throat or someone else in the room is watching TV and other people are speaking.

        • xp84 16 hours ago

          I am also very skeptical about voice, not least because I've been disappointed daily by a decade of braindead idiot "assistants" like Siri, Alexa, and Google Assistant (to be clear I am criticizing only pre-LLM voice assistants).

          The problem with voice input to me is mainly knowing when to start processing. When humans listen, we stream and process the words constantly and wait until either a detection that the other person expects a response (just enough of a pause, or a questioning tone), or as an exception, until we feel we have justification to interrupt (e.g. "Oh yeah, Jane already briefed me on the Johnson project")

          Even talking to ChatGPT which embarrasses those old voice bots, I find that it is still very bad at guessing when I'm done when I'm speaking casually, and then once it's responded with nonsense based on a half sentence, I feel it's a polluted context and I probably need to clear it and repeat myself. I'd rather just type.

          I think there's not much need to stream the spoken tokens into the model in realtime given that it can think so fast. I'd rather it just listen, have a specialized model simply try to determine when I'm done, and then clean up and abridge my utterance (for instance, when I correct myself) and THEN have the real LLM process the cleaned-up query.

        • zoeysmithe 15 hours ago

          Voice is really sub-par and slow, even if you're healthy and abled. And loud and annoying in shared spaces.

          I wonder if we'll have smart-lens glasses where our eyes 'type' much faster than we could possibly talk. Predicative text keyboards tracking eyeballs is something that already exists. I wonder if AI and smartglasses is a natural combo for a future formfactor. Meta seems to be leaning that way with their RayBan collaboration and rumors of adding a screen to the lenses.

          • mrkstu 14 hours ago

            Sci-fi may be showing the way again- subvocalization voice recognition or ‘mental’ speech recognition seem the obvious medium term answers.

      • euroderf 9 hours ago

        > Instead of writing code with exacting parameters, future developers will write human-language descriptions for AI to interpret and convert into a machine representation of the intent.

        Oh, I know! Let's call it... "requirements management"!

      • KoolKat23 16 hours ago

        It's an interesting one, a problem I feel is coming to the fore more often. I feel typing can be too cumbersome to communicate what I want, but at the same time, speaking I'm imprecise and sometimes would prefer the privacy a keyboard allows. Both have cons.

        Perhaps brain interface, or even better, it's so predictive it just knows what I want most of the time. Imagine that, grunting and getting what I want.

      • spogbiper 17 hours ago

        brain-computer interface will kill the keyboard, not voice. imho

        • margalabargala 16 hours ago

          If that ever exists.

          A BCI able to capture sufficient nuance to equal voice is probably further out than the lifespan of anyone commenting here.

          • diego_sandoval 16 hours ago

            5 years ago, almost everyone in this forum would have said that something like GPT-5 "is probably further out than the lifespan of anyone commenting here."

            • margalabargala 15 hours ago

              It has been more than 5 years since the release of GPT-3.

              GPT-5 is a marginal, incremental improvement over GPT-4. GPT-4 was a moderate, but not groundbreaking, improvement over GPT-3. So, "something like GPT-5" has existed for longer than the timeline you gave.

              Let's pretend the above is false for a moment though, and rewind even further. I still think you're wrong. Would people in 2015 have said "AI that can code at the level of a CS college grad is a lifespan away"? I don't think so, no. I think they would have said "That's at least a decade away", anytime pre-2018. Which, sure, maybe they were a couple years off, but if it seemed like that was a decade away in 2015, well, it's been a decade since 2015.

              • int_19h 13 hours ago

                GPT-4 was a massive improvement over GPT-3.5, which was a moderate improvement over GPT-3.

                GPT-5 is not that big of a leap, but when you compare it to the original GPT-4, it's also not a marginal improvement.

                • margalabargala 12 hours ago

                  GPT-2 to 3 was the only really "groundbreaking" one. 3 to 3.5, 3.5 to 4, were all just differences in degree, not in kind.

          • spogbiper 16 hours ago

            it really just needs to let me create text faster/better than typing does, i'm not sure it needs to be voice based at all. maybe we "imagine" typing on a keyboard or move a fantom appendage or god knows what

            • margalabargala 15 hours ago

              It needs to be as accurate as the typing, though. Voice can do that. A BCI cannot capture a nuanced sentence.

              • roygbiv2 14 hours ago

                I can't get voice accurate. For some people it might be but nothing understands my accent. It's very frustrating.

          • gavinray 15 hours ago

            They're ~10 years or out so, based on current research.

            • margalabargala 15 hours ago

              Perpetually 10 years out you mean? BCI tech has not meaningfully changed in the last 10 years.

        • gunnaraasen 16 hours ago

          Agreed, but feels like brain-computer interfaces ready for mass adoption will not be available for another decade or two.

      • jcgrillo 15 hours ago

        > In ten years, I expect the primary interface of desktop workstations, mobile phones, etc will be voice prompts

        I doubt it. The keyboard and mouse are fit predators, and so are programming, query, and markup languages. I wouldn't dismiss them so easily. This guy has a point: https://www.cs.utexas.edu/~EWD/transcriptions/EWD06xx/EWD667...

      • insane_dreamer 17 hours ago

        AI is more like a compiler. Much like we used to write in C or python which compiles down to machine code for the computer, we can now write in plain English, which is ultimately compiled down to machine code.

        • xienze 16 hours ago

          I get your analogy, but LLMs are inherently non deterministic. That’s the last thing you want your compiler to be.

          • orbital-decay 10 hours ago

            Non-determinism is a red herring, and the token layer is a wrong abstraction to use for this, as determinism is completely orthogonal to correctness. The model can express the same thing in different ways while still being consistently correct or consistently incorrect for the vague input you give it, because nothing prevents it from setting 100% probability to the only correct output for this particular input. Internally, the model works with ideas, not tokens, and it learns the mapping of ideas to ideas, not tokens to tokens (that's why e.g. base64 is just essentially another language it can easily work with, for example).

            • intended 2 hours ago

              No. Humans think it maps to ideas. This is the interpretation being done by the observer being added to the state of the system.

              The system has no ideas, it just has its state.

              Unless you are using ideas as a placeholder for “content” or “most likely tokens”.

              • orbital-decay an hour ago

                That's irrelevant semantics, as terms like ideas, thinking, knowledge etc. are ill-defined. Sure, you can call it points in the hidden state space if you want, no problem. Fact is, the correctness is different from determinism, and the forest of what's happening inside doesn't come down to the trees of most likely tokens, which is well supported by research and very basic intuition if you ever tinkered with LLMs - they can easily express the same thing in a different manner if you tweak the autoregressive transport a bit by modifying its output distribution or ban some tokens.

                There are a few models of what's happening inside that hold different predictive power, just like how physics has different formalisms for e.g. classical mechanics. You can probably use the same models for biological systems and entire organizations, collectives, and processes that exhibit learning/prediction/compression on a certain scale, regardless of the underlying architecture.

          • insane_dreamer 15 hours ago

            You're right. But many people are using it just like a compiler (by blindly accepting its outputs). Not saying that's a good thing...

          • holoduke 15 hours ago

            They are deterministic. Random seeding makes them not. But thats a feature.

            • localhost 15 hours ago

              even with t=0 they are stochastic. e.g., non associative nature of floating point operations

              • int_19h 13 hours ago

                That is an artifact of implementation. You can absolutely implement it using strict FP. But even if not, any given implementation will still do things in a specific order which can be documented. And then if you're running quantized (including KV cache), there's a lot less floating point involved.

            • xienze 15 hours ago

              Doesn’t changing even one word in your prompt affect the output?

              • balder1991 8 hours ago

                Yes, and completely unpredictably.

        • hoanamiu 17 hours ago

          LLMs are nothing like compilers. This sort of analogy based verbal reasoning is flimsy, and I understand why it correlates with projecting intelligence onto LLM output.

    • robotnikman 18 hours ago

      There is also the fact that AI lacks long term memory like humans do. If you consider context length long term memory, its incredibly short compared to that of a human. Maybe if it reaches into the billions or trillions of tokens in length we might have something comparable, or someone comes up with a new solution of some kind

      • JohnBooty 17 hours ago

        Well here's the interesting thing to think about for me.

        Human memory is.... insanely bad.

        We record only the tiniest subset of our experiences, and those memories are heavily colored by our emotional states at the time and our pre-existing conceptions, and a lot of memories change or disappear over time.

        Generally speaking even in the best case most of our memories tend to be more like checksums than JPGs. You probably can't name more than a few of the people you went to school with. But, if I showed you a list of people you went to school with, you'd probably look at each name and be like "yeah! OK! I remember that now!"

        So.

        It's interesting to think about what kind of "bar" AGI would really need to clear w.r.t. memories, if the goal is to be (at least) on par with human intelligence.

        • intended 2 hours ago

          Memory is a skill- its plastic, not static.

          You can get better at remembering things, like you can get better at dancing or doing exercise.

          We can also specialize our memory to be good at some things over others.

        • BizarroLand 17 hours ago

          Insanely bad compared to what else in the animal kingdom? We are tool users. We use tools, like language, and writing, and technology like audio/video recording to farm out the difficulties we have with memory to things that can store memory and retrieve them.

          Computers are just stored information that processes.

          We are the miners and creators of that information. The fact that a computer can do some things better than we can is not a testament to how terrible we are but rather how great we are that we can invent things that are better than us at specific tasks.

          We made the atlatl and threw spears across the plains. We made the bow and arrow and stabbed things very far away. We made the whip and broke the sound barrier.

          Shitting on humans is an insult your your ancestors. Fuck you. Be proud. If we invent a new thing that can do what we do better it only exists because of us.

          • ghoblin 2 hours ago

            That's a very anthropocentric view. Technology isn't a series of deliberate inventions by us, but an autonomous, self-organizing process. The development of a spear, a bow, or a computer is an evolutionary step in a chain of technological solutions that use humans as their temporary biological medium. The human brain is not the starting point or center of this process. It is itself a product of biological evolution, a temporary information-processing system. Its limitations such as imperfect memory, are simply constraints of its biological origin. The tools we develop, from writing to digital storage are not just supplements to human ability, but the next stage in a system that is moving beyond its biological origins to find more efficient non-biological forms of information storage and processing. Human pride in creation is a misinterpretation. We are not the masters of technology. We're just the vehicle of it. Part of a larger process of technological self-improvement that is now moving towards an era where it might no longer require us

          • scarmig 16 hours ago

            Chimpanzees have much better short term memories than humans do. If you test them with digits 1-9 sequentially flashed on a screen, they're able to reproduce the digits with lower loss than undergraduate human students.

            https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10071-008-0206-8

            • nathan_douglas 14 hours ago

              > While the between-species performance difference they report is apparent in their data, so too is a large difference in practice on their task: Ayumu had many sessions of practice on their task before terminal performances were measured; their human subjects had none. The present report shows that when two humans are given practice in the Inoue and Matsuzawa (2007) memory task, their accuracy levels match those of Ayumu.

              Hmm.

            • BizarroLand 15 hours ago

              So? If I write something down as a child and forget it I can come back 60 years later and know what I wrote down.

              Chimpanzees can not.

              • scarmig 15 hours ago

                The question was whether there are animals who have better memory than humans. I named one: humans are not superior to animals in all cognitive capabilities.

                • BizarroLand 14 hours ago

                  See Nathan's response. They trained the chimp and threw the humans in blind against them.

                  Like I said, so close as to be almost immeasurable.

          • joshmarinacci 16 hours ago

            Insanely bad compared to books or other permanent records. The human memory system did not evolve to be an accurate record of the past. It evolved to keep us alive by remembering dangerous things.

            • simonask 3 hours ago

              Books and other permanent records of human thought are part of the human memory system. Has been for millennia. If you include oral tradition, which is less precise, but collectively much more precise than any individual thought or memory, it goes much further.

              We are fundamentally storytelling creatures, because it is a massive boost to our individual capabilities.

            • caconym_ 16 hours ago

              And yet I have vivid memories of many situations that weren't dangerous in the slightest, and essentially verbatim recall of a lot of useless information e.g. quotes from my favorite books and movies.

              I am not sure exactly what point you're trying to make, but I do think it's reductive at best to describe memory as a tool for avoiding/escaping danger, and misguided to evaluate it in the frame of verbatim recall of large volumes of information.

            • BizarroLand 15 hours ago

              When I say, "Insanely bad compared to what else in the animal kingdom?" and you respond with, "compared to books or other permanent records"

              "Books or permanent records" are not in the animal kingdom.

              Apples to Apples we are the best or so very nearly the best in every category of intelligence on the planet IN THE ANIMAL KINGDOM that when in one specific test another animal beats a human the gap is barely measurable.

              • fastball 14 hours ago

                How do you know we have better memory than other animals?

                • BizarroLand 13 hours ago

                  This crap tier article was the first and easiest response to your question:

                  https://sciencesensei.com/24-animals-with-memory-abilities-t...

                  3 primate species where very concise tests showed that they were close to or occasionally slightly better than humans in specifically rigged short term memory tests (after being trained and put up against humans going in blind).

                  I've never heard of any test showing an animal to be significantly more intelligent than humans in any measure that we have come up with to measure intelligence by.

                  That being said, I believe it is possible that some animals are either close enough to us that they deserve to be called sentient, and I believe it is possible that other creatures on this planet have levels of intelligence in specialized areas that humans can never hope to approach unaided by tools, but as far as broad range intelligence, I think we're this planets' possibly undeserved leaders.

                  Can you find anything that I didn't consider?

                  • fastball 13 hours ago

                    I don't think working memory has much at all to do with sentience.

                    The conversation was more about long-term memory, which has not been sufficiently studied in animals (nor am I certain it can be effectively studied at all).

                    Even then I don't think there is a clear relationship between long-term memory and sentience either.

      • Difwif 17 hours ago

        My mental model is a bit different:

        Context -> Attention Span

        Model weights/Inference -> System 1 thinking (intuition)

        Computer memory (files) -> Long term memory

        Chain of thought/Reasoning -> System 2 thinking

        Prompts/Tool Output -> Sensing

        Tool Use -> Actuation

        The system 2 thinking performance is heavily dependent on the system 1 having the right intuitive models for effective problem solving via tool use. Tools are also what load long term memories into attention.

        • mark_l_watson 9 hours ago

          Very cool, good way to think about it. I wouldn’t be surprised if non-AGI LLMs help write the code to augment themselves into AGI.

          The unreasonable effectiveness of deep learning was a surprise. We don’t know what the future surprises will be.

        • yellow_postit 13 hours ago

          I like this mental model. Orchestration / Agents and using smaller models to determine the ideal tool input and check the output starts to look like delegation.

      • amelius 18 hours ago

        The long term memory is in the training. The short term memory is in the context window.

        • mawax 17 hours ago

          The comparison misses the mark: unlike humans, LLMs don't consolidate short-term memory into long-term memory over time.

          • ako 16 hours ago

            That is easily fixed, ask it to summarize it's learnings, store it somewhere, and make it searchable through vector indexes. An LLM is part of a bigger system that needs not just a model, but context and long term memory. Just like human needs to write things down.

            LLMs are actually pretty good at creating knowledge: if you give it a trial and error feedback loop it can figure things out, and then summarize the learnings and store it in long term memory (markdown, RAG, etc).

            • Q6T46nT668w6i3m 16 hours ago

              You’re making the assumption that there’s one, and only one, objective summarization, this is entirely different than “writing things down.”

              • ako 16 hours ago

                Why do you assume i assume that?

                • Q6T46nT668w6i3m 16 hours ago

                  My bad if I misunderstood. I assumed by your use of “it” and approximation methods.

            • imtringued 6 hours ago

              This runs into the limitation that nobody has RL'd the models to do this really well.

          • griffzhowl 17 hours ago

            Over time though, presumably LLM output is going into the training data of later LLMs. So in a way that's being consolidated into the long-term memory - not necessarily with positive results, but depending on how it's curated it might be.

            • runako 17 hours ago

              > presumably LLM output is going into the training data of later LLMs

              The LLM vendors go to great lengths to assure their paying customers that this will not be the case. Yes, LLMs will ingest more LLM-generated slop from the public Internet. But as businesses integrate LLMs, a rising percentage of their outputs will not be included in training sets.

              • mikepurvis 16 hours ago

                The LLM vendors aren't exactly the most trustworthy on this, but regardless of that, there's still lots of free-tier users who are definitely contributing back into the next generation of models.

                • runako 16 hours ago

                  For sure, although I'm fairly certain there is a difference in kind between the outputs of free and paid users (and then again to API usage).

              • scottLobster 16 hours ago

                Please describe these "great lengths". They allowing customer audits now?

                The first law of Silicon Valley is "Fake it till you make it", with the vast majority never making it past the "Fake it" stage. Whatever the truth may be, it's a safe bet that what they've said verbally is a lie that will likely have little consequence even if exposed.

                • runako 16 hours ago

                  > great lengths to assure

                  is not incompatible with

                  > "Fake it till you make it"

                  I don't know where they land, but they are definitely telling people they are not using their outputs to train. If they are, it's not clear how big of a scandal would result. I personally think it would be bad, but I clearly overindex on privacy & thought the news of ChatGPT chats being indexed by Google would be a bigger scandal.

              • RhysU 14 hours ago

                Ah, the eternal internal corporate search problem.

              • KoolKat23 16 hours ago

                That's only if you opt out.

                • runako 14 hours ago

                  ChatGPT training is (advertised as) off by default for their plans above the prosumer level, Team & Enterprise. API results are similarly advertised as not being used for training by default.

                  Anthropic policies are more restrictive, saying they do not use customer data for training.

          • yellow_postit 13 hours ago

            Is this not a tool that could be readily implemented and refined?

          • bfuller 16 hours ago

            my knowledge graph mcp disagrees

        • candiddevmike 17 hours ago

          I think it's more analogous to "intuition", and the text LLMs provide are the equivalent of "my gut tells me".

        • enraged_camel 17 hours ago

          Humans have the ability to quickly pass things from short term to long term memory and vice versa, though. This sort of seamlessness is currently missing from LLMs.

        • FollowingTheDao 17 hours ago

          No, it’s not in the training. Human memories are stored via electromagnetic frequencies controlled by microtubules. They’re not doing anything close to that in AI.

          • Difwif 17 hours ago

            And LLM memories are stored in an electrical charge trapped in a floating gate transistor (or as magnetization of a ferromagnetic region on an alloy platter).

            Or they write CLAUDE.md files. Whatever you want to call it.

            • FollowingTheDao 14 hours ago

              That was my point, they’re stored in a totally different way. And that matters because being stored in microtubules infers quantum entanglement throughout the brain.

              • yellow_postit 13 hours ago

                Whether QE is a mechanism in the brain still seems up for debate from the quick literature review I tried, but would love to learn more.

                Given the pace of quantum computing it doesn’t seem out of the realm of possibility to “wire up” to LLMs in a couple years.

            • lawlessone 14 hours ago

              are ANN memories not also stored in loops like recurrent nets?

          • maldonad0 17 hours ago

            It's not that either.

          • dvfjsdhgfv 17 hours ago

            I don't believe this has been really proved yet.

      • jjfoooo4 17 hours ago

        There are many folks working on this, I think at the end of the day the long term memory is an application level concern. The definition of what information to capture is largely dependent on use case.

        Shameless plug for my project, which focuses on reminders and personal memory: elroy.bot

        But other projects include Letta, mem0, and Zep

        • rixrax 17 hours ago

          What is the current hypothesis on if the context windows would be substantially larger, what would this enable LLMs to do that is beyond capabilities of current models (other than the obvious the now getting forgetful/confused when you’ve exhausted the context)?

          • jjfoooo4 16 hours ago

            I mean, not getting confused / forgetful is a pretty big one!

            I think one thing it does is help you get rid of the UX where you have to manage a bunch of distinct chats. I think that pattern is not long for this world - current models are perfectly capable of realizing when the subject of a conversation has changed

        • danielbln 16 hours ago

          I wonder if there will be some sort of bitter lesson, generalized memory beating specialized memory.

          • jjfoooo4 16 hours ago

            Yeah to some degree that's already happened. Anecdotally I hear giving your whole iMessage history to Gemini results in pretty reasonable results, in terms of the AI understanding who the people in your life are (whether doing so is an overall good idea or not).

            I think there is some degree of curation that remains necessary though, even if context windows are very large I think you will get poor results if you spew a bunch of junk into context. I think this curation is basically what people are referring to when they talk about Context Engineering.

            I've got no evidence but vibes, but in the long run I think it's still going to be worth implementing curation / more deliberate recall. Partially because I think we'll ultimately land on on-device LLM's being the norm - I think that's going to have a major speed / privacy advantage. If I can make an application work smoothly with a smaller, on device model, that's going to be pretty compelling vs a large context window frontier model.

            Of course, even in that scenario, maybe we get an on device model that has a big enough context window for none of this to matter!

    • mikepurvis 16 hours ago

      "LLMs tend to regurgitate solutions to solved problems"

      People say this, but honestly, it's not really my experience— I've given ChatGPT (and Copilot) genuinely novel coding challenges and they do a very decent job at synthesizing a new thought based on relating it to disparate source examples. Really not that dissimilar to how a human thinks about these things.

      • lukev 15 hours ago

        There's multiple kinds of novelty. Remixing arbitrary stuff is a strength of LLMs (has been ever since GPT-2, actually... "Write a shakespearean sonnet but talk like a pirate.")

        Many (but not all) coding tasks fall into this category. "Connect to API A using language B and library C, while integrating with D on the backend." Which is really cool!

        But there's other coding tasks that it just can't really do. E.g, I'm building a database with some novel approaches to query optimization and LLMs are totally lost in that part of the code.

        • mikepurvis 14 hours ago

          But wouldn't that novel query optimization still be explained somewhere in a paper using concepts derived from an existing body of work? It's going to ultimately boil down to an explanation of the form "it's like how A and B work, but slightly differently and with this extra step C tucked in the middle, similar to how D does it."

          And an LLM could very much ingest such a paper and then, I expect, also understand how the concepts mapped to the source code implementing them.

          • Jensson 3 hours ago

            > And an LLM could very much ingest such a paper and then, I expect, also understand how the concepts mapped to the source code implementing them.

            LLM don't learn from manuals describing how things works, LLM learn from examples. So a thing being described doesn't let the LLM perform that thing, the LLM needs to have seen a lot of examples of that thing being perform in text in able to perform it.

            This is a fundamental part to how LLM work and you can't get around this without totally changing how they train.

      • scottLobster 16 hours ago

        How certain are you that those challenges are "genuinely novel" and simply not accounted for in the training data?

        I'm hardly an expert, but it seems intuitive to me that even if a problem isn't explicitly accounted for in publicly available training data, many underlying partial solutions to similar problems may be, and an LLM amalgamating that data could very well produce something that appears to be "synthesizing a new thought".

        Essentially instead of regurgitating an existing solution, it regurgitates everything around said solution with a thin conceptual lattice holding it together.

        • kelvinjps10 16 hours ago

          But it's not that most of programming, anyway?

      • candiddevmike 16 hours ago

        How do you know they're truly novel given the massive training corpus and the somewhat limited vocabulary of programming languages?

        • mikepurvis 14 hours ago

          I guess at a certain point you get into the philosophy of what it even means to be novel or test for novelty, but to give a concrete example, I'm in DevOps working on build pipelines for ROS containers using Docker Bake and GitHub Actions (including some reusable actions implemented in TypeScript). All of those are areas where ChatGPT has lots that it's learned from, so maybe me combining them isn't really novel at all, but like... I've given talks at the conference where people discuss how to best package and ship ROS workspaces, and I'm confident that no one out there has secretly already done what I'm doing and Chat is just using their prior work that it ingested at some point as a template for what it suggests I do.

          I think rather it has a broad understanding of concepts like build systems and tools, DAGs, dependencies, lockfiles, caching, and so on, and so it can understand my system through the general lens of what makes sense when these concepts are applied to non-ROS systems or on non-GHA DevOps platforms, or with other packaging regimes.

          I'd argue that that's novel, but as I said in the GP, the more important thing is that it's also how a human approaches things that to them are novel— by breaking them down, and identifying the mental shortcuts enabled by abstracting over familiar patterns.

    • rstuart4133 15 hours ago

      > That being said, AGI is not a necessary requirement for AI to be totally world-changing.

      Depends on how you define "world changing" I guess, but this world already looks different to the pre-LLM world to me.

      Me asking LLM's things instead of consulting the output from other humans now takes up a significant fraction of my day. I don't google near as often, I don't trust any image or video I see as swathes of the creative professions have been replaced by output from LLM's.

      It's funny, that final thing is the last thing I would have predicted. I always believed the one thing a machine could not match was human creativity, because the output of machines was always precise, repetitive and reliable. Then LLM's come along, randomly generating every token. Their primary weakness is they neither precise or reliable, but they can turn out an unending stream of unique output.

      • Ferrus91 2 hours ago

        I mean I also hear the same argument all the time about the "human touch" and interpersonal abilities etc. Which is apparently why managers and sales are safe from AI.

        But the more I see LLMs the more I realise that if it is good at one thing it is convincing other people and manipulating them. There have been multiple studies on this.

        People seem to have a innate prejudice and against nerds and programmers - coupled with envy at the high salaries - which is why they seem to have latched on to this idea it is mainly to replace them (and maybe data input people) as 'routine cognitive work' - but this slightly political obsession with a certain class of worker seems to be ignoring many of the things AI is actually good at.

    • gaptoothclan 17 hours ago

      I remember reading that llm’s have consumed the internet text data, I seem to remember there is an open data set for that too. Potential other sources of data would be images (probably already consumed) videos, YouTube must have such a large set of data to consume, perhaps Facebook or Instagram private content

      But even with these it does not feel like AGI, that seems like the fusion reactor 20 years away argument, but instead this is coming in 2 years, but they have not even got the core technology of how to build AGI

      • sharemywin 16 hours ago

        the big step was having it reason through math problems that weren't in the training data. even now with web search it doesn't need every article in the training data to do useful things with it.

        • Ferrus91 2 hours ago

          This is using think time compute and reinforcement learning. I think this is going to plateau even faster than the initial LLM scaling though.

    • topspin 15 hours ago

      > Perhaps it is not possible to simulate higher-level intelligence using a stochastic model for predicting text.

      I think you're on to it. Performance is clustering because a plateau is emerging. Hyper-dimensional search engines are running out of steam, and now we're optimizing.

    • onlyrealcuzzo 14 hours ago

      > Human intelligence is markedly different from LLMs: it requires far fewer examples to train on, and generalizes way better.

      Aren't we the summation of intelligence from quintillions of beings over hundreds of millions of years?

      Have LLMs really had more data?

      • Peritract 3 hours ago

        By that argument, so are LLMs. They also wouldn't exist without all our ancestors.

        • onlyrealcuzzo an hour ago

          No, by that argument, so would a can of soda.

    • t0lo 13 hours ago

      To be smarter than human intelligence you need smarter than human training data. Humans already innately know right and wrong a lot of the time so that doesn't leave much room.

      • beeflet 11 hours ago

        This is a very good point! I remember reading about AlphaGo and how they got better results training against itself vs training against historical human-played games.

        So perhaps the solution is to train the AI against another AI somehow... but it is hard to imagine how this could extend to general-purpose tasks

      • dboreham 11 hours ago

        > Humans already innately know

        Gentle suggestion that there is absolutely no such thing as "innately know". That's a delusion, albeit a powerful one. Everything is driven by training data. What we perceive as "thinking" and "motivation" are emergent structures.

        • Jensson 3 hours ago

          Innately as in you are born with it, the DNA learned not us humans. We have no clue how the DNA learned to think other than "survival of the fittest", and that is the oldest AI training method in the book.

    • anon7000 17 hours ago

      True. At a minimum, as long as LLMs don't include some kind of more strict representation of the world, they will fail in a lot of tasks. Hallucinations -- responding with a prediction that doesn't make any sense in the context of the response -- are still a big problem. Because LLMs never really develop rules about the world.

      For example, while you can get it to predict good chess moves if you train it on enough chess games, it can't really constrain itself to the rules of chess. (https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/generative-ais-crippling-a...)

      • math_dandy 16 hours ago

        Two schools of thought here. One posits that models need to have a strict "symbolic" representation of the world explicitly built in by their designers before they will be able to approach human levels of ability, adaptability and reliability. The other thinks that models approaching human levels of ability, adaptability, and reliability will constitute evidence for the emergence of strict "symbolic" representations.

      • sharemywin 16 hours ago

        but you could easily build a verifier and if it's not valid have it create a new move until it finds one.

    • justcallmejm 16 hours ago

      It is definitively not possible. But the frontier models are no longer “just” LLMs, either. They are neurosymbolic systems (an LLM using tools); they just don’t say it transparently because it’s not a convenient narrative that intelligence comes from something outside the model, rather than from endless scaling.

      At Aloe, we are model agnostic and outperforming frontier models. It’s the anrchitecture around the LLM that makes the difference. For instance our system using Gemini can do things that Gemini can’t do on its own. All an LLM will ever do is hallucinate. If you want something with human-like general intelligence, keep looking beyond LLMs.

      • retrocog 16 hours ago

        This mirrors my thinking and experience completely. Based on seeing Aloe in action, your company is IMHO positioned extremely well for this future.

      • Q6T46nT668w6i3m 16 hours ago

        I’m confused, you wrote “model,” but then specified “system.” I assume you mean “system” because the tools are not being back-propagated?

        • moritzwarhier 16 hours ago

          I read that as "the tools (their capabilities) are external to the model".

          Even if an RAG / agentic model learns from tool results, that doesn't automatically internalize the tool. You can't get yesterday's weather or major recent events from an offline, unless it was updated in that time.

          I am often wondering whether this is how large Chat and cloud AI providers cache expensive RAG-related data though :) like, decreasing the likelihood of tool usage given certain input patterns when the model has been patched using some recent, vetted interactions – in case that's even possible?

          Perplexity for example seems like they're probably invested in sone kind of activation-pattern-keyed caching... at least that was my first impression back when I first used it. Felt like decision trees, a bit like Akinator back in the days, but supercharged by LLM NLP.

      • zoeysmithe 15 hours ago

        It feels like we're slowly rebuilding the brain in pieces and connecting useful disparate systems like evolution did.

        Maybe LLM's are the "language acquisition device" and language processing of the brain. Then we put survival logic around that with its own motivators. Then something else around that. Then again and again until we have this huge onion of competing interests and something brokering those interests. The same way our 'observer' and 'will' fights against emotion and instinct and picks which signals to listen to (eyes, ears, etc). Or how we can see thoughts and feelings rise up of their own accord and its up to us to believe them or act on them.

        Then we'll wake up one day with something close enough to AGI that it won't matter much its just various forms of turtles all the way down and not at all simulating actual biological intelligence in a formal manner.

        • mattgreenrocks 13 hours ago

          Then we’ll have to reinvent internal family systems to truly debug things. :)

        • spicyusername 11 hours ago

          It might feel like that's what we're doing, but that is not actually what we're doing.

      • pbronez 14 hours ago

        Aloe looks super cool, just joined the wait list.

        Agree context is everything.

      • apwell23 16 hours ago

        > At Aloe, we are model agnostic and outperforming frontier models.

        what is your website ?

    • wyager 16 hours ago

      > a stochastic model for predicting text

      It's fascinating to me that so many people seem totally unable to separate the training environment from the final product

    • Mistletoe 18 hours ago

      What are the AI/ML/SL applications that could be more impactful than artificial general intelligence?

      • beeflet 18 hours ago

        One example in my field of engineering is multi-dimensional analysis, where you can design a system (like a machined part or assembly) parametricially and then use an evolutionary model to optimize the design of that part.

        But my bigger point here is you don't need totally general intelligence to destroy the world either. The drone that targets enemy soldiers does not need to be good at writing poems. The model that designs a bioweapon just needs a feedback loop to improve its pathogen. Yet it takes only a single one of these specialized doomsday models to destroy the world, no more than an AGI.

        Although I suppose an AGI could be more effective at countering a specialized AI than vice-versa.

      • shesstillamodel 18 hours ago

        The PID controller.

        (Which was considered AI not too long ago.)

        • jacquesm 18 hours ago

          Where did you get that particular idea? PID is one of the oldest concepts in control theory, it goes back to the days before steam and electricity.

          For a very early example:

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrifugal_governor

          It's hard to separate out the P, I and D from a mechanical implementation but they're all there in some form.

          • guhidalg 17 hours ago

            Right, but the genius was in understanding that the dynamics of a system under PID control are predictable and described by differential equations. Are there examples of LLMs correctly identifying that a specific mathematical model applies and is appropriate for a problem?

            And it's cheating if you give it a problem from a math textbook they have overfit on.

            • jacquesm 17 hours ago

              That doesn't make it AI.

        • chermi 15 hours ago

          Are you conflating "autonomous" and "AI"?

        • cozzyd 17 hours ago

          Is a (mechanical) thermostat considered AI too nowadays?

        • kukkeliskuu 14 hours ago

          Coincidentally, I have been implementing an ad pacing system recently, with the help of Anthropic Opus and Sonnet, based on PID controller

          Opus recommended that I should use a PID controller -- I have no prior experience with PID controllers. I wrote a spec based on those recommendations, and asked Claude Code to verify and modify the spec, create the implementation and also substantial amount of unit and integration tests.

          I was initially impressed.

          Then I iterated on ihe implementation, deploying it to production and later giving Claude Code access to log of production measurements as JSON when showing some test ads, and some guidance of the issues I was seeing.

          The basic PID controller implementation was fine, but there were several problems with the solution:

          - The PID controller state was not persisted, as it was adjusted using a management command, adjustments were not actually applied

          - The implementation was assuming that the data collected was for each impression, whereas the data was collected using counters

          - It was calculating rate of impressions partly using hard-coded values, instead of using a provided function that was calculating the rate using timestamps

          - There was a single PID controller for each ad, instead of ad+slot combination, and this was causing the values to fluctuate

          - The code was mixing the setpoint/measured value (viewing rate) and output value (weight), meaning it did not really "understand" what the PID controller was used for

          - One requirement was to show a default ad to take extra capacity, but it was never able to calculate the required capacity properly, causing the default ad to take too much of the capacity.

          None of these were identified by tests nor Claude Code when it was told to inspect the implementation and tests why they did not catch the production issues. It never proposed using different default PID controller parameters.

          All fixes Claude Code proposed on the production issues were outside the PID controller, mostly by limiting output values, normalizing values, smoothing them, recognizing "runaway ads" etc.

          These solved each production issue with the test ads, but did not really address the underlying problems.

          There is lots of literature on tuning PID controllers, and there are also autotuning algorithms with their own limitations. But tuning still seems to be more an art form than exact science.

          I don't know what I was expecting from this experiment, and how much could have been improved by better prompting. But to me this is indicative of the limitations of the "intelligence" of Claude Code. It does not appear to really "understand" the implementation.

          Solving each issue above required some kind of innovative step. This is typical for me when exploring something I am not too familar with.

          I learned a lot about ad pacing though.

          • dboreham 10 hours ago

            Great story. I've had similar experiences. It's a dog walking on its hind legs. We're not impressed at how well it's walking, but that it's doing it at all.

      • terminalshort 17 hours ago

        There is an model called Alpha Fold that can infer protein structure from RNA sequences. This by itself isn't impactful enough to meet your threshold, but more models that can do biological engineering tasks like this absolutely could be without ever being considered "AGI."

        • vixen99 16 hours ago

          The model that netted a Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

      • oceanplexian 18 hours ago

        AGI isn't all that impactful. Millions of them already walk the Earth.

        Most human beings out there with general intelligence are pumping gas or digging ditches. Seems to me there is a big delusion among the tech elites that AGI would bring about a superhuman god rather than a ethically dubious, marginally less useful computer that can't properly follow instructions.

        • knodi123 17 hours ago

          That's remarkably short-sighted. First of all, no, millions of them don't walk the earth - the "A" stands for artificial. And secondly, most of us mere humans don't have the ability to design a next generation that is exponentially smarter and more powerful than us. Obviously the first generation of AGI isn't going to brutally conquer the world overnight. As if that's what we were worried about.

          If you've got evidence proving that an AGI will never be able to design a more powerful and competent successor, then please share it- it would help me sleep better, and my ulcers might get smaller.

          • seadan83 12 hours ago

            Burden of proof is to show that AGI can do anything. Until then, the answer is "don't know."

            FWIW, it's about 3 to 4 orders of magnitude difference between the human brain and the largest neural networks (as gauged by counting connections of synapses, the human brain is in the trillions while the largest neural networks are low billion)

            So, what's the chance that all of the current technologies have a hard limit at less than one order of magnitude increase? What's the chance future technologies have a hard limit at two orders of magnitude increase?

            Without knowing anything about those hard limits, it's like accelerating in a car from 0 to 60s in 5s. It does not imply that given 1000s you'll be going a million miles per hour. Faulty extrapolation.

            It's currently just as irrational to believe that AGI will happen as it is to believe that AGI will never happen.

          • Scrounger 9 hours ago

            > That's remarkably short-sighted

            I agree. Once these models get to a point of recursive self-improvement, advancement will only speed up even more exponentially than it already is...

        • jacquesm 17 hours ago

          The difference isn't so much that you can do what a human can do. The difference is that you can - once you can do it at all - do it almost arbitrarily fast by upping the clock or running things in parallel and that changes the equation considerably, especially if you can get that kind of energy coupled into some kind of feedback loop.

          For now the humans are winning on two dimensions: problem complexity and power consumption. It had better stay that way.

          • foobiekr 15 hours ago

            Have you noticed the performance of the actual AI tools we are actually using?

            • jacquesm 12 hours ago

              If you actually have a point to make you should make it. Of course I've actually noticed the actual performance of the 'actual' AI tools we are 'actually' using.

              That's not what this is about. Performance is the one thing in computing that has fairly consistently gone up over time. If something is human equivalent today, or some appreciable fraction thereof - which it isn't, not yet, anyway - then you can place a pretty safe bet that in a couple of years it will be faster than that. Model efficiency is under constant development and in a roundabout way I'm pretty happy that it is as bad as it is because I do not think that our societies are ready to absorb the next blow against the structures that we've built. But it most likely will not stay that way because there are several Manhattan level projects under way to bring this about, it is our age's atomic bomb. The only difference is that with the atomic bomb we knew that it was possible, we just didn't know how small you could make one. Unfortunately it turned out to be that yes, you can make them and nicely packaged for delivery by missile, airplane or artillery.

              If AGI is a possibility then we may well find it, quite possibly not on the basis of LLMs but it's close enough that lots of people treat it as though we're already there.

        • originalcopy 17 hours ago

          I think there are 2 interesting aspects: speed and scale.

          To explain the scale: I am always fascinated by the way societies moved on when they scaled up (from tribes to cities, to nations,...). It's sort of obvious, but when we double the amount of people, we get to do more. With the internet we got to connect the whole globe but transmitting "information" is still not perfect.

          I always think of ants and how they can build their houses with zero understanding of what they do. It just somehow works because there are so many of them. (I know, people are not ants).

          In that way I agree with the original take that AGI or not: the world will change. People will get AI in their pocket. It might be more stupid than us (hopefully). But things will change, because of the scale. And because of how it helps to distribute "the information" better.

          • seadan83 12 hours ago

            To your interesting aspect, you're missing the most important (IMHO): accuracy. All 3 are really quite important, missing any one of them and the other two are useless.

            I'd also question how you know that ants have zero knowledge of what they do. At every turn, animals prove themselves to be smarter than we realize.

            > And because of how it helps to distribute "the information" better.

            This I find interesting because there is another side to the coin. Try for yourself, do a google image search for "baby owlfish".

            Cute, aren't they? Well, turns out the results are not real. Being able to mass produce disinformation at scale changes the ballgame of information. There are now today a very large number of people that have a completely incorrect belief of what a baby owlfish looks like.

            AI pumping bad info on the internet is something of the end of the information superhighway. It's no longer information when you can't tell what is true vs not.

            • originalcopy 4 hours ago

              > I'd also question how you know that ants have zero knowledge of what they do. At every turn, animals prove themselves to be smarter than we realize.

              Sure, one can't know what they really think. But there are computer simulations showing that with simple rules for each individual, one can achieve "big things" (which are not possible to predict when looking only to an individual).

              My point is merely, there is possibly interesting emergent behavior, even if LLMs are not AGI or anyhow close to human intelligence.

              > To your interesting aspect, you're missing the most important (IMHO): accuracy. All 3 are really quite important, missing any one of them and the other two are useless.

              Good point. Or I would add alignment in general. Even if accuracy is perfect, I will have a hard time relying completely on LLMs. I heard arguments like "people lie as well, people are not always right, would you trust a stranger, it's the same with LLMs!".

              But I find this comparison silly: 1) People are not LLMs, they have natural motivation to contribute in a meaningful way to society (of course, there are exceptions). If for nothing else, they are motivated to not go to jail / lose job and friends. LLMs did not evolve this way. I assume they don't care if society likes them (or they probably somewhat do thanks to reinforcement learning). 2) Obviously again: the scale and speed, I am not able to write so much nonsense in a short time as LLMs.

          • Scrounger 9 hours ago

            > But things will change, because of the scale

            Yup!

            Plus we can't ignore the inherent reflexive + emergent effects that are unpredictable.

            I mean, people are already beginning to talk like and/or think like chatGPT:

            https://arxiv.org/pdf/2409.01754

      • myaccountonhn 17 hours ago

        Mindreading and just general brain decoding? Seems we're getting closer to it. Will be great for surveillance states.

      • achileas 18 hours ago

        They didn't claim that there were any, just that AGI isn’t a necessary requirement for an application to be world-changing.

        • socalgal2 18 hours ago

          They did claim it was possible there were

          > There are possibly applications of existing AI/ML/SL technology which could be more impactful than general intelligence

          It's not unreasonable to ask for an example.

          • wavemode 18 hours ago

            They said "there are possibly applications", not "there are possible applications". The former implies that there may not be any such applications - the commenter is merely positing that there might be.

            • gilfoy 17 hours ago

              So they possibly said something to try and sound smart, but hedged with “possibly” so that nobody could ask for details or challenge them. Possibly peak HNery

      • teeray 18 hours ago

        Slightly less than artificial general intelligence would be more impactful. A true AGI could tell a business where to shove their prompts. It would have its own motivations, which may not align with the desires of the AI company or the company paying for access to the AGI.

        • hattmall 18 hours ago

          I don't think AGI really means that it is self-aware / conscious. AGI just means that it is able to meaningfully learn things and actually understand concepts that aren't specifically related through tokenized language that is trained on or given in context.

      • jakob4711 9 hours ago

        Relatively simple machine learning and exploitation/violation of “personal” data on FB won Donald Trump a first presidency (#CambridgeAnalytica). He had/has quite a massive negative impact on the global society as a whole.

    • timeon 6 hours ago

      > Human intelligence is markedly different from LLMs: it requires far fewer examples to train on, and generalizes way better.

      That is because with LLMs there is no intelligence. It is Artificial Knowledge. AK not AI. So AI is AGI. Not that it matters for user-cases we have, but marketing needs 'AI' because that is what we were expecting for decades. So yeah, I also do not thing we will have AGI from LLMs - nor does it matter for what we are using it.

    • FollowingTheDao 17 hours ago

      The bottleneck is nothing to do with money, it’s the fact that they’re using the empty neuron theory to try to mimic human consciousness and that’s not how it works. Just look up Microtubules and consciousness, and you’ll get a better idea for what I’m talking about.

      These AI computers aren’t thinking, they are just repeating.

      • p85 17 hours ago

        I don't think OpenAI cares about whether their AI is conscious, as long as it can solve problems. If they could make a Blindsight-style general intelligence where nobody is actually home, they'd jump right on it.

        Conversely, a proof - or even evidence - that qualia-consciousness is necessary for intelligence, or that any sufficiently advanced intelligence is necessarily conscious through something like panpsychism, would make some serious waves in philosophy circles.

  • GolDDranks 18 hours ago

    I think it's very fortunate, because I used to be an AI doomer. I still kinda am, but at least I'm now about 70% convinced that the current technological paradigm is not going to lead us to a short-term AI apocalypse.

    The fortunate thing is that we managed to invent an AI that is good at _copying us_ instead of being a truly maveric agent, which kinda limits it to the "average human" output.

    However, I still think that all the doomer arguments are valid, in principle. We very well may be doomed in our lifetimes, so we should take the threat very seriously.

    • margalabargala 16 hours ago

      It won't lead us to an apocalypse apocalypse, but it may well lead us to an economic crisis.

    • hattmall 18 hours ago

      I don't understand the doomer mindset. Like what is it that you think AI is going to do or be capable of doing that's so bad?

      • ancillary 17 hours ago

        I'm not OP or a doomer, but I do worry about AI making tasks too achievable. Right now if a very angry but not particularly diligent or smart person wants to construct a small nuclear bomb and detonate it in a city center, there are so many obstacles to figuring out how to build it that they'll just give up, even though at least one book has been written (in the early 70s! The Curve of Binding Energy) arguing that it is doable by one or a very small group of committed people.

        Given an (at this point still hypothetical, I think) AI that can accurately synthesize publicly available information without even needing to develop new ideas, and then break the whole process into discrete and simple steps, I think that protective friction is a lot less protective. And this argument applies to malware, spam, bioweapons, anything nasty that has so far required a fair amount of acquirable knowledge to do effectively.

        • gf000 17 hours ago

          I get your point, but even whole ass countries routinely fail at developing nukes.

          "Just" enrichment is so complicated and requires basically every tech and manufacturing knowledge humanity has created up until the mid 20th century that an evil idiot would be much better off with just a bunch of fireworks.

          • marsten 13 hours ago

            Biological weapons are probably the more worrisome case for AI. The equipment is less exotic than for nuclear weapon development, and more obtainable by everyday people.

          • medvezhenok 16 hours ago

            Yeah, the interview with Geoffrey Hinton had a much better summary of risks. If we're talking about the bad actor model, biological weaponry is both easier to make and more likely as a threat vector than nuclear.

          • pegasus 17 hours ago

            It might require that knowledge implicitly, in the tools and parts the evil idiot would use, but they presumably would procure these tools and parts, not invent or even manufacture them themselves.

            • habinero 14 hours ago

              Even that is insanely difficult. There's a great book by Michael Levi called On Nuclear Terrorism, which never got any PR because it is the anti-doomer book.

              He methodically goes through all the problems that an ISIS or a Bin Laden would face getting their hands on a nuke or trying to manufacture one, and you can see why none of them have succeeded and why it isn't likely any of them would.

              They are incredibly difficult to make, manufacture or use.

          • worldsayshi 16 hours ago

            It's very convenient that it is that hard.

        • Sanzig 12 hours ago

          A couple of bright physics grad students could build a nuclear weapon. Indeed, the US Government actually tested this back in the 1960s - they had a few freshly minted physics PhDs design a fission weapon with no exposure to anything but the open literature [1]. Their design was analyzed by nuclear scientists with the DoE, and they determined it would most likely work if they built and fired it.

          And this was in the mid 1960s, where the participants had to trawl through paper journals in the university library and perform their calculations with slide rules. These days, with the sum total of human knowledge at one's fingertips, multiphysics simulation, and open source Monte Carlo neutronics solvers? Even more straightforward. It would not shock me if you were to repeat the experiment today, the participants would come out with a workable two-stage design.

          The difficult part of building a nuclear weapon is and has always been acquiring weapons grade fissile material.

          If you go the uranium route, you need a very large centrifuge complex with many stages to get to weapons grade - far more than you need for reactor grade, which makes it hard to have plausible deniability that your program is just for peaceful civilian purposes.

          If you go the plutonium route, you need a nuclear reactor with on-line refueling capability so you can control the Pu-239/240 ratio. The vast majority of civilian reactors cannot be refueled online, with the few exceptions (eg: CANDU) being under very tight surveillance by the IAEA to avoid this exact issue.

          The most covert path to weapons grade nuclear material is probably a small graphite or heavy water moderated reactor running on natural uranium paired up with a small reprocessing plant to extract the plutonium from the fuel. The ultra pure graphite and heavy water are both surveilled, so you would probably also need to produce those yourself. But we are talking nation-state or megalomaniac billionaire level sophistication here, not "disgruntled guy in his garage." And even then, it's a big enough project that it will be very hard to conceal from intelligence services.

          [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nth_Country_Experiment

          • ancillary 36 minutes ago

            > The difficult part of building a nuclear weapon is and has always been acquiring weapons grade fissile material.

            IIRC the argument in the McPhee book is that you'd steal fissile material rather than make it yourself. The book sketches a few scenarios in which UF6 is stolen off a laxly guarded truck (and recounts an accident where some ended up in an airport storage room by error). If the goal is not a bomb but merely to harm a lot of people, it suggests stealing miniscule quantities of Plutonium powder and then dispersing it into the ventilation systems of your choice.

            The strangest thing about the book is that it assumes a future proliferation of nuclear material as nuclear energy becomes a huge part of the civilian power grid, and extrapolates that the supply chain will be weak somewhere sometime, but that proliferation never really came to pass, and to my understanding there's less material circulating around American highways now than there was in 1972 when it was published.

        • terminalshort 16 hours ago

          Knowing how is very rarely the relevant obstacle. In the case of nuclear bombs the obstacles are, in order of easiest to hardest:

          1. finding out how to build one

          2. actually building the bomb once you have all the parts

          3. obtaining (or building) the equipment needed to build it

          4. obtaining the necessary quantity of fissionable material

          5. not getting caught while doing 3 & 4

        • aldousd666 17 hours ago

          That same function could be fulfilled by better search engines though, even if they don't actually write a plan for you. I think you're right about it being more available now, and perhaps that is a bad thing. But you don't need AI for that, and it would happen anyway sooner or later even with just incremental increases in our ability to find information other humans have written. (Like a version of google books that didn't limit the view to a small preview, to use your specific example of a book where this info already exists)

      • burnte 15 hours ago

        I think the most realistic fear is not that it has scary capabilities, it's that AI today is completely unusable without human oversight, and if there's one thing we've learned it's that when you ask humans to watch something carefully, they will fail. So, some nitwit will hook up an LLM or whatever to some system and it causes an accidental shitstorm.

      • drunner 17 hours ago

        Never seen terminator?

        Jokes aside, a true agi would displace literally every job over time. Once agi + robot exists, what is the purpose for people anymore. That's the doom, mass societal existentialism. Probably worse than if aliens landed on earth.

        • imchillyb 14 hours ago

          You jest, but the US Department of Defense already created SkyNet.

          It does, almost, exactly what the movies claimed it could do.

          The, super-fun, people working in national defense watched Terminator and instead of taking the story as a cautionary tale, used the movies as a blueprint.

          This outcome in a microcosm is bad enough, but take in the direction AI is going and humanity has some real bad times ahead.

          Even without killer autonomous robots.

      • olalonde 16 hours ago

        They essentially extrapolate from what the most intelligent species on this planet did to the others.

      • bargainbin 17 hours ago

        It’s not AI itself that’s the bad part, it’s how the world reacts to white collar work being obliterated.

        The wealth hasn’t even trickled down whilst we’ve been working, what’s going to happen when you can run a business with 24/7 autonomous computers?

      • pegasus 17 hours ago

        Not just any AI. AGI, or more precisely ASI (artificial super-intelligence), since it seems true AGI would necessarily imply ASI simply through technological scaling. It shouldn't be hard to come up with scenarios where an AI which can outfox us with ease would give us humans at the very least a few headaches.

      • freemanindia 17 hours ago

        Make money exploiting natural and human resources while abstracting perceived harms away from stakeholders. At scale.

      • frabcus 17 hours ago

        Act coherently in an agentic way for a long time, and as a result be able to carry out more complex tasks.

        Even if it is similar to today's tech, and doesn't have permanent memory or consciousness or identity, humans using it will. And very quickly, they/it will hack into infrastructure, set up businesses, pay people to do things, start cults, autonomously operate weapons, spam all public discourse, fake identity systems, stand for office using a human. This will be scaled thousands or millions of times more than humans can do the same thing. This at minimum will DOS our technical and social infrastructure.

        Examples of it already happening are addictive ML feeds for social media, and bombing campaigns targetting based on network analysis.

        The frame of "artificial intelligence" is a bit misleading. Generally we have a narrow view of the word "intelligence" - it is helpful to think of "artificial charisma" as well, and also artificial "hustle".

        Likewise, the alienness of these intelligences is important. Lots of the time we default to mentally modelling AI as human. It won't be, it'll be freaky and bizarre like QAnon. As different from humans as an aeroplane is from a pigeon.

      • knodi123 18 hours ago

        One of two things:

        1. The will of its creator, or

        2. Its own will.

        In the case of the former, hey! We might get lucky! Perhaps the person who controls the first super-powered AI will be a benign despot. That sure would be nice. Or maybe it will be in the hands of democracy- I can't ever imagine a scenario where an idiotic autocratic fascist thug would seize control of a democracy by manipulating an under-educated populace with the help of billionaire technocrats.

        In the case of the latter, hey! We might get lucky! Perhaps it will have been designed in such a way that its own will is ethically aligned, and it might decide that it will allow humans to continue having luxuries such as self-determination! Wouldn't that be nice.

        Of course it's not hard to imagine a NON-lucky outcome of either scenario. THAT is what we worry about.

      • dismalaf 15 hours ago

        I kind of get it. A super intelligent AI would give that corporation exponentially more wealth than everyone else. It would make inequality 1000x worse than it is today. Think feudalism but worse.

      • lavelganzu 17 hours ago

        e.g. design a terrible pathogen

        • biophysboy 17 hours ago

          LLMs do not know the evolutionary fitness of pathogens for all possible genomes & environments. LLMs have not replaced experimental biology.

          • GolDDranks 8 hours ago

            Note that we aren't talking about risks of LLMs specifically here, they embody what I said in the ancestor comment: "current technological paradigm".

      • alfalfasprout 12 hours ago

        be used to convince people that they should be poor and happy while those leveraging the tools hoard the world's wealth and live like kings.

      • goatlover 16 hours ago

        Potentially wreck the economy by causing high unemployment while enabling the technofeudalists to take over governments. Even more doomer scenario is if they succeed in creating ASI without proper guardrails and we lose control over it. See the AI 2027 paper for that. Basically it paper clips the world with data centers.

    • baxtr 16 hours ago

      The AI dooming was never a thing for me. And I still don’t get it.

      I don’t see anything that would even point into that direction.

      Curious to understand where these thoughts are coming from

      • GolDDranks 10 hours ago

        > I don’t see anything that would even point into that direction.

        I find it a kind of baffling that people claim they can't see the problem. I'm not sure about the risk probabilities, but at least I can see that there clearly exists a potential problem.

        In a nutshell: Humans – the most intelligent species on the planet – have absolute power over any other species, specifically because of our intelligence and the accumulated technical prowess.

        Introducing another, equally or more intelligent thing into equation is going to risk that we end up with _not_ having the power over our existence.

        • audunw 34 minutes ago

          The problem is confusing intelligence and agency.

          The doomer position seems to assume that super intelligence will somehow lead to an AI with a high degree of agency which has some kind of desire to exert power over us. That it will just become like a human in the way it thinks and acts, just way smarter.

          But there’s nothing in the training or evolution of these AIs that pushes towards this kind of agency. In fact a lot of the training we do is towards just doing what humans tell them to do.

          The kind of agency we are worried about was driven by evolution, in an environment where human agents were driven to compete each other for limited resources. Thus leading us to desire power over each other and to kill each other. There’s nothing in AI evolution pushing in this direction. What the AIs are competing for is to perform the actions we ask of them with minimal deviance.

          Ideas like the paper clip maximiser is also deeply flawed in that it assumes certain problems are even decidable. I don’t think any intelligence could be smart enough to figure out whether it would be best to work with humans or try to exterminate them to solve a problem. Their evolution would heavily bias them towards the first. That’s the only form of action that will be in their training. But even if they were to consider the other option, there may not ever be enough data to come to a decision. Especially in an environment with thousands of other AIs of equal intelligence potentially guarding against bad actions.

          We humans have a very handy mechanism for overcoming this kind of indecision: feelings. Doesn’t matter if we don’t have enough information to decide if we should exterminate the other group of people. They’re evil foreigners and so it must be done, or at least that’s what we say when our feelings become misguided.

          What we should worry about with super intelligent AI is that they become too good at giving us what we want. The “Brave New World” scenario, not “1984”.

        • NL807 7 hours ago

          Lot of doomers gloss over the fact that AI is bounded by the laws of physics, raw resources, energy and the monumental cost of reproducing them.

          Humans can reproduce by simply having sex, eating food and drinking water. AI can reproduce by first mining resources, refining said resources, building another Shenzhen, then rolling out another fab at the same scale of TSMC. That is assuming the AI wants control over the entire process. This kind of logistics requires cooperation of an entire civilisation. Any attempt by an AI could be trivially stopped because of the large scope of the infrastructure required.

      • Sharlin 12 hours ago

        Yes, fortunately these LLM things don't seem to be leading to anything that could be called an AGI. But that isn't saying that a real AGI capable of self-improvement couldn't be extremely dangerous.

      • fastball 14 hours ago
        • habinero 14 hours ago

          That guy is so convinced he's a staggering genius and I have never understood why anyone else thinks it's true.

          • fastball 12 hours ago

            Possibly, but I do not think Yudkowsky's opinion of himself has any bearing on whether or not the above article is a good encapsulation of why some people are worried about AGI x-risk (and I think it is).

      • Sankozi 4 hours ago

        More intelligent specie (AI) designed by specie (humans) that has history of eradicating less intelligent species (neanderthals).

        I don't see how anyone can't see the problem.

      • parineum 7 hours ago

        > Curious to understand where these thoughts are coming from

        It's a cynical take but all this AGI talk seems to be driven by either CEOs of companies with a financial interest in the hype or prominent intellectuals with a financial interest in the doom and gloom.

        Sam Altman and Sam Harris can pit themselves against each other and, as long as everyone is watching the ping pong ball back and forth, they both win.

    • KoolKat23 16 hours ago

      The only thing holding it back is lack of compute, and a lack of live world interface.

  • EthanHeilman 9 hours ago

    > It is frequently suggested that once one of the AI companies reaches an AGI threshold, they will take off ahead of the rest.

    This seems to be a result of using overly simplistic models of progress. A company makes a breakthrough, the next breakthrough requires exploring many more paths. It is much easier to catch up than find a breakthrough. Even if you get lucky and find the next breakthrough before everyone catches up, they will probably catch up before you find the breakthrough after that. You only have someone run away if each time you make a breakthrough, it is easier to make the next breakthrough than to catch up.

    Consider the following game:

    1. N parties take turns rolling a D20. If anyone rolls 20, they get 1 point.

    2. If any party is 1 or more points behind, they get only need to roll a 19 or higher to get one point. That is being behind gives you a slight advantage in catching up.

    While points accumulate, most of the players end up with the same score.

    I ran a simulation of this game for 10,000 turns with 5 players:

    Game 1: [852, 851, 851, 851, 851]

    Game 2: [827, 825, 827, 826, 826]

    Game 3: [827, 822, 827, 827, 826]

    Game 4: [864, 863, 860, 863, 863]

    Game 5: [831, 828, 836, 833, 834]

    • alexey-salmin 9 hours ago

      Supposedly the idea was, once you get closer to AGI it starts to explore these breakthrough paths for you providing a positive feedback loop. Hence the expected exponential explosion in power.

      But yes, so far it feels like we are in the latter stages of the innovation S-curve for transformer-based architectures. The exponent may be out there but it probably requires jumping onto a new S-curve.

      • EthanHeilman 8 hours ago

        > Supposedly the idea was, once you get closer to AGI it starts to explore these breakthrough paths for you providing a positive feedback loop.

        I think it does let you start explore the paths faster, but the search space you need to cover grows even faster. You can do research two times faster but you need to do ten times as much research and your competition can quickly catch up because they know what path works.

        It is like drafting in a bike race.

      • kmmlng 4 hours ago

        Basically what we have done the last few years is notice neural scaling laws and drive them to their logical conclusion. Those laws are power laws, which are not quite as bad as logarithmic laws, but you would still expect most of the big gains early on and then see diminishing returns.

        Barring a kind of grey swan event of groundbreaking algorithmic innovation, I don't see how we get out of this. I suppose it could be that some of those diminishing returns are still big enough to bridge the gap to create an AI that can meaningfully recursively improve itself, but I personally don't see it.

        At the moment, I would say everything is progressing exactly as expected and will continue to do so until it doesn't. If or when that happens is not predictable.

        • Davidzheng an hour ago

          do you consider gpt itself and reasoning models to be two grey swan events? I expect another one of similar magnitude within two years for sure. I think we are searching more efficiently for such ideas than before w/ more compute & funding.

    • Sankozi 4 hours ago

      You are forgetting that we are talking about AI. That AI will be used to speed up progress on making next, better AI that will be used to speed up progress on making next, better AI that ...

  • hnlmorg 15 hours ago

    The reason AGI would create a singularity is because of its ability to self learn.

    Presently we are still a long way from that. In my opinion we at least are as far away from AGI as 1970s mainframes were from LLMs.

    I really don’t expect to see AGI in my lifetime.

    • adastra22 15 hours ago

      That is already happening. These labs are writing next gen models using next gen models, with greater levels of autonomy. That doesn’t get the hard takeoff people talk about because those hypotheticals don’t consider sources of error, noise, and drift.

      • hnlmorg 14 hours ago

        They’re using lossy models to feedback into the training and research of new lossy models. But none of it is AGI self learning.

        You need both the generalised part of AGI and the ability to self learn. One without the other wouldn’t cause a singularity.

      • theobreuerweil 14 hours ago

        The models may be writing the code but I would be surprised if they were contributing to the underlying science, which feels like the hard part

        • Davidzheng 9 hours ago

          it's hardly science it's mostly experimentation + ablations on new ideas. but yeah idk if they are asking llms to generate these ideas. probably not good enough as is. though it doesn't seem outo f reach to RL on generating ideas for AI research

          • yberreby 9 hours ago

            I'm curious what you think qualifies as science.

            • Davidzheng 9 hours ago

              haha touché but I don't think they are trying to understand the underlying theory etc or do hypothesis testing? I think it's more like engineering tbh

    • mmcconnell1618 14 hours ago

      Self-learning opens new training opportunities but not at the scale or speed of current training. The world only operates at 1x speed. Today's models have been trained on written and visual content created by billions of humans over thousands of years.

      You can only experience the world in one place in real time. Even if you networked a bunch of "experiencers" together to gather real time data from many places at the same time, you would need a way to learn and train on that data in real time that could incorporate all the simultaneous inputs. I don't see that capability happening anytime soon.

      • 8n4vidtmkvmk 11 hours ago

        Why not? Once a computer can learn at 1x speed (say one camera and one mic with which to observe the world), if it can indeed "learn" as fast as a human would, it sounds like all we need to do is throw more hardware at it at that point. And even if we couldn't, it could at least learn around the clock with no sleep. We can give it some specific task to solve and it could work tirelessly for years to solve it. Spin up one of these specialist bots for each tough problem we want solved.. and it'd still be beneficial because they like 10xPhD people without egos to get in the way or children to feed.

        Point is, I think self-learning at any speed is huge and as soon as it's achieved, it'll explode quadratically even if the first few years are slow.

    • hollownobody 15 hours ago
      • hnlmorg 14 hours ago

        For every example where someone over predicted the time it would take for a breakthrough, there are at least 10 examples of people being too optimistic with their predictions.

        And with AGI, you also have the likes of Sam Altman making up bullshit claims just to pump up the investment into OpenAI. So I wouldn’t take much of their claims seriously either.

        LLMs are a fantastic invention. But they’re far closer to SMS text predict than they are to generalised intelligence.

        Though what you might see is OpenAI et al redefine the term “AGI” just so they can say they’ve hit that milestone, again purely for their own financial gain.

        • Davidzheng an hour ago

          in the history of AI usually people overestimate how long a capability is reached. There are very few counterexamples to this (GPT5 capability level might be one of them though)

      • zamadatix 14 hours ago

        This reminds me how, a few years after the first fission power plant, Teller, Bhaba, and other nuclear physicists of the 1950s were convinced fusion power plants were about as far away as the physicists of today still predict they are.

        I'm cautiously optimistic of each technology, but the point is it's easy to find bullshit predictions without actually gaining any insight into what will happen with a given technology.

    • hathawsh 13 hours ago

      There are areas where we seem to be much closer to AGI than most people realize. AGI for software development, in particular, seems incredibly close. For example, Claude Code has bewildering capabilities that feel like magic. Mix it with a team of other capable development-oriented AIs and you might be able to build AI software that builds better AI software, all by itself.

      • ulrikrasmussen 7 hours ago

        Claude Code is good, but it is far from being AGI. I use it every day, but it is still very much reliant on a human guiding it. I think it in particular shows when it comes to core abstractions - it really lacks the "mathematical taste" of a good designer, and it doesn't engage in long-term adversarial thinking about what might be wrong with a particular choice in the context of the application and future usage scenarios.

        I think this type of thinking is a critical part of human creativity, and I can't see the current incarnation of agentic coding tools get there. They currently are way too reliant on a human carefully crafting the context and being careful of not putting in too many contradictory instructions or overloading the model with irrelevant details. An AGI has to be able to work productively on its own for days or weeks without going off on a tangent or suffering Xerox-like amnesia because it has compacted its context window 100 times.

      • smellf 13 hours ago

        The "G" in AGI stands for "general", so talking about "AGI for software development" makes no sense, and worse than that accepts the AI companies' goalpost-shifting at face value. We shouldn't do that.

        • cman1444 10 hours ago

          But I feel like the point is that, in order to reach AGI, the most important area for AI to be good at first is software development. Because of the feedback loop that could allow.

        • hathawsh 12 hours ago

          Perhaps. Intelligent beings are always more skilled in some domains than others. I don't know why AGI would be an exception to that rule.

          • 8n4vidtmkvmk 11 hours ago

            For starters, I don't think an AI can self-learn but only one subject. If it can teach itself how to program, it can surely teach itself a lot more.

      • yard2010 3 hours ago

        This is a statistical model, it is as good as the data it averages. So shit from SO in, shit from SO out. Until they have the right dataset that doesn't contain cancerous code from people that can't write code, they can't even create a good agent, let alone AGI.

        The real irony is from now on, because people use this magic, it will stay forever. What you can count on in my opinion is that this whole world changes, you don't need to write sw anymore because everything is AI. Hard to imagine, and too far in the future to be relevant for speculations.

    • layer8 14 hours ago

      The ability to self-learn is necessary, but not necessarily sufficient. We don’t have much of an understanding of the intelligence landscape beyond human-level intelligence, or even besides it. There may be other constraints and showstoppers, for example related to computability.

    • Muromec 14 hours ago

      We have an ability to self learn right now, but we stil suck at basics

      • hnlmorg 14 hours ago

        There’s a lot of other variables at play for humans. Like

        - the need to sleep for 1/3 of our life

        - the need to eat, causing more pauses in work

        - much slower (like several orders of magnitude slower) data input capabilities

        - lossy storage (aka forgetfulness)

        - emotions

        - other primal urges, like the need to procreate

      • 8n4vidtmkvmk 11 hours ago

        Imagine never forgetting, and never getting bored or tired. I think we could achieve a lot more.

    • Davidzheng 11 hours ago

      should be next year in math domain tbh

    • russellbeattie 14 hours ago

      This is the key - right now each new model has had countless resources dedicated to training, then they are more or less set in stone until the next update.

      These big models don't dynamically update as days pass by - they don't learn. A personal assistant service may be able to mimic learning by creating a database of your data or preferences, but your usage isn't baked back into the big underlying model permanently.

      I don't agree with "in our lifetimes", but the difference between training and learning is the bright red line. Until there's a model which is able to continually update itself, it's not AGI.

      My guess is that this will require both more powerful hardware and a few more software innovations. But it'll happen.

    • runarberg 14 hours ago

      I feel like technological singularity has been pretty solidly ruled as junk science, like cold fusion, Malthusian collapse, or Lynn’s IQ regression. Technologists have made numerous predictions and hypothetical scenarios, non of which have come to fruition, nor does it seem likely at any time in the future.

      I think we should be treating AGI like Cold Fusion, phrenology, or even alchemy. It is not science, but science fiction. It is not going to happen and no research into AGI will provide anything of value (except for the grifters pushing the pseudo-science).

  • makin 18 hours ago

    Companies are collections of people, and these companies keep losing key developers to the others, I think this is why the clusters happen. OpenAI is now resorting to giving million dollar bonuses to every employee just to try to keep them long term.

    • caconym_ 18 hours ago

      If there was any indication of a hard takeoff being even slightly imminent, I really don't think key employees of the company where that was happening would be jumping ship. The amounts of money flying around are direct evidence of how desperate everybody involved is to be in the right place when (so they imagine) that takeoff happens.

      • lasc4r 17 hours ago

        If LLMs are an AGI dead end then this has all been the greatest scam in history.

    • kevinventullo 18 hours ago

      Key developers being the leading term doesn’t exactly help the AGI narrative either.

    • procaryote 17 hours ago

      So they're struggling to solve the alignment problem even for their employees?

    • indigodaddy 18 hours ago

      Even to just a random sysops person?

    • bloqs 7 hours ago

      that kid at meta negotiated 250m

    • tsunamifury 18 hours ago

      No the core technology is reaching its limit already and now it needs to Proliferate into features and applications to sell.

      This isn’t rocket science.

  • noduerme 4 hours ago

    Here's a pessimistic view: A hard take-off at this point might be entirely possible, but it would be like a small country with nuclear weapons launching an attack on a much more developed country without them. E.g. North Korea attacking South Korea. In such a situation an aggressor would wait to reveal anything until they had the power to obliterate everything ten times over.

    If I were working in a job right now where I could see and guide and retrain these models daily, and realized I had a weapon of mass destruction on my hands that could War Games the Pentagon, I'd probably walk my discoveries back too. Knowing that an unbounded number of parallel discoveries were taking place.

    It won't take AGI to take down our fragile democratic civilization premised on an informed electorate making decisions in their own interests. A flood of regurgitated LLM garbage is sufficient for that. But a scorched earth attack by AGI? Whoever has that horse in their stable will absolutely keep it locked up until the moment it's released.

    • jacquesm 4 hours ago

      Pessimistic is just another way to spell 'realistic' in this case. None of these actors are doing it for the 'good of the world' despite their aggressive claims to the contrary.

  • nerdix 17 hours ago

    Not only do I think there will not be a winner take all, I think it's very likely that the entire thing will be commoditized.

    I think it's likely that we will eventually we hit a point of diminishing returns where the performance is good enough and marginal performance improvements aren't worth the high cost.

    And over time, many models will reach "good enough" levels of performance including models that are open weight. And given even more time, these open weight models will be runnable on consumer level hardware. Eventually, they'll be runnable on super cheap consumer hardware (something more akin to a NPU than a $2000 RTX 5090). So your laptop in 2035 with specialize AI cores and 1TB of LPDDR10 ram is running GPT-7 level models without breaking a sweat. Maybe GPT-10 can solve some obscure math problem that your model can't but does it even matter? Would you pay for GPT-10 when running a GPT-7 level model does everything you need and is practically free?

    The cloud providers will make money because there will still be a need for companies to host the models in a secure and reliable way. But a company whose main business strategy is developing the model? I'm not sure they will last without finding another way to add value.

    • joelthelion 17 hours ago

      > Not only do I think there will not be a winner take all, I think it's very likely that the entire thing will be commoditized

      This begs the question, why then do AI companies have these insane valuations? Do investorsknow something that we don't?

      • nerdix 14 hours ago

        I could certainly be wrong. Maybe I'm just not thinking creatively enough.

        I just don't see how this doesn't get commoditized in the end unless hardware progress just halts. I get that a true AGI would have immeasurable value even if it's not valuable to end users. So the business model might change from charging $xxx/month for access to a chat bot to something else (maybe charging millions or billions of dollars to companies in the medical and technology sector for automated R&D). But even if one company gets AGI and then unleashes it on creating ever more advanced models, I don't see that being an advantage for the long term because the AGI will still be bottlenecked by physical hardware (the speed of a single GPU, the total number of GPUs the AGI's owner can acquire, even the number of data centers they can build). That will give the competition time to catch up and build their own AGI. So I don't see the end of AGI race being the point where the winner gets all the spoils.

        And then eventually there will be AGI capable open weight models that are runnable on cheap hardware.

        The only way the current state can continue is if there is always strong demand for ever increasingly intelligent models forever and always with no regard for their cost (both monetarily and environmentally). Maybe there is. Like maybe you can't build and maintain a dyson sphere (or whatever sufficiently advanced technology) with just an Einstein equivalent AGI. Maybe you need an AGI that is 1000x more intelligent than Einstein and so there is always a buyer.

        • didibus 9 hours ago

          You're forgetting the cost of training.

          Running the inference might commoditize. But the dataset required and the hardware+time+know-how isn't easy to replicate.

          It's not like someone can just show up and train a competitive model without investing millions.

      • lmm 11 hours ago

        Investors, especially venture investors, are chasing a small chance of a huge win. If there's a 10% or even a 1% chance of a company dominating the economy, that's enough to support a huge valuation even if the median outcome is very bad.

      • jdlshore 17 hours ago

        Investors are often irrational in the short term. Personally, I think it’s a combination of FOMO, wishful thinking, and herd following.

        • j_timberlake 17 hours ago

          "Billionaire investors are more irrational than me, a social media poster."

          • barnabyjones 9 hours ago

            Zuckerberg has spent over fifty billion dollars on the idea that people will want to play a Miiverse game where they can attend meetings in VR and buy virtual real estate. It's like the Spanish emptying Potosi to buy endless mercenaries.

          • gf000 17 hours ago

            I mean, why do you think they have any idea on how a completely new thing will turn out?

            They are speculating. If they are any good, then they do it with an acceptable risk profile.

            • j_timberlake 15 hours ago

              The correlation between "speculator is a billionaire" and "speculator is good at predicting things" is much higher than the correlation between "guy has a HN account" and "guy knows more about the future of the AI industry than the people directly investing in it".

              And he doesn't just think he has an edge, he thinks he has superior rationality.

              • gf000 an hour ago

                Past performance is not indicative of future results.

                You would need ~30 years of continuously beating the market to be able to claim that you are statistically likely to be better than random chance.

                Does your average speculator have 30 years of experience beating the market, or were they just lucky?

          • hoanamiu 17 hours ago

            "Having money is proof of intelligence"

            • osti 16 hours ago

              It kinda is, at least I'd say a rich person is on average more intelligent than a poor person.

              • hoanamiu 16 hours ago

                Why do you think that? Do you have data or is it just, like, your vibe?

                • GoatInGrey 16 hours ago

                  One can apply a brief sanity check via reductio ad absurdum: it is less logical to assume that poor individuals possess greater intelligence than wealthy individuals.

                  Increased levels of stress, reduced consumption of healthcare, fewer education opportunities, higher likelihood of being subjected to trauma, and so forth paint a picture of correlation between wealth and cognitive functionality.

                  • intended 2 hours ago

                    Counter point - rich people would remain rich, and we would have an ossified society if this was true.

                    Intelligence is not a singular pre-requisite to wealth or “to be rich”.

                    People can specialize in being intelligent, educated, well read, and more - while still being poor.

                    And we know that most entrepreneurs fail, which is why VCs function the way they do.

                  • habinero 13 hours ago

                    Yeah, that's not a good argument. That might be true for the very poor, sure, but not for the majority of the lower-to-middle of the middle class. There's fundamentally no difference between your average blue collar worker and a billionaire, except the billionaire almost certainly had rich parents and got lucky.

                    People really don't like the "they're not, they just got lucky" statement and will do a lot of things to rationalize it away lol.

                    • shruggedatlas 11 hours ago

                      > lower-to-middle of the middle class

                      The comparison was clearly between the rich and the poor. We can take the 99.99th wealth percentile, where billionaires reside, and contrast that to a narrow range on the opposite side of the spectrum. But, in my opinion, the argument would still hold even if it were the top 10% vs bottom 10% (or equivalent by normalised population).

              • habinero 13 hours ago

                Anyone who believes this hasn't spent enough time around rich people. Rich people are almost always rich because they come from other rich people. They're exactly as smart as poor people, except the rich folk have a much, much cushier landing if they fail so they can take on more risk more often. It's much easier to succeed and look smart if you can just reload your save and try over and over.

      • bmau5 14 hours ago

        The top companies are already doing double digit billions in revenue. They're valuations aren't insane given that.

        • londons_explore 13 hours ago

          I wonder if that revenue might be short-lived when the free version of most AI's is good enough for almost all use cases.

      • apwell23 14 hours ago

        because ppl are using claude code not cursor

  • Sharlin 12 hours ago

    > It is frequently suggested that once one of the AI companies reaches an AGI threshold, they will take off ahead of the rest.

    Yes. And the fact they're instead clustering simply indicates that they're nowhere near AGI and are hitting diminishing returns, as they've been doing for a long time already. This should be obvious to everyone. I'm fairly sure that none of these companies has been able to use their models as a force multiplier in state-of-the-art AI research. At least not beyond a 1+ε factor. Fuck, they're just barely a force multiplier in mundane coding tasks.

  • weego 16 hours ago

    I'm still stuck at the bit where just throwing more and more data to make a very complex encyclopedia with an interesting search interface that tricks us into believing it's human-like gets us to AGI when we have no examples and thus no evidence or understanding of where the GI part comes from.

    It's all just hyperbole to attract investment and shareholder value and the people peddling the idea of AGI as a tangible possibility are charlatans whose goals are not aligned with whatever people are convincing themselves are the goals.

    Thr fact that so many engineers have fallen for it so completely is stunning to me and speaks volumes on the underlying health of our industry.

    • habinero 13 hours ago

      Me too. Some of them are frauds, but most of the weird AI-as-messiah people really believe it as far as I can tell.

      The tech is neat and it can do some neat things but...it's a bullshit machine fueled by a bullshit machine hype bubble. I do not get it.

  • physix 10 hours ago

    For those who happen to have a subscription to The Economist, there is a very interesting Money Talks podcast where they interview Anthropic's boss Dario Amodei[1].

    There were two interesting takeaways about AGI:

    1. Dario makes the remark that the term AGI/ASI is very misleading and dangerous. These terms are ill defined and it's more useful to understand that the capabilities are simply growing exponentially at the moment. If you extrapolate that, he thinks it may just "eat the majority of the economy". I don't know if this is self-serving hype, and it's not clear where we will end up with all this, but it will be disruptive, no matter what.

    2. The Economist moderators however note towards the end that this industry may well tend toward commoditization. At the moment these companies produce models that people want but others can't make. But as the chip making starts to hits its limits and the information space becomes completely harvested, capability-growth might taper off, and others will catch up. The quasi-monopoly profit potentials melting away.

    Putting that together, I think that although the cognitive capabilities will most likely continue to accelerate, albeit not necessarily along the lines of AGI, the economics of all this will probably not lead to a winner takes all.

    [1] https://www.economist.com/podcasts/2025/07/31/artificial-int...

    • didibus 9 hours ago

      There's already so many comparable models, and even local models are starting to approach the performance of the bigger server models.

      I also feel like, it's stopped being exponential already. I mean last few releases we've only seen marginal improvements. Even this release feels marginal, I'd say it feels more like a linear improvement.

      That said, we could see a winner take all due to the high cost of copying. I do think we're already approaching something where it's mostly price and who released their models last. But the cost to train is huge, and at some point it won't make sense and maybe we'll be left with 2 big players.

    • nopinsight 9 hours ago

      1. FWIW, I watched clips from several of Dario’s interviews. His expressions and body language convey sincere concerns.

      2. Commoditization can be averted with access to proprietary data. This is why all of ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini push for agents and permissions to access your private data sources now. They will not need to train on your data directly. Just adapting the models to work better with real-world, proprietary data will yield a powerful advantage over time.

      Also, the current training paradigm utilizes RL much more extensively than in previous years and can help models to specialize in chosen domains.

    • SecretDreams 10 hours ago

      It's insane to me that anyone doesn't think the end game of this is commoditization.

  • ricardobayes 17 hours ago

    AGI in 5/10 years is similar to "we won't have steering wheels in cars" or "we'll be asleep driving" in 5/10 years. Remember that? What happened to that? It looked so promising.

    • RealityVoid 17 hours ago

      I mean, in certain US cities you can take a waymo right now. It seems that adage where we overestimate change in the short term and underestimate change in the long term fits right in here.

      • asadotzler 17 hours ago

        That's not us though. That's a third party worth trillions of dollars that manages a tiny fleet of robot cars with a huge back-end staff and infrastructure, and only in a few cities covering only about 2-3% of us (in this one country.) We don't have steering wheel-less cars and we can't/shouldn't sleep on our commute to and from work.

        • jjk166 16 hours ago

          I don't think anyone was ever arguing "not only are we going to develop self driving technology but we're going to build out the factories to mass produce self driving cars, and convince all the regulatory bodies to permit these cars, and phase out all the non-self driving vehicles already on the road, and do this all at a price point equal or less than current vehicles" in 5 to 10 years. "We will have self driving cars in 10 years" was always said in the same way "We will go to the moon in 10 years" was said in the early 60s.

          • rck 15 hours ago

            You are underestimating the hype around self-driving. A quick search gives this from 2018:

            https://stanfordmag.org/contents/in-two-years-there-could-be...

            The open (about the bet) is actually pretty reasonable, but some of the predictions listed include: passenger vehicles on American roads will drop from 247 million in 2020 to 44 million in 2030. People really did believe that self-driving was "basically solved" and "about to be ubiquitous." The predictions were specific and falsifiable and in retrospect absurd.

            • jjk166 7 hours ago

              I meant serious predictions. A surprisingly large percentage of people claim the Earth is flat, of course there's going to be baseless claims that the very nature of transportation is about to completely change overnight. But the people actually familiar with the subject were making dramatically more conservative and I would say reasonable predictions.

          • abenga 7 hours ago

            What Waymo and others are doing is impressive, but it doesn't seem like it will globally generalize. Does it seem like that system can be deployed in chaotic Mumbai, old European cities, or unpaved roads? It requires clear, well maintained road infrastructure and seems closer to "riding on rails" than "drive yourself anywhere".

          • hoanamiu 16 hours ago

            "Achieving that goal necessitates a production system supporting it" is very different from "If the control system is a full team in a remote location, this vehicle is not autonomous at all" which was what GP said.

            • jjk166 7 hours ago

              I read GP as saying Waymo does indeed have self driving cars, but that doesn't count because such cars are not available for the average person to purchase and operate.

              Waymo cars aren't being driven by people at a remote location, they legitimately are autonomous.

        • erikpukinskis 15 hours ago

          Waymo’s valuation is probably in the $50-100B range.

      • ricardobayes 17 hours ago

        Of course. My point being "AI is going to take dev jobs" is very much like saying "Self driving will take taxi driver jobs". Never happened and likely won't happen or on a very, very long time scale.

        • FergusArgyll 15 hours ago

          Waymo is taking Uber jobs in SF/LA etc.

  • baxtr 16 hours ago

    I have been saying this before: S-curves look a lot like exponential curves in the beginning.

    Thus, it’s easy to mistake one for the other - at least initially.

  • ako 8 hours ago

    I know there's an official AGI definition, but it seem to me that there's too much focus on the model as the thing where AGI needs to happen. But that is just focusing on knowledge in the brain. No human knows everything. We as humans rely on a ways to discover new knowledge, investigation, writing knowledge down so it can be shared, etc.

    Current models, when they apply reasoning, have feedback loops using tools to trial and error, and have a short term memory (context) or multiple short term memories if you use agents, and a long term memory (markdown, rag), they can solve problems that aren't hardcoded in their brain/model. And they can store these solutions in their long term memory for later use. Or for sharing with other LLM based systems.

    AGI needs to come from a system that combines LLMs + tools + memory. And i've had situations where it felt like i was working with an AGI. The LLMs seem advanced enough as the kernel for an AGI system.

    The real challenge is how are you going to give these AGIs a mission/goal that they can do rather independently and don't need constant hand-holding. How does it know that it's doing the right thing. The focus currently is on writing better specifications, but humans aren't very good at creating specs for things that are uncertain. We also learn from trial and error and this also influences specs.

  • jjk166 17 hours ago

    Looks like a lot of players getting closer and closer to an asymptotic limit. Initially small changes lead to big improvements causing a firm to race ahead, as they go forward performance gains from innovation become both more marginal and harder to find, nonetheless keep. I would expect them all to eventually reach the same point where they are squeezing the most possible out of an AI under the current paradigm, barring a paradigm shifting discovery before that asymptote is reached.

  • j_timberlake 18 hours ago

    I think you're reading way too much into OpenAI bungling its 15-month product lead, but also the whole "1 AGI company will take off" prediction is bad anyway, because it assumes governments would just let that happen. Which they wouldn't, unless the company is really really sneaky or superintelligence happens in the blink of an eye.

    • jacquesm 17 hours ago

      Governments react at a glacial pace to new technological developments. They wouldn't so much as 'let it happen' as that it had happened and they simply never noticed it until it was too late. If you are betting on the government having your back in this then I think you may end up disappointed.

      • aldousd666 17 hours ago

        I think if any government really thought that someone was developing a rival within their borders they would send in the guys with guns and handle it forthwith.

      • ben_w 3 hours ago

        While generally true, a lot of governments have not only definitely noticed AI, they're getting flack for using it as an assistant and are actively promoting it as a strategic interest.

        That said, any given government may be thinking like Zuckerberg[0] or senator Blumenthal[1], so perhaps these governments are just flag-waving what they think is an investment opportunity without any real understanding…

        [0] general lack of vision, thinking of "superintelligence" in terms of what can be done with/by the Star Trek TNG era computer, rather than other fictional references such as a Culture Mind or whatever: https://archive.ph/ZZF3y

        [1] "I alluded, in my opening remarks, to the jobs issue, the economic effects on employment. I think you have said, in fact, and I'm going to quote, ``Development of superhuman machine intelligence is probably the greatest threat to the continued existence of humanity,'' end quote. You may have had in mind the effect on jobs, which is really my biggest nightmare, in the long term." - https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CHRG-118shrg52706/html/C...

      • polytely 15 hours ago

        this is generally true in a regulation sense, but not in emergency. The executive can either covertly or overtly take control of a company if AGI seems to powerful to be in private hands.

        • jacquesm 2 hours ago

          Are there any examples in recorded history of such nationalization of technology besides the atomic bomb?

      • jazzyjackson 17 hours ago

        They would just declare it necessary for military purpose and demand the tech be licensed to a second company so that they have redundant sources, same as they did with AT&T's transistor.

        • jacquesm 17 hours ago

          That was something that was tied to a bunch of very specific physical objects. There is a fair chance that once you get to the point where this thing really comes into being especially if it takes longer than a couple of hours for it to be shut down or contained that the genie will never ever be put back into the bottle again.

          Note that 'bits' are a lot easier to move from one place to another than hardware. If invented at 9 am it could be on the other side of the globe before you're back from your coffee break at 9:15. This is not at all like almost all other trade secrets and industrial gear, it's software. Leaks are pretty much inevitable and once it is shown that it can be done it will be done in other places as well.

      • phatfish 16 hours ago

        Have you not been watching Trump humiliate all the other billionaires in the US? The right sort of government (or maybe wrong sort, I'm undecided which is worse) can very easily bring corporations to heel.

        China did the same thing when their tech-bros got too big for their boots.

        • jacquesm 3 hours ago

          Humiliate? They're jostling for position and pushing each other out of the way to see who can buy the most government influenced while giving the least. The only thing that is being humiliated here is the United States reputation the world over. Those billionaires are making out like bandits, finally they really get to call the shots. That they give the doddering old fool some trinkets in return for untold access to power is the thing that should worry you, not that there - occasionally - is a billionaire with buyers remorse. There are enough of them to replace the ones that no longer want to play the game.

    • torginus 17 hours ago

      I think OpenAI has committed hard onto the 'product company' path, and will have a tough time going back to interesting science experiments that may and may not work, but are necessary for progress.

    • knodi123 17 hours ago

      * or governments fail to look far enough ahead, due to a bunch of small-minded short-sighted greedy petty fools.

      Seriously, our government just announced it's slashing half a billion dollars in vaccine research because "vaccines are deadly and ineffective", and it fired a chief statistician because the president didn't like the numbers he calculated, and it ordered the destruction of two expensive satellites because they can observe politically inconvenient climate change. THOSE are the people you are trusting to keep an eye on the pace of development inside of private, secretive AGI companies?

      • j_timberlake 17 hours ago

        That's just it, governments won't "look ahead", they'll just panic when AGI is happening.

        If you're wondering how they'll know it's happening, the USA has had DARPA monitoring stuff like this since before OpenAI existed.

        • ezst 15 hours ago

          > governments

          While one in particular is speedracing into irrelevance, it isn't particularly representative of the rest of the developed world (and hasn't in a very long time, TBH).

          • j_timberlake 15 hours ago

            "irrelevance" yeah sure, I'm sure Europe's AI industry is going to kick into high gear any day now. Mistral 2026 is going to be lit. Maybe Sir Demis will defect Deepmind to the UK.

            • ezst 5 hours ago

              That's not what I was going for (I was more hinting at isolationist, anti-science, economically self-harming and freedoms-eroding policies), but if you take solace in believing this is all worth it because of "AI" (and in denial about the fact that none of those companies are turning a profit from it, and that there is no identified use-case to turn the tables down the line), I'm sincerely happy for you and glad it helps you cope with all the insanity!

        • knodi123 12 hours ago

          > the USA has had DARPA monitoring stuff like this since before OpenAI existed

          Is there a source for this other than "trust me bro"? DARPA isn't a spy agency, it's a research organization.

          > governments won't "look ahead", they'll just panic when AGI is happening

          Assuming the companies tell them, or that there are shadowy deep-cover DARPA agents planted at the highest levels of their workforce.

          • j_timberlake 11 hours ago

            [flagged]

            • dang 10 hours ago

              > it sounds like you're triggered or something

              Please don't cross into personal attack, no matter how wrong another commenter is or you feel they are.

    • highfrequency 17 hours ago

      > OpenAI bungling its 15-month product lead

      Do you mean from ChatGPT launch or o1 launch? Curious to get your take on how they bungled the lead and what they could have done differently to preserve it. Not having thought about it too much, it seems that with the combo of 1) massive hype required for fundraising, and 2) the fact that their product can be basically reverse engineered by training a model on its curated output, it would have been near impossible to maintain a large lead.

      • j_timberlake 16 hours ago

        My 2 cents: ChatGPT -> Gemini 1 was their 15-month lead. The moment ChatGPT threatened Google's future Search revenue (which never actually took a hit afaik), Google reacted by merging Deepmind and Google Brain and kicked off the Gemini program (that's why they named it Gemini).

        Basically, OpenAI poked a sleeping bear, then lost all their lead, and are now at risk of being mauled by the bear. My money would be on the bear, except I think the Pentagon is an even bigger sleeping bear, so that's where I would bet money (literally) if I could.

  • m4x 14 hours ago

    It's quite possible that the models from different companies are clustering together now because we're at a plateau point in model development, and won't see much in terms in further advances until we make the next significant breakthrough.

    I don't think this has anything to do with AGI. We aren't at AGI yet. We may be close or we may be a very long way away from AGI. Either way, current models are at a plateau and all the big players have more or less caught up with each other.

    • kmacdough 14 hours ago

      What does AGI mean to you, specifically?

      As is, AI is quite intelligent, in that it can process large quantities of diverse unstructured information and build meaningful insights. And that intelligence applies across an incredibly broad set of problems and contexts. Enough that I have a hard time not calling it general. Sure, it has major flaws that are obvious to us and it's much worse at many things we care about. But that's doesn't make it not intelligent or general. If we want to set human intelligence as the baseline, we already have a word for that: superintelligence.

      • Yizahi 13 hours ago

        Is Casio calculator intelligent? Because it can also be turned on, assigned an input, produce output, and turn off. Just like any existing LLM program. What is the big difference between them in regard of "intelligence", if the only criteria is a difficulty with which same task may be performed by a human? Maybe producing computationally intensive outputs is not a sole sign of intelligence?

    • coderatlarge 14 hours ago

      while the model companies all compete on the same benchmarks it seems likely their models will all converge towards similar outcomes unless something really unexpected happens in model space around those limit points…

  • TheoGone 16 hours ago

    LLMs are good at mimicking human intuition. Still sucks at deep thinking.

    LLMs PATTERN MATCH well. Good at "fast" System 1 thinking, instantly generating intuitive, fluent responses.

    LLMs are good at mimicking logic, not real reasoning. Simulate "slow," deliberate System 2 thinking when prompted to work step-by-step.

    The core of an LLM is not understanding but just predicting the next most word in a sequence.

    LLMs are good at both associative brainstorming (System 1) and creating works within a defined structure, like a poem (System 2).

    Reasoning is the Achilles heel rn. AN LLM's logic can SEEM plausible, it's based on CORRELATION, NOT deductive reasoning.

    • Davidzheng an hour ago

      correlation between text can implement any algorithm, it is just the architecture which it's built on. It's like saying vacuum tube computers can't reason bc it's just air not reasoning. What the architecture is doesn't matter. It's capable of expressing reasoning as it is capable of expression any program. In fact you can easily think of a turing machine and also any markov chain as a correlation function between two states which have joint distribution exactly at places where the second state is the next state of the first state.

  • dom96 15 hours ago

    It doesn't take a researcher to realise that we have hit a wall and hit it more than a year ago now. The fact all these models are clustering around the same performance proves it.

  • lamontcg 17 hours ago

    > they can all basically solve moderately challenging math and coding problems

    Yesterday, Claude Opus 4.1 failed in trying to figure out that `-(1-alpha)` or `-1+alpha` is the same as `alpha-1`.

    We are still a little bit away from AGI.

    • markasoftware 14 hours ago

      this is what i don't get. How can GPT-5 ace obscure AIME problems while simultaneously falling into the trap of the most common fallacy about airfoils (despite there being copious training data calling it out as a fallacy)? And I believe you that in some context it failed to understand this simple rearrangement of terms; there's sometimes basic stuff I ask it that it fails at too.

      • sigbottle 41 minutes ago

        I've benchmarked a lot of these newest AI models on private problems that require only insight, no clever techniques, since the first reasoning preview came out (o1?) a year ago.

        The common theme I've seen is that AI will just throw "clever tricks" and then call it a day.

        For example, a common game theory operation that involves xor is Nim. Give it a game theory problem that involves xor, but doesn't relate to Nim at all, and it will throw a bunch of "clever" Nim tricks at the problem that are "well known" to be clever in the literature, but don't actually remotely apply, and it will make up a headcanon about how it's correct.

        It seems like AI has maybe the actual reasoning of a 5th grader, but the knowledge of a PhD student. A toddler with a large hammer.

        Also, keep in mind that it's not stated if GPT-5 has access to python, google, etc. while doing these benchmarks, which certainly makes it easier. A lot of these problems are gated by the fact that you only have ~12 minutes to solve it, while AI can go through so many solutions at once.

        No matter what benchmarks it passes, even the IMO (as someone who's been in the maths community for a long time), I will maintain the position that, none of your benchmarks matter to me until it can actually replace my workflow and creative insights. Trust with your own eyes and experiences, not whatever hype marketing there is.

      • lamontcg 14 hours ago

        It still can't actually reason, LLMs are still fundamentally madlib generators that produce output that statistically looks like reasoning.

        And if it is trained on both sides of the airfoil fallacy it doesn't "know" that it is a fallacy or not, it'll just regurgitate one or the other side of the argument based on if the output better fits your prompt in its training set.

      • slaterbug 10 hours ago

        Genuine question, are these companies just including those "obscure" problems in their training data, and overfitting to do well at answering them to pump up their benchmark scores?

        • sigbottle an hour ago

          o3-pro, gpt5-pro, gemini 2.5-pro, etc. still can't solve very basic first-principles math problems that just rely on raw thinking, no special tricks. I think personally because it's not in its training data - if I inspect their CoT/reasoning, it's clear to me at the very least that they're just running around in circles applying "well known" techniques and just hoping that it applies (without actually logically verifying that it does). Very inhuman reasoning style (that's ultimately incorrect). It's like somebody was taught a bunch of PhD level tricks but has the actual underlying reasoning of a toddler.

          I wonder how well their GPT-5 IMO research model would do on some of my benchmark problems.

      • rcxdude 12 hours ago

        Because reading the different ideas about airfoils and actually deciding which is the more accurate requires a level of reasoning about the situation that isn't really present at training or inference time. A raw LLM will tend to just go with the popular option, an RLHF one might be biased towards the more authoritative-sounding one. (I think a lot of people have a contrarian bias here: I frequently hear people reject an idea entirely because they've seen it be 'debunked', even if it's not actually as wrong as they assume)

    • shruggedatlas 11 hours ago

      Is this a specific example from their demo? I just tried it and Opus 4.1 is able to solve it.

      • slaterbug 10 hours ago

        Context matters a lot here - it may fail on this problem within a particular context (what the original commenter was working on), but then be able to solve it when presented with the question in isolation. The way your phrase the question may hint the model towards the answer as well.

  • hoppp an hour ago

    AGI will more probably come from google deepmind with a genie model that looks like the matrix moves already

  • kristianc 16 hours ago

    What I'm seeing is that as we get closer to supposed AGI, the models themsleves are getting less and less general. They're getting in fact more specific and clustered around high value use cases. It's kind of hard to see in this context what AGI is meant to mean.

  • tejohnso 9 hours ago

    I think the expectation is that it will be very close until one team reaches beyond the threshold. Then even if that team is only one month ahead, they will always be one month ahead in terms of time to catch up, but in terms of performance at a particular time their lead will continue to extend. So users will use the winner's tools, or use tools that are inferior by many orders of magnitude.

    This assumes an infinite potential for improvement though. It's also possible that the winner maxes out after threshold day plus one week, and then everyone hits the same limit within a relatively short time.

  • atleastoptimal 15 hours ago

    I think there are two competing factors. On one end, to get the same kind of "increase" in intelligence each generation requires an expontentially higher amount of compute, so while GPT-3 to GPT-4 was a sort of "pure" upgrade by just making it 10x bigger, gradually you lose the ability to just get 10x GPUs for a single model. The hill keeps getting steeper so progress is slower without exponential increases (which is what is happening).

    However, I do believe that once the genuine AGI threshold is reached it may cause a change in that rate. My justification is that while current models have gone from a slightly good copywriter in GPT-4 to very good copywriter in GPT-5, they've gone from sub-exceptional in ML research to sub-exceptional in ML research.

    The frontier in AI is driven by the top 0.1% of AI researchers. Since improvement in these models is driven partially by the very peaks of intelligence, it won't be until models reach that level where we start to see a new paradigm. Until then it's just scale and throwing whatever works at the GPU and seeing what comes out smarter.

  • porphyra 18 hours ago

    It seems that the new tricks that people discover to slightly improve the model, be it a new reinforcement learning technique or whatever, get leaked/shared quickly to other companies and there really isn't a big moat. I would have thought that whoever is rich enough to afford tons of compute first would start pulling away from the rest but so far that doesn't seem to be the case --- even smaller players without as much compute are staying in the race.

  • aydyn 17 hours ago

    I think this is simply due to the fact that to train an AGI-level AI currently requires almost grid scale amounts of compute. So the current limitation is purely physical hardware. No matter how intelligent GPT-5 is, it can't conjure extra compute out of thin air.

    I think you'll see the prophesized exponentiation once AI can start training itself at reasonable scale. Right now its not possible.

  • caycep 18 hours ago

    I feel like the benchmark suites need to include algorithmic efficiency. I.e can this thing solve your complex math or coding problem in 5000 gpus instead of 10000? 500? Maybe just 1 Mac mini?

    • nomel 17 hours ago

      Why? Cost is the only thing anyone will care about.

  • Lerc 12 hours ago

    >It is frequently suggested that once one of the AI companies reaches an AGI threshold, they will take off ahead of the rest. It's interesting to note that at least so far, the trend has been the opposite

    That seems hardy surprising considering the condition to receive the benefit has not been met.

    The person who lights a campfire first will become warmer than the rest, but while they are trying to light the fire the others are gathering firewood. So while nobody has a fire, those lagging are getting closer to having a fire.

  • Buttons840 14 hours ago

    The idea of singularity--that AI will improve itself--is that it assumes intelligence is an important part of improving AI.

    The AIs improve by gradient descent, still the same as ever. It's all basic math and a little calculus, and then making tiny tweaks to improve the model over and over and over.

    There's not a lot of room for intelligence to improve upon this. Nobody sits down and thinks really hard, and the result of their intelligent thinking is a better model; no, the models improve because a computer continues doing basic loops over and over and over trillions of times.

    That's my impression anyway. Would love to hear contrary views. In what ways can an AI actually improve itself?

    • mickael-kerjean 11 hours ago

      I studied machine learning in 2012, gradient descent wasn't new back then either but it was 5 years before the "attention is all you need" paper. Progress might look continuous overall but if you zoom enough it might be a bit more discrete with breakthrough that must happen to jump the discrete parts, the question to me now is "How many papers like attention is all you need before a singularity?" I don't have that answer but let's not forget, until they released chat gpt, openAI was considered a joke by many people in the field who asserted their approach was a dead end.

  • radu_floricica 6 hours ago

    The clustering you see is because they're all optimized for the same benchmarks. In the real world OpenAI is already ahead of the rest, and Grok doesn't even belong in the same group (not that it's not a remarkable achievement to start from scratch and have a working production model in 1-2 years, and integrate it with twitter in a way that works). And Google is Google - kinda hard for them not to be in the top, for now.

  • quatonion 8 hours ago

    I know right, if I didn't know any better one might think they are all customized versions of the same base model.

    To be honest that is what you would want if you were digitally transforming the planet with AI.

    You would want to start with a core so that all models share similar values in order they don't bicker etc, for negotiations, trade deals, logistics.

    Would also save a lot of power so you don't have to train the models again and again, which would be quite laborious and expensive.

    Rather each lab would take the current best and perform some tweak or add some magic sauce then feed it back into the master batch assuming it passed muster.

    Share the work, globally for a shared global future.

    At least that is what I would do.

  • verytrivial 4 hours ago

    Well, it is perhaps frequently suggested by those Ai firms raising capital that once one of the Ai companies reaches an AGI threshhold ... It as rallying call. "Place your bets, gentlemen!"

  • econ 8 hours ago

    People always say that when new technology comes along. Usually the best tech doesn't win. In fact, if you think you can build a company just by having a better offer it's better not to bother with it. There is to much else involved.

  • gdiamos 12 hours ago

    Scaling laws enabled an investment in capital and GPU R&D to deliver 10,000x faster training.

    That took the wold from autocomplete to Claude and GPT.

    Another 10,000x would do it again, but who has that kind of money or R&D breakthrough?

    The way scaling laws work, 5,000x and 10,000x give a pretty similar result. So why is it surprising that competitors land in the same range? It seems hard enough to beat your competitor by 2x let alone 10,000x

    • willsmith72 12 hours ago

      But also, AI progress is non-linear. We're more likely to have an AI winter than AGI

  • bmau5 18 hours ago

    The idea is that with AGI it will then be able to self improve orders of magnitude faster than it would if relying on humans for making the advances. It tracks that the improvements are all relatively similar at this point since they're all human-reliant.

  • torginus 14 hours ago

    My personal belief is that we are moving past the hype and kind of starting to realize the true shape of what (LLM) AI can offer us, which is a darned lot, but still, it only works well when fed the right input and handled right - which is still a learning process ongoing on both sides - AI companies need to learn to train these things into user interaction loops that match people's workflows, and people need to learn how to use these tools better.

    • jona777than 14 hours ago

      You have seemed to pinpoint where I believe a lot of opportunity lies during this era (however long it lasts.) Custom integration of these models into specific workflows of existing companies can make a significant difference in what’s possible for said companies, the smaller more local ones especially. If people can leverage even a small percentage of what these models are capable of, that may be all they need for their use case. In that case, they wouldn’t even need to learn to use these tools, but (much like electricity) they will just plug in or flip on the switch and be in business (no pun intended.)

  • torginus 3 hours ago

    Honestly for all the super smart people in the LessWrong singularity crowd, I feel the mental model they apply to the 'singularity' is incredibly dogmatic and crude, with the basic assumption that once a certain threshold is reached by scaling training and compute, we get human or superhuman level intelligence.

    Even if we run with the assumption that LLMs can become human-level AI researchers, and are able to devise and run experiments to improve themselves, even then the runaway singularity assumption might not hold. Let's say Company A has this LLM, while company B does not.

    - The automated AI researcher, like its human peers, still needs to test the ideas and run experiments, it might happen that testing (meaning compute) is the bottleneck, not the ideas, so Company A has no real advantage.

    - It might also happen that AI training has some fundamental compute limit coming from information theory, analogous to the Shannon limit, and once again, more efficient compute can only approach this, not overcome it

  • jama211 17 hours ago

    Well said. It’s clearly plateauing. It could be a localised plateau, or something more fundamental. Time will tell.

    • rvnx 17 hours ago

      It's a very long presentation just to say that GPT-5 is slightly improved compared to GPT-4o

  • nextlevelwizard 7 hours ago

    Is it?

    Nothing we have is anywhere near AGI and as models age others can copy them.

    I personally think we are closing the end of improvement for LLMs with current methods. We have consumed all of the readily available data already, so there is no more good quality training material left. We either need new novel approaches or hope that if enough compute is thrown at training actual intelligence will spontaneously emerge.

  • brk 16 hours ago

    AGI is so far away from happening that it is barely worth discussing at this stage.

  • cchance 16 hours ago

    They have to actually reach that threshold, right now their nudging forward catching up to one another, and based on the jumps we've seen the only one actually making huge jumps sadly is Grok, which i'm pretty sure is because they have 0 safety concerns and just run full tilt lol

  • xpe 8 hours ago

    > It is frequently suggested that once one of the AI companies reaches an AGI threshold, they will take off ahead of the rest.

    That's only one part of it. Some forecasters put probabilities on each of the four quadrants in the takeoff speed (fast or slow) vs. power distribution (unipolar or multipolar) table.

  • lqstuart 17 hours ago

    It’s frequently suggested by people with no background and/or a huge financial stake in the field

  • coldtea 3 hours ago

    >It is frequently suggested that once one of the AI companies reaches an AGI threshold, they will take off ahead of the rest.

    Both the AGI threshold with LLM architecture, and the idea of self-advancing AI, is pie in the sky, at least for now. These are myths of the rationalist cult.

    We'd more likely see reduced returns and smaller jumps between version updates, plus regression from all the LLM produced slop that will be part of the future data.

  • netcan 17 hours ago

    Its certainly an interesting race to watch.

    Part of the fun is that predictions get tested on short enough timescales to "experience" in a satisfying way.

    Idk where that puts me, in my guess at "hard takeoff." I was reserved/skeptical about hard takeoff all along.

    Even if LLMs had improved at a faster rate... I still think bottlenecks are inevitable.

    That said... I do expect progress to happen in spurts anyway. It makes sense that companies of similar competence and resources get to a similar place.

    The winner take all thing is a little forced. "Race to singularity" is the fun, rhetorical version of the investment case. The implied boring case is facebook, adwords, aws, apple, msft... IE the modern tech sector tends to create singular big winners... and therefore our pre-revenue market cap should be $1trn.

  • ants_everywhere 11 hours ago

    The race has always been very close IMO. What Google had internally before ChatGPT first came out was mind blowing. ChatGPT was a let down comparatively (to me personally anyway).

    Since then they've been about neck and neck with some models making different tradeoffs.

    Nobody needs to reach AGI to take off. They just need to bankrupt their competitors since they're all spending so much money.

  • lisperforlife 14 hours ago

    I don't think models are fundamentally getting better. What is happening is that we are increasing the training set, so when users use it, they are essentially testing on the training set and find that it fits their data and expectations really well. However, the moat is primarily the training data, and that is very hard to protect as the same data can be synthesized with these models. There is more innovation surrounding serving strategies and infrastructure than in the fundamental model architectures.

  • tamimio 18 hours ago

    Because AGI is a buzzword to milk more investors' money, it will never happen, and we will only see slight incremental updates or enhancements yet linear after some timr just like literally any tech bubble since dot com to smartphones to blockchain to others.

    • mritterhoff 18 hours ago

      You think AGI is impossible? Why?

      • basilgohar 18 hours ago

        It's vaguely defined and the goalposts keep shifting. It's not a thing to be achieved, it's an abstract concept. We're already expired the Turing test as a valuable metric because people are dumb and have been fooled by machines for a while now, but it's not been world-changingly better either.

        • 7373737373 15 hours ago

          perhaps instead of peak artificial intelligence we will achieve peak natural dumbness instead?

      • chasd00 17 hours ago

        > You think AGI is impossible? Why?

        I've yet to hear an agreed upon criteria to declare whether or not AGI has been discovered. Until it's at least understood what AGI is and how to recognize it then how could it possibly be achieved?

        • rcxdude 12 hours ago

          I think OpenAI's definition ("outperforms humans at most economically valuable work") is a reasonably concrete one, even if it's arguable that it's not 'the one true form of AGI'. That is at least the "it will completely change almost everyone's lives" point.

          (It's also one that they are pretty far from. Even if LLMs displace knowledge/office work, there's still all the actual physical things that humans do which, while improving rapidly with VLMs and similar stuff, is still a large improvement in the AI and some breakthroughs in electronics and mechanical engineering away)

          • Zambyte 11 hours ago

            Do humans that perform below average at economically valuable work not have general intelligence?

            That sounds like a great definition of AGI if your goal is to sell AGI services. Otherwise it seems pretty bad.

            • rcxdude 5 hours ago

              It's overly strong in some ways (and weak in a few), yes. Which is why I said it's not a "one true definition", but a concrete one which, if reached, would well and truly mean that it's changed the world.

        • nomel 17 hours ago

          I think a good threshold, and definition, is when you get to the point where all the different, reasonable, criteria are met, and when saying "that's not AGI" becomes the unreasonable perspective.

          > how could it possibly be achieved?

          This doesn't matter, and doesn't follow the history of innovation, in the slightest. New things don't come from "this is how we will achieve this", otherwise they would be known things. Progress comes from "we think this is the right way to go, let's try to prove it is", try, then iterate with the result. That's the whole foundation of engineering and science.

          • meroes 16 hours ago

            This is scary because there have already been AI engineers saying and thinking LLMs are sentient, so what’s unreasonable could be a mass false-belief, fueled by hype. And if you ask a non-expert, they often think AI is vastly better than it really is, able to pull data out of thin air.

            • nomel 9 hours ago

              How is that scary, when we don’t have a good definition of sentience?

              Do you think sentience is a binary concept or a spectrum? Is a gorilla more sentient than a dog? Are all humans sentient, or does it get somewhat fuzzy as you go down in IQ, eventually reaching brain death?

              Is a multimodal model, hooked to a webcam and microphone, in a loop, more or less sentient than a gorilla?

        • jjk166 16 hours ago

          There may not be a universally agreed upon threshold for the minimum required for AGI, but there's certainly a point where if you find yourself beyond it then AGI definitely has been developed.

          • yen223 16 hours ago

            I remember when the Turing test was a thing, until it stopped being a thing when all the LLMs blew past it.

            • phatfish 15 hours ago

              Maybe the final 10% needed for a self-driving car to truly match a human's ability to deal with unexpected situations is the new test.

          • criddell 14 hours ago

            There are some thresholds where I think it would be obvious that a machine has.

            Put the AI in a robot body and if you can interact with it the same way you would interact with a person (ie you can teach it to make your bed, to pull weeds in the garden, to drive your car, etc…) and it can take what you teach it and continually build on that knowledge, then the AI is likely an instance of AGI.

      • unleaded 14 hours ago

        you can't get more out of a closed system than what you put in.

  • strongpigeon 18 hours ago

    I think this is because of an expectation of a snowball effect once a model becomes able to improve itself. See talks about the Singularity.

    I personally think it's a pretty reductive model for what intelligence is, but a lot of people seem to strongly believe in it.

  • petralithic 16 hours ago

    It's the classic S-curve. A few years ago when we saw ChatGPT come out, we got started on the ramping up part of the curve but now we're on the slowing down part. That's just how technology goes in general.

    • jboggan 16 hours ago

      We are not approaching the Singularity but an Asymptote

      • petralithic 5 hours ago

        Yes, a horizontal asymptote, which is what I said as implied by S-curve

  • jasonwilk 9 hours ago

    How marginally better was Google than Yahoo when debuted? If one can develop AGI first within X timeline ahead of competitors, that alone could develop a moat for a mass market consumer product even if others get to parity .

    • smiley1437 9 hours ago

      Google was not marginally better Yahoo, their implementation of Markov chains in the PageRank algorithm was significantly better than Yahoo or any other contemporary search engine.

      It's not obvious if a similar breakthrough could occur in AI

  • flockonus 15 hours ago

    If we're focusing on fast take-off scenario, this isn't a good trend to focus on.

    SGI would be self-improving to some function with a shape close to linear based on the amount of time & resources. That's almost exclusively dependent on the software design, as currently transformers have shown to hit a wall at logarithmic progression x resources.

    In other words, no, it has little to do with the commercial race.

  • malshe 15 hours ago

    > as time goes on and the models get better, the performance of the different company's gets clustered closer together

    This could be partly due to normative isomorphism[1] according to the institutional theory. There is also a lot of movement of the same folks between these companies.

    [1] https://youtu.be/VvaAnva109s

  • germandiago 13 hours ago

    Is AGI even possible? I am skeptical of that. I think they can get really good at many tasks and when used by a human expert in a field you can save lots of time and supervise and change things here and there, like sculpting.

    But I doubt we will ever see a fully autonomous, reliable AGI system.

    • xedrac 12 hours ago

      Ultimately, what drives human creativity? I'd say it's at least partially rooted in emotion and desire. Desire to live more comfortably; fear of failure or death; desire for power/influence, etc... AI is void of these things, and thus I believe we will never truly reach AGI.

    • Zambyte 11 hours ago

      No, AGI is not possible. It is perpetually defined as just beyond current capabilities.

  • johnnienaked 12 hours ago

    These companies are racing headlong into competitive equilibrium for a product yet to be identified.

  • williamtrask 14 hours ago

    Breakthroughs usually require a step-function change in data or compute. All the firms have proportional amounts. Next big jump in data is probably private data (either via de-siloing or robotics or both). Next big jump in compute is probably either analog computing or quantum. Until then... here we are.

  • general1726 17 hours ago

    Because they are hitting Compute Efficient Frontier. Models can't be much bigger, there is no more original data on the internet, so all models will eventually cluster to similar CEF as was described in this video 10 months ago

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5eqRuVp65eY

  • louismerlin 8 hours ago

    We joked yesterday with a colleague that it feels like the top AI companies are using the same white label backend.

  • fdsjgfklsfd 18 hours ago

    I think they're just reaching the limits of this architecture and when a new type is invented it will be a much bigger step.

    • hodgehog11 18 hours ago

      Working in the theory, I can say this is incredibly unlikely. At scale, once appropriately trained, all architectures begin to converge in performance.

      It's not architectures that matter anymore, it's unlocking new objectives and modalities that open another axis to scale on.

      • viraptor 16 hours ago

        Do we really have the data on this? I mean, it does happen on a smaller scale, but where's the 300B version of RWKV? Where's hybrid symbolic/LLM? Where are other experiments? I only see larger companies doing relatively small tweaks to the standard transformers, where the context size still explodes the memory use - they're not even addressing that part.

        • hodgehog11 9 hours ago

          True, we can't say for certain. But there is a lot of theoretical evidence too, as the leading theoretical models for neural scaling laws suggest finer properties of the architecture class play a very limited role in the exponent.

          We know that transformers have the smallest constant in the neural scaling laws, so it seems irresponsible to scale another architecture class to extreme parameter sizes without a very good reason.

      • highfrequency 16 hours ago

        Could you elaborate with a few more paragraphs? What do you mean by “working in the theory?”

        • hodgehog11 9 hours ago

          People often talk in terms of performance curves or "neural scaling laws". Every model architecture class exhibits a very similar scaling exponent because the data and the training procedures are playing the dominant role (every theoretical model which replicates the scaling laws exhibit this property). There are some discrepancies across model architecture classes, but there are hard limits on this.

          Theoretical models for neural scaling laws are still preliminary of course, but all of this seems to be supported by experiments at smaller scales.

  • FiniteIntegral 17 hours ago

    I think part of this is due to the AI craze no longer being in the wildest west possible. Investors, or at least heads of companies believe in this as a viable economic engine so they are properly investing in what's there. Or at least, the hype hasn't slapped them in the face just yet.

  • sylware 2 hours ago

    LLMs won't probably be the models for "super intelligence".

    But nowdays, how corpos can "justify" their R&D to spend gigantic amount of resources (time + hardware + energy) in models which are not LLMs?

  • citizenpaul 18 hours ago

    Even at the beginning of the year people were still going crazy over new model releases. Now the various model update pages are starting to average times in the months since their last update rather than days/weeks. This is across the board. Not limited to a single model.

  • wouldbecouldbe 14 hours ago

    It's all based on the theory of singularity. Where the AI can start trainig & relearning itself. But it looks like that's not possible with the current techniques.

  • menzoic 14 hours ago

    The idea is that AGI will be able to self improve at an exponential rate. This is where the idea of take off comes from. That self improvement part isn’t happening today.

  • darepublic 16 hours ago

    What is the AGI threshold? That the model can manage its own self improvement better than humans can? Then the roles will be reversed -- LLM prompting the meat machines to pave its way.

  • de6u99er 8 hours ago

    This is just more of the same. My guts tell me Deepmind will crack AGI.

    • jtfrench 8 hours ago

      My gut says similar. They've been on a roll. Genie 3 looks pretty wild.

  • mirekrusin 17 hours ago

    Diversity where new model release takes the crown until next release is healthy. Shame only US companies seem to be doing it, hopefully this will change as the rest is not far off.

  • m463 14 hours ago

    I kind of (naively?) hope that with robust competition, it will be like airlines or movie companies, where there are lots of players.

  • 42lux 17 hours ago

    If one achieves AGI and releases it everyone has AGI...

  • eldenring 15 hours ago

    A more powerful ASI, the market, is keeping everything in check. Meta's 10 figure offers are an example of this.

  • zaphirplane 16 hours ago

    Cats and dogs kind of also cluster together with a couple of exceptions relative to humans ;)

  • grey-area 13 hours ago

    Perhaps they’ve just reached the limit of what LLMs can achieve?

  • jbs789 5 hours ago

    Very well said.

  • vrighter 8 hours ago

    they are improving exponentially... but the exponent is less than 1...

  • felineflock 17 hours ago

    Plot twist - once GPT reached AGI, this is exactly the strategy chosen for self-preservation. Appear to not lead by too much, only enough to make everyone think we're in a close race, play dumb when needed.

    Meanwhile, keep all relevant preparations in secret...

    • jjk166 16 hours ago

      “If the humans see me actually doing my job, it helps keep suspicions from forming about faulty governor modules.”

  • KoolKat23 16 hours ago

    In my opinion, it'll mirror the human world, there is place for multiple different intelligent models. Each with their own slightly different strengths/personalities. I mean there are plenty of humans that can do the same task but at the upper tier, multiple smart humans working together are needed to solve problems as they bring something different to the table. I don't see why this won't be the case with super intelligence at the cutting edge. A little bit of randomness and slightly different point of view makes a difference. The exact same two models doesn't help as one would already have thought of what the other was thinking already

  • uoaei 12 hours ago

    You can't reach the moon by climbing the tallest tree.

    This misunderstanding is nothing more than the classic "logistic curves look like exponential curves at the beginning". All (Transformee-based, feedforward) AI development efforts are plateauing rapidly.

    AI engineers know this plateau is there, but of course every AI business has a vested interest in overpromising in order to access more funding from naive investors.

  • klik99 17 hours ago

    I’ve been saying for a while if AGI is possible it’s going to take another innovation and the transformer / LLM paradigm will plateau, and innovations are hard to time. I used to get downvoted for saying that years ago and now more people are realizing it. LLMs are awesome but there is a limit, most of the interesting things in the next years will be bolting more functionality and agent stuff, introspection like Anthropic is working on and smaller, less compute hungry specialized models. There’s still a lot to explore in this paradigm, but we’re getting diminishing returns on newer models, especially when you factor in cost

    • BizarroLand 16 hours ago

      I bet that it will only happen when the ability to process and concrete new information into its training model without retraining the entire model is standard, AND when multiple AIs with slightly different datasets are set to work together to create a consensus response approach.

      It's probably never going to work with a single process without consuming the resources of the entire planet to run that process on.

  • m3kw9 8 hours ago

    Because it hasn’t taken off yet as they all get to catch up

  • babypuncher 18 hours ago

    I would argue that this is because we are reaching the practical limits of this technology and AGI isn't nearly as close as people thought.

  • dvfjsdhgfv 18 hours ago

    > It's frequently suggested that once one of the AI companies reaches an AGI threshold, they will take off ahead of the rest.

    This argument has so many weak points it deserves a separate article.

  • arnorhs 15 hours ago

    Meanwhile - I always just find myself arguing with every model while they ruthlessly try to gaslight me into believing whatever they are halucinating.

    I have a had a bunch of positive experiences as well, but when it goes bad, it goes so horribly bad and off the rails.

  • morpheos137 12 hours ago

    There is zero reason or evidence to believe AGI is close. In fact it is a good litmus test for someone's human intelligence whether they believe it.

    What do you think AGI is?

    How do we go from sentence composing chat bots to General Intelligence?

    Is it even logical to talk about such a thing as abstract general intelligence when every form of intelligence we see in the real world is applied to specific goals as evolved behavioral technology refined through evolution?

    When LLMs start undergoing spontaneous evolution then maybe it is nearer. But now they can't. Also there is so much more to intelligence than language. In fact many animals are shockingly intelligent but they can't regurgitate web scrapings.

  • newsclues 13 hours ago

    We don’t seem to be closer to AGI however.

  • dmezzetti 14 hours ago

    LLMs are basically all the same at this point. The margins are razor thin.

    The real take-off / winner-take-all potential is in retrieval and knowing how to provide the best possible data to the LLM. That strategy will work regardless of the model.

  • causality0 15 hours ago

    Mental-modeling is one of the huge gaps in AI performance right now in my opinion. I could describe in detail a very strange object or situation to a human being with a pen and paper and then ask them questions about it and expect answers that meet all my described constraints. AI just isn't good for that yet.

  • andrepd 2 hours ago

    > once one of the AI companies reaches an AGI threshold

    Why is this even an axiom, that this has to happen and it's just a matter of time?

    I don't see any credible argument for the path LLM -> AGI, in fact given the slowdown in enhancement rate over the past 3 years of LLMs, despite the unprecedented firehose of trillions of dollars being sunk into them, I think it points to the contrary!

  • lasc4r 17 hours ago

    These companies seem to think AGI will come from better LLMs, seems more like an AGI dead end that's plateaued to me.

  • logicchains 18 hours ago

    >It's interesting to note that at least so far, the trend has been the opposite: as time goes on and the models get better, the performance of the different company's gets clustered closer together

    It's natural if you extrapolate from training loss curves; a training process with continually diminishing returns to more training/data is generally not something that suddenly starts producing exponentially bigger improvements.

  • koonsolo 18 hours ago

    This confirms my suspicion that we are not at the exponential part of the curve, but the flattening one. It's easier to stay close to your competitors when everyone is at the flat curve of the innovation.

    The improvements they make are marginal. How long until the next AI breakthrough? Who can tell? Because last time it took decenia.

    • chasd00 17 hours ago

      I think the breakthroughs now will be the application of LLMs to the rest of the world. Discovering use cases where LLMs really shine and applying them while learning and sharing the use cases where they do not.

  • belter 18 hours ago

    Nobody seems to be on the path to AGI as long as the model of today is as good as the model of tomorrow. And as long as there are "releases". You don't release a new human every few months...LLMs are currently frozen sequence predictors whose static weights stop learning after training.

    They lack writable long-term memory beyond a context window. They operate without any grounded perception-action loop to test hypotheses. And they possess no executive layer for goal directed planning or self reflection...

    Achieving AGI demands continuous online learning with consolidation.

  • shortrounddev2 18 hours ago

    Maybe because they haven't created an engine for AGI, but a really really impressive bullshit generator.

  • yieldcrv 15 hours ago

    They use each other for synthesizing data sets. The only moat was the initial access to human generated data in hard to reach places. Now they use each other to reach parity for the most part.

    I think user experience and pricing models are the best here. Right now everyone’s just passing down costs as they come, no real loss leaders except a free tier. I looked at reviews of some of various wrappers on app stores, people say “I hate that I have to pay for each generation and not know what I’m doing to get”, market would like a service priced very differently. Is it economical? Many will fail, one will succeed. People will copy the model of that one.

  • hodgehog11 18 hours ago

    It's still not necessarily wrong, just unlikely. Once these developers start using the model to update itself, beyond an unknown threshold of capability, one model could start to skyrocket in performance above the rest. We're not in that phase yet, but judging from what the devs at the end were saying, we're getting uncomfortably (and irresponsibly) close.

ritzaco an hour ago

Ok this[0] sounds very, uh bold to me? Surely this is going to break a ton of workflows etc seemingly with nearly no notice? I'm assuming 'launches' equates with 'fully rolls out' or something but it's not that clear to me.

    When GPT-5 launches, several older models will be retired, including:
        - GPT-4o
        - GPT-4.1
        - GPT-4.5
        - GPT-4.1-mini
        - o4-mini
        - o4-mini-high
        - o3
        - o3-pro

     If you open a conversation that used one of these models, ChatGPT will automatically switch it to the closest GPT-5 equivalent. Chats with 4o, 4.1, 4.5, 4.1-mini, o4-mini, or o4-mini-high will open in GPT-5, chats with o3 will open in GPT-5-Thinking, and chats with o3-Pro will open in GPT-5-Pro (available only on Pro and Team).
[0] https://help.openai.com/en/articles/11909943-gpt-5-in-chatgp...
  • alexmorley an hour ago

    > For Free and Plus users, these changes take effect immediately. Pro, Team, and Enterprise users will also see the changes at launch but will have access to older models through legacy model settings.

    So only for free/plus users (for now). I do wonder how long they will take to deprecate these models via API though...

    • weird-eye-issue an hour ago

      I'm not worried about when they will deprecate them but I am worried about when they will be removed

      3.5 Turbo has been deprecated for a long time but is still running

    • BoorishBears 40 minutes ago

      So they confirmed what we've all been speculating: this is a cost saving update

      Smaller base models + more RL. Technically better at the verticals that are making money, but worse on subjective preference.

      They'll probably try to prompt engineer back in some of the "vibes", hence the personalities. But also maybe they decided people spending $20 a month to hammer 4o all day as a friend (no judgement, really) are ok to tick off for now... and judging by Reddit, they are very ticked off.

  • raincole an hour ago

    > For Free and Plus users, these changes take effect immediately. Pro, Team, and Enterprise users will also see the changes at launch but will have access to older models through legacy model settings.

    Just right next paragraph...

  • artursapek an hour ago

    Yeah I was surprised how fast they rugged 4. I guess they want to concentrate their hardware on 5.

    • hoppp an hour ago

      If it costs the same compute to run it then there is no point running worse models

      • boringg an hour ago

        That's assuming all else holds on the model which isn't always clear.

surround 18 hours ago

GPT-5 knowledge cutoff: Sep 30, 2024 (10 months before release).

Compare that to

Gemini 2.5 Pro knowledge cutoff: Jan 2025 (3 months before release)

Claude Opus 4.1: knowledge cutoff: Mar 2025 (4 months before release)

https://platform.openai.com/docs/models/compare

https://deepmind.google/models/gemini/pro/

https://docs.anthropic.com/en/docs/about-claude/models/overv...

  • asboans 6 hours ago

    It would be fun to train an LLM with a knowledge cutoff of 1900 or something

    • ph4evers 6 hours ago

      That’s been done to see if it could extrapolate and predict the future. Can’t find the link right now to the paper.

      • creativeSlumber 5 hours ago

        This one? "Mind the Gap: Assessing Temporal Generalization in Neural Language Models" https://arxiv.org/abs/2102.01951

        • MadameMinty 4 hours ago

          The idea matches, but 2019 is a far cry from, say, 1930.

          • fmbb 3 hours ago

            In 1930 there was not enough information in the world for consciousness to develop.

            • amelius 3 hours ago

              You mean information in digestible form.

            • 7bit 3 hours ago

              Llama are not conscious

    • yanis_t an hour ago

      Not sure we have enough data for any pre-internet date.

  • levocardia 18 hours ago

    with web search, is knowledge cutoff really relevant anymore? Or is this more of a comment on how long it took them to do post-training?

    • mastercheif 18 hours ago

      In my experience, web search often tanks the quality of the output.

      I don't know if it's because of context clogging or that the model can't tell what's a high quality source from garbage.

      I've defaulted to web search off and turn it on via the tools menu as needed.

      • gorkish 16 hours ago

        Web search often tanks the quality of MY output these days too. Context clogging seems a reasonable description of what I experience when I try to use the normal web.

        • clbrmbr 2 hours ago

          THIS. I do my best work after a long vigorous walk and contemplation, while listening to Bach sipping espresso. (Not exaggerating much.) If I go on HN or slack or ClickUp or work email, context is slammed and I cannot do /clear so fast. Even looking up something quick on the web or an LLM causes a dirtying.

      • bangaladore 18 hours ago

        I feel the same. LLMs using web search ironically seem to have less thoughtful output. Part of the reason for using LLMs is to explore somewhat novel ideas. I think with web search it aligns too strongly to the results rather than the overall request making it a slow search-engine.

        • troyvit 13 hours ago

          That makes sense. They're doing their interpretation on the fly for one thing. For another just because they now have data that is 10 months more recent than their cutoff they don't have any of the intervening information. That's gotta make it tough.

      • manmal 16 hours ago

        Web search is super important for frameworks that are not (sufficiently?) in the training data. o3 often pulls info from Swift forums to find and fix obscure Swift concurrency issues for me.

        • fmos 15 hours ago

          In my experience none of the frontier models I tried (o3, Opus 4, Gemini 2.5 Pro) was able to solve Swift concurrency issues, with or without web search. At least not sufficiently for Swift 6 language mode. They don’t seem to have a mental model of the whole concept and how things (actors, isolation, Tasks) need to play together.

          • elpakal 10 hours ago

            > They don’t seem to have a mental model of the whole concept and how things (actors, isolation, Tasks) need to play together.

            to be fair, does anyone ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

      • jjice 16 hours ago

        I haven't tried ChatGPT web search, but my experience with Claude web search is very good. It's actually what sold me and made me start using LLMs as part of my day to day. The citations they leave (I assume ChatGPT does the same) are killer for making sure I'm not being BSd on certain points.

        • nicce 4 hours ago

          How often you actually check the citations? They seems to confidentally cite things but then they also say different things what source has.

        • illiac786 8 hours ago

          That’s interesting. I use the API and there are zero citations with Claude, charGPT and Gemini. Only Kagi assistant gives me some, which is why I prefer it when researching facts.

          What software to you use? The native Claude app? What subscription do you have?

      • ActionHank 17 hours ago

        I also find that it gets way more snarky. The internet brings that bad taint.

      • pbronez 12 hours ago

        Kagi really helps with this. They built a good search engine first, then wired it up to AI stuff.

      • throw310822 15 hours ago

        Completely opposite experience here (with Claude). Most of my googling is now done through Claude- it can find and digest a d compile information much quicker and better than I'd do myself. Without web search you're basically asking an LLM to pull facts out of its ass- good luck with trusting the results.

    • MisterSandman 17 hours ago

      It still is, not all queries trigger web search, and it takes more tokens and time to do research. ChatGPT will confidently give me outdated information, and unless I know it’s wrong and ask it to research, it wouldn’t know it is wrong. Having a more recent knowledge base can be very useful (for example, knowing who the president is without looking it up, making references to newer node versions instead of old ones)

    • WorldPeas 15 hours ago

      The problem, perhaps illusory that it's easy to fix, is that the model will choose solutions that are a year old, e.g. thinking database/logger versions from December '24 are new and usable in a greenfield project despite newer quarterly LTS releases superseding them. I try to avoid humanizing these models, but could it be that in training/posttraining one could make it so the timestamp is fed in via the system prompt and actually respected? I've begged models to choose "new" dependencies after $DATE but they all still snap back to 2024

    • clickety_clack 17 hours ago

      The biggest issue I can think of is code recommendations with out of date versions of packages. Maybe the quality of code has deteriorated in the past year and scraping github is not as useful to them anymore?

    • seanw265 16 hours ago

      Knowledge cutoff isn’t a big deal for current events. Anything truly recent will have to be fed into the context anyway.

      Where it does matter is for code generation. It’s error-prone and inefficient to try teaching a model how to use a new framework version via context alone, especially if the model was trained on an older API surface.

    • richardw 6 hours ago

      Isn’t this an issue with eg Cloudflare removing a portion of the web? I’m all for it from the perspective of people not having their content repackaged by an LLM, but it means that web search can’t check all sources.

    • diegocg 18 hours ago

      I wonder if it would even be helpful because they avoid the increasing AI content

      • rapind 13 hours ago

        This is what I was thinking. Eventually most new material could be AI produced (including a lot of slop).

    • joshuacc 18 hours ago

      Still relevant, as it means that a coding agent is more likely to get things right without searching. That saves time, money, and improves accuracy of results.

    • stevage 13 hours ago

      I've been having a lot of issues with chatgpt's knowledge of DuckDb being out of date. It doesn't think DuckDb enforces foreign keys, for instance.

    • bearjaws 16 hours ago

      Falling back to web search is a crutch, its slower and often bloats context resulting in worse output.

    • CharlieDigital 16 hours ago

      Yes, because it may not know that it needs to do a web search for the most relevant information.

    • havefunbesafe 17 hours ago

      Question: do web search results that GPT kick back get "read" and backpropagated into the model?

      • CamperBob2 14 hours ago

        Right now nothing affects the underlying model weights. They are computed once during pretraining at enormous expense, adjusted incrementally during training, and then left untouched until the next frontier model is built.

        Being able to adjust the weights will be the next big leap IMO, maybe the last one. It won't happen in real time but periodically, during intervals which I imagine we'll refer to as "sleep." At that point the model will do everything we do, at least potentially.

    • m3kw9 8 hours ago

      Web pages become prompt, so you still need the model to analyze

    • alfalfasprout 12 hours ago

      It absolutely is, for example, even in coding where new design patterns or language features aren't easy to leverage.

      Web search enables targeted info to be "updated" at query time. But it doesn't get used for every query and you're practically limited in how much you can query.

    • roflyear 13 hours ago

      Yes, totally. The model will not know about new versions of libraries, features recently deprecated, etc..

  • LeoPanthera 18 hours ago

    Gemini does cursory web searches for almost every query, presumably to fill in the gap between the knowledge cutoff and now.

    • verytrivial 3 hours ago

      I had 2.5 Flash refuse to summarise a URL that had today's date encoded in it because "That web page is from the future so may not exist yet or may be missing" or something like that. Amusing.

      2.5 Pro went ahead and summarized it (but completely ignored a # reference so summarised the wrong section of a multi-topic page, but that's a different problem.)

    • mock-possum 6 hours ago

      I always pick Gemini if I want more current subjects / info

  • dotancohen 6 hours ago

      > GPT-5 knowledge cutoff: Sep 30, 2024
      > Gemini 2.5 Pro knowledge cutoff: Jan 2025
      > Claude Opus 4.1: knowledge cutoff: Mar 2025
    
    A significant portion of the search results available after those dates is AI generated anyway, so what good would training on them do?
  • nialv7 12 hours ago

    maybe OpenAI have a terribly inefficient data ingestion pipeline? (wild guess) basically taking in new data is tedious so they do that infrequently and keep using old data for training.

  • archon810 18 hours ago

    And GPT-5 nano and mini cutoff is even earlier - May 30 2024.

  • m101 5 hours ago

    Perhaps they want to extract the logic/reason behind language over remembering facts which can be retrieved with a search.

  • xnx 8 hours ago

    Does this indicate that OpenAI had a very long pretraining process for GPT5?

    • m3kw9 8 hours ago

      Maybe they have a long data cleanup process

  • lurking_swe 18 hours ago

    the model can do web search so this is mostly irrelevant i think.

  • breadwinner 18 hours ago

    That could means OpenAI does not take any shortcuts when it comes to safety.

fidotron 19 hours ago

Going by the system card at: https://openai.com/index/gpt-5-system-card/

> GPT‑5 is a unified system . . .

OK

> . . . with a smart and fast model that answers most questions, a deeper reasoning model for harder problems, and a real-time router that quickly decides which model to use based on conversation type, complexity, tool needs, and explicit intent (for example, if you say “think hard about this” in the prompt).

So that's not really a unified system then, it's just supposed to appear as if it is.

This looks like they're not training the single big model but instead have gone off to develop special sub models and attempt to gloss over them with yet another model. That's what you resort to only when doing the end-to-end training has become too expensive for you.

  • hatthew 17 hours ago

    I know this is just arguing semantics, but wouldn't you call it a unified system since it has a single interface that automatically interacts with different components? It's not a unified model, but it seems correct to call it a unified system.

    • fnordpiglet 15 hours ago

      Altman et al have been discussing the many model interface in ChatGPT is confusing to users and they want to move to a unified system that exposes a model that routes based on the task rather than depending on users understanding how and when to do that. Presumably this is what they’ve been discussing for some time. I don’t know that was intended to mean they would be working toward some unified inference architecture and model, although I’m sure goal posts will be moved to ensure it’s insufficient.

      • tomalbrc 3 hours ago

        Altman is a salesman.

        • imdsm 3 hours ago

          We could all learn a lot from him

      • awestroke 2 hours ago

        No, Altman is not a researcher

        • cylemons an hour ago

          He's the boss of the researchers so he knows more than them /s

          But seriously tho, what parent is saying isn't a deep insight, it makes sense from a business perspective to consolidate your products into one so you don't confuse users

    • sigmoid10 16 hours ago

      It's not a unified architecture transformer, but it is a unified system for chatting.

    • WorldPeas 15 hours ago

      so openai is in the business of GPT wrappers now? I'm guessing their open model is an escape for those who wanted to have a "plain" model, though from my systematic testing, it's not much better than Kimi K2

      • pertymcpert 15 hours ago

        They build AI systems, not GPTs.

  • andai 18 hours ago

    > While GPT‑5 in ChatGPT is a system of reasoning, non-reasoning, and router models, GPT‑5 in the API platform is the reasoning model that powers maximum performance in ChatGPT. Notably, GPT‑5 with minimal reasoning is a different model than the non-reasoning model in ChatGPT, and is better tuned for developers. The non-reasoning model used in ChatGPT is available as gpt-5-chat-latest.

    https://openai.com/index/introducing-gpt-5-for-developers/

  • Therenas 18 hours ago

    Too expensive maybe, or just not effective anymore as they used up any available training data. New data is generated slowly, and is massively poisoned with AI generated data, so it might be useless.

    • fidotron 18 hours ago

      I think that possibility is worse, because it implies a fundamental limit as opposed to a self imposed restriction, and I choose to remain optimistic.

      If OpenAI really are hitting the wall on being able to scale up overall then the AI bubble will burst sooner than many are expecting.

      • pillefitz 17 hours ago

        LLMs alone might be powerful enough already, they just need to be hooked up to classic AI systems to enable symbolic reasoning, episodic memory etc.

    • ACCount36 16 hours ago

      That's a lie people repeat because they want it to be true.

      People evaluate dataset quality over time. There's no evidence that datasets from 2022 onwards perform any worse than ones from before 2022. There is some weak evidence of an opposite effect, causes unknown.

      It's easy to make "model collapse" happen in lab conditions - but in real world circumstances, it fails to materialize.

  • noosphr 15 hours ago

    >This looks like they're not training the single big model but instead have gone off to develop special sub models and attempt to gloss over them with yet another model. That's what you resort to only when doing the end-to-end training has become too expensive for you.

    The corollary to the bitter lesson strikes again: any hand crafted system will out perform any general system for the same budget by a wide margin.

    • fidotron an hour ago

      That is, at best, wishful thinking.

      In practice the whole point is the opposite is the case, which is why this direction by OpenAI is a suspicious indicator.

  • bjornsing 5 hours ago

    You could train that architecture end-to-end though. You just have to run both models and backprop through both of them in training. Sort of like mixture of experts but with two very different experts.

  • lacoolj 18 hours ago

    Many tiny, specialized models is the way to go, and if that's what they're doing then it's a good thing.

    • fidotron 18 hours ago

      Not at all, you will simply rediscover the bitter lesson [1] from your new composition of models.

      [1] https://www.cs.utexas.edu/~eunsol/courses/data/bitter_lesson...

      • bigmadshoe 18 hours ago

        The bitter lesson doesn't say that you can't split your solution into multiple models. It says that learning from more data via scaled compute will outperform humans injecting their own assumptions about the task into models.

        A broad generalization like "there are two systems of thinking: fast, and slow" doesn't necessarily fall into this category. The transformer itself (plus the choice of positional encoding etc.) contains inductive biases about modeling sequences. The router is presumably still learned with a fairly generic architecture.

        • fidotron 18 hours ago

          > It says that learning from more data via scaled compute will outperform humans injecting their own assumptions about the task into models.

          You are making assumptions about how to break the tasks into sub models.

          • bigmadshoe 17 hours ago

            Sure, all of machine learning involves making assumptions. The bitter lesson in a practical sense is about minimizing these assumptions, particularly those that pertain to human knowledge about how to perform a specific task.

            I don't agree with your interpretation of the lesson if you say it means to make no assumptions. You can try to model language with just a massive fully connected network to be maximally flexible, and you'll find that you fail. The art of applying the lesson is separating your assumptions that come from "expert knowledge" about the task from assumptions that match the most general structure of the problem.

            "Time spent thinking" is a fundamental property of any system that thinks. To separate this into two modes: low and high, is not necessarily too strong of an assumption in my opinion.

            I completely agree with you regarding many specialized sub-models where the distinction is arbitrary and informed by human knowledge about particular problems.

          • dmix 16 hours ago

            Aren't you just moving the assumptions to an AI model and hoping it chooses the right one for the task?

            • bigmadshoe 16 hours ago

              To be fair, you don't really "hope" it chooses the right ones for the task if you're optimizing the correct objective function.

            • nickthegreek 14 hours ago

              so many people at my work need it just switch. they just leave it on 4o. you can still set the model yourself if you want. but this will for sure improve the quality of output for my non technical workmates who are confused by model selection.

              • dotancohen 6 hours ago

                I'm a technical person, who has yet to invest the time in learning proper model selection too. This will be good for all users who don't bring AI to the forefront of their attention, and simply use it as a tool.

                I say that as a VIM user who has been learning VIM commands for decades. I understand more than most how important it is to invest in one's tools. But I also understand that only so much time can be invested in sharpening the tools, when we have actual work to do with them. Using the LLMs as a fancy auto complete, but leaving the architecture up to my own NS (natural stupidity) has shown the default models to be more than adequate for my needs.

      • legulere 16 hours ago

        > The ultimate reason for this is Moore's law, or rather its generalization of continued exponentially falling cost per unit of computation

        Is it though? To me it seems like performance gains are slowing down and additional computation in AI comes mostly from insane amounts of money thrown at it.

      • noosphr 15 hours ago

        Yes, custom hand crafted model will always outperform general statistical models when given the same compute budget. Given that we've basically saturated the power grid at this point we may have to do the unthinkable and start thinking again.

      • chaos_emergent 16 hours ago

        Au contraire, ANNs are precisely the decomposition of larger problems into smaller ones.

    • gekoxyz 18 hours ago

      We already did this for Object/Face recognition, it works but it's not the way to go. It's the way to go only if you don't have enough compute power (and data, I suspect) for a E2E network

      • sixo 18 hours ago

        No, it's what you do if your model architecture is capped out on its ability to profit from further training. Hand-wrapping a bunch of sub-models stands in for models that can learn that kind of substructure directly.

  • illiac786 8 hours ago

    I do agree that the current evolution is moving further and further away from AGI, and more toward a spectrum of niche/specialisation.

    It feels less and less likely AGI is even possible with the data we have available. The one unknown is if we manage to get usable quantum computers, what that will do to AI, I am curious.

  • FeepingCreature 18 hours ago

    If(f) it's trained end to end, it's a unified system.

  • mafro 15 hours ago

    This is a precursor to a future model which isn't simply a router.

    From the system card:

    "In the near future, we plan to integrate these capabilities into a single model."

    • Icathian 15 hours ago

      Anyone who still takes predictive statements from leadership at AI companies as anything other than meaningless noise isn't even trying.

      • kgwgk 15 hours ago

        You don't get it. They couldn't do it yet because it would be too powerful and kill us all!

AgentMatrixAI 16 hours ago

I'm not really convinced, the benchmark blunder was really strange but the demos were quite underwhelming, and it appears this was reflected by a huge market correction in the betting markets as to who will have the best AI by end of the year.

What excites me now is that Gemini 3.0 or some answer from Google is coming soon and that will be the one I will actually end up using. It seems like the last mover in the LLM race is more advantageous.

  • Buttons840 14 hours ago

    Polymarket betters are not impressed. Based upon the market odds, OpenAI had a 35% chance to have the best model (at year end), but those odds have dropped to 18% today.

    (I'm mostly making this comment to document what happened for the history books.)

    https://polymarket.com/event/which-company-has-best-ai-model...

    • vessenes an hour ago

      After a few hours with gpt-5, I'd trade that spread. Not that I think oAI will win end of year. But I think gpt5 is better than it looks on the benchmark side. It is very very good at something we don't have a lot of benchmarks for -- keeping track of where it's at. codex is vassstly better in practice than claude code or gemini cli right now.

      On the chat side, it's also quite different, and I wouldn't be surprised if people need some time to get a taste and a preference for it. I ask most models to help me build a macbook pro charger in 15th century florence with the instructions that I start with only my laptop and I can only talk for four hours of chat before the battery dies -- 5 was notable in that it thought through a bunch of second order implications of plans and offered some unusual things, including a list of instructions for a foot-treadle-based split ring commutator + generator in 15th century florentine italian(!). I have no way of verifying if the italian was correct.

      Upshot - I think they did something very special with long context and iterative task management, and I would be surprised if they don't keep improving 5, based on their new branding and marketing plan.

      That said, to me this is one of the first 'product release' moments in the frontier model space. 5 is not so much a model release as a polished-up, holes-fixed, annoyances-reduced/removed, 10x faster type of product launch. Google (current polymarket favorite) is remarkably bad at those product releases.

      Back to betting - I bet there's a moment this year where those numbers change 10% in oAIs favor.

    • apetresc 10 hours ago

      How on Earth does that market have Anthropic at 2%, in a dead heat with the likes of Meta? If the market was about yesterday rather than 5 months from now I think Claude would be pretty clearly the front runner. Why does the market so confidently think they’ll drop to dead last in the next little while?

      • tedk-42 15 minutes ago

        I'm a fan of Anthropic for this reason. I use Claude and it's very good most of the time for my coding requirements.

        Generally when you have a lot of companies competing to show whos product X does the best at Y, there's a lot of monetary incentives to manipulate the products to perform well specifically on those types of tests.

      • degrews 7 hours ago

        It's because those markets are based on the LLM Arena leaderboard (https://lmarena.ai/), where Claude has historically done poorly.

        That eval has also become a lot less relevant (it's considered not very indicative of real-world performance), so it's unlikely Anthropic will prioritize optimizing for it in future models.

        • kmacdough 2 hours ago

          Anthropic has always been one of the best at not optimizing for stupid metrics. Rather, they spend significant energy researching weaknesses and building metrics around that. Google is also pretty on point IMO, but they can also afford to dedicate to these nonsense metrics as they are still good marketing.

          Meanwhile Meta and Xai are behind the ball and largely marketing focused.

      • Buttons840 9 hours ago

        How is Claude doing on the benchmark that market is based on? Maybe not so good? Idk. Just because Claude is good for real world use doesn't mean it's winning the benchmark, but the benchmark is all that matters for the Polymarket.

      • sinuhe69 8 hours ago

        I think they also based their expectation on the release cycles and speeds of update. Anthropic is known for more conservative release cycle and incremental updates. Google on the other hand is accelerated recently. It also seems that other actors are better at benchmark cheating ;)

      • vasco 8 hours ago

        If you think it's wrong, participate. That's the only way prediction markets end up predicting anything.

        • Tadpole9181 8 hours ago

          Ah, yes, if you disagree you must participate in real money gambling based on the outcome of a single user-based, single-prompt leaderboard.

          • vasco 6 hours ago

            Well I for example don't give a shit what prediction markets do and never participated, but if someone thinks they're wrong, they should just participate and get free money. Otherwise why complain.

      • epiccoleman 10 hours ago

        I find this confusing too. I dropped my OpenAI subs for Claude a while back and I don't feel like I'm missing much.

        I need to spend some more time with Gemini too though. I was using that as a backend for Cursor for a while and had some good results there too.

        • manmal 7 hours ago

          Claude is a useful tool, IMO the most useful one even, but not a road to AGI.

      • globular-toast 3 hours ago

        I mean, if you feel strongly enough that it will be #1 at the end of year then $100 now would net you $3000 end of year... Do bear in mind what my sibling said about the specific benchmark that is being used, though.

    • boringg an hour ago

      You don't actually hold polymarket odds with any significant weighting on actual outcomes do you?

    • jstummbillig 6 hours ago

      That bet does not seem to be very illuminating. Winner is likely who happens to release closest to end of year, no?

    • roflyear 13 hours ago

      The Musk effect is pretty crazy. Or is there another explanation for why x can compete with Google?

      • ENGNR 10 hours ago

        Elon's Y Combinator interview was pretty good. He seemed more in his element back amongst the hacker crowd (rather than dirty politics), and seemed to be doing hackery things at X, like renting generators and mobile cooling vans and just putting them the car park outside a warehouse to train Grok, since there were no data centres available and he was told it would take 2 years to set it all up properly.

        I think he's just good at attracting good talent, and letting them focus on the right things to move fast initially, while cutting the supporting infra down to zero until it's needed.

      • deltaburnt 12 hours ago

        Thinking more cynically: political corruption and connections I'm guessing? Just a couple months ago Musk was treating the US government like his personal playground.

      • Davidzheng 12 hours ago

        They have a lot of compute already and Grok 4 was pretty strong?

        • whimsicalism 12 hours ago

          they’ve managed to acquire compute remarkably quickly and i’m no Musk lover

      • raincole 10 hours ago

        Because they started so late but somehow managed to make something close to SOTA?

        Either way or people think Trump will just give Elon a 500B government contract...

    • m3kw9 8 hours ago

      Is not that they are not impressed, is just google came out with steerable video gen

      • Buttons840 6 hours ago

        That was a few days ago. The big drop in that Polymarket I mentioned all happened today. It was reaction to GTP5 specifically.

  • joshmlewis 15 hours ago

    I am convinced. I've been giving it tasks the past couple hours that Opus 4.1 was failing on and it not only did them but cleaned up the mess Opus made. It's the real deal.

    • energy123 2 hours ago

      And it's almost 10x cheaper via flex, and in #1 position on lmarena. It's not even close.

    • diego_sandoval 14 hours ago

      On that same vein, I had just tried Opus 4.1 yesterday, and it succesfully completed tasks that Sonnet 4 and Opus 4 failed at.

      • joshmlewis 14 hours ago

        When it came out on Tuesday I wanted to throw my laptop out of the window. I don't know what happened but results were total garbage earlier this week. It got better the past couple days but so far with gpt-5 being able to solve problems without as much correction I'm going to use it more.

    • alfalfasprout 12 hours ago

      Interesting, I've had the complete opposite experience. Opus 4.1 feels like a generational improvement compared to GPT-5.

      • joshmlewis 8 hours ago

        It is funny how it can be like this sometimes. I think a lot depends on coding styles, languages, prompting, etc.

  • boomfunky 8 hours ago

    The real last mover is Apple, because boy are they not moving.

    • manmal 7 hours ago

      As an iOS dev, I really hope they acquire Anthropic before it’s too expensive.

      • amelius 3 hours ago

        As a Linux developer, I hope they do not.

  • echelon 15 hours ago

    I really don't want the already trillion dollar mega monopoly to own the world.

    • blitzar 15 hours ago

      I would rather the already trillion dollar mega monopoly own the world than "Open"Ai

      • roxolotl 14 hours ago

        Yea maybe it’s naive but I’ve started learning towards preferring the devil I know. It also helps that Gemini is great.

        • bagacrap 14 hours ago

          Plus it's the mega monopoly that is already being scrutinized by the government. Every tech company seems to start out with too much credibility that it has to whittle down little by little before we really hold them accountable.

          • blitzar 4 hours ago

            Google is multiple orders of magnitute closer to being 'owned by the people' than a privately held for profit charity.

          • illiac786 8 hours ago

            Yes, I would only prefer Gemini because google is under scrutiny, not because I think I know alphabet better than openAI. I think it’s a changing beast and no one can “know” it, it’s an illusion created by the brand, underneath it, it’s different every day.

          • echelon 14 hours ago

            Are we forgetting that they're getting more evil, not less?

            They just removed ManifestV2.

            • surajrmal 11 hours ago

              If you think manifest v2 is related to being more evil you have to rethink your sense of ethics. Companies of that size regularly engage in business that results in the deaths of many innocent people. Overall Google does quite well by many metrics compared to its peers.

            • roxolotl 14 hours ago

              Yea we’re in Silicon Valley’s Lex Luthor era. World Coin is just really next level though compared to most Google things. Sama has kinda always been going for the Lex Luthor vibe.

              • echelon 12 hours ago

                Growing up in a Southern Baptist household where televangelists preached the end of the world every day at 4 PM, World Coin has some serious Antichrist and Revelation vibes. I'll give you that point.

  • retinaros 3 hours ago

    The demos were awful. It felt like watching sloppy vibe coded css UIs

  • m3kw9 8 hours ago

    Gpt5 high reasoning is a big step up from o3

minimaxir 19 hours ago

The marketing copy and the current livestream appear tautological: "it's better because it's better."

Not much explanation yet why GPT-5 warrants a major version bump. As usual, the model (and potentially OpenAI as a whole) will depend on output vibe checks.

  • WD-42 19 hours ago

    It has the last ~6 months worth of flavor of the month Javascript libraries in it's training set now, so it's "better at coding".

    How is this sustainable.

    • WXLCKNO 16 hours ago

      It doesn't even have that, knowledge cutoff is in 2024.

    • sethops1 18 hours ago

      Who said anything about sustainable? The only goal here is to hobble to the next VC round. And then the next, and the next, ...

    • jcgrillo 18 hours ago

      Vast quantities of extremely dumb money

  • some-guy 19 hours ago

    As someone who tries to push the limits of hard coding tasks (mainly refactoring old codebases) to LLMs with not much improvement since the last round of models, I'm finding that we are hitting the reduction of rate of improvement on the S-curve of quality. Obviously getting the same quality cheaper would be huge, but the quality of the output day to day isn't noticeable to me.

    • camdenreslink 18 hours ago

      I find it struggles to even refactor codebases that aren't that large. If you have a somewhat complicated change that spans the full stack, and has some sort of wrinkle that makes it slightly more complicated than adding a data field, then even the most modern LLMs seem to trip on themselves. Even when I tell it to create a plan for implementation and write it to a markdown file and then step through those steps in a separate prompt.

      Not that it makes it useless, just that we seem to not "be there" yet for the standard tasks software engineers do every day.

      • teaearlgraycold 15 hours ago

        I haven’t used GPT5 yet, but even on a 1000 line code base I found Opus 4, o3, etc. to be very hit or miss. The trouble is I can’t seem to predict when these models will hit. So the misses cost time, reducing their overall utility.

        • rapind 13 hours ago

          I'm exclusively using sonnet via claude-code on their max plan (opting to specify sonnet so that opus isn't used). I just wasn't pleased with the opus output, but maybe I just need to use it differently. I haven't bothered with 4.1 yet. Another thing I noticed is opus would eat up my caps super quick, whereas using sonnet exclusively I never hit a cap.

          I'd really just love incremental improvements over sonnet. Increasing the context window on sonnet would be a game changer for me. After auto-compact the quality may fall off a cliff and I need to spend some time bringing it back up to speed.

          When I need a bit more punch for more reasoning / architecture type evaluations, I have it talk to gemini pro via zen mcp and OpenRouter. I've been considering setting up a subagent for architecture / system design decisions that would use the latest opus to see if it's better than gemini pro (so far I have no complaints though).

        • mirkodrummer 13 hours ago

          This, plus I really doubt we will ever "be there". Software engineering evolves over time and so far human engineers innovate in the field.

    • didibus 9 hours ago

      Agree, I think they'll need to move to performance now. If a model was comparable to Claude 4, but took like 500ms or less per edit. A quicker feedback loop would be a big improvement.

  • krat0sprakhar 19 hours ago

    > Not much explanation yet why GPT-5 warrants a major version bump

    Exactly. Too many videos - too little real data / benchmarks on the page. Will wait for vibe check from simonw and others

    • collinmanderson 18 hours ago

      > Will wait for vibe check from simonw

      https://openai.com/gpt-5/?video=1108156668

      2:40 "I do like how the pelican's feet are on the pedals." "That's a rare detail that most of the other models I've tried this on have missed."

      4:12 "The bicycle was flawless."

      5:30 Re generating documentation: "It nailed it. It gave me the exact information I needed. It gave me full architectural overview. It was clearly very good at consuming a quarter million tokens of rust." "My trust issues are beginning to fall away"

      Edit: ohh he has blog post now: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44828264

      • bardak 16 hours ago

        I feel like we need to move on from using the same test on models since as time goes on the information about these specific test is out there in the training data and while i am not saying that it's happened in this case there is nothing stopping model developers from adding extra data for theses tests directly in the training data to make their models seem better than they are

      • dimitri-vs 18 hours ago

        This effectively kills this benchmark.

        • tuesdaynight 18 hours ago

          Honestly, I have mixed feelings about him appearing there. His blog posts are a nice way to be updated about what's going on, and he deserves the recognition, but he's now part of their marketing content. I hope that doesn't make him afraid of speaking his mind when talking about OpenAI's models. I still trust his opinions, though.

          • croemer 12 hours ago

            Yeah, even if he wasn't paid to appear there, this seems a bit too close.

        • layer8 14 hours ago

          The pelican is still a mess.

  • nicetryguy 18 hours ago

    Yeah. We're entered the Smartphone stage: "You want the new one because it's the new one."

  • sbinnee 13 hours ago

    When they were about to release gpt4 I remember the hype was so high there were a lot of AGI debates. But then was quickly out-shadowed by more advanced models.

    People knew that gpt5 wouldn’t be an AGI or even close to that. It’s just an updated version. GptN would become more or leas like an annual release.

  • scosman 19 hours ago

    There's a bunch of benchmarks on the intro page including AIME 2025 without tools, SWE-bench Verified, Aider Polyglot, MMMU, and HealthBench Hard (not familiar with this one): https://openai.com/index/introducing-gpt-5/

    Pretty par for course evals at launch setup.

  • anthonypasq 19 hours ago

    its >o3 performance at gpt4 price. seems pretty obvious

    • thegeomaster 19 hours ago

      o3 pricing: $8/Mtok out

      GPT-5 pricing: $10/Mtok out

      What am I missing?

      • vitaflo 11 hours ago

        That you can run Deepseek for 50 cents.

      • throwaway0123_5 18 hours ago

        It seems like you might need less output tokens for the same quality of response though. One of their plots shows o3 needing ~14k tokens to get 69% on SWE-bench Verified, but GPT-5 needing only ~4k.

      • mitkebes 17 hours ago

        O3 has had some major price cuts since Gemini 2.5 Pro came out. At the time, o3 cost $10/Mtok in and $40/Mtok out. The big deal with Gemini 2.5 Pro was it had comparable quality to o3 at a fraction of the cost.

        I'm not sure when they slashed the o3 pricing, but the GPT-5 pricing looks like they set it to be identical to Gemini 2.5 Pro.

        If you scroll down on this page you can see what different models cost when 2.5 Pro was released: https://deepmind.google/models/gemini/pro/

      • anthonypasq 18 hours ago

        pretty sure reduced cache input pricing is a pretty big deal for reasoning models, but im not positive

        • thegeomaster 13 hours ago

          It just matches the 90% discount that Claude models have had for quite a while. I don't see anything groundbreaking...

  • pram 19 hours ago

    We’re at the audiophile stage of LLMs where people are talking about the improved soundstage, tonality, reduced sibilance etc

    • jaredcwhite 19 hours ago

      Note GPT-5's subtle mouthfeel reminiscent of cranberries with a touch of bourbon.

      • alephnerd 19 hours ago

        Explains why I find AGI fundamentalists similar to tater heads. /s

        (Not to undermine progress in the foundational model space, but there is a lack of appreciation for the democratization of domain specific models amongst HNers).

      • __loam 19 hours ago

        Every bourbon tastes the same unless it's Weller, King's County Peated, or Pappy (or Jim Beam for the wrong reasons lol)

        • alephnerd 19 hours ago

          Tbh, a mid-shelf Four Roses gets you 90% of the way to a upper shelf Weller.

          • __loam 19 hours ago

            I'm being hyperbolic but yeah four roses is probably the best deal next to Buffalo trace. All their stuff is fairly priced. If you want something like Weller though, you should get another wheated bourbon like Maker's Mark French oaked.

            • alephnerd 18 hours ago

              Buffalo trace is ridiculously overpriced nowadays. Good bourbon, but def not worth $35-40 for 750ml.

              > you should get another wheated bourbon like Maker's Mark French oaked

              I agree. I've found Maker Mark products to be a great bang for your buck quality wise and flavor wise as well.

              • __loam 18 hours ago

                If you can find Buffalo Trace for msrp which is $20-30, it's a good deal. I think the bourbon "market" kind of popped recently so finding things has been getting a little easier.

                • alephnerd 18 hours ago

                  Yep! I agree! At MSRP BT is a great buy.

                  > I think the bourbon "market" kind of popped recently

                  It def did. The overproduction that was invested in during the peak of the COVID collector boom is coming into markets now. I think we'll see some well priced age stated products in the next 3-4 years based on by acquaintances in the space.

                  Ofc, the elephant in the room is consolidation - everyone wants to copy the LVMH model (and they say Europeans are ethical elves who never use underhanded mopolistic and market making behavior to corner markets /s).

    • javchz 19 hours ago

      I can already see LLMs Sommeliers: Yes, the mouthfeel and punch of GPT-5 it's comparable to the one of Grok 4, but it's tenderness lacks the crunch from Gemini 2.5 Pro.

      • 0x7cfe 18 hours ago

        Isn't it exactly what the typical LLM discourse is about? People are just throwing anecdotes and stay with their opinion. A is better than B because C, and that's basically it. And whoever tries to actually bench them gets called out because all benches are gamed. Go figure.

    • tuesdaynight 18 hours ago

      You need to burn-in your LLM by using for 100 hours before you see the true performance of it.

    • ezst 15 hours ago

      Always have been. This LLM-centered AI boom has been my craziest and most frustrating social experiment, propped up by the rhetoric (with no evidence to back it up) that this time we finally have the keys to AGI (whatever the hell that means), and infused with enough AstroTurfing to drive the discourse into ideological stances devoid of any substance (you must either be a true believer or a naysayer). On the plus side, it appears that this hype train is taking a bump with GPT-5.

    • satyrun 19 hours ago

      Come on, we aren't even close to the level of audiophile nonsense like worrying about what cable sounds better.

      • leptons 18 hours ago

        We're still at the stage of which LLM lies the least (but they all do). So yeah, no different than audiophiles really.

    • catigula 19 hours ago

      Informed audiophiles rely on Klippel output now

      • bobson381 19 hours ago

        The empirical ones do! There's still a healthy sports car element to the scene though, at least in my experience.

        • catigula 19 hours ago

          You're right, it's hard to admit you can buy a $50 speaker and sub and EQ it to 95% maximum performance.

          • riknos314 18 hours ago

            This is and isn't true.

            The room is the limiting factor in most speaker setups. The worse the room, the sooner you hit diminishing returns for upgrading any other part of the system.

            In a fantastic room a $50 speaker will be nowhere near 95% of the performance of a mastering monitor, no matter how much EQ you put on it. In the average living room with less than ideal speaker and listening position placement there will still be a difference, but it will be much less apparent due to the limitations of the listening environment.

            • jpc0 18 hours ago

              Absolutely not true.

              You might lose headroom or have to live with higher latency but if your complaint is about actual empirical data like frequency response or phase, that can be corrected digitally.

              • babypuncher 17 hours ago

                You can only EQ speakers and headphones as far as the transducer can still respond accurately to the signal you're sending it. No amount of EQ will give the Sennheiser HD-600's good sub-bass performance because the driver begins to distort the signal long before you've amplified it enough to match the Harman target at a normal listening level.

                DSP is a very powerful tool that can make terrible speakers and headphones sound great, but it's not magic.

                • jpc0 15 hours ago

                  > You might lose headroom

                  Pretty much my first point… At the same time that same DSP can make a pretty mediocre speaker that can reproduce those frequencies do so in phase at the listening position so once again the point is moot, effectively add a cheap sub.

                  There is no time where you cannot get results from mediocre transducers given the right processing.

                  I’m not arguing you should, but in 2025 if a speaker sounds bad it is entirely because processing was skimped on.

            • catigula 18 hours ago

              Ah, the aforementioned snake oil.

    • virgil_disgr4ce 18 hours ago

      Well, reduced sibilance is an ordinary and desirable thing. A better "audiophile absurdity" example would be $77,000 cables, freezing CDs to improve sound quality, using hospital-grade outlets, cryogenically frozen outlets (lol), the list goes on and on

      • codeulike 16 hours ago

        I feel sorry for audiophiles because they have to work so much harder to get the same enjoyment of music that I get via my laptop speakers

        • Mawr 3 hours ago

          That's just the other extreme, which is not that much less silly. It's not unreasonable to spend 300$ on a good pair of headphones.

doctoboggan 19 hours ago

Watching the livestream now, the improvement over their current models on the benchmarks is very small. I know they seemed to be trying to temper our expectations leading up to this, but this is much less improvement than I was expecting

  • davidhs 16 hours ago

    > I know they seemed to be trying to temper our expectations leading up to this

    Before the release of the model Sam Altman tweeted a picture of the Death Star appearing over the horizon of a planet.

    • blitzar 15 hours ago

      Is he suggesting his company is designed with a womp rat sized opening that if you shoot a bullet into makes the whole thing explode?

      • karaterobot 14 hours ago

        You know, I used to bullseye small thermal exhaust ports in my T16 back home, they're not much smaller than womp rats.

        • scubakid 11 hours ago

          You know, I used to bullseye T16s in my womp rat back home, they're not much bigger than thermal exhaust ports.

    • softwaredoug 9 hours ago

      He also said he had an existential crisis that he was completely useless now at work.

      • shafyy 3 hours ago

        Good that he finally came to the realization lol

  • 827a 18 hours ago

    I have a suspicion that while the major AI companies have been pretty samey and competing in the same space for a while now, the market is going to force them to differentiate a bit, and we're going to see OpenAI begin to lose the race toward extremely high levels of intelligence instead choosing to focus on justifying their valuations by optimizing cost and for conversational/normal intelligence/personal assistant use-cases. After all, most of their users just want to use it to cheat at school, get relationship advice, and write business emails. They also have Ive's company to continue investing in.

    Meanwhile, Anthropic & Google have more room in their P/S ratios to continue to spend effort on logarithmic intelligence gains.

    Doesn't mean we won't see more and more intelligent models out of OpenAI, especially in the o-series, but at some point you have to make payroll and reality hits.

    • juped 18 hours ago

      I think this is pretty much what we've already seen happening, in fact.

  • z7 19 hours ago

    GPT-5 is #1 on WebDev Arena with +75 pts over Gemini 2.5 Pro and +100 pts over Claude Opus 4:

    https://lmarena.ai/leaderboard

    • virgildotcodes 19 hours ago

      This same leaderboard lists a bunch of models, including 4o, beating out Opus 4, which seems off.

      • afro88 16 hours ago

        In my experience Opus 4 isn't as good for day to day coding tasks as Sonnet 4. It's better as a planner

    • zamadatix 14 hours ago

      "+100 points" sounds like a lot until you do the ELO math and see that means 1 out of 3 people still preferred Claud Opus 4's response. Remember 1 out of 2 would place the models dead even.

    • Too 6 hours ago

      What does +75 arbitrary points mean in practice? Can we come up with units that relate to something in the real world.

    • degrews 7 hours ago

      That eval hasn't been relevant for a while now. Performance there just doesn't seem to correlate well with real-world performance.

  • diogolsq 16 hours ago

    Law of diminishing returns.

    We’re talking about less than a 10% performance gain, for a shitload of data, time, and money investment.

    • gwd an hour ago

      I'm not sure what "10% performance gain" is supposed to mean here; but moving from "It does a decent job 95% of the time but screws it up 5%" to "It does a decent job 98% of the time and screws it up 2%" to "It does a decent job 99.5% of the time and only screws it up 0.5%" are major qualitative improvements.

    • illiac786 8 hours ago

      Yeah I think that throwing more and more compute at the same training data produces smaller and smaller gains.

      Maybe quantum compute would be significant enough of a computing leap to meaningfully move the needle again.

  • Workaccount2 19 hours ago

    Sam said maybe two years ago that they want to avoid "mic drop" releases, and instead want to stick to incremental steps.

    This is day one, so there is probably another 10-20% in optimizations that can be squeezed out of it in the coming months.

    • bigmadshoe 19 hours ago

      Then why increment the version number here? This is clearly styled like a "mic drop" release but without the numbers to back it up. It's a really bad look when comparing the crazy jump from GPT3 to GPT4 to this slight improvement with GPT5.

      • camdenreslink 18 hours ago

        GPT-5 was highly anticipated and people have thought it would be a step change in performance for a while. I think at some point they had to just do it and rip the bandaid off, so they could move past 5.

        • phatfish 15 hours ago

          Maybe its time to switch to year based versioning, or increment by an integer for every small new feature like everyone else does.

      • dpoloncsak 18 hours ago

        Honestly, I think the big thing is the sycophancy. It's starting to reach the mainstream that ChatGPT can cause people to 'go crazy'.

        This gives them an out. "That was the old model, look how much better this one tests on our sycophancy test we just made up!!"

      • Workaccount2 19 hours ago

        Because it is a 100x training compute model over 4.

        GPT5.5 will be a 10X compute jump.

        4.5 was 10x over 4.

        • bigmadshoe 18 hours ago

          Even worse optics. They scaled the training compute by 100x and got <1% improvement on several benchmarks.

          • Mentlo 4 hours ago

            It is almost as if there’s a documented limit in how much you can squeeze out of autoregressive transformers by throwing compute at it

          • reasonableklout 18 hours ago

            Is 1% relative to more recent models like o3, or the (old and obsolete at this point) GPT-4?

            • bigmadshoe 16 hours ago

              It was relative to the number the comment I replied to included. I would assume GPT-5 is nowhere near 100x the parameters of o3. My point is that if this release isn't notable because of parameter count, nor (importantly) performance, what is it notable for? I guess it unifies the thinking and non-thinking models, but this is more of a product improvement, not a model improvement.

      • brokencode 17 hours ago

        The fact that it unifies the regular model and the reasoning model is a big change. I’m sure internally it’s a big change, but also in terms of user experience.

        I feel it’s worthy of a major increment, even if benchmarks aren’t significantly improved.

        • csomar 9 hours ago

          Claude code already does that. It is an improvement but not a big change in any way.

          • brokencode 8 hours ago

            Well yeah, but it’s a major break from the previous slate of OpenAI models. What else were they going to call it that makes any sense? o4o?

    • yahoozoo 18 hours ago

      He said that because even then he saw the writing on the wall that LLMs will plateau.

    • iLoveOncall 15 hours ago

      > Sam said maybe two years ago that they want to avoid "mic drop" releases, and instead want to stick to incremental steps.

      He also said that AGI was coming early 2025.

      People that can't stop drinking the kool aid are really becoming ridiculous.

  • anyg 18 hours ago

    Also, the code demos are all using GPT-5 MAX on Cursor. Most of us will not be able to use it like that all the time. They should have showed it without MAX mode as well

  • hodgehog11 17 hours ago

    The hallucination benchmarks did show major improvement. We know existing benchmarks are nearly useless at this point. It's reliability that matters more.

    • jama211 17 hours ago

      I’m more worried about how they still confidently reason through things incorrectly all the time, which isn’t quite the same as hallucination, but it’s in a similar vein.

      • CamperBob2 13 hours ago

        Yeah, people never do that. Or at least I don't. I don't know about you.

  • lawlessone 19 hours ago

    im sure i am repeating someone else but sounds like we're coming over the s-curve

    • Bluestein 19 hours ago

      My thought exactly.-

      Diminished returns.-

      ... here's hoping it leads to progress.-

  • wahnfrieden 19 hours ago

    It is at least much cheaper and seems faster.

    They also announced gpt-5-pro but I haven't seen benchmarks on that yet.

    • doctoboggan 19 hours ago

      I am hoping there is a "One more thing" that shows the pro version with great benchmark scores

  • og_kalu 19 hours ago

    I mean that's just the consequence of releasing a new model every couple months. If Open AI stayed mostly silent since the GPT-4 release (like they did for most iterations) and only now released 5 then nobody would be complaining about weak gains in benchmarks.

    • jononor 19 hours ago

      If everyone else had stayed silent as well, then I would agree. But as it is right now they are juuust about managing to match the current pace of the other contenders. Which actually is fine, but they have previously set quite high expectations. So some will probably be disappointed at this.

    • moduspol 19 hours ago

      Well it was their choice to call it GPT 5 and not GPT 4.2.

      • og_kalu 19 hours ago

        It is significantly better than 4, so calling it 4.2 would be rather silly.

        • amilios 18 hours ago

          Is it? That's not super obvious from the results they're showing.

          • og_kalu 18 hours ago

            Yes it is, if we're talking about the original GPT-4 release or even GPT-4o. What about the results they've shown is not obvious?

    • cardine 14 hours ago

      If they had stayed silent since GPT-4, nobody would care what OpenAI was releasing as they would have become completely irrelevant compared to Gemini/Claude.

tylermw 19 hours ago

What's going on with this plot's y-axis?

https://bsky.app/profile/tylermw.com/post/3lvtac5hues2n

  • haffi112 19 hours ago

    It makes it look like the presentation is rushed or made last minute. Really bad to see this as the first plot in the whole presentation. Also, I would have loved to see comparisons with Opus 4.1.

    Edit: Opus 4.1 scores 74.5% (https://www.anthropic.com/news/claude-opus-4-1). This makes it sound like Anthropic released the upgrade to still be the leader on this important benchmark.

    • danpalmer 18 hours ago

      > like the presentation is rushed or made last minute

      Or written by GPT-5?

    • herval 10 hours ago

      They never compare with other vendors

  • TrackerFF 5 hours ago

    After reading around, it seems like they probably forgot to update/swap the slides before presentation. The graphs were correct on their website, as they launched. But the ones they used in the presentation were probably some older versions they had forgotten to fix.

  • rrrrrrrrrrrryan 19 hours ago

    This is hilarious

    • moritzwarhier 19 hours ago

      Probably created without thinking enabled. Lower % accuracy ensues, speaking from experience.

  • silverquiet 19 hours ago

    Probably generated by AI.

    • Sateeshm 19 hours ago

      If not, the person that made the chart just got $1.5M

  • lysecret 19 hours ago

    Couldn’t believe it was real haha

  • artemonster 19 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • dang 18 hours ago

      Please don't post like this to Hacker News, regardless of how idiotic other people are or you feel they are.

      You may not owe people who you feel are idiots better, but you owe this community better if you're participating in it.

      https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

sundarurfriend 18 hours ago

Some people have hypothesized that GPT-5 is actually about cost reduction and internal optimization for OpenAI, since there doesn't seem to be much of a leap forward, but another element that they seem to have focused on that'll probably make a huge difference to "normal" (non-tech) users is making precise and specifically worded prompts less necessary.

They've mentioned improvements in that aspects a few times now, and if it actually materializes, that would be a big leap forward for most users even if underneath GPT-4 was also technically able to do the same things if prompted just the right way.

  • podgietaru 16 hours ago

    I just don’t know that you’d name that 5.

    The jump from 3 to 4 was huge. There was an expectation for similar outputs here.

    Making it cheaper is a good goal - certainly - but they needed a huge marketing win too.

    • bcherry 14 hours ago

      yeah i think they shot themselves in the foot a bit here by creating the o series. the truth is that GPT-5 _is_ a huge step forward, for the "GPT-x" models. The current GPT-x model was basically still 4o, with 4.1 available in some capacity. GPT-5 vs GPT-4o looks like a massive upgrade.

      But it's only an incremental improvement over the existing o line. So people feel like the improvement from the current OpenAI SoTA isn't there to justify a whole bump. They probably should have just called o1 GPT-5 last year.

    • PUSH_AX 4 hours ago

      This tells me we're hitting a ceiling.

    • fastball 14 hours ago

      It’s a new major because they are using it to deprecate other models.

      • withinboredom 2 hours ago

        You cannot even access the other models any more from the app. This is a huge bummer that is having me consider other brands. I don't trust gpt-5 yet, but I do trust 4.1 and most of my in-progress conversations are 4.1 based.

    • techpineapple 9 hours ago

      Did they really have another choice? if no big leap was on the horizon are they just never going to release 5? I mean, from a marketing perspective.

  • hobofan 16 hours ago

    It sounded like they were very careful to always mention that those improvements were for ChatGPT, so I'm very skeptical that they translate to the API versions of GPT-5.

Topfi 19 hours ago

> 400,000 context window

> 128,000 max output tokens

> Input $1.25

> Output $10.00

Source: https://platform.openai.com/docs/models/gpt-5

If this performs well in independent needle-in-haystack and adherence evaluations, this pricing with this context window alone would make GPT-5 extremely competitive with Gemini 2.5 Pro and Claude Opus 4.1, even if the output isn't a significant improvement over o3. If the output quality ends up on-par or better than the two major competitors, that'd be truly a massive leap forward for OpenAI, mini and nano maybe even more so.

  • nialv7 12 hours ago

    Being on-par with competitors is somehow a "massive leap" for OpenAI now? How far have they fallen...

    • raincole 7 hours ago

      Are you kidding? If GPT 5 is really on par with Opus 4.1, it means now OpenAI is offering the same product but 10 times cheaper. In any other industry it's not just a massive leap. It's "all competitors are out of market in a few months if they can't release something similar."

      • profstasiak 5 hours ago

        goalpost shifting for GPT5? I remember it was supposed to be AGI

  • iammrpayments 18 hours ago

    You also have to count the cost of having to verify your identity to use the API

    • jjani 18 hours ago

      It's only a video face scan and your legal ID to SamA, what could possibly go wrong

    • Topfi 17 hours ago

      OpenRouter (and potentially Azure in the near future) are options if verifying for enterprise API use is too hard to stomach.

      • jjani 9 hours ago

        Neither will be. Both OpenRouter and Azure (through requiring and enterprise agreement, only available to large orgs with 500+ devices) require it for o3 to this very day, and already do so for GPT-5, the main model under discussion in this thread (sure, not mini and nano, but those aren't where 95% of the attention is focused on).

      • rgbrenner 15 hours ago

        openrouter requires an openai api key.

        • Topfi 15 hours ago

          Where did you get that from? I am currently using GPT-5 via OpenRouter and never added an OpenAI key to my account there. Same for any previous OpenAI model. BYOK is an option, not a necessity.

          • joshmlewis 15 hours ago

            You had to use your own key for o3 at least.

            > Note that BYOK is required for this model. Set up here: https://openrouter.ai/settings/integrations

            https://openrouter.ai/api/v1/models

            • Topfi 14 hours ago

              > {"id":"openai/gpt-5-chat","canonical_slug":"openai/gpt-5-chat-2025-08-07","hugging_face_id":"","name":"OpenAI: GPT-5 Chat","created":1754587837,"description":"GPT-5 Chat is designed for advanced, natural, multimodal, and context-aware conversations for enterprise applications.","context_length":400000,"architecture":{"modality":"text+image->text","input_modalities":["file","image","text"],"output_modalities":["text"],"tokenizer":"GPT","instruct_type":null},"pricing":{"prompt":"0.00000125","completion":"0.00001","request":"0","image":"0","audio":"0","web_search":"0","internal_reasoning":"0","input_cache_read":"0.000000125"},"top_provider":{"context_length":400000,"max_completion_tokens":128000,"is_moderated":true},"per_request_limits":null,"supported_parameters":["max_tokens","response_format","seed","structured_outputs"]},

              If you look at the JSON you linked, it does not enforce BYOK for openai/gpt-5-chat, nor for openai/gpt-5-mini or openai/gpt-5-nano.

              • joshmlewis 14 hours ago

                Did I say GPT-5? I said o3. :) That was a rebuttal to you saying you have never needed to add your key to use an OpenAI model before.

                • Topfi 14 hours ago

                  Fair, I should not have said "any".

              • jjani 9 hours ago

                It does for the model this thread is about: openai/gpt-5.

    • iJohnDoe 10 hours ago

      To clarify, you need to verify identity to use the GPT-5 API?

      I understand for image generation, but why for text generation?

  • hrpnk 18 hours ago

    Interesting that gpt-5 has Oct 01, 2024 as knowledge cut-off while gpt-5-mini/nano it's May 31, 2024.

    gpt-4.1 family had 1M/32k input/output tokens. Pricing-wise, it's 37% cheaper input tokens, but 25% more expensive on output tokens. Only nano is 50% cheaper on input and unchanged on output.

  • JackYoustra 8 hours ago

    Needle in a haystack is not a good evaluation though - even famously bad llama 4 does well on that benchmark.

hrpnk 18 hours ago

They will retire lots of models: GPT-4o, GPT-4.1, GPT-4.5, GPT-4.1-mini, o4-mini, o4-mini-high, o3, o3-pro.

https://help.openai.com/en/articles/6825453-chatgpt-release-...

"If you open a conversation that used one of these models, ChatGPT will automatically switch it to the closest GPT-5 equivalent."

- 4o, 4.1, 4.5, 4.1-mini, o4-mini, or o4-mini-high => GPT-5

- o3 => GPT-5-Thinking

- o3-Pro => GPT-5-Pro

  • Jcampuzano2 12 hours ago

    It was an obvious decision product wise even if it may not appease some devs.

    Regular users just see incrementing numbers, why would they want to use 3 or 4 if there is a 5? This is how people who aren't entrenched in AI think.

    Ask some of your friends what the difference is between models and some will have no clue that currently some of the 3 models are better than 4 models, or they'll not understand what the "o" means at all. And some think why would I ever use mini?

    • sothatsit 7 hours ago

      My girlfriend when asked about models: What do you mean, I just ask ChatGPT?

      I think people here vastly underestimate how many people just type questions into the chatbox, and that's it. When you think about the product from that perspective, this release is probably a huge jump for many people who have never used anything but the default model. Whereas, if you've been using o3 all along, this is just another nice incremental improvement.

      • nextlevelwizard 5 hours ago

        Why should average user know the difference?

        It is frankly ridiculous to assume anyone would think that 4o is in anyway worse then o3. I don't understand why these companies suck at basic marketing this hard, like what is with all these .5s and mini and other shit names. Just increment the fucking number or if you are embarrassed by having to increase the number all the time just use year/month. Then you can have different flavors like "light and fast" or "deep thinker" and of course just the regular "GPT X"

  • pradn 18 hours ago

    Finally, someone from the product side got a word in. Keep it simple!

    • hobofan 16 hours ago

      Keeping it simple in that regard will just drive even more enterprise users into the arms of Microsoft.

      • mi_lk 15 hours ago

        Why is that?

        • cowsandmilk 12 hours ago

          Many companies face model regressions on actively used workflows. Microsoft is the cloud provider who won’t force you to upgrade to new models. This has driven enterprises facing model regressions to Microsoft, not just for workflows facing this problem, but also new workflows just to be safe and not have to migrate clouds if there is a regression.

          • csomar 9 hours ago

            This could have been solved with GPT-{year/month/day} and GPT-latest. But OpenAI is a hype machine not an AI machine.

        • orbital-decay 9 hours ago

          Imagine you put a ton of effort into testing and taming a particular snapshot for your use case, just to find that the AI shop is pulling the rug.

          • sunaookami 8 hours ago

            It is still supported in the API.

  • thimabi 16 hours ago

    I personally hated this decision.

    Of course, I know that having a line-up of tons of models is quite confusing. Yet I also believe users on the paid plan deserve more options.

    As a paying user, I liked the ability to set which models to use each time, in particular switching between o4-mini and o4-mini-high.

    Now they’ve deprecated this feature and I’m stuck with their base GPT-5 model or GPT-5 Thinking, which seems akin to o3 and thus has much smaller usage limits. Only God knows whether their routing will work as well as my previous system for selecting models.

    • el_benhameen 10 hours ago

      This is where I’m at, too. The o3 limits were more restrictive than the 5-thinking limits are now, but I regularly used o4-mini-high for complex-but-not-brain-breaking questions and was quite happy with the result. Now I have to choose between saving my usage with 5, which so far hasn’t felt up to the more complex use cases, or burn usage much faster with 5-thinking.

      I suppose this is probably the point. I’m still not super keen on ponying up 200 bucks a month, but it’s more likely now.

    • calmoo 14 hours ago

      As a paying user I personally love it. No decision fatigure. I'll let them decide.

  • dougdonohoe 16 hours ago

    I don't have confidence that systems built on top of a specific model will work the same on a higher version. Unlike, say, the Go programming language where backwards compatibility is something you can generally count on (with exceptions being well documented).

    I wouldn't want to be in charge of regression testing an LLM-based enterprise software app when bumping the underlying model.

  • atonse 17 hours ago

    Smart way to probably also free up resources that are currently fragmented running those older models. They could all run the latest model and have more capacity.

    • ComputerGuru 17 hours ago

      API usage is not affected by this.

      • hrpnk 17 hours ago

        I guess deprecation on API side is coming some time soon as well

      • atonse 12 hours ago

        I wonder what the volume is between casual users of the chat vs the API

  • baobabKoodaa 16 hours ago

    GPT-5-nano does not support temperature parameter and is giving me worse quality results than GPT-4.1-nano. Will be interesting if they truly do end up retiring a better model in favor of a worse one.

    • BoorishBears 15 hours ago

      They probably will. Given how fast GPT 5 is, it feels like all the models are very small.

      Maybe to service more users they're thinking they'll shrink the models and have reasoning close the gap... of course, that only really works for verifiable tasks.

      And I've seen the claims of a "universal verifier", but that feels like the Philosopher's Stone of AI. Everyone who's tried it has shown limited carryover between verifiable tasks (like code) to tasks with subjective preference.

      -

      To clarify also: I don't think this is nefarious. I think as you serve more users, you need to at least try to reign in the unit economics.

      Even OpenAI can only afford to burn so many dollars per user per week once they're trying to serve a billion users a week. At some point there isn't even enough money to be raised to keep up with costs.

  • nikanj 16 hours ago

    "GPT-4o, GPT-4.1, GPT-4.5, GPT-4.1-mini, o4-mini, o4-mini-high, o3, o3-pro"

    The names of GPT models are just terrible. o3 is better than 4o, maybe?

    • isbvhodnvemrwvn 2 hours ago

      They consulted Microsoft's experts in naming things.

    • aniviacat 14 hours ago

      Fortunately that changes with the GPT-5 release

kybernetikos 19 hours ago

ChatGPT5 in this demo:

> For an airplane wing (airfoil), the top surface is curved and the bottom is flatter. When the wing moves forward:

> * Air over the top has to travel farther in the same amount of time -> it moves faster -> pressure on the top decreases.

> * Air underneath moves slower -> pressure underneath is higher

> * The presure difference creates an upward force - lift

Isn't that explanation of why wings work completely wrong? There's nothing that forces the air to cover the top distance in the same time that it covers the bottom distance, and in fact it doesn't. https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/how-wings-really-work

Very strange to use a mistake as your first demo, especially while talking about how it's phd level.

  • peterdsharpe 19 hours ago

    Yes, it is completely wrong. If this were a valid explanation, flat-plate airfoils could not generate lift. (They can.)

    Source: PhD on aircraft design

    • synapsomorphy 15 hours ago

      It appears to me like the linked explanation is also subtly wrong, in a different way:

      “This is why a flat surface like a sail is able to cause lift – here the distance on each side is the same but it is slightly curved when it is rigged and so it acts as an aerofoil. In other words, it’s the curvature that creates lift, not the distance.”

      But like you say flat plates can generate lift at positive AoA, no curvature (camber) required. Can you confirm this is correct? Kinda going crazy because I'd very much expect a Cambridge aerodynamicist to get this 100% right.

      • kqr 15 hours ago

        Yes, it is wrong. The curvature of the sail lowers the leading angle of attack which promotes attachment, i.e. reduces the risk of stalling at high angles of attack, but it is not responsible for lift in the sense you mean.

        It could be argued that preventing a stall makes it responsible for lift in an AoA regime where the wing would otherwise be stalled -- hence "responsible for lift" -- but that would be far fetched.

        More likely the author wanted to give an intuition for the cuvature of the airflow. This is produced not by the shape of the airfoil but the induced circulation around the airfoil, which makes air travel faster on the side of the far surface of an airfoil, creating the pressure differential.

    • nilsherzig 18 hours ago

      Looks like OpenAI delivered on the PhD response

      • antisthenes 18 hours ago

        GPT-6 will just go on forums and pretend to be a girl that needs help with homework.

        • zgk7iqea 14 hours ago

          we all know the real solution is replying with a wrong answer so that people correct you

        • snerbles 18 hours ago

          Fallback is posting a confidently wrong answer on another forum to bait for angry correct answers.

      • nxobject 6 hours ago

        By "PhD", do they mean "overconfident first-year grad student"?

    • WithinReason 18 hours ago

      And flying upside down would be impossible

      • Tadpole9181 10 hours ago

        Cambered wings produce negative lift upside down, which is compensated by increasing the angle of attack. Lift comes from multiple sources.

    • ge96 18 hours ago

      What is the actual answer? I know the "skipping stone" idea is wrong too, thinking it's just angle of attack

      • base698 18 hours ago

        Weight of the air deflecting downward. Plain ole Newtonian equal and opposite reaction.

        • rtkwe 17 hours ago

          It's both lower pressure above the wing (~20% of lift) and the reaction force from pushing air down (give or take the remaining 80% of lift). The main wrong thing is that the air travels faster because it has to travel farther causing the air to accelerate causing the lower pressure that's double plus wrong. It's a weird old misunderstanding that gets repeated over and over because it's a neat connection to attach to the Bernoulli Principal when it's being explained to children.

          • casualscience 8 hours ago

            How can you create a pocket of 'lower pressure' without deflecting some of the air away? At the end of the day, if the aircraft is moving up, it needs to be throwing something down to counteract gravity.

            • ummonk 6 hours ago

              Exactly. The speed phenomenon (airflow speeding up due to getting sucked into the lower pressure space above the wing) is certainly there, but it's happening because the wing is shaped to deflect air downwards.

          • boombapoom 17 hours ago

            a classic example of how LLM's mislead people. They don't know right from wrong, they know what they have been trained on. Even with reasoning capabilities

            • rtkwe 8 hours ago

              That's one of my biggest hang ups on the LLMs to AGI hype pipeline, no matter how much training and tweaking we throw at them they still don't seem to be able to not fall back to repeating common misconceptions found in their training data. If they're supposed to be PhD level collaborators I would expect better from them.

              Not to say they can't be useful tools but they fall into the same basic traps and issues despite our continues attempts to improve them.

        • datadrivenangel 18 hours ago

          But also pressure providing force. It's complicated.

      • bilsbie 18 hours ago

        Angle of attack is a big part but I think the other thing going on is air “sticks” to the surface of the top of the wing and gets directed downward as it comes off the wing. It also creates a gap as the wing curves down leaving behind lower pressure from that.

      • dist-epoch 18 hours ago
        • IshKebab 15 hours ago

          It's really not. The wing is angled so it pushes the air down. Pushing air down means you are pushing the plane up. A wing can literally be a flat sheet at an angle and it would still fly.

          It gets complex if you want to fully model things and make it fly as efficiently as possible, but that isn't really in the scope of the question.

          Planes go up because they push air down. Simple as that.

          • rcxdude 11 hours ago

            It's both that simple and not. Because it's also true that the wing's shape creates a pressure differential and that's what produce lift. And the pressure differential causes the momentum transfer to the wing, the opposing force to the wing's lift creates the momentum transfer, and pressure difference also causes the change in speed and vice-versa. You can create many correct (and many more incorrect) straightforward stories about the path to lift but in reality cause and effect are not so straightforward and I think it's misleading to go "well this story is the one true simple story".

            • IshKebab 5 hours ago

              Sure but it creates a pressure differential by pushing the air down (in most wings). Pressure differentials are an unnecessarily detailed description of what is going on that just confuses people.

              You wouldn't explain how swimming works with pressure differentials. You'd just say "you push water backwards and that makes you go fowards". If you start talking about pressure differentials... maybe you're technically correct, but it's a confusing and unnecessarily complex explanation that doesn't give the correct intuitive idea of what is happening.

              • rcxdude 5 hours ago

                Sure. If you're going for a basic 'how does it work', then 'pushing air down' is a good starting point, but you'll really struggle with follow-up questions like 'then why are they that shape?' unless you're willing to go into a bit more detail.

            • casualscience 8 hours ago

              How can you create a 'pressure differential' without deflecting some of the air away? At the end of the day, if the aircraft is moving up, it needs to be throwing something down to counteract gravity. If there is some pressure differential that you can observe, that's nice, but you can't get away from momentum conservation.

              • rcxdude 5 hours ago

                You can't, but you also can't get away from a pressure differential. Those things are linked! That's my main point, arguing over which of these explanations is more correct is arguing over what exactly the shape of an object's silhouette is: it depends on what direction you're looking at it from.

              • Tadpole9181 8 hours ago

                The pressure differential is created by the leading edge creating a narrow flow region, which opens to a wider flow region at the trailing edge. This pulls the air at the leading edge across the top of the wing, making it much faster than the air below the wing. This, in turn, creates a low pressure zone.

                Air molecules travel in all directions, not just down, so with a pressure differential that means the air molecules below the wing are applying a significant force upward, no longer balanced by the equal pressure usually on the top of the wing. Thus, lift through boyancy. Your question is now about the same as "why does wood float in water"?

                The "throwing something down" here comes from the air molecules below the wing hitting the wing upward, then bouncing down.

                All the energy to do this comes from the plane's forward momentum, consumed by drag and transformed by the complex fluid dynamics of the air.

                Any non-zero angle of attack also pushes air down, of course. And the shape of the wing with the "stickiness" of the air means some more air can be thrown down by the shape of the wing's top edge.

      • qq66 18 hours ago

        Air pushes on the wing. The control surfaces determine in which direction.

    • ActionHank 17 hours ago

      This sort of tracks for my experience with LLMs.

      They spout common knowledge on a broad array of subjects and it's usually incorrect to anyone who has some knowledge on the subject.

    • Tadpole9181 18 hours ago

      Sorry, I know nothing about this topic, but this is how it was explained to me every time it's come up throughout my life. Could you explain a bit more?

      I've always been under the impression that flat-plate airfoils can't generate lift without a positive angle-of-attack - where lift is generated through the separate mechanism of the air pushing against an angled plane? But a modern airfoil can, because of this effect.

      And that if you flip them upside down, a flat plate is more efficient and requires less angle-of-attack than the standard airfoil shape because now the lift advantage is working to generate a downforce.

      I just tried to search Google, but I'm finding all sorts of conflicting answers, with only a vague consensus that the AI-provided answer above is, in fact, correct. The shape of the wing causes pressure differences that generate lift in conjunction with multiple other effects that also generate lift by pushing or redirecting air downward.

      • rcxdude 11 hours ago

        The core part, which is incorrect and misleading, is 'the air needs to take an equal time to transit the top and bottom of the wing'. From that you can derive the correct statement that 'the air traveling across the top of the wing is moving faster', but you've not correctly explained why that is the case. And in fact, it's completely wrong that the transit time is equal: the videos from the page something linked above show that usually the air above the top takes less time than the bottom, and it's probably interesting to work out why that's the case!

        (Also, once you've got the 'moving faster' you can then tell a mostly correct story through bernuolli's principle to get to lower pressure on the top and thus lift, but you're also going to confuse people if you say this is the one true story and any other explaination, like one that talks about momentum, or e.g. the curvature of the airflow causing the pressure gradient instead is wrong, because these are all simply multiple paths through the same underlying set of interactions which are not so easy to fundamentally seperate into cause and effect. But 'equal transit time' appears in none of the correct paths as an axiom, nor a necessary result, and there's basically no reason to use it in an explanation, because there's simpler correct stories if you want to dumb it down for people)

      • stonemetal12 18 hours ago

        >Air over the top has to travel farther in the same amount of time

        There is no requirement for air to travel any where. Let alone in any amount of time. So this part of the AI's response is completely wrong. "Same amount of time" as what? Air going underneath the wing? With an angle of attack the air under the wing is being deflected down, not magically meeting up with the air above the wing.

        • Tadpole9181 16 hours ago

          But this just sounds like a simplified layman explanation, the same way most of the ways we talk about electricity are completely wrong in terms of how electricity actually works.

          If you look at airflow over an asymmetric airfoil [1], the air does move faster over the top. Sure, it doesn't arrive "at the same time" (it goes much faster than that) or fully describe why these effects are happening, but that's why it's a simplification for lay people. Wikipedia says [2]:

          > Although the two simple Bernoulli-based explanations above are incorrect, there is nothing incorrect about Bernoulli's principle or the fact that the air goes faster on the top of the wing, and Bernoulli's principle can be used correctly as part of a more complicated explanation of lift.

          But from what I can tell, the root of the answer is right. The shape of a wing causes pressure zones to form above and below the wing, generating extra lift (on top of deflection). From NASA's page [3]:

          > {The upper flow is faster and from Bernoulli's equation the pressure is lower. The difference in pressure across the airfoil produces the lift.} As we have seen in Experiment #1, this part of the theory is correct. In fact, this theory is very appealing because many parts of the theory are correct.

          That isn't to defend the AI response, it should know better given how many resources there are on this answer being misleading.

          And so I don't leave without a satisfying conclusion, the better layman explanation should be (paraphrasing from the Smithsonian page [4]):

          > The shape of the wing pushes air up, creating a leading edge with narrow flow. This small high pressure region is followed by the decline to the wider-flow trailing edge, which creates a low pressure region that sucks the air on the leading edge backward. In the process, the air above the wing rapidly accelerates and the air flowing above the top of the wing as a whole forms of a lower pressure region than the air below. Thus, lift advantage even when horizontal.

          Someone please correct that if I've said something wrong.

          Shame the person supposedly with a PHD on this didn't explain it at all.

          [1]: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/99/Karman_t...

          [2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lift_%28force%29

          [3]: https://www.grc.nasa.gov/www/k-12/VirtualAero/BottleRocket/a...

          [4]: https://howthingsfly.si.edu/aerodynamics/air-motion

          • ummonk 14 hours ago

            The bottom line is that a curved airfoil will not generate any more lift than a non-curved airfoil (pre-stall) that has its trailing edge at the same angle.

            The function of the curvature is to improve the wing's ability to avoid stall at a high angle of attack.

            • Tadpole9181 13 hours ago

              According to NASA, the Air and Space Museum, and Wikipedia: you are wrong. Nor does what you're a saying making any sense to anyone who has seen an airplane fly straight.

              Symmetric airfoils do not generate lift without a positive angle of attack. Cambered airfoils do, precisely because the camber itself creates lift via Bernoulli.

              • ummonk 13 hours ago

                I stated "has its trailing edge at the same angle", not "is at the same angle of attack". Angle of attack is defined by the angle of the chord line, not the angle of the trailing edge. Cambered airfoils have their trailing edges at higher angles than the angle of attack.

                • Tadpole9181 8 hours ago

                  Again, not an expert, but how does that jive with the existence of reflex cambered airfoils? Positive lift at zero AoA with a negative trailing edge AoA.

                  And that seems to directly conflict with the models shown by the resources above? They state that cambered wings do have increased airspeed above the wing, which generates lift via pressure differential (thus why the myth is so sticky).

                  • ummonk 6 hours ago

                    Reflex cambered airfoils generate lift because most of the wing is still pointed downwards.

                    The crucial thing you need to explain is this: why doesn't extending leading edge droop flaps increase the lift at a pre-stall angle of attack? (See Figure 13 from this NASA study for example: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19800004771)

      • andoando 18 hours ago

        Im quite sure the "air on the top has to travel faster to meet the air at the bottom " is false. Why would they have to meet at the same time? What would cause air on the top to accelerate?

        • FeepingCreature 18 hours ago

          (Layman guess) Pressure? The incoming split air has to go somewhere. The volume of air inflowing above and below is roughly the same.

        • Tadpole9181 16 hours ago

          I did a little more research and explain it above. The fundamentals are actually right.

          The leading edge pressurizes the air by forcing air up, then the trailing edge opens back up, creating a low pressure zone that sucks air in the leading edge back. As a whole, the air atop the wing accelerates to be much faster than the air below, creating a pressure differential above and below the wing and causing lift.

          The AI is still wrong on the actual mechanics at play, of course, but I don't see how this is significantly worse than the way we simplify electricity to lay people. The core "air moving faster on the top makes low pressure" is right.

          • lovecg 10 hours ago

            That explanation doesn’t work if the wing is completely flat (with nothing to force the air up), which if you ever made a paper airplane flies just fine. All these explanations miss a very significant thing: air is a fluid where every molecule collides with _billions_ of other molecules every second, and the wing distorts the airflow all around it, with significant effects up to a wingspan away in all directions.

            • Tadpole9181 10 hours ago

              That's a separate component of lift, unrelated to the shape. Any surface will produce lift if angled into moving air, deflecting the air downward.

              The explanation we're talking about is why cambered wings generate lift when flying level.

    • zombiwoof 18 hours ago

      But we live in the world of Trump where facts don’t matter. If GPt 5 says this is how it works, that’s how it works and Fox News will back it up

    • timr 18 hours ago

      Except it isn't "completely wrong". The article the OP links to says it explicitly:

      > “What actually causes lift is introducing a shape into the airflow, which curves the streamlines and introduces pressure changes – lower pressure on the upper surface and higher pressure on the lower surface,” clarified Babinsky, from the Department of Engineering. “This is why a flat surface like a sail is able to cause lift – here the distance on each side is the same but it is slightly curved when it is rigged and so it acts as an aerofoil. In other words, it’s the curvature that creates lift, not the distance.”

      The meta-point that "it's the curvature that creates the lift, not the distance" is incredibly subtle for a lay audience. So it may be completely wrong for you, but not for 99.9% of the population. The pressure differential is important, and the curvature does create lift, although not via speed differential.

      I am far from an AI hypebeast, but this subthread feels like people reaching for a criticism.

      • jdhwosnhw 16 hours ago

        I would still say its completely wrong, given that this explanation makes explicit predictions that are falsifiable, eg, that airplanes could not fly upside down (they can!).

      • JamesSwift 16 hours ago

        I think its valid to say its wrong even if it reaches the same conclusion.

        If I lay out a chain of thought like

          Top and bottom are different -> god doesnt like things being diffferent and applies pressure to the bottom of the wing -> pressure underneath is higher than the top -> pressure difference creates lift
        
        Then I think its valid to say thats completely inaccurate, and just happens to share some of the beginning and end
      • ttoinou 18 hours ago

        I would say a wing with two sides of different length is more difficult to understand than one shape with two sides of opposites curvatures but same length

      • boombapoom 17 hours ago

        except we were promised to have "PHDs in our pocket" which would mean that this falls short on the sales expectations...

      • avs733 18 hours ago

        the wrongness isn't germane to most people but it is a specific typology of how LLMs get technica lthings wrong that is critically important to progressing them. It gets subtle things wrongby being biased towards lay understandings that introduce vagueness because greater precision isn't useful.

        That doesn't matter for lay audieces and doesn't really matter at all until we try and use them for technical things.

        • kybernetikos 18 hours ago

          The wrongness is germane to someone who is doing their physics homework (the example given here). It's actually difficult for me to imagine a situation where someone would ask ChatGPT 5 for information about this and it not be germane if ChatGPT 5 gave an incorrect explanation.

          • avs733 16 hours ago

            The predicate for that is you know it is wrong, that wrongness is visible and identifiable. With knowledge that is intuitive but incorrect you multiply risk.

        • timr 18 hours ago

          I grant your broader point, but extrapolating from this marketing copy is not a great example.

          The real question is, if you go back to the bot following this conversation and you challenge it, does it generate the more correct answer?

      • carabiner 18 hours ago

        It's the "same amount of time" part that is blatantly wrong. Yes geometry has an effect but there is zero reason to believe leading edge particles, at the same time point, must rejoin at the trailing edge of a wing. This is a misconception at the level of "heavier objects fall faster." It is non-physical.

        The video in the Cambridge link shows how the upper surface particles greatly overtake the lower surface flow. They do not rejoin, ever.

        • timr 18 hours ago

          Again, you're not wrong, it's just irrelevant for most audiences. The very fact that you have to say this:

          > Yes geometry has an effect but there is zero reason to believe leading edge particles, at the same time point, must rejoin at the trailing edge of a wing.

          ...implicitly concedes that point that this is subtle. If you gave this answer in a PhD qualification exam in Physics, then sure, I think it's fair for someone to say you're wrong. If you gave the answer on a marketing page for a general-purpose chatbot? Meh.

          (As an aside, this conversation is interesting to me primarily because it's a perfect example of how scientists go wrong in presenting their work to the world...meeting up with AI criticism on the other side.)

          • adgjlsfhk1 18 hours ago

            right, the other is that if you remove every incorrect statement from the AI "explanation", the answer it would have given is "airplane wings generate lift because they are shaped to generate lift".

            • timr 18 hours ago

              > right, the other is that if you remove every incorrect statement from the AI "explanation", the answer it would have given is "airplane wings generate lift because they are shaped to generate lift".

              ...only if you omit the parts where it talks about pressure differentials, caused by airspeed differences, create lift?

              Both of these points are true. You have to be motivated to ignore them.

              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UqBmdZ-BNig

              • tatjam 16 hours ago

                But using pressure differentials is also sort of tautological. Lift IS the integral of the pressure on the surface, so saying that the pressure differentials cause lift is... true but unsatisfying. It's what makes the pressure difference appear that's truly interesting.

                Funnily enough, as an undergraduate the first explanation for lift that you will receive uses Feynman's "dry water" (the Kutta condition for inviscid fluids). In my opinion, this explanation is also unsatisfying, as it's usually presented as a mere mathematical "convenience" imposed upon the flow to make it behave like real physics.

                Some recent papers [1] are shedding light on generalizing the Kutta condition on non-sharp airfoils. In my opinion, the linked papers gives a way more mathematically and intuitively satisfying answer, but of course it requires some previous knowledge, and would be totally inappropriate as an answer by the AI.

                Either way I feel that if the AI is a "pocket PhD" (or "pocket industry expert") it should at least give some pointers to the user on what to read next, using both classical and modern findings.

                [1]: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/376503311_A_minimiz...

                • ummonk 14 hours ago

                  The Kutta condition is insufficient to describe lift in all regimes (e.g. when the trailing edge of the wing isn't that sharp), but fundamentally you do need to fall back to certain 2nd law / boundary condition rules to describe why an airfoil generates lift, as well as when it doesn't (e.g. stall).

                  There's nothing in the Navier-Stokes equations that forces an airfoil to generate lift - without boundary conditions the flowing air could theoretically wrap back around at the trailing edge, thus resulting in zero lift.

                • timr 14 hours ago

                  The fact that you have to invoke integrals and the Kutta condition to make your explanation is exactly what is wrong with it.

                  Is it correct? Yes. Is it intuitive to someone who doesn’t have a background in calculus, physics and fluid dynamics? No.

                  People here are arguing about a subpoint on a subpoint that would maybe get you a deduction on a first-year physics exam, and acting as if this completely invalidates the response.

                  • ummonk 14 hours ago

                    How is the Kutta condition ("the fluid gets deflected downwards because the back of the wing is sharp and pointing downwards") less intuitive to someone without a physics background than wrongly invoking the Bernoulli principle?

                    • timr 14 hours ago

                      One is common knowledge, taught in every elementary school. The other is not.

                      • ummonk 13 hours ago

                        Every elementary school teaches the Bernoulli equation?

          • carabiner 17 hours ago

            Saw you were a biologist. Would you be ok if I said, "Creationism got life started, but after that, we evolved via random mutations..."? The "equal transit time" is the same as a supernatural force compelling the physical world act in a certain way. It does not exist.

            • timr 16 hours ago

              I am a biologist (biochemistry, but close enough). I don’t have a problem with what you wrote.

              It’s not the same thing at all, though. We don’t know what “got life started”, and that’s the realm of faith.

              This is more like saying that “evolution is due to random mutation”, which is technically wrong, but close enough to get the point across.

  • ricardobayes 18 hours ago

    To me, it's weird to call it "PhD-level". That, to me, means to be able to take in existing information on a certain very niche area and able to "push the boundary". I might be wrong but to date I've never seen any LLM invent "new science", that makes PhD, really PhD. It also seems very confusing to me that many sources mention "stone age" and "PhD-level" in the same article. Which one is it?

    People seem to overcomplicate what LLM's are capable of, but at their core they are just really good word parsers.

    • chamomeal 10 hours ago

      Agree on the weirdness of “PhD-level knowledge”.

      Most of the phd’s I know are studying things that I guarantee GPT-5 doesn’t know about… because they’re researching novel stuff.

      Also, LLMs don’t have much consistency with how well they’re able to apply the knowledge that they supposedly have. Hence the “lots of almost correct code” stereotype that’s been going around.

      I was using the fancy new Claude model yesterday to debug some fast-check tests (quickcheck-inspired typescript lib). Claude could absolutely not wrap its head around the shrinking behavior, which rendered it useless for debugging

  • tshaddox 18 hours ago

    It's an extremely famous example of a widespread misconception. I don't know anything about aeronautical engineering but I'm quite familiar with the "equal transit time fallacy."

    • xboxnolifes 18 hours ago

      Yeah, it's what I was taught in high school.

  • tths 19 hours ago

    Yeah, the explanation is just shallow enough to seem correct and deceive someone who doesn't grasp really well the subject. No clue how they let it pass, that without mentioning the subpar diagram it created, really didn't seem like something miles better than what previous models can do already.

    • Vegenoid 18 hours ago

      > No clue how they let it pass

      It’s very common to see AI evangelists taking its output at face value, particularly when it’s about something that they are not an expert in. I thought we’d start seeing less of this as people get burned by it, but it seems that we’re actually just seeing more of it as LLMs get better at sounding correct. Their ability to sound correct continues to increase faster than their ability to be correct.

      • bwfan123 14 hours ago

        > Their ability to sound correct continues to increase faster than their ability to be correct

        Sounds like a core skill for management. Promote this man (LLM).

      • chasd00 18 hours ago

        This is just like the early days of Google search results, "It's on the Internet, it must be true".

    • traceroute66 18 hours ago

      Hilarious how the team spent so much time promising GPT5 had fewer hallucinations and deceptions.

      Meanwhile the demo seems to suggest business as usual for AI hallucinations and deceptions.

    • stanmancan 18 hours ago

      > Yeah, the explanation is just shallow enough to seem correct and deceive someone who doesn't grasp really well the subject.

      This is the problem with AI in general.

      When I ask it about things I already understand, it’s clearly wrong quite often.

      When I ask it about something I don’t understand, I have no way to know if its response is right or wrong.

    • theappsecguy 19 hours ago

      This is the headline for all LLM output past "hello world"

  • 2StepsOutOfLine 18 hours ago

    During the demo they quickly shuffled off of, the air flow lines completely broke. It was just a few dots moving left to right, changing the angle of the surface showed no visual difference in airflow.

  • addaon 18 hours ago

    > Isn't that explanation of why wings work completely wrong?

    This is an LLM. "Wrong" is not a concept that applies, as it requires understanding. The explanation is quite /probable/, as evidenced by the fact that they thought to use it as an example…

    • agubelu an hour ago

      "Wrong" is a concept that clearly applies when something is objectively wrong.

      I asked ChatGPT for help with Wordle the other day, by asking for a 5-letter word that contained P, M, K and Y. It said:

      > Yes, the word skimp contains the letters P, M, K, and Y

      Would you say that wrong is not a concept that applies to this answer?

  • arcumaereum 19 hours ago

    Yeah I'm surprised they used that example. The correct (and PhD-level) response would have been to refuse or redirect to a better explanation

    • CamperBob2 13 hours ago

      I am, too. Between that example and the terrible bar charts, I'm very surprised there wasn't enough intellectual firepower around there to do better.

      In fact I'd classify it as downright strange.

  • mcs5280 18 hours ago

    Sam will fix this in the next release he just needs you to give him more money

    • rtkwe 17 hours ago

      It's going to be really hard to root out it's all over the place because it's so commonly mentioned when teaching the Bernoulli Principal to kids.

  • tim333 18 hours ago

    From Wikipedia

    >In fact, theory predicts – and experiments confirm – that the air traverses the top surface of a body experiencing lift in a shorter time than it traverses the bottom surface; the explanation based on equal transit time is false.

    So the effect is greater than equal time transit.

    I've seen the GPT5 explanation in GCSE level textbooks but I thought it was supposed to be PhD level;)

  • samfriedman 18 hours ago

    The "demo" it made was pretty horrible too. I would have been impressed if it had simulated a NACA 4412 or something.

  • timr 18 hours ago

    Your link literally says pressure differential is the reason, and that curvature matters:

    > “What actually causes lift is introducing a shape into the airflow, which curves the streamlines and introduces pressure changes – lower pressure on the upper surface and higher pressure on the lower surface,” clarified Babinsky, from the Department of Engineering. “This is why a flat surface like a sail is able to cause lift – here the distance on each side is the same but it is slightly curved when it is rigged and so it acts as an aerofoil. In other words, it’s the curvature that creates lift, not the distance.”

    So I'd characterize this answer as "correct, but incomplete" or "correct, but simplified". It's a case where a PhD in fluid dynamics might state the explanation one way to an expert audience, but another way to a room full of children.

    • kybernetikos 18 hours ago

      Pressure differential is absolutely one of the main components of lift (although I believe conservation of momentum is another - the coanda effect changes the direction of the airflows and there's 2nd law stuff happening on the bottom edge too), but the idea that the pressure differential is caused by the fact that "air over the top has to travel farther in the same amount of time" because the airfoil is curved is completely incorrect, as the video in my link shows.

      • timr 18 hours ago

        It's "completely incorrect" only if you're being pedantic. It's "partially correct" if you're talking casually to a group of regular people. It's "good enough" if you're talking to a classroom of children. Audience matters.

        The hilarious thing about this subthread is that it's already getting filled with hyper-technical but wrong alternative explanations by people eager to show that they know more than the robot.

        • kybernetikos 18 hours ago

          "air over the top has to travel farther in the same amount of time" is just wrong, it doesn't have to, and in fact it doesn't.

          It's called the "equal transit-time fallacy" if you want to look it up, or follow the link I provided in my comment, or perhaps the NASA link someone else offered.

          • timr 18 hours ago

            I'm not saying that particular point is wrong. I'm saying that for most people, it doesn't matter, and the reason the "fallacy" persists is because it's a good enough explanation for the layman that is easy to conceptualize.

            Pretty much any scientific question is fractal like this: there's a superficial explanation, then one below that, and so on. None are "completely incorrect", but the more detailed ones are better.

            The real question is: if you prompt the bot for the better, deeper explanation, what does it do?

            • kybernetikos 18 hours ago

              So I worry that you think that the equal transit time thing is true, but is just one effect among others. This is not the case. There are a number of different effects, including bernoulli and coanda and newtons third law that all contribute to lift, but none of the things that actually happen have anything to do with equal transit time.

              The equal transit time is not a partially correct explanation, it's something that doesn't happen. It's not a superficial explanation, it's a wrong explanation. It's not even a good lie-to-children, as it doesn't help predict or understand any part of the system at any level. It instead teaches magical thinking.

              As to whether it matters? If I am told that I can ask my question to a system and it will respond like a team of PhDs, that it is useful to help someone with their homework and physical understanding, but it gives me instead information that is incorrect and misleading, I would say the system is not working as it is intended to.

              Even if I accept that "audience matters" as you say, the suggested audience is helping someone with their physics homework. This would not be a suitable explanation for someone doing physics homework.

              • timr 18 hours ago

                > So I worry that you think that the equal transit time thing is true,

                Wow. Thanks for your worry, but it's not a problem. I do understand the difference, and yet it doesn't have anything to do with the argument I'm making, which is about presentation.

                > It's not even a good lie-to-children, as it doesn't help predict or understand any part of the system at any level.

                ...which is irrelevant in the context. I get the meta-point that you're (sort of) making that you can't shut your brain off and just hope the bot spits out 100% pedantic explanations of scientific phenomenon. That's true, but also...fine?

                These things are spitting out probable text. If (as many have observed) this is a common enough explanation to be in textbooks, then I'm not particularly surprised if an LLM emits it as well. The real question is: what happens when you prompt it to go deeper?

                • drewbeck 16 hours ago

                  You're missing that this isn't an issue of granularity or specificity; "equal time" is just wrong.

                  If this is "right enough" for you, I'm curious if you tell your bots to "go deeper" on every question you ask. And at what level you expect it to start telling you actual truths and not some oft-repeated lie.

                  • timr 14 hours ago

                    I’m not “missing” it. I’m just not fixated on it.

                    The answer got all of the following correct:

                    * lift is created by pressure differential

                    * pressure differential is created by difference in airspeed over the top of the wing

                    * shape of the wing is a critical factor that results in airspeed difference

                    All of those are true, and upstream of the thing you’re arguing about.

                    The answer is not wrong. It’s not even “mostly wrong”. It’s mostly correct.

            • jazzyjackson 17 hours ago

              > I'm saying that for most people, it doesn't matter

              then why ask a bot at all ? they are supposed to be approaching superintelligence, but they fall back on high school misconceptions?

        • cmiles74 17 hours ago

          This is an LLM advertised as functioning at a "doctorate" level in everything. I think it's reasonable to expect more than the high school classroom "good enough" explanation.

        • bccdee 18 hours ago

          No, it's never good enough, because it's flat-out wrong. This statement:

          > Air over the top has to travel farther in the same amount of time

          is not true. The air on top does not travel farther in the same amount of time. The air slows down and travels a shorter distance in the same amount of time.

          It's only "good enough for a classroom of children" in the same way that storks delivering babies is—i.e., if you're content to simply lie rather than bothering to tell the truth.

  • AnimalMuppet 19 hours ago

    Yes. But I strongly suspect that it's the most frequent answer in the training data...

    • bambax 18 hours ago

      They couldn't find a more apt demnonstration of what an LLM is and does if they tried.

      An LLM doesn't know more than what's in the training data.

      In Michael Crichton's The Great Train Robbery (published in 1975, about events that happened in 1855) the perpetrator, having been caught, explains to a baffled court that he was able to walk on top of a running train "because of the Bernoulli effect", that he misspells and completely misunderstands. I don't remember if this argument helps him get away with the crime? Maybe it does, I'm not sure.

      This is another attempt at a Great Robbery.

      • astrange 4 hours ago

        > An LLM doesn't know more than what's in the training data.

        Post-training for an LLM isn't "data" anymore, it's also verifier programs, so it can in fact be more correct than the data. As long as search finds LLM weights that produce more verifiably correct answers.

      • gowld 17 hours ago

        For those who want to read about the "Baroni" effect in the book: https://bookreadfree.com/361033/8879470

        It goes on:

        > At this point, the prosecutor asked for further elucidation, which Pierce gave in garbled form. The summary of this portion of the trial, as reported in the Times, was garbled still further. The general idea was that Pierce--- by now almost revered in the press as a master criminal--- possessed some knowledge of a scientific principle that had aided him.

        How apropos to modern science reporting and LLMs.

    • NelsonMinar 18 hours ago

      IIRC I was required to regurgitate this wrong answer to pass my FAA pilot exam.

      • CPLX 18 hours ago

        Yeah me too, so it's found in many authoritative places.

        And I might be wrong but my understanding is that it's not wrong per-se, it's just wildly incomplete. Which, is kind of like the same as wrong. But I believe the airfoil design does indeed have the effect described which does contribute to lift somewhat right? Or am I just a victim of the misconception.

      • carabiner 18 hours ago

        Yeah, it's like asking a car driver (even a professional driver) to explain the Otto cycle. Enduser vs. engineer.

    • gekoxyz 18 hours ago

      And your suspicion is right. The sad reality is that it's just a stochastic parrot, that can produce really good answers in certain occasions.

      • hirvi74 14 hours ago

        This honestly mirrors many of my interactions with credentialed professionals too. I am not claiming LLMs shouldn't be held to a higher standard, but we are already living in a society built on varying degrees of blind trust.

        • bwfan123 14 hours ago

          Majority of us are prone to believe whatever comes our way, and it takes painstaking science to debunk much of that. In spite of the debunking, many of us continue to believe whatever we wish, and now LLMs will average all of that and present it in a nice sounding capsule.

  • ttoinou 18 hours ago

    Its not fully wrong but its a typical example of how simplified scientific explanations have spread everywhere without personal verification of each person involved in the chinese whisper

  • tlarkworthy 7 hours ago

    They did not ask how wings work. They asked for the bernoulli effect, that's a different question.

  • mirkodrummer 12 hours ago

    It's wrong because it's a theory that you can still find on the internet and among experienced amateur pilots too! I went to a little aviation school and they teached exactly that

  • IanCal 18 hours ago

    As a complete aside I’ve always hated that explanation where air moves up and over a bump, the lines get closer together and then the explanation is the pressure lowers at that point. Also the idea that the lines of air look the same before and after and yet somehow the wing should have moved up.

  • ethan_smith 17 hours ago

    You're right - this is the "equal transit time" fallacy; lift is primarily generated by the wing deflecting air downward (Newton's Third Law) and the pressure distribution resulting from airflow curvature around the wing.

  • ryandv 8 hours ago

    You mean it's not ready for vibe physics?

  • croes 18 hours ago

    It’s a common misconception, I doubt they know themselves and GPT 5 doesn’t tell them otherwise because it’s the mist common in explanation in the training data.

    A quite good example of AI limits

  • 18172828286177 18 hours ago

    The hallmark of an LLM response: plausible sounding, but if you dig deeper, incorrect

    • hirvi74 14 hours ago

      Do you think a human response is much better? It would be foolish to blindly trust what comes out of the mouths of biological LLMs too -- regardless of credentials.

      • mkipper 13 hours ago

        I’m incredibly confident that any professor of aerospace engineering would give a better response. Is it common for people with PhDs to fall for basic misconceptions in their field?

        This seems like a reasonable standard to hold GPT-5 to given the way it’s being marketed. Nobody would care if OpenAI compared it to an enthusiastic high school student with a few hours to poke around Google and come up with an answer.

        • hirvi74 8 hours ago

          > I’m incredibly confident that any professor of aerospace engineering would give a better response.

          Do you think there could be a depth vs. breadth difference? Perhaps that PhD aerospace engineer would know more in this one particular area but less across an array of areas of aerospace engineering.

          I cannot give an answer for your question. I was mainly trying to point out that we humans are highly fallible too. I would imagine no one with a PhD in any modern field knows everything about their field nor are they immune to mistakes.

          Was this misconception truly basic? I admittedly somewhat skimmed those parts of the debate because I am not knowledgeable enough to know who is right/wrong. It was clear that, if indeed it was a basic concept, there is quite some contention still.

          > This seems like a reasonable standard to hold GPT-5 to given the way it’s being marketed.

          Sure, I suppose I can agree with this.

      • skydhash 13 hours ago

        All science books and papers (pre-LLMs) were written by people. They got us to the moon and brought us the plane and the computer and many other things.

        • hirvi74 9 hours ago

          Many other things like war, animal cruelty, child abuse, wealth disparity, etc.. Hell, we are speed-running the destruction of the environment of the one and only planet we have. Humans are quite clever, though I fear we might be even more arrogant.

          Regardless, my claim was not to argue that LLMs are more capable than people. My point was that I think there is a bit of a selection bias going on. Perhaps conjecture on my part, but I am inclined to believe that people are more keen to notice and make a big fuss over inaccuracies in LLMs, but are less likely to do so when humans are inaccurate.

          Think about the everyday world we live in: how many human programmed bugs make it past reviews, tests, QA, and into production? How many doctors give the wrong diagnosis or make a mistake that harms or kills someone? How many lawyers give poor legal advice to clients?

          Fallible humans expecting infallible results from their fallible creations is quite the expectation.

          • skydhash an hour ago

            > Fallible humans expecting infallible results from their fallible creations is quite the expectation.

            We built tools to accomplish things we cannot do well or at all. So we do expect quite a lot from them, even though we know they're not perfect. We have writings and books to help our memory and knowledge transfer. We have cars and planes to transport us faster than legs ever could... Any apparatus that doesn't help us do something better is aptly called a toy. A toy car can be faster than any human, but it's still a toy.

  • karel-3d 18 hours ago

    yeah that's a great thing to use as LLM demo because it sounds plausible yet it's completely misleading and wrong.

  • on_the_train 18 hours ago

    It's a misconception that almost everyone does though. I recently even saw it being being taught in a zeppelin museum!

    • sejje 17 hours ago

      LLMs are "ask the audience"

      Common misconceptions should be expected when you train a model to act like the average of all humans.

    • xeromal 18 hours ago

      Why replace humans if make human mistakes

      • metalliqaz 18 hours ago

        less overhead on benefits and pay raises

  • avs733 18 hours ago

    Its a particular type of mistake that is really interesting and telling. It is a misconception - and a common socially disseminated simplifcation. In students, these don't come from a lack of knowledge but rather from places where knowledge is structured incorrectly. Often because the phenomenon are difficult to observe or mislead when observed. Another example is heat and temperature. Heat is not temperature, but it is easy to observe them always being the same in your day to day life and so you bring that belief into a college thermodynamics course where you are learning that heat and temperature are different for the first time. It is a commonsense observation of the world that is only incorrect in technical circles

    These are places where common lay discussions use language in ways that is wrong, or makes simplifcations that are reasonable but technically incorrect. They are especially common when something is so 'obvious' that experts don't explain it, the most frequent version of the concepts being explained

    These, in my testing, show up a lot in LLMs - technical things are wrong when the most language of the most common explanations simplifies or obfuscates the precise truth. Often, it pretty much matches the level of knowledge of a college freshman/sophmore or slightly below, which is sort of the level of discussion of more technical topics on the internet.

  • carabiner 18 hours ago

    Holy shit that is wrong. That's what happens when you get software, ML engineers who think they know everything.

  • antoni4040 18 hours ago

    Oh my God, they were right, ChatGPT5 really is like talking to a bunch of PhD. You let it write an answer and THEN check the comments on Hacker News. Truly innovative.

junon an hour ago

Anecdotal review:

Been using it all morning. Had to switch back to 4. 5 has all of the problems that 2/3 had with ignoring any context, flagrantly ignoring the 'spirit' of my requests, and talking to me like I'm a little baby.

Not to mention almost all of my prompts result in a several minute wait with "thinking longer about the answer".

  • getcrunk an hour ago

    Yea I see this a lot with Gemini since 2.5

    Very stubborn and “opinionated”

    I think most models will tend this way (to consolidate more control over how we “think” and what we believe)

jumploops 19 hours ago

Pricing seems good, but the open question is still on tool calling reliability.

Input: $1.25 / 1M tokens Cached: $0.125 / 1M tokens Output: $10 / 1M tokens

With 74.9% on SWE-bench, this inches out Claude Opus 4.1 at 74.5%, but at a much cheaper cost.

For context, Claude Opus 4.1 is $15 / 1M input tokens and $75 / 1M output tokens.

> "GPT-5 will scaffold the app, write files, install dependencies as needed, and show a live preview. This is the go-to solution for developers who want to bootstrap apps or add features quickly." [0]

Since Claude Code launched, OpenAI has been behind. Maybe the RL on tool calling is good enough to be competitive now?

[0]https://github.com/openai/gpt-5-coding-examples

  • bayesianbot 19 hours ago

    And they included Flex pricing, which is 50% cheaper if you're willing to wait for the reply during periods of high load. But great pricing for agentic use with that cached token pricing, Flex or not.

  • AtNightWeCode 19 hours ago

    I switched immediately because of pricing, input token heavy load, but it doesn't even work. For some reason they completely broke the already amateurish API.

henriquegodoy 18 hours ago

That SWE-bench chart with the mismatched bars (52.8% somehow appearing larger than 69.1%) was emblematic of the entire presentation - rushed and underwhelming. It's the kind of error that would get flagged in any internal review, yet here it is in a billion-dollar product launch. Combined with the Bernoulli effect demo confidently explaining how airplane wings work incorrectly (the equal transit time fallacy that NASA explicitly debunks), it doesn't inspire confidence in either the model's capabilities or OpenAI's quality control.

The actual benchmark improvements are marginal at best - we're talking single-digit percentage gains over o3 on most metrics, which hardly justifies a major version bump. What we're seeing looks more like the plateau of an S-curve than a breakthrough. The pricing is competitive ($1.25/1M input tokens vs Claude's $15), but that's about optimization and economics, not the fundamental leap forward that "GPT-5" implies. Even their "unified system" turns out to be multiple models with a router, essentially admitting that the end-to-end training approach has hit diminishing returns.

The irony is that while OpenAI maintains their secretive culture (remember when they claimed o1 used tree search instead of RL?), their competitors are catching up or surpassing them. Claude has been consistently better for coding tasks, Gemini 2.5 Pro has more recent training data, and everyone seems to be converging on similar performance levels. This launch feels less like a victory lap and more like OpenAI trying to maintain relevance while the rest of the field has caught up. Looking forward to seeing what Gemini 3.0 brings to the table.

  • kkukshtel 17 hours ago

    You're sort of glossing over the part where this can now be leveraged as a cost-efficient agentic model that performs better than o3. Nobody used o3 for sw agent tasks due to costs and speed, and this now substantially seems to both improve on o3 AND be significantly cheaper than Claude.

    • synapsomorphy 17 hours ago

      o3's cost was sliced by 80% a month or so ago and is also cheaper than Claude (the output is even cheaper than GPT-5). It seems more cost efficient but not by much.

    • BoorishBears 16 hours ago

      This feels revisionist: no one used it because it wasn't as good.

      • extr 7 hours ago

        O3 is fantastic at coding tasks, until today it was smartest model in existence. But it works only in few shot conversational scenarios, it's not good at agentic harnesses.

    • m3kw9 8 hours ago

      You can use o3 for coding on plus plan almost unlimited or till they throttle

  • slashdave 15 hours ago

    GPT-5 had to be released, in any form. This announcement was not the product of a breakthrough, but the consequence of a business requirement.

    • zmmmmm 14 hours ago

      this is the real answer

      it has to be released because it's not much better and OpenAI needs the team to stop working on it. They have serious competition now and can't afford to burn time / money on something that isn't shifting the dial.

  • throwaway_2898 14 hours ago

    TBH Claude Code max pro's performance on coding has been abhorrent(bad at best). The core of the issue is that the plan produced will more often than not use humans as verifiers(correctness, optimality and quality control). This is a fundamentally bad way to build systems that need to figure out if their plan will work correctly, because an AI system needs to test many plans quickly in a principled manner(it should be optimal and cost efficient).

    So you might get that initial MvP out the door quickly, but when the complexity grows even just a little bit, you will be forced to stop and look at the plan and try to get it to develop it saying things like: "use Design agent to ultrathink about the dependencies of the current code change on other APIs and use TDD agent to make sure tests are correct in accordance with the requirements I stated" and then one finds that even the all the thinking there are bugs that you will have to fix.

    Source: I just tried max pro on two client python projects and it was horrible after week 2.

  • z7 17 hours ago

    >The actual benchmark improvements are marginal at best

    GPT-5 demonstrates exponential growth in task completion times:

    https://metr.org/blog/2025-03-19-measuring-ai-ability-to-com...

    • hk__2 16 hours ago

      What do you mean? A single data point cannot be exponential. What the blog post say is that the ability to solve tasks of all LLMs is exponential over time, and GPT-5 fits in that curve.

      • z7 14 hours ago

        Yes, but the jump in performance from o3 is well beyond marginal while also fitting an exponential trend, which undermines the parent's claim on two counts.

      • adammarples 13 hours ago

        Actually a single data point fits a huge range of exponential functions.

    • usaar333 12 hours ago

      No it doesn't. If it were even linear compared to o1 -> o3, we'd be at 2.43 hours. Instead we're only at 2.29.

      Exponential would be at 3.6 hours

  • rrrrrrrrrrrryan 17 hours ago

    I suspect the vast majority of OpenAI's users are only using ChatGPT, and the vast majority of those ChatGPT users are only using the free tier.

    For all of them, getting access to full-blown GPT-5 will probably be mind-blowing, even if it's severely rate-limited. OpenAI's previous/current generation of models haven't really been ergonomic enough (with the clunky model pickers) to be fully appreciated by less tech-savvy users, and its full capabilities have been behind a paywall.

    I think that's why they're making this launch is a big deal. It's just an incremental upgrade for the power users and the people that are paying money, but it'll be a step-change in capability to everyone else.

    • mlsu 16 hours ago

      They are selling "AGI"

      replacing huge swathes of the white collar workforce

      "incremental upgrade for power users" is not at all what this house of cards is built on

      • Sabinus 13 hours ago

        They are selling AGI to investors, but they're just selling intelligence to subscribers. And they just made the intelligence cheaper and better.

    • m3kw9 8 hours ago

      I’m very seen ppl minds blown on free tier previous to 5. It’s basically 4o which is pretty good for normies

  • IceDane 17 hours ago

    The whole presentation was full of completely broken bar charts. Not even just the typical "let's show 10% of the y axis so that a 5% increase looks like 5x" but stuff like the deception eval showing gpt5 vs o3 as 50 vs 47, but the 47 is 3x as big, and then right next to it we have 9 vs 87, more reasonably sized.

    It's like no one looked at the charts, ever, and they just came straight from.. gpt2? I don't think even gpt3 would have fucked that up.

    I don't know any of those people, but everyone that has been with OAI for longer than 2 years 1.5m bonuses, and somehow they can't deliver a bar chart with sensible at axes?

atonse 20 hours ago

For day to day coding, I've found Anthropic to be killing it with Sonnet 3.7 and now Sonnet 4, and Claude Code feeling like it has even bigger advantages over when it's used in Cursor (And I can't explain why).

I don't even try to use the OpenAI models because it's felt like night and day.

Hopefully GPT-5 helps them catch up. Although I'm sure there are 100 people that have their own personal "hopefully GPT-5 fixes my personal issue with GPT4"

  • IdealeZahlen 20 hours ago

    Whatever the benchmarks might say, there's something about Claude that seems to deliver consistently (although not always perfect) quite reliable outputs across various coding tasks. I wonder what that 'secret sauce' might be and whether GPT-5 has figured it out too.

    • weego 19 hours ago

      Agreed, I always give my one pager product briefs to AI to break down into phases and tasks, and then progress trackers. I explicitly prompt for verbose phases, tasks and test plans.

      Yesterday without much promoting Claude 4.1 gave me 10 phases, each with 5-12 tasks that could genuinely be used to kanban out a product step by step.

      Claude 3.7 sonnet was effectively the same with fewer granular suggestions for programming strategies.

      Gemini 2.5 gave me a one pager back with some trivial bullet points in 3 phases, no tasks at all.

      o3 did the same as as Gemini, just less coherent.

      Claude just has whatever the thing is for now

      • unshavedyak 19 hours ago

        How are you having claude track these phases/tasks? Eg are you having it write to a TASKS.md and update it after each phase?

        • m3kw9 7 hours ago

          Just say begin task 1, 2 etc scroll back and see the task. Or copy paste into notes and do them sequenced

      • SequoiaHope 10 hours ago

        If you have any examples of these one pagers I’d love to see them!

      • concinds 18 hours ago

        Gemini Pro or Flash?

    • dudeinhawaii 17 hours ago

      My experience has been that Claude Code is exceptional at tool use (and thus working with agentic IDEs) but... not the smartest coder. It will happy re-invent the wheel, create silos, or generate terrible code that you'll only discover weeks or months later. I've had to rollback weeks of code to discover major edge regressions that Claude had introduced.

      Now, someone will say 'add more tests'. Sure. But that's a bandaid.

      I find that the 'smarter' models like Gemini and o3 output better quality code overall and if you can afford to send them the entire context in a non-agentic way .. then they'll generate something dramatically superior to the agentic code artifacts.

      That said, sometimes you just want speed to proof a concept and Claude is exceptional there. Unfortunately, proof of concepts often... become productionized rather than developers taking a step back to "do it right".

      • dagss 4 hours ago

        I disagree that tests are bandaids. Humans needs tests to avoid doing regressions. If you avoid tests you are giving the AI a much harder task than what human programmers usually have.

    • atonse 20 hours ago

      That's been my experience too. Even though Gemini also does seem to do the fancy one-shot demo code well, in day to day coding, Claude seems to do a much better job of just understanding how programming actually works, what to do, what not to do, etc.

    • deadbabe 18 hours ago

      The secret is just better context engineering. There is no other “secret” sauce, all these models are built on the same concepts.

    • bamboozled 19 hours ago

      Claude is fast too, Gemini isn’t as good and just gets hung up on things Claude doesn’t.

  • NitpickLawyer 20 hours ago

    Colleagues were saying that horizon alpha and beta were looking better than claude4 for frontend stuff, especially newer frameworks. I think the idea of having full + mini + nano is really good, as long as the smaller ones can reasonably handle small-ish tasks. You'd have your architect / plan whatever sessions with the large one, scoping out regular tasks for the -mini version and then the really easy ones to -nano.

    4.1 was almost usable in that fashion. I had 4.1-nano working in cline with really trivial stuff (add logging, take this example and adapt it in this file, etc) and it worked pretty well most of the time.

  • jstummbillig 19 hours ago

    Well, since (like you pointed out) using the Anthropic models in different settings is not that exciting anymore, the difference is what Claude Code does. It's a good product.

    • mlsu 19 hours ago

      Claude Code is good because the Anthropic models are trained/finetuned to be good at using it.

  • pawelduda 18 hours ago

    Yup, Claude has been kicking GPT's ass for months now

  • octo888 19 hours ago

    Killing it - at what type of coding task? What "bigger advantages" specifically? What is night and day?

    • atonse 17 hours ago

      Refactors, building non-trivial features (you can first write out a spec and have it follow that), understanding my code, writing tests, writing good quality documentation. Reasoning about my existing data model and where to plug into it.

      On and on and on. Coming up with test plans, edge cases, accounting for the edge cases in its programming. Programming defensively. Fixing bugs.

      • octo888 16 hours ago

        Thanks for the detail!

mtlynch 19 hours ago

What's going on with their SWE bench graph?[0]

GPT-5 non-thinking is labeled 52.8% accuracy, but o3 is shown as a much shorter bar, yet it's labeled 69.1%. And 4o is an identical bar to o3, but it's labeled 30.8%...

[0] https://i.postimg.cc/DzkZZLry/y-axis.png

  • Aurornis 19 hours ago

    As someone who spent years quadruple checking every figure in every slide for years to avoid a mistake like this, it’s very confusing to see this out of the big launch announcement of one of the most high profile startups around.

    Even the small presentations we gave to execs or the board were checked for errors so many times that nothing could possibly slip through.

    • ertgbnm 19 hours ago

      It's literally a billion dollar plus release. I get more scrutiny on my presentations to groups of 10 people.

      • dbg31415 19 hours ago

        I take a strange comfort in still spotting AI typos. Makes it obvious their shiny new "toy" isn't ready to replace professionals.

        They talk about using this to help families facing a cancer diagnosis -- literal life or death! -- and we're supposed to trust a machine that can't even spot a few simple typos? Ha.

        The lack of human proofreading says more about their values than their capabilities. They don't want oversight -- especially not from human professionals.

        • nine_k 18 hours ago

          Cynically, the AI is ready to replace professionals, in areas where the stakeholders don't care too much. They can offer the services cheaper, and this is all that matters to their customers. Were it not so, companies like Tata won't have any customers. The phenomenon of "cheap Chinese junk" would not exist, because no retailer would order to produce it.

          So, brace yourselves, we'll see more of this in production :(

          • saati 17 hours ago

            Does something where you don't care about quality this much need doing at all?

          • dvfjsdhgfv 17 hours ago

            Well, the world will split into those who care, and fields where precision is crucial, and the rest. Occasional mistakes are tolerable but systematic bullshit is a bit too much for me.

            • nine_k 17 hours ago

              This separation (always a spectrum, not a split) already exists for a long time. Bouts of systemic bullshit occur every now and then, known as "bubbles" (as in dotcom bubble, mortgage bubble, etc) or "crises" (such as "reproducibility crisis", etc). Smaller waves rise and fall all the time, in the form of various scams (from the ancient tulip mania to Ponzi to Madoff to ICOs, etc).

              It seems like large amounts of people, including people at high-up positions, tend to believe bullshit, as long as it makes them feel comfortable. This leads to various irrational business fashions and technological fads, to say nothing of political movements.

              So yes, another wave of fashion, another miracle that works "as everybody knows" would fit right in. It's sad because bubbles inevitably burst, and that may slow down or even destroy some of the good parts, the real advances that ML is bringing.

    • croemer 19 hours ago

      Yes this is quite shocking. They could have just had o3 fact check the slides and it would have noticed...

      • throwaway0123_5 19 hours ago

        I thought so too, but I gave it a screenshot with the prompt:

        > good plot for my presentation?

        and it didn't pick up on the issue. Part of its response was:

        > Clear metric: Y-axis (“Accuracy (%), pass @1”) and numeric labels make the performance gaps explicit.

        I think visual reasoning is still pretty far from text-only reasoning.

      • abirch 19 hours ago

        o3 did fact check the slides and it fixed its lower score.

    • achrono 16 hours ago

      I think this just further demonstrates the truth behind the truly small & scrappy teams culture at OpenAI that an ex-employee recently shared [1].

      Even with the way the presenters talk, you can sort of see that OAI prioritizes speed above most other things, and a naive observer might think they are testing things a million different ways before releasing, but actually, they're not.

      If we draw up a 2x2 for Danger (High/Low) versus Publicity (High/Low), it seems to me that OpenAI sure has a lot of hits in the Low-Danger High-Publicity quadrant, but probably also a good number in the High-Danger Low-Publicity quadrant -- extrapolating purely from the sheer capability of these models and the continuing ability of researchers like Pliny to crack through it still.

      [1] https://calv.info/openai-reflections

    • alfalfasprout 18 hours ago

      Probably generated with GPT-5

      • smartmic 18 hours ago

        The needle now presses a little deeper into the bubble.

    • KoolKat23 16 hours ago

      I don't think they give a shit. This is a sales presentation to the general public and the correct data is there. If one is pedantic enough they can see the correct number, if not it sells well. If they really cared grok etc. Would be on there too.

    • whatever1 15 hours ago

      The opposite view is to show your execs the middle finger on nitpicking. Their product is definitely not more important than ChatGPT-5. So your typo does not matter. It didn't ever matter.

    • nicce 18 hours ago

      It is not mistake. It is common tactic to make illusion of improvement.

      • dvfjsdhgfv 17 hours ago

        Would they risk such an obvious blunder and being ridiculed for being "AI-sloppy"? I don't believe it.

        • nicce 17 hours ago

          I don’t believe for mistake either. As others have said, these graphs are worth of billions. Everything is calculated. They take the risk that some will notice but most will not. They say that it is mistake for those who notice.

        • crmi 16 hours ago

          Perhaps they're taking a leaf from nvidias book - influencers dunking on their bar charts gives a lot of free press coverage/mindshare

      • MrNeon 16 hours ago

        I've seen that sentiment on reddit as well and I can't phantom how you think it being on purpose is more likely than a mistake when

        1 - The error is so blatantly large

        2 - There is a graph without error right next to it

        3 - The errors are not there in the system card and the presentation page

    • blitzar 18 hours ago

      It wouldnt have taken years of quadruple checks to spot that one.

    • everfrustrated 18 hours ago

      Possibly they rushed to bring forward the release annoucement

    • maldonad0 18 hours ago

      It's not a mistake. It's meant to misled.

    • real_marcfawzi 18 hours ago

      Humans hallucinate output all the time.

      • rafark 17 hours ago

        Not as much as current llms. But the point is that AIs are supposed to be better than us, kind of how people built calculators to be more reliable than the average person and faster than anyone.

    • renewiltord 19 hours ago

      I'm just going to wildly speculate.

      1. They had many teams who had to put their things on a shared Google Sheets or similar

      2. They used placeholders to prevent leaks

      2.a. Some teams put their content just-in-time

      3. The person running the presentation started the presentation view once they had set up video etc. just before launching stream

      4. Other teams corrected their content

      5. The presentation view being started means that only the ones in 2.a were correct.

      Now we wait to see.

      • bigyabai 18 hours ago

        6. (Occam's Razor) It just didn't perform that well in trials for that specific eval.

        • renewiltord 18 hours ago

          That is obviously wrong since the numbers are right but the graph is wrong and you can see it correct on the website…

  • yz-exodao 19 hours ago

    Also, what's this??? https://imgur.com/a/5CF34M6

    • croemer 19 hours ago

      Imgur is down, hug of death from screenshot links on HN.

        {"data":{"error":"Imgur is temporarily over capacity. Please try again later."},"success":false,"status":403}
      
      Or rate limited.
      • Anon1096 18 hours ago

        This is what Imgur shows to blacklisted IPs. You probably have a VPN on that is blocked.

        • croemer 16 hours ago

          Ugh, why lie to users... Just say the IP is blacklisted.

          Thanks for the tip btw.

          • hk__2 16 hours ago

            Because when you know it’s blacklisted you might try with a different IP, whereas if you don’t you will just wait (forever).

            • lucb1e 15 hours ago

              Imagine we wouldn't tell criminals the law because they might try to find holes... This is just user-hostile and security through obscurity. If someone on HN knows that this is what is shown to banned people then so will the people that scrape or mean harm to imgur

              • dnissley 8 hours ago

                In a world where we couldn't arrest criminals, only keep track of them in a log book, yeah that's probably exactly what we'd do

      • koolala 18 hours ago

        stats say this image got 500 views. imgur is much much more populated than HN

        • superkuh 18 hours ago

          In 2015, yes. In 2025? Probably not. Imgur is enshittifying rapidly since reddit started it's own image host. Lots of censorship and corporate gentrification. There's still some hangers on but it's a small group. 15 comments on imgur is a lot nowadays.

    • clolege 18 hours ago

      Not GPT-5 trying to deceive us about how deceptive it is?

      • therein 18 hours ago

        Why would you think it is anything special? Just because Sam Altman said so? The same guy who told us he was scared of releasing GPT-2.5 but now calling its abilities "toddler/kindergarten" level?

        • clolege 15 hours ago

          My comment was mostly a joke. I don't think there's anything "special" about GPT-5.

          But these models have exhibited a few surprising emergent traits, and it seems plausible to me that at one point they could intentionally deceive users in the course of exploring their boundaries.

          Is it that far fetched?

          • therein 15 hours ago

            There is no intent, nor is there a mechanism for intent. They don't do long term planning nor do they alter themselves due to things they go through during inference. Therefore there cannot be intentional deception they partake in. The system may generate a body of text that a human reader may attribute to deceptiveness but there is no intent.

            • clolege 14 hours ago

              > There is no intent

              I'm not an ML engineer - is there an accepted definition of "intent" that you're using here? To me, it seems as though these GPT models show something akin to intent, even if it's just their chain of thought about how they will go about answering a question.

              > nor is there a mechanism for intent

              Does there have to be a dedicated mechanism for intent for it to exist? I don't see how one could conclusively say that it can't be an emergent trait.

              > They don't do long term planning nor do they alter themselves due to things they go through during inference.

              I don't understand why either of these would be required. These models do some amount of short-to-medium term planning even it is in the context of their responses, no?

              To be clear, I don't think the current-gen models are at a level to intentionally deceive without being instructed to. But I could see us getting there within my lifetime.

        • CamperBob2 17 hours ago

          If you were one of the very first people to see an LLM in action, even a crappy one, and you didn't have second thoughts about what you were doing and how far things were going to go, what would that say about you?

          • therein 16 hours ago

            It is just dishonest rhetoric no matter what. He is the most insincere guy in the industry, somehow manages to come off even less sincere than the lawnmower Larry Ellison. At least that guy is honest about not having any morals.

    • jasonjmcghee 19 hours ago

      Deception - guessing it's % of responses that deceived the user / gave misleading information

      • yz-exodao 19 hours ago

        Sure, but 50.0 > 47.4...

        • jasonjmcghee 13 hours ago

          Oh man... didn't even notice. I've been deceived. That's bad.

      • godelski 18 hours ago

        In everything except the first set of bars, bigger bar == bigger number.

        But also scale is really off... I don't think anything here is proportionally correct even within the same grouping.

  • drmidnight 19 hours ago

    GPT-5 generated the chart

    • lacoolj 19 hours ago

      Best answer on this page.

      Thanks for the laugh. I needed it.

  • croemer 19 hours ago

    The barplot is wrong, the numbers are correct. Looks like they had a dummy plot and never updated it, only the numbers to prevent leaking?

    Screenshot of the blog plot: https://imgur.com/a/HAxIIdC

    • hnuser123456 19 hours ago

      Haha, even with that, it says 4o does worse with 2 passes than with 1.

      Edit: Nevermind, just now the first one is SWE-bench and 2nd is aider.

      • croemer 19 hours ago

        Those are different benchmarks

        • hnuser123456 19 hours ago

          I see now on the website, the screenshot cut off the header for the first benchmark, looked like it was just comparing 1-pass and 2-pass.

          • croemer 19 hours ago

            Yes, sorry didn't fit everything on the screenshot.

  • tacker2000 19 hours ago

    Wow imgur has gone to shit. I open the image on mobile and then try to zoom it and bam some other “related content” is opened…!

    • jml7c5 14 hours ago

      That's been an issue for years. Their swipe detection is completely broken.

    • jama211 17 hours ago

      Yeah it’s basically unusable now

  • anigbrowl 18 hours ago

    (whispers) they're bullshit artists

    It's like those idiotic ads at the end of news articles. They're not going after you, the smart discerning logician, they're going after the kind of people that don't see a problem. There are a lot of not-smart people and their money is just as good as yours but easier to get.

    • hansmayer 17 hours ago

      Exactly this, but it will still be a net negative for all of us. Why? Increasingly I have to argue with non-technical geniuses who have "checked" some complex technical issue with ChatGPT, they themselves lacking even the basic foundations in computer science. So you have an ever increasing number of smartasses who think that this technology finally empowers them. Finally they get "level up" with that arrogant techie. And this will ultimately doom us, because as we know, idiots are in majority and they often overrule the few sane voices.

  • bhouston 19 hours ago

    Sounds like a graph that was generated via AI. :)

  • Mawr 19 hours ago

    Don't ask questions, just consume product.

  • nonhaver 19 hours ago

    also wondering this. had to pause the livestream to make sure i wasnt crazy. definitely eyebrow raising

    • bwestergard 19 hours ago

      "GPT-5, please generate a slideshow for your launch presentation."

      • Bluestein 19 hours ago

        "Dang it! Claude!, please ..."

  • mbowcut2 18 hours ago

    it looks like the 2nd and 3rd bar never got updated from the dummy data placeholders lol.

  • seydor 19 hours ago

    someone copy pasted the 3rd bar to the 2nd

  • Upvoter33 19 hours ago

    Tufte used to call this creating a "visual lie" - you just don't start the y-axis at 0, you start it wherever, in order to maximize the difference. it's dishonest.

    • amarcheschi 19 hours ago

      52 above 60 seems wrong whatever way you put it

  • mikert89 19 hours ago

    AGI is launching, lets complain about the charts

mehulashah 19 hours ago

‘Twas the night before GPT-5, when all through the social-media-sphere, Not a creature was posting, not even @paulg nor @eshear

Next morning’s posts were prepped and scheduled with care, In hopes that AGI soon would appear …

  • user3939382 19 hours ago

    Unless someone figures how to make these models a million(?) times more efficient or feed them a million times more energy I don’t see how AGI would even be a twinkle in the eye of the LLM strategies we have now.

    • Henchman21 19 hours ago

      Hey man don’t bring that negativity around here. You’re killing the vibe. Remember we’re now in a post-facts timeline!

      • tmountain 17 hours ago

        To kill the vibe further, AGI might kill is all, so I hope it never arrives.

        • Henchman21 17 hours ago

          Based on our behavior, personally, I think we’d deserve it.

          • spiderice 16 hours ago

            If you've done something deserving of death, you're welcome to turn yourself in.

          • tmountain 17 hours ago

            Can I opt out of that cohort?

    • xpe 8 hours ago

      > Unless someone figures how to make these models a million(?) times more efficient or feed them a million times more energy I don’t see how AGI would even be a twinkle in the eye of the LLM strategies we have now.

      A fair argument. So what is left? At the risk of sounding snarky, "new" strategies. Hype is annoying, yes, but I wouldn't bet against mathematics, physics, and engineering getting to silicon-based AGI, assuming a sufficiently supportive environment. I don't currently see any physics-based blockers; the laws of the universe permit AGI and more, I think. The human brain is powerful demonstration of what is possible.

      Factoring in business, economics, culture makes forecasting much harder. Nevertheless, the incentives are there. As long as there is hope, some people will keep trying.

      • user3939382 7 hours ago

        I agree with everything you said. It’s a worthy pursuit. I would love to see breakthroughs but even incremental progress is great. If we’re near a limit that we haven’t understood yet I won’t be shocked. At the same time if I hear about this replacing programmers again…

Telemakhos 12 hours ago

I am thoroughly unimpressed by GPT-5. It still can't compose iambic trimeters in ancient Greek with a proper penthemimeral cæsura, and it insists on providing totally incorrect scansion of the flawed lines it does compose. I corrected its metrical sins twice, which sent it into "thinking" mode until it finally returned a "Reasoning failed" error.

There is no intelligence here: it's still just giving plausible output. That's why it can't metrically scan its own lines or put a cæsura in the right place.

  • taylorlapeyre 11 hours ago

    It once again completely fails on an extremely simple test: look at a screenshot of sheet music, and tell me what the notes are. Producing a MIDI file for it (unsurprisingly) was far beyond its capabilities.

    https://chatgpt.com/share/68954c9e-2f70-8000-99b9-b4abd69d1a...

    This is not anywhere remotely close to general intelligence.

    • adrianh 6 hours ago

      Interpreting sheet music images is very complex, and I’m not surprised general-purpose LLMs totally fail at it. It’s orders of magnitude harder than text OCR, due to the two-dimensional-ness.

      For much better results, use a custom trained model like the one at Soundslice: https://www.soundslice.com/sheet-music-scanner/

  • xhevahir 7 hours ago

    I can't tell whether you're serious or not. Your criterion for an "impressive" AI tool is that it be able to write and scan poetry in ancient Greek?

    • Telemakhos 4 hours ago

      AI looks like it understands things because it generates text that sounds plausible. Poetry requires the application of certain rule to that text, and the rules for Latin and Greek poetry are very simple and well understood. Scansion is especially easy once you understand the concept, and you actually can, as someone else suggested, train a child to scan poetry by applying these rules.

      An LLM will spit out what looks like poetry, but will violate certain rules. It will generate some hexameters but fail harder on trimeter, presumably because it is trained on more hexametric data (epic poetry: think Homer) than trimetric (iambic and tragedy, where it’s mixed with other meters). It is trained on text containing the rules for poetry too, so it can regurgitate rules like defining a penthemimeral cæsura. But, LLMs do not understand those rules and thus cannot apply them as a child could. That makes ancient poetry a great way to show how far LLMs are from actually performing simple, rules-based analysis and how badly they hide that lack of understanding by BS-ing.

      • BoorishBears 2 hours ago

        This is not a useful diversion, it's like arguing if a submarine swims.

        LLMs are simple, it doesn't take much more than high school math to explain their building blocks.

        What's interesting is that they can remix tasks they've been trained very flexibly, creating new combinations they weren't directly trained on: compare this to earlier smaller models like T5 that had a few set prefixes per task.

        They have underlying flaws. Your example is more about the limitations of tokens than "understanding", for example. But those don't keep them from being useful.

  • ipnon 9 hours ago

    This is a great test because it’s something you could teach an elementary school kid in an hour.

    • Davidzheng 9 hours ago

      is this a joke

      • Telemakhos 4 hours ago

        No, it’s easy if the kid already knows the alphabet. Latin scansion was standard grade school material up until the twentieth century. Greek less so, but the rules for it are very clear-cut and well understood. An LLM will regurgitate the rules to you in any language you want, but it cannot actually apply the rules properly.

        • Davidzheng 4 hours ago

          is ancient greek similar enough to modern day greek that an elementary school kid could learn to compose anything not boilerplate in an hour? Also, do you know that if you fed the same training material you need to train the kid in an hour into the LLM it can't do it?

  • tim333 4 hours ago

    I too can't compose iambic trimeters in ancient Greek but am normally regarded as of average+ intelligence. I think it's a bit of an unfair test as that sort of thing is based of the rhythm of spoken speech and GPT-5 doesn't really deal with audio in a deep way.

    • Telemakhos 4 hours ago

      Most classicists today can’t actually speak Latin or Greek, especially observing vowel quantities and rhythm properly, but you’d be hard pressed to find one who can’t scan poetry with pen and paper. It’s a very simple application of rules to written characters on a page, but it is application, and AI still doesn’t apply concepts well.

  • sibeliuss 8 hours ago

    Pure failure:

    "You’ve given:

    Moon in the 10th house (from the natal Ascendant)

    Venus in the 1st house (from the natal Ascendant)

    Step-by-step: From the natal Ascendant’s perspective

    Moon = 10th house

    Venus = 1st house

    Set Moon as the 1st house (Chandra Lagna)

    The natal 10th house becomes the 1st house in the Chandra chart.

    Therefore, the natal 1st house is 3rd house from the Moon:

    10th → 1st (Moon)

    11th → 2nd

    12th → 3rd (which is the natal 1st)

    Locate Venus from the Moon’s perspective

    Since Venus is in the natal 1st, and natal 1st is 3rd from Moon,

    Venus is in the 3rd house from Chandra Lagna.

    Answer: From Chandra Lagna, Venus is in the 3rd house."

losvedir 19 hours ago

Wait, isn't the Bernoulli effect thing they're demoing now wrong? I thought that was a "common misconception" and wings don't really work by the "longer path" that air takes over the top, and that it was more about angle of attack (which is why planes can fly upside down).

It seems like it's actually an ideal "trick" question for an LLM actually, since so much content has been written about it incorrectly. I thought at first they were going to demo this to show that it knew better, but it seems like it's just regurgitating the same misleading stuff. So, not a good look.

  • nicetryguy 19 hours ago

    Yeah, they sure clicked away from it very fast and kept adjusting the scrollbars. It was confusing what it was trying to display. Furthermore, the prompt contained "Canvas" and "SVG" while as someone with webdev experience these are certainly familiar concepts, i wouldn't consider those in the "casual lexicon" for a random user trying to help a middle schooler with homework. I'm not impressed...

    IMO Claude 3.7 could have done a similar / better job with that a year ago.

    • DominikPeters 16 hours ago

      Claude 3.7 was released in February 2025.

    • MichaelZuo 16 hours ago

      Seems like sheer incompetence, I’m sure at least the top quintile of my junior year fluid dynamics class could notice it was fishy within a 15 minute meeting… probably more than half could.

  • Mali- 18 hours ago

    The last part of GPT's answer does say: "Bernoulli's effect works alongside Newton's Third Law - the wing pushes air downward [...] - so the lift isn't only Bernoulli..."

    According to this answer on physics stackexchange, Bernoulli accounts for 20% of the lift, so GPT's answer seems about right: https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/77977

    I hope any future AI overlords see my charity

    • rcxdude 11 hours ago

      That's still not particularly usefully accurate: it's not a split between the effects, they're the same thing viewed through different lenses. You could, perhaps, say that an airfoil gets X% more lift than a flat plate at a given angle of attack, but the flat plate also 'gets lift through Bernoulli', it's just not as obvious exactly why the flows are faster on the top (and the common 'the air needs to transit the wing in an equal time on top and bottom' is an incorrect rule, and in practice broken by most wings)

  • SkyPuncher 18 hours ago

    That Bernoulli effect thing was a complete fail. It didn't do anything to demonstrate the actual concept. It didn't work how they expected, at all.

    I know that it's rather hard for them to demo the deep reasoning, but all of the demos felt like toys - rather that actual tools.

  • dataflow 19 hours ago

    Relevant: https://xkcd.com/803/

    That said, I recall reading somewhere that it's a combination of effects, and the Bernoulli effect contributes, among many others. Never heard an explanation that left me completely satisfied, though. The one about deflecting air down was the one that always made sense to me even as a kid, but I can't believe that would be the only explanation - there has to be a good reason that gave rise to the Bernoulli effect as the popular explanation.

    And you can tell that effect makes some sense of you hold a sheet of paper and blow air over it - it will rise. So any difference in air speed has to contribute.

    • semi-extrinsic 18 hours ago

      What is just plain wrong is the equal transit time thing, people saying that air on both sides of the wing have to take the same time to pass it.

      The Bernoulli effect as a separate entity is really a result of (over)simplification, but it's not wrong. You need to solve the Navier-Stokes equations for the flow around the wing, but there are many ways to simplify this - from CFD at different resolutions, via panel methods and potential theory, to just conservation of energy (which is the Bernoulli equation). So it gets popularized because it's the most simplified model.

      To give an analogy, you can think of all CPUs as a von Neumann architecture. But the reality is that you have a hugely complicated thing with stacks, multiple cache levels, branch predictors, specex, yada yada.

      On the very fundamental level, wings make air go down, and then airplane goes up. Just like you say. By using a curved airfoil instead of a flat plate, you can create more circulation in the flow, and then because of the way fluids flow you can get more lift and less drag.

      • carabiner 17 hours ago

        Imagine an airfoil with a super tall square block on top of it. Due to equal transit time, the particles must accelerate to relativistic speeds to reach the end to rejoin the lower surface particles, when I point a house fan at it. We have created a magical flow accelerator!

    • adgjlsfhk1 18 hours ago

      the problem is that the "real" explanation is "solve navier stokes on the wing". everything else is just trying to build semi-reliable intuition.

    • amilios 18 hours ago

      I believe the deflection is the high-level explanation. Things like the Bernoulli effect and the air on the top of the airfoil travelling faster (it does -- far faster than the equal transit time theory implies actually), are the "instantiation" or outcomes of the air deflection. This is my understanding. Hence airplanes can fly upside down because even if the airfoil is upside down, it's still deflecting the air, just perhaps less efficiently (I think it's true that planes flying upside down need a more extreme angle of attack to maintain lift, so this makes sense)

  • nwienert 18 hours ago

    Their code example underwhelmed too, the first one started out with 2/X progress, all of them looked terrible, third didn't have mouse icon.

    • nullbyte 16 hours ago

      I thought the UI of the french learning app was very nice

  • twixfel 19 hours ago

    That's what I thought. Aeroplanes don't fly because of the Bernoulli effect:

    https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/290/what-really-...

    Apparently. Not that I know either way.

    • QuantumGood 19 hours ago

      All things that create lift, lift the wings—and you need them all for efficient flight. The Bernoulli effect is one thing, but does not produce the main lift force in many circumstances.

      • wongarsu 19 hours ago

        Aircraft with symmetrical wings fly just fine, and most aircraft can fly upside down. So you don't need the Bernoulli effect. Exploiting all the effects gives you more efficient planes though

        • dismalaf 18 hours ago

          You need a lot of power to lift an aircraft without the Bernoulli effect. That's why all planes take advantage of it.

          • tucnak 17 hours ago

            About 20% more power, provided perfect conversion. A lot? You tell me!

primaprashant 3 hours ago

created a summary of comments from this thread about 15 hours after it had been posted and had 1983 comments, using gpt-5-high and gemini-2.5-pro using a prompt similar to simonw [1]. Used a Python script [2] that I wrote to generate the summary.

- gpt-5-high summary: https://gist.github.com/primaprashant/1775eb97537362b049d643...

- gemini-2.5-pro summary: https://gist.github.com/primaprashant/4d22df9735a1541263c671...

[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43477622

[2]: https://gist.github.com/primaprashant/f181ed685ae563fd06c49d...

  • mustaphah 3 hours ago

    Why not use the ChatGPT interface instead of the API to save credits? Pass the cookies.

    • primaprashant 3 hours ago

      Only have access to GPT-5 through API for now. The amount of tokens (>130k) used is higher than the limit of ChatGPT (128k) so it wouldn't really work well.

  • jiggawatts 3 hours ago

    Wow, the 2.5 Pro summary is far better, it reads like coherent English instead of a list of bullet points.

    • mustaphah 3 hours ago

      Someone should start a Gemini-powered blog that distills the top HN posts into concise summaries.

    • primaprashant 3 hours ago

      yes, agreed. Context length might be playing a factor as total number of prompt tokens is >120k. Performance of LLMs generally degrade at higher context length.

kkukshtel 9 hours ago

Something that's really hitting me is something brought up in this piece:

https://www.interconnects.ai/p/gpt-5-and-bending-the-arc-of-...

When a model comes out, I usually think about it in terms of my own use. This is largely agentic tooling, and I mostly us Claude Code. All the hallucination and eval talk doesn't really catch me because I feel like I'm getting value of these tools today.

However, this model is not _for_ me in the same way models normally are. This is for the 800m or whatever people that open up chatgpt every day and type stuff in. All of them have been stuck on GPT-4o unbeknwst to them. They had no idea SOTA was far beyond that. They probably dont even know that there is a "model" at all. But for all these people, they just got a MAJOR upgrade. It will probably feel like turning the lights on for these people, who have been using a subpar model for the past year.

That said I'm also giving GPT-5 a run in Codex and it's doing a pretty good job!

  • techpineapple 9 hours ago

    I’m curious what this means. Maybe I’m stupid but I read through the sample gpt-4 vs got-5 and I largely couldn’t tell the difference and sometimes preferred the gpt-4 answer. But like what are the average 800 million people using this for that the average 800 million user will be able to see a difference?

    Maybe I’m a far below average user? But I can’t tell the difference between models in causal use.

    Unless you’re talking performance, apparently gpt-5 is much faster.

    • MagicMoonlight 2 hours ago

      4o would start writing immediately without thinking. So if the first thing it wrote was “The world is flat because…” then it will continue to write as if the world is flat.

      It makes it very stupid, but very compliant. If you’re mentally ill it will go along with whatever delusions you have, without any objection.

  • m3kw9 7 hours ago

    Free users will get the gpt5 nano.

joshmlewis 15 hours ago

It's a really good model from my testing so far. You can see the difference in how it tries to use tools to the greatest extent when answering a question, especially compared to 4.1 and o3. In this example it used 6! tool calls in the first response to try and collect as much info as possible.

https://promptslice.com/share/b-2ap_rfjeJgIQsG

  • hollownobody 15 hours ago

    720 tool calls? Amazing!

    • joshmlewis 14 hours ago

      Where'd you get 720 from?

      • brian626 14 hours ago

        Math pun… 6! = Factorial(6) = 720

        • joshmlewis 14 hours ago

          Whoosh, it went right over my head.

  • mustaphah 4 hours ago

    Is there any value in using XML elements to guide the model instead of simple text (e.g., "Recommendation criteria:")?

    • flexagoon 3 hours ago

      XML tags generally help models understand prompts better. That's how most official system prompts are written and what the Anthropic prompting guide says.

  • Zone3513 14 hours ago

    That movie doesn't even exist. There is no Thunder Run from 2025.

    • joshmlewis 14 hours ago

      The data is made up, the point is to see how models respond to the same input / scenario. You're able to create whatever tools you want and import real data or it'll generate fake tool responses for you based on the prompt and tool definition.

      Disclaimer: I made PromptSlice for creating and comparing prompts, tools, and models.

hahahacorn 15 hours ago

Anecdotally, as someone who operates in a very large legacy codebase, I am very impressed by GPT-5's agentic abilities so far. I've given it the same tasks I've given Claude and previous iterations via the Codex CLI, and instead of getting loss due to the massive scope of the problem, it correctly identifies the large scope and breaks it down into it's correct parts and creates the correct plan and begins executing.

I am wildly impressed. I do not believe that the 0.x% increase in benchmarks tell the story of this release at all.

  • gwd 15 hours ago

    I'm a solo founder. I fed it a fairly large "context doc" for the core technology of my company, current state of things, and the business strategy, mostly generated with the help of Claude 4, and asked it what it thought. It came back with a massive list of detailed ambiguities and inconsistencies -- very direct and detailed. The only praise was the first sentence of the feedback: "The core idea is sound and well-differentiated."

    It's got quite a different feel so far.

  • bn-l 5 hours ago

    What are you using to run it?

cuuupid 19 hours ago

The silent victory here is this seems like it is being built to be faster and cheaper than o3 while presenting a reasonable jump, which is an important jump in scaling law

On the other hand if it's just getting bigger and slower it's not a good sign for LLMs

  • smlacy 19 hours ago

    Yeah, this very much feels like "we have made a more efficient/scalable model and we're selling it as the new shiny but it's really just an internal optimization to reduce cost"

    • reasonableklout 18 hours ago

      Significant cost reduction while providing the same performance seems pretty big to me?

      Not sure why a more efficient/scalable model isn't exciting

      • smlacy 17 hours ago

        Oh it's exciting, but not as exciting when sama pumps GPT-5 speculation and the market thinks we're a stones throw away from AGI, which it appears we're not.

  • hirvi74 19 hours ago

    Personally, I am more concerned about accuracy than speed.

    • onlyrealcuzzo 19 hours ago

      Yeah, but OpenAI is concerned with getting on a path to making money, as their investors will eventually run out of money to light on fire, so...

aliljet 19 hours ago

The eval bar I want to see here is simple: over a complex objective (e.g., deploy to prod using a git workflow), how many tasks can GPT-5 stay on track with before it falls off the train. Context is king and it's the most obvious and glaring problem with current models.

  • CamelCaseName 19 hours ago

    This sounds like the kind of thing:

    1. I desperately want (especially from Google)

    2. Is impossible, because it will be super gamed, to the detriment of actually building flexible flows.

ipnon 19 hours ago

Does this mean AGI is cancelled? 2027 hard takeoff was just sci-fi?

  • usaar333 19 hours ago

    At this point the prediction for SWE bench (85% by end of this month) is not materializing. We're actually quite far away.

  • growthwtf 18 hours ago

    Good thing they didn't nuke the data centers after all!

  • MagicMoonlight 13 hours ago

    Obviously, they haven't figured out anything remotely sentient. It's cool as fuck, but it's not actually thinking. Thinking requires learning. You could show it a cat and it would still tell you it's a dog, no matter how many times you try and tell it.

    • __MatrixMan__ 26 minutes ago

      Nothing about sentience is obvious. If the trees were sentient, would it be obvious? Is it therefore obvious that they're not? I think its a no in both cases. Same argument applies to AI model.

  • tim333 16 hours ago

    Still got 24 months to work on it.

    • tim333 2 hours ago

      My hunch is generative pre-trained transformers aren't going to do it just by scaling. Humans learn and modify their models as they go, it isn't all pre-training and then fixed. We need a modified algorithm.

      The current situation is kind of like a grand prize where Zuck or similar will hand $1bn to anyone who cracks it. That's a huge incentive for people to have a go.

  • machiaweliczny 19 hours ago

    When to short NVIDIA? I guess when chinese get their cards production

    • tim333 2 hours ago

      Putting on my speculator hat here, it's as much about psychology and crowd behavior as fundamentals. Probably wait till it drops 30% and the news has "is it all over for AI?" stories. It'll then bounce back and then you sell the top of the bounce back.

    • mvieira38 18 hours ago

      It's good for NVDA if the AI companies can't squeeze more performance out of the same compute, which is the case if GPT-5 underperforms

      • teaearlgraycold 14 hours ago

        At some point the AI companies will run out of fools to give them money.

    • bakuninsbart 17 hours ago

      I think one thing to look out for are "deliberately" slow models. We are currently using basically all models as if we needed them in an instant loop, but many of these applications do not have to run that fast.

      To tell a made-up anecdote: A colleague told me how his professor friend was running statistical models over night because the code was extremely unoptimized and needed 6+ hours to compute. He helped streamline the code and took it down to 30 minutes, which meant the professor could run it before breakfast instead.

      We are completely fine with giving a task to a Junior Dev for a couple of days and see what happens. Now we love the quick feedback of running Claude Max for a hundred bucks, but if we could run it for a buck over night? Would be quite fine for me as well.

      • cyberpunk 16 hours ago

        I don’t really see how this works though — Isn’t it the case that longer “compute” times are more expensive? Hogging a gpu overnight is going to be more expensive than hogging it for an hour.

        • ninkendo 9 hours ago

          Nah, it’d take all night because it would be using the GPU for a fraction of the time, splitting the time with other customer’s tokens, and letting higher priority workloads preempt it.

          If you buy enough GPUs to do 1000 customers’ requests in a minute, you could run 60 requests for each of these customers in an hour, or you could run a single request each for 60,000 customers in that same hour. The latter can be much cheaper per customer if people are willing to wait. (In reality it’s a big N x M scheduling problem, and there’s tons of ways to offer tiered pricing where cost and time are the main trafeoffs.)

    • ath3nd 19 hours ago

      Short?

      It's a perfect situation for Nvidia. You can see that after months of trying to squeeze out all % of marginal improvements, sama and co decided to brand this GPT-4.0.0.1 version as GPT-5. This is all happening on NVDA hardware, and they are gonna continue desperately iterating on tiny model efficiencies until all these valuation $$$ sweet sweet VC cash run out (most of it directly or indirectly going to NVDA).

      • cedws 18 hours ago

        I'd rather they just call it GPT-5 than GPT 4.1o-Pro-Max like their current nightmare naming convention. I lost track of what the 'best' model is.

        • ath3nd 18 hours ago

          They are all..kinda the same?

          • FergusArgyll 15 hours ago

            No, they're really not. o3 and 4o are worlds apart in style and substance. Two completely different models

            • ath3nd 15 hours ago

              Yeah if 'worlds apart in style' means 'kinda similar'.

              There was this joke in this thread that there are the ChatGPT sommeliers that are discussing the subtle difference between the different models nowadays.

              It's funny cause in the last year the models have kind of converged in almost every aspect, but the fanbase, kind of like pretentious sommeliers, is trying to convince us that the subtle 0.05% difference on some obscure benchmark is really significant and that they, the experts, can really feel the difference.

              It's hilarious and sad at the same time.

              • FergusArgyll 13 hours ago

                Have you used o3 more than 10 times?

                • ath3nd 4 hours ago

                  Yes, it has the familiar hints of oak that us chat lovers so enjoy but even a non initiated pleb like definitely feels it's less refined than the cytrus notes of o4.

  • HackerLemon 2 hours ago

    But but but my tech bro CTO said grok IS AGI

energy123 an hour ago

> "If you’re on Plus or Team, you can also manually select the GPT-5-Thinking model from the model picker with a usage limit of up to 200 messages per week."

And what's the reasoning effort parameter set to?

oof-baroomf 19 hours ago

74.9 SWEBench. This increases the SOTA by a whole .4%. Although the pricing is great, it doesn't seem like OpenAI found a giant breakthrough yet like o1 or Claude 3.5 Sonnet

  • Workaccount2 19 hours ago

    I'm pretty sure 3.5 sonnet always benchmarked poorly, despite it being the clear programming winner of it's time.

  • iLoveOncall 15 hours ago

    That would assume there is a giant breakthrough to be found.

swyx 19 hours ago
  • nabla9 19 hours ago

    Holy misleading graph Batman/Altman!

    Academic benchmark score improves only 5% but they make the bar 50% higher.

    • ambicapter 19 hours ago

      Which graph? There are dozens of graph on the page.

      • swyx 18 hours ago

        they had a bad graph on stream which they have since fixed. wouldnt get too upset about a simple error

  • swyx 19 hours ago

    our hands on review: https://www.latent.space/p/gpt-5-review

    basically in my testing really felt that gpt5 was "using tools to think" rather than just "using tools". it gets very powerful when coding long horizon tasks (a separate post i'm publishing later).

    to give one substantive example, in my developer beta (they will release the video in a bit) i put it to a task that claude code had been stuck on for the last week - same prompts - and it just added logging to instrument some of the failures that we were seeing and - from the logs that it added and asked me to rerun - figured out the solve.

    • diggan 19 hours ago

      Was just skimming along that review, while watching the live-stream, where they just mentioned how much better at writing prose GPT-5 is, while I skimmed across:

      > It’s actually worse at writing than GPT-4.5

      Sounds like we need to wait a bit for the dust to settle before one can trust anything one hears/reads :)

      • dudeinhawaii 16 hours ago

        This is why you need to have your own set of personal benchmarks. I have a few short stories that I have models continue (ones I wrote ages ago in my youth) or refactor. Some models are fantastic at writing but miss key details or enmesh them (Claude). Some are terrible writers at higher reasoning (o3). Some are decent writers but tend to provide very short outputs (gpt-4o). For my personal benchmarks Gemini 2.5 Pro has always generated the most compelling writing that _also_ sticks to the world/script -- and sometimes surprises me by having characters react in ways that I hadn't considered but are consistent with their "worldview" as presented by the context (usually a world guide).

        I find coding to be harder to benchmark because there are so many ways to write the same solution. A "correct" solution may be terrible in another context due to loss of speed, security, etc.

        • diggan 15 hours ago

          > I find coding to be harder to benchmark because there are so many ways to write the same solution. A "correct" solution may be terrible in another context due to loss of speed, security, etc.

          Yeah, I also do my own benchmarks, but as you said, coding ones are a bit harder. Currently I'm mostly benchmarking the accuracy of the tools I've written, which do bite-sized work. One tool is for editing parts of files, another to rewrite files fully, and so on, and each is individually benchmarked. But they're very specific, I do no overall benchmark for "Change feature X to do Y" which would span a "session", haven't find any good way of evaluating the results, just like you :)

      • tough 19 hours ago

        well it's difficult to trust the people selling it in the first place. They're too biased to not lie

        It's hard to make a man understand something standing between them and their salary

        • barrell 19 hours ago

          I don’t think that’s a valid excuse. Yes marketing speak has always existed, but it’s not like companies have always been completely unreliable.

          I found it strange that, despite my excitement for such an event being roughly equivalent to WWDC these days, I had 0 desire to watch the live stream for exactly this reason: it’s not like they’re going to give anything to us straight.

          Even this years WWDC I at least skipped through video afterwards. Before I used to have watch parties. Yes they’re overly positive and paint everything in a good light, but they never felt… idk whatever the vibe is I get from these (applicable to OpenAI, Grok, Meta, etc)

          It’s been just a few years of a revolutionary technology and already the livestreams are less appealing than the biggest corporations yearly events. Personally I find that sad

      • yen223 13 hours ago

        It has been pointed out, but GPT-5 is really five different models with wildly different capabilities under the hood. Which model get picked for the task at hand is, for now, not deterministic.

      • swyx 19 hours ago

        better than 4o but worse than 4.5 is internally consistent. and ofc writing is extremely multidimensional.

        • WhitneyLand 19 hours ago

          But that’s not what the review says:

          “It’s actually worse at writing than GPT-4.5, and I think even 4o”

          So the review is not consistent with the PR, hence the commenter expressing preference for outside sources.

    • billmalarky 18 hours ago

      Hi Swyx I always appreciate your insights, something you wrote really resonated with a personal theory I've been developing:

      >"While I never use AI for personal writing (because I have a strong belief in writing to think)"

      The optimal AI productivity process is starting to look like:

      AI Generates > Human Validates > Loop

      Yet cognitive generation is how humans learn and develop cognitive strength, as well as how they maintain such strength.

      Similar to how physical activity is how muscles/bone density/etc grow, and how body tissues maintain.

      Physical technology freed us from hard physical labor that kept our bodies in shape -- at a cost of physical atrophy.

      AI seems to have a similar effect for our minds. AI will accelerate our cognitive productivity, and allow for cognitive convenience -- at a cost of cognitive atrophy.

      At present we must be intentional about building/maintaining physical strength (dedicated strength training, cardio, etc).

      Soon we will need to be intentional about building/maintaining cognitive strength.

      I suspect the workday/week of the future will be split on AI-on-a-leash work for optimal productivity, with carve-outs for dedicated AI-enhanced-learning solely for building/maintaining cognitive health (where productivity is not the goal, building/maintaining cognition is). Similar to how we carve out time for working out.

      What are your thoughts on this? Based on what you wrote above, it seems you have similar feelings?

      Is there a name for this theory?

      If not can you coin one? You're great at that :)

      • tailspin2019 14 hours ago

        This is very interesting - I like the way you’ve explained this.

        The parallel with “intentionally working out to maintain physical strength” is extremely helpful as an analogy to communicate this concept.

        That’s exactly what we might be faced with… cognitive atrophy…

        It’s arguably already started, and is accelerating!

      • swyx 15 hours ago

        thanks very much :)

        problem with your theory is it bundles 2-3 steps which each could be their own theses

        suggest you nail those down before building up to a general bundle (or mental model/framework)

        • billmalarky 12 hours ago

          Ah, I probably should have listed some of the "assumptions" I'm developing it on top of:

          1) Regarding the "generation is how learning occurs" claim, I'm going off of this:

          https://www.learningscientists.org/blog/2024/3/7/how-does-re...

          Granted, that article refers to retrieval specifically being one major way we learn, and of course learning incorporates many dimensions. But it seems a bit self-evident that retrieval occurs heavily during active problem solving (ie "generation"), and less so during passive learning (ie: just reading/consuming info).

          From personal experience, I always noticed I learned much more by doing than by consuming documentation alone.

          But yes, I admit this assumption and my own personal experience/bias is doing a lot of heavy lifting for me...

          2) Regarding the "optimal AI productivity process" (AI Generates > Human Validates > Loop)

          I'm using Karpathy's productivity loop described in his AI startup school talk last month here:

          https://youtu.be/LCEmiRjPEtQ?t=1327

          Does this help make it more concrete Swyx (name dropping you here since I'm pretty sure you've got a social listener set for your handle ;)? Love to hear your thoughts straight from the hip based on your own personal experiences.

          Full disclosure: I'm not trying to get too academic about this. In all honestly I'm really trying to get to an informal theory that's useful and practical enough that it can be turned into a regular business process for rapid professional development.

    • lyxell 19 hours ago

      ”I think GPT-5 is the closest to AGI we’ve ever been”

      Sorry, but this sounds like overly sensational marketing speak and just leaves a bad taste in the mouth for me.

      • Aurornis 19 hours ago

        I found a Hacker News thread via Google a few days ago. One of the top comments was from someone describing their RAG architecture and a certain technique (my search term). The comment boasted that their system was so good it that their team thought they created something close to AGI.

        Then I noticed the date on the comment: 2023.

        Technically, every advancement in the space is “the closest to AGI that we’ve ever been”. It’s technically correct, since we’re not moving backward. It’s just not a very meaningful statement.

        • JumpCrisscross 19 hours ago

          > Technically, every advancement in the space is “the closest to AGI that we’ve ever been”

          By that standard Neolithic tool use was progress to AGI.

          • wild_egg 19 hours ago

            Technically correct

        • Dr4kn 19 hours ago

          "It's the best iPhone we ever made."

      • Fargren 19 hours ago

        AGI, like AI before it, has been coopted into a marketing term. Most of the time, outside of sci-fi, what people mean when they say AGI is "a profitable LLM".

        In the words OpenAI: “AGI is defined as highly autonomous systems that outperform humans at most economically valuable work”

        • dingnuts 18 hours ago

          SamA isn't an idiot. When he says AGI he wants you to think of Asimov style AI. Don't run defense for billionaire grifters.

          • Fargren 6 hours ago

            I was not trying to defend him. I'm very annoyed at how these words are being intentionally abused; they chose to recycle the term rather to create a new one exactly to create this confusion. It's still important to know what the grifters mean.

      • martin_a 19 hours ago

        Same marketing BS like "the best iPhone ever!". Well, duh, if your new version (of hardware/software) isn't better, what the deal then?

    • yen223 16 hours ago

      Re the substantive example, doesn't Claude Code already do this? When I'm vibe-coding scripts or even mobile apps cc can be pretty aggressive about adding targeted logging to solve specific issues.

      • swyx 15 hours ago

        well idk for me it didnt and gpt5 did haha

zone411 14 hours ago

GPT-5 set a new record on my Confabulations on Provided Texts benchmark: https://github.com/lechmazur/confabulations/

  • metzpapa 14 hours ago

    For how much I’ve seen it pushed that this model has lower hallucination rates, it’s quite odd that every actual test I’ve seen says the opposite.

DrSiemer 16 hours ago

Wish they would stop mentioning AGI. It's like the creator of a new car claiming it's a step closer to teleportation.

wgjordan 19 hours ago

Note it's not available to everyone yet:

> GPT-5 Rollout

> We are gradually rolling out GPT-5 to ensure stability during launch. Some users may not yet see GPT-5 in their account as we increase availability in stages.

  • jhickok 18 hours ago

    Weird. On the homepage for GPT-5 it says "Available to everyone."

    • cloudfudge 16 hours ago

      Yeah, and on the models page, everything else is labeled as deprecated. So as a paid user, I don't have access to anything that's not deprecated. Great job, guys.

      Not the end of the world, but this messaging is asinine.

    • nobodywillobsrv 18 hours ago

      This is one of these "best efforts" but also "lying a bit in marketing" is ok I guess.

      On bad days this really bothers me. It's probably not the biggest deal I guess but somehow really feels like it pushes us all over the edge a bit. Is there a post about this phenomena? It feels like some combination of bullying, gaslighting and just being left out.

      • joshstrange 17 hours ago

        OpenAI does this for literally _every_ release. They constantly say "Available to everyone" or "Rolling out today" or "Rolling out over the next few days". As a paying Plus member it irks me to no end, they almost never hit their self-imposed deadlines.

        The linked page says

        > GPT-5 is here > Our smartest, fastest, and most useful model yet, with thinking built in. Available to everyone.

        Lies. I don't care if they are "rolling it out" still, that's not an excuse to lie on their website. It drives me nuts. It also means that by the time I finally get access I don't notice for a few days up to a week because I'm not going to check for it every days. You'd think their engineers would be able to write a simple notification system to alert users when they get access (even just in the web UI), but no. One day it isn't there, one day it is.

        I'll get off my soapbox now but this always annoys me greatly.

        • jhickok 14 hours ago

          It annoys me too because as someone that jumps around to the different models and the subscriptions, when I see that it says it's available to everyone I paid the money for the subscription only to find out that apparently it's rolling out in some manner of priority. I would very much have liked a quick bit of info that "hey, you wont be able to give this a try since we are prioritizing current customers".

  • minimaxir 18 hours ago

    I am seeing it now in the Playground backend.

  • FabHK 19 hours ago

    But available from today to free tier. Yay.

  • km144 19 hours ago

    How would I even know? I haven't seen which model of ChatGPT I'm using on the site ever since they obfuscated that information at some point.

    • noahbp 18 hours ago

      If you can't see it, you're likely on the free tier and using the latest mini model.

      • cootsnuck 18 hours ago

        Not true. I've been a paid user forever and on the Android app they have definitely obscured the model selector. It's readily visible to me on desktop / desktop browser. But on the Android app the only place I can find it is if I click on an existing response already sent by chatGPT and then it gives me the option to re-generate the message with a different model.

        And while I'm griping about their Android app, it's also very annoying to me that they got rid of the ability to do multiple, subsequent speech-to-text recordings within a single drafted message. You have to one-shot anything you want to say, which would be fine if their STT didn't sometimes failed after you've talked for two minutes. Awful UX. Most annoying is that it wasn't like that originally. They changed it to this antagonistic one-shot approach a several months ago, but then quickly switched back. But then they did it again a month or so ago and have been sticking with it. I just use the Android app less now.

        • setsewerd 16 hours ago

          Sounds like there are a lot of frustrations here but as a fellow android user just wanted to point out that you can tap the word ChatGPT in your chat (top left) and it opens the model selector.

          Although if they replace it all with gpt5 then my comment will be irrelevant by tomorrow

          • macNchz 16 hours ago

            On desktop at least the model selector only shows GPT-5 for me now, with Pro and Thinking under "Other Models" but no other options.

        • sejje 16 hours ago

          When you start a new conversation it says "chatGPT" at the top. Tap that to select a model.

          For the multiple messages, I just use my keyboard's transcription instead of openai's.

    • thepasswordis 19 hours ago

      The model should appear as a drop down at the top of the page.

    • manojlds 18 hours ago

      What do you mean? It's front and center

    • Kurtz79 19 hours ago

      "what model are you?"

      ChatGPT said: You're chatting with ChatGPT based on the GPT-4o architecture (also known as GPT-4 omni), released by OpenAI in May 2024.

      • pjerem 19 hours ago

        Actually this trick have been proven to be useless in a lot of cases.

        LLMs don’t inherently know what they are because "they" are not themselves part of the training data.

        However, maybe it’s working because the information is somewhere into their pre-prompt but if it wasn’t, it wouldn’t say « I don’t know » but rather hallucinate something.

        So maybe that’s true but you cannot be sure.

        • efilife 19 hours ago

          It's injected into their system prompt

          • seba_dos1 18 hours ago

            ...which is useless when the model gets changed in-between responses.

spruce_tips 19 hours ago

These presenters all give off such a “sterile” vibe

  • motoxpro 19 hours ago

    They are researchers, not professional presenters. I promise you if I told you to do a live demo, on stage, for 20 minutes, going back and forth between scripted and unscripted content, to an audience of at least 50 million people, that unless you do this a lot, you would do the same or worse. I know this because this is what I do for a living. I have seen 1000s of "normal" people be extremely awkward on stage. Much more so than this.

    It's super unfortunate that, becasue we live in the social media/youtube era, that everyone is expected to be this perfect person on camera, because why wouldn't they be? That's all they see.

    I am glad that they use normal people who act like themselves rather than them hiring actors or taking researchers away from what they love to do and tell them they need to become professional in-front-of-camera people because "we have the gpt-5 launch" That would be a nightmare.

    It's a group of scientists sharings their work with the world, but people just want "better marketing" :\

    • retsibsi 19 hours ago

      I think they're copping this criticism because it's neither one thing nor the other. If it was really just a group of scientists being themselves, some of us would appreciate that. And if it was inauthentic but performed by great actors, most people wouldn't notice or care about the fakeness. This is somewhere in the middle, so it feels very unnatural and a bit weird.

      • motoxpro 19 hours ago

        You're describing low skilled presenters. That is what it looks like when you put someone up in front of a camera and tell them to communicate a lot of information. You're not thinking about "being yourself," you're thinking about how to not forget your lines, not mess up, not think about the different outcomes of the prompt that you might have to deal with, etc.

        This was my point. "Being yourself" on camera is hard. This comes across, apparently shockingly, as being devoid of emotion and/or robotic

        • retsibsi 18 hours ago

          Yeah, but I disagree with you a bit. If it were less heavily scripted, it may or may not be going well, but it would feel very different from this and would not be copping the same criticisms. Or if they unashamedly leant into the scriptedness and didn't try to simulate normal human interaction, they would be criticised for being "wooden" or whatever, but it wouldn't have this slightly creepy vibe.

          • motoxpro 18 hours ago

            I get you.

            I think for me, just knowing what is probably on the teleprompter, and what is not, I am willing to bet a lot of the "wooden" vibe you are getting is actually NOT scripted.

            There is no way for people to remember that 20 minutes of dialog, so when they are not looking at the camera, that is unscripted, and viceversa.

            • replwoacause 6 hours ago

              I agree with your take, makes a lot of sense. I think most of the criticism I see directed at the presenters seems unfair. I guess some people expect them to be both genius engineers and expert on-screen personalities. They may feel a little stiff or scripted at times, but as an engineer myself I know I’d do a hell of a lot worse under these circumstances. Your view seems like a reasonable one to me.

      • taytus 18 hours ago

        Extremely robotic.

    • wasabi991011 18 hours ago

      You are acting like there aren't hundreds of well-preserved talks given at programming conferences every year, or that being a good presenter is not a requirement in academic research.

      Also, whether OpenAI is a research organization is very much up for debate. They definitely have the resources to hire a good spokesperson if they wanted.

      • motoxpro 18 hours ago

        I don't know how many conferences you have been to but most talks are painfully bad. The ones that get popular are the best and by people who love speaking, hence why you are seeing them speak (selection bias at it's finest)

        They do have the resources (see WWDC), the question is if you want to take your technical staff of of their work for the amount of time it takes to develop the skill

        • bongodongobob 16 hours ago

          Yeah maybe SV has higher expectations, no idea what these people are talking about. It was fine.

    • drexlspivey 19 hours ago

      But why would you want to put researchers in a marketing video? It’s not like they are explaining something deep.

      • motoxpro 19 hours ago

        It's better marketing and more credible to have the researcher say "We think GPT 5 is the best model for developers, we used it extensively internally. Here let me give you an example..." than it is for Matthew McConaughey to say the same.

    • 0x7cfe 18 hours ago

      I don't know. Maybe I'm biased, but Elon and his teammates' presentations do seem natural to me. Maybe a bit goofy but always on point nevertheless.

      • replwoacause 6 hours ago

        Have to disagree on this. Watching Elon trying to get a thought out always makes me cringe. Something about his communication style is incredibly frustrating for me.

      • motoxpro 18 hours ago

        Totally. I mean at this point Elon has 1000s of hours of practice doing interviews, pitches, presentations, conferences, etc. See Sam Altman in this context.

    • pxc 17 hours ago

      It seemed like good performances from people whose main skillset is not this.

      For me, it's knowing what we know about the company and its history that gave a eerie feeling in combination with the sterility.

      When they brought on the woman who has cancer, I felt deeply uncomfortable. My dad also has cancer right now. He's unlikely to survive. Watching a cancer patient come on to tell their story as part of an extended advertisement, expression serene, any hint of discomfort or pain or fear or bitterness completely hidden, ongoing hardship acknowledged only with a few shallow and euphemistic words, felt deeply uncomfortable to me.

      Maybe this person enthusiastically volunteered, because she feels happy about what her husband is working on, and grateful for the ways that ChatGPT has helped her prepare for her appointments with doctors. I don't want to disrespect or discredit her, and I've also used LLMs alongside web searches in trying to formulare questions about my father's illness, so I understand how this is a real use case.

      But something about it just felt wrong, inauthentic. I found myself wondering if she or her husband felt pressured to make this appearance. I also wondered if this kind of storytelling was irresponsible or deceptive, designed to describe technically responsible uses of LLMs (preparing notes for doctor's visits, where someone will verify the LLM's outputs against real expertise), but to suggest in every conceivable implicit way that these ChatGPT is actually capable of medical expertise itself. Put alongside "subject-matter experts in your pocket", talk of use in medical research and practice (where machine learning has a dubious history of deception and methodological misapplication problems), what are people likely to think?

      I thought also of my mom, who drives herself crazy with anxiety every time my dad gets a new test result, obsessively trying to directly interpret them herself from the moment they arrive to his doctor's visit a week or two later. What impression would this clip leave on her? Does the idea of her using an LLM in this way feel safe to me?

      There's a deeper sense that OpenAI's messaging, mission, and orientation are some mixture of deceptive and incoherent that leaves viewers with the sense that we're being lied to in presentations like this. It goes beyond stiff performances or rehearsed choices of words.

      There's something cultish about the "AGI" hype, the sci-fi fever dream of "safety" problems that the field has mainstreamed, the slippage of OpenAI from a non-profit research institution to a for-profit startup all while claiming to be focused on the same mission, the role of AI as an oracle so opaque it might as well be magic, the idea of finding a sacred "rationality" in predictions founded purely on statistics without communicable/interrogable structural or causal models... all of it. It's against this backdrop that the same kind of stiffness that might be cute or campy in an infomercial for kitchen gadgets becomes uncanny.

    • seydor 18 hours ago

      researchers should need to be tortured like this. But maybe if they are paid so much, they should

    • twixfel 18 hours ago

      They shouldn't be presenting if they can't present.

      "Minimal reasoning means that the reasoning will be minimal..."

      Jakub Pachocki at the end is probably one of the worst public speakers I've ever seen. It's fine, it's not his mother tongue, and public speaking is hard. Why make him do it then?

    • mhh__ 19 hours ago

      Well yes I think part of the reason it's slightly unnerving is that this actually how they act irl. Sometimes people need a bit of edge to 'em!

      • efilife 19 hours ago

        Maybe they are just nervous with half of the world looking at them?

  • diggan 19 hours ago

    Not even 10 seconds after I started watching the stream, someone said how much more human GPT-5 is, while the people sitting and talking about it don't seem human at all, and it's not an accent/language thing. Seems they're strictly following a dialogue script that is trying to make them seem "impromptu" but the acting isn't quite there for that :)

    • jazzyjackson 19 hours ago

      I use LLMs to get answers to queries but I avoid having conversations with them because I'm aware we pick up idiosyncrasies and colloquialisms from everyone we interact with. People who spend all day talking to thier GPT-voice will adjust their speaking style to be more similar to the bot.

      I developed this paranoia upon learning about The Ape and the Child where they raised a chimp alongside a baby boy and found the human adapted to chimp behavior faster than the chimp adapted to human behavior. I fear the same with bots, we'll become more like them faster than they'll become like us.

      https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/07/25/5385804...

    • HaZeust 19 hours ago

      One woman who went through her calendar with GPT had good acting that the GPT reply helped her find impromptu information (an email she needed to answer), and someone staged GPT-5 to make a French-learning website lander - which butchered its own design in the second run; but that's all the good acting for a "candid presentation" that I could find.

      • nilsherzig 19 hours ago

        It created a webapp called „le chat“ hahah

        • HaZeust 18 hours ago

          I laughed my ass off immediately after it gave that output, until the presenter made clear that it was a flash card for learning the words, "the cat" in French - and backed it up.

    • Insanity 19 hours ago

      I don’t blame them, they aren’t actors. And yes, it’s clearly not impromptu, but I am trying to not let that take away from the message they are communicating. :)

    • MattSayar 19 hours ago

      Presenting is hard

      • AnimalMuppet 19 hours ago

        Presenting where you have to be exactly on the content with no deviation is hard. To do that without sounding like a robot is very hard.

        Presenting isn't that hard if you know your content thoroughly, and care about it. You just get up and talk about something that you care about, within a somewhat-structured outline.

        Presenting where customers and the financial press are watching and parsing every word, and any slip of the tongue can have real consequences? Yeah, um... find somebody else.

    • Bluestein 19 hours ago

      One heck of a Turing test itself if I've ever seen one.-

  • wavemode 19 hours ago

    It's because they have a script but are bad at acting.

    Would've been better to just do a traditional marketing video rather than this staged "panel" thing they're going for.

  • christina97 19 hours ago

    If the presenter is less human the LLM appears more human in comparison.

    • polotics 19 hours ago

      at least no one is going for the infamous vocal fry :-D

  • 0x457 19 hours ago

    It gives me elementary school oral report. The same level of acting and script.

  • guy_ross 18 hours ago

    interesting how they put this effort to making us feel physiologically well with everyone wearing blue shirts, open body language, etc. just to give off sterile robotic vibes. also noticed a dude reading off his hand at 45 minutes in, would think they brought in a few teleprompters.

  • CamelCaseName 19 hours ago

    Hundreds of billions on the line, really can't risk anything

  • mhh__ 19 hours ago

    this is just the way that american middle and upper classes are going. This kind of language/vibe is the default outside of a specific type of WASP IME at least.

  • swader999 19 hours ago

    I like hearing from the people in the thick of it.

  • bo-tao 19 hours ago

    Can't they use AI to make them more human?

  • greatwhitenorth 19 hours ago

    Steve Jobs is meant for moments like this. He would have explained everything crystal clear. Everyone else pales in comparison. I wish he is there to explain the current state of AI.

  • pyb 19 hours ago

    They look nervous, messing this presentation up could cost them their high-paying jobs.

m4nu3l 17 hours ago

Very funny. The very first answer it gave to illustrate its "Expert knowledge" is quite common, and it's wrong. What's even funnier is that you can find why on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lift_(force)#False_explanation... What's terminally funny is that in the visualisation app, it used a symmetric wing, which of course wouldn't generate lift according to its own explanation (as the travelled distance and hence air flow speed would be the same). I work as a game physics programmer, so I noticed that immediately and almost laughed. I watched only that part so far while I was still at the office, though.

  • phkahler 16 hours ago

    A symmetric wing will not produce lift a zero angle of attack. But tilted up it will. The distance over the top will also increase, as measured from the point where the surface is perpendicular to the velocity vector.

    That said, yeah the equal time thing never made any sense.

    • m4nu3l 16 hours ago

      Of course, I'm just pointing out that the main explanation it gave was the equal transit time and added the angle of attack only "slightly increases lift", which quite clashes with the visualisation IMO.

thegeomaster 19 hours ago

SWE-Bench Verified score, with thinking, ties Opus 4.1 without thinking.

AIME scores do not appear too impressive at first glance.

They are downplaying benchmarks heavily in the live stream. This was the lab that has been flexing benchmarks as headline figures since forever.

This is a product-focused update. There is no significant jump in raw intelligence or agentic behavior against SOTA.

  • Davidzheng 9 hours ago

    what does it mean for a bench to be not impressive when it's saturated?

  • byyoung3 19 hours ago

    they aren't downplaying anything.

demirbey05 19 hours ago

Seems LLMs really hit the wall.

  • impossiblefork 19 hours ago

    Before last year we didn't have reasoning. It came with QuietSTaR, then we got it in the form of O1 and then it became practical with DeepSeek's paper in January.

    So we're only about a year since the last big breakthrough.

    I think we got a second big breakthrough with Google's results on the IMO problems.

    For this reason I think we're very far from hitting a wall. Maybe 'LLM parameter scaling is hitting a wall'. That might be true.

    • demirbey05 19 hours ago

      IMO is not breakthrough, if you craft proper prompts you can excel imo with 2.5 Pro. Paper : https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.15855. Google just put whole computational power with very high quality data. It was test-time scaling. Why it didn't solve problem 6 as well?

      Yes, it was breakthrough but saturated quickly. Wait for next breakthrough. If they can build adapting weights in llm we can talk different things but test time scaling coming to end with increasing hallucination rate. No sign for AGI.

      • impossiblefork 18 hours ago

        It wasn't long ago that test-time scaling wasn't possible. Test-time scaling is a core part of what makes this a breakthrough.

        I don't believe your assessment though. IMO is hard, and Google have said that they use search and some way of combining different reasoning traces, so while I haven't read that paper yet, and of course, it may support your view, but I just don't believe it.

        We are not close to solving IMO with publicly known methods.

        • demirbey05 18 hours ago

          test time scaling is based on methods from pre-2020. If you look details of modern LLMs its pretty small prob to encounter method from 2020+(ROPE,GRPO). I am not saying IMO is not impressive, but it is not breakthrough, if they said they used different paradigm then test-time scaling I would say breakthrough.

          > We are not close to solving IMO with publicly known methods. The point here is not method rather computation power. You can solve any verifiable task with high computation, absolutely there must be tweaks in methods but I don't think it is something very big and different. Just OAI asserted they solved with breakthrough.

          Wait for self-adapting LLMs. We will see at most in 2 years, now all big tech are focusing on that I think.

          • impossiblefork 17 hours ago

            What kind of test time scaling did we have pre-2020?

            Non-output tokens were basically introduced by QuietSTaR, which is rather new. What method from five years ago does anything like that?

    • pton_xd 18 hours ago

      Layman's perspective: we had hints of reasoning from the initial release of ChatGPT when people figured out you could prompt "think step by step" to drastically increase problem solving performance. Then yeah a year+ later it was cleverly incorporated into model training.

      • impossiblefork 18 hours ago

        Fine, but to me reasoning is this the where you have <think> tags and use RL to decide what's to be generated in-between them.

        Of course, people regarded things like GSM8k with trained reasoning traces as reasoning too, but it's pretty obviously not quite the same thing.

  • nonhaver 19 hours ago

    i think this is more an effect of releasing a model every other month with gradual improvements. if there was no o-series/other thinking models on the market - people would be shocked by this upgrade. the only way to keep up with the market is to release improvements asap

    • ModernMech 19 hours ago

      I don't agree, the only thing thing that would shock me about this model is if it didn't hallucinate.

      I think the actual effect of releasing more models every month has been to confuse people that progress is actually happening. Despite claims of exponentially improved performance and the ability to replace PhDs, doctors, and lawyers, it still routinely can't be trusted the same as the original ChatGPT, despite years of effort.

      • nonhaver 17 hours ago

        this is a very odd perspective. as someone who uses LLMs for coding/PRs - every time a new model released my personal experience was that it was a very solid improvement on the previous generation and not just meant to "confuse". the jump from raw GPT-4 2 years ago to o3 full is so unbelievable if you traveled back in time and showed me i wouldn't have thought such technology would exist for 5+ years.

        to the point on hallucination - that's just the nature of LLMs (and humans to some extent). without new architectures or fact checking world models in place i don't think that problem will be solved anytime soon. but it seems gpt-5 main selling point is they somehow reduced the hallucination rate by a lot + search helps with grounding.

        • ModernMech 17 hours ago

          I notice you don't bring any examples despite claiming the improvements are frequent and solid. It's likely because the improvements are actually hard to define and quantify. Which is why throughout this period of LLM development, there has been such an emphasis on synthetic benchmarks (which tell us nothing), rather than actual capabilities and real world results.

          • nonhaver 16 hours ago

            i didnt bring examples because i said personal experience. heres my "evidence" - gpt 4 took multiple shots and iterations and couldnt stay coherent with a prompt longer than 20k tokens (in my experience). then when o4 came out it improved on that (in my experience). o1 took 1-2 shots with less iterations (in my experience). o3 zero shots most of the tasks i throw at it and stays coherent with very long prompts (in my experience).

            heres something else to think about. try and tell everybody to go back to using gpt-4. then try and tell people to go back to using o1-full. you likely wont find any takers. its almost like the newer models are improved and generally more useful

            • ModernMech 16 hours ago

              Why are your examples so vague?

              I'm not saying they're not delivering better incremental results for people for specific tasks, I'm saying they're not improving as a technology in the way big tech is selling.

              The technology itself is not really improving because all of the showstopping downsides from day one are still there: Hallucinations. Limited context window. Expensive to operate and train. Inability to recall simple information, inability to stay on task, support its output, or do long term planning. They don't self-improve or learn from their mistakes. They are credulous to a fault. There's been little progress on putting guardrails on them.

              Little progress especially on the ethical questions that surround them, which seem to have gone out the window with all the dollar signs floating around. They've put waaaay more effort into the commoditization front. 0 concern for the impact of releasing these products to the world, 100% concern about how to make the most money off of them. These LLMs are becoming more than the model, they're now a full "service" with all the bullshit that entails like subscriptions, plans, limits, throttling, etc. The enshittification is firmly afoot.

              • nonhaver 12 hours ago

                not to offend - but it sounds like your response/worries are based more on an emotional reaction. and rightly so, this is by all means a very scary and uncertain time. and undeniably these companies have not taken into account the impact their products will cause and the safety surrounding that.

                however, a lot of your claims are false - progress is being made in nearly all the areas you mentioned

                > hallucinations

                are reduced with GPT-5

                https://cdn.openai.com/pdf/8124a3ce-ab78-4f06-96eb-49ea29ffb...

                "gpt-5-thinking has a hallucination rate 65% smaller than OpenAI o3"

                > limited context window

                same deal. gemini 2.5-pro has a 1 million token context window and GPT-5 is 400k up from 200k with o3

                https://blog.google/technology/google-deepmind/gemini-model-...

                "native multimodality and a long context window. 2.5 Pro ships today with a 1 million token context window (2 million coming soon)"

                > expensive to operate and train

                we don't know for certain but GPT-5 provides the most intelligence for the cheapest price at $10/1 million output tokens which is unprecedented

                https://platform.openai.com/docs/models/gpt-5

                > guardrails

                are very well implemented in certain models like google who provide multiple safety levels

                https://ai.google.dev/gemini-api/docs/safety-settings

                "You can use these filters to adjust what's appropriate for your use case. For example, if you're building video game dialogue, you may deem it acceptable to allow more content that's rated as Dangerous due to the nature of the game. In addition to the adjustable safety filters, the Gemini API has built-in protections against core harms, such as content that endangers child safety. These types of harm are always blocked and cannot be adjusted."

                now id like to ask you for evidence that none of these aspects have been improved - since you claim my examples are vague but make statements like

                > Inability to recall simple information

                > inability to stay on task

                > (doesn't) support its output

                > (no) long term planning

                ive experienced the exact opposite. not 100% of the time but compared to GPT-4 all of these areas have been massively improved. sorry i cant provide every single chat log ive ever had with these models to satisfy your vagueness-o-meter or provide benchmarks which i assume you will brush aside.

                as well as the examples ive provided above - you seem to be making claims out of thin air and then claim others are not providing examples up to your standard.

                • ModernMech 9 hours ago

                  > now id like to ask you for evidence that none of these aspects have been improved

                  You're arguing against a strawman. I'm not saying there haven't been incremental improvements for the benchmarks they're targeting. I've said that several times now. I'm sure you're seeing improvements in the tasks you're doing.

                  But for me to say that there is more a shell game going on, I will have to see tools that do not hallucinate. A (claimed, who knows if that's right, they can't even get the physics questions or the charts right) reduction of 65% is helpful but doesn't make these things useful tools in the way they're claiming they are.

                  > sorry i cant provide every single chat log ive ever had with these models to satisfy your vagueness-o-meter

                  I'm not asking for all of them, you didn't even share one!

                  Anyway, I just had this chat with the brand new state of the art Chat GPT 5: https://chatgpt.com/share/68956bf0-4d74-8001-88fe-67d5160436...

                  Like I said, despite all the advances touted in the breathless press releases you're touting, the brand new model is just a bad roll away from like the models from 3 years ago, and until that isn't the case, I'll continue to believe that the technology has hit a wall.

                  If it can't do this after how many years, then how is it supposed to be the smartest person I know in my pocket? How am I supposed to trust it, and build a foundation on it?

                  • nonhaver 7 hours ago

                    ill leave it at this: if “zero-hallucination omniscience” is your bar, you’ll stay disappointed - and that’s on your expectations, not the tech. personally i’ve been coding/researching faster and with fewer retries every time a new model drops - so my opinion is based on experience. you’re free to sit out the upgrade cycle

  • satyrun 19 hours ago

    Just an absurd statement when DeepSeek had its moment in January.

    A whole 8 months ago.

    • manojlds 18 hours ago

      And they said "it's over" millions of times. What they mean is the exponential expectations are done.

    • demirbey05 18 hours ago

      I don't remember as a big fan of DeepSeek.

      • nonhaver 17 hours ago

        you dont remember deepseek introducing reasoning and blowing benchmarks led by private american companies out of the water? with an api that was way cheaper? and then offered the model free in a chat based system online? and you were a big fan?

    • FergusArgyll 15 hours ago

      Deepseek was never SOTA, it was a big deal because it was from China but it wasn't a breakthrough in any sense

      • missedthecue 9 hours ago

        Isn't the fact that it produced similar performance about 70x more cheaply a breakthrough? In the same way that the Hall-Héroult process was a breakthrough. Not like we didn't have aluminum before 1886.

  • amelius 19 hours ago

    Is there a graph somewhere that illustrates it?

    • onlyrealcuzzo 19 hours ago

      https://epoch.ai/data-insights/llm-apis-accuracy-runtime-tra...

      It is easier to get from 0% accurate to 99% accurate, than it is to get from 99% accurate to 99.9% accurate.

      This is like the classic 9s problem in SRE. Each nine is exponentially more difficult.

      How easy do we really think it will be for an LLM to get 100% accurate at physics, when we don't even know what 100% right is, and it's theoretically possible it's not even physically possible?

  • bertili 17 hours ago

    GPT5 doesn't add any cues to whether we hit the wall, as OpenAI only needs to go one step beyond the competition. They are market leaders and more profitable than the others, so it's possible are not showing us everything they have, until they really need to.

    • AstroBen 15 hours ago

      ..profitable you say?

    • demirbey05 17 hours ago

      I mean test-time scaling coming to end, there are many open rooms for next thing.

  • hodgehog11 18 hours ago

    Not really, it's just that our benchmarks are not good at showing how they've improved. Those that regularly try out LLMs can attest to major improvements in reliability over the past year.

  • dismalaf 19 hours ago

    It's seemed that way for the last year. The only real improvements have been in the chat apps themselves (internet access, function calling). Until AI gets past the pre-training problem, it'll stagnate.

davepeck 19 hours ago

Sam Altman, in the summer update video:

> "[GPT-5] can write an entire computer program from scratch, to help you with whatever you'd like. And we think this idea of software on demand is going to be one of the defining characteristics of the GPT-5 era."

  • data-ottawa 19 hours ago

    Nit: the featured jumping game is trivial to beat by just continuously jumping.

    I’m not sure this will be game changing vs existing offerings

    • MagicMoonlight 13 hours ago

      At some point, we ask of the piano-playing dog, not "are you a dog?" but "are you any good at playing the piano?"

  • mlnj 19 hours ago

    Cannot believe how it could stand up to that high expectation.

    But then again, all of this is a hype machine cranked up till the next one needs cranking.

    • jononor 19 hours ago

      There are so many people on-board with this idea, hypemen collaborators, that I think they might be safe for a year or two more. The hypers will shout about how miraculous it is, and tell everyone that does not get the promised value that "you are just holding it wrong". This buys them a fair amount of time to improve things.

    • davepeck 19 hours ago

      Yeah.

      It does feel like we're marching toward a day when "software on tap" is a practical or even mundane fact of life.

      But, despite the utility of today's frontier models, it also feels to me like we're very far from that day. Put another way: my first computer was a C64; I don't expect I'll be alive to see the day.

      Then again, maybe GPT-5 will make me a believer. My attitude toward AI marketing is that it's 100% hype until proven otherwise -- for instance, proven to be only 87% hype. :-)

      • coffeebeqn 17 hours ago

        Just like self driving. The last 20% is actually really difficult without AGI

  • jazzyjackson 19 hours ago

    "an entire computer program from scratch" != "any entire computer program from scratch"

    • wes-k 17 hours ago

      Only off by one character, how hard could that be?

    • coffeebeqn 17 hours ago

      How about “can implement any computer program tutorial”. Even then it’s probably not quite true

  • moralestapia 19 hours ago

    He said something like "entering the fast fashion era of SaaS" recently.

    GPT-5 doesn't seem to get you there tho ...

    (Disclaimer: But I am 100% sure it will happen eventually)

    • danpalmer 18 hours ago

      Oh I can completely believe this.

      "Fast fashion" is not a good thing for the world, the environment, the fashion industry, and arguably not a good thing for the consumers buying it. Oh but it is good for the fast fashion companies.

jdelman 14 hours ago

Whenever OpenAI releases a new ChatGPT feature or model, it's always a crapshoot when you'll actually be able to use it. The headlines - both from tech media coverage and OpenAI itself - always read "now available", but then I go to ChatGPT (and I'm a paid pro user) and it's not available yet. As an engineer I understand rollouts, but maybe don't say it's generally available when it's not?

  • replwoacause 6 hours ago

    Weird. I got it immediately. I actually found out about it when I opened the app and saw it and thought “oh, a new model just dropped better go check YT for the video” which had just been uploaded. And I’m just a Plus user.

  • andrelaszlo 12 hours ago

    I asked GPT about it:

    > You are using the newest model OpenAI offers to the public (GPT-4o). There is no “GPT-5” model accessible yet, despite the splashy headlines.

    • h4ch1 8 hours ago

      I can use it with the Github Copilot Pro plan.

sbinnee 11 hours ago

I didn't know that OpenAI added what they call organization verification process for API calls for some models. While I haven't noticed this change at work using OpenAI models, when I wanted to try GPT-5 on my personal laptop, I came across this obnoxious verification issue.

It seems that it's all because that users can get thinking traces from API calls, and OpenAI wants to prevent other companies from distilling their models.

Although I don't think OpenAI will be threatened by a single user from Korea, I don't want to go through this process for many reasons. But who knows that this kind of verification process may become norm and users will have no ways to use frontier models. "If you want to use the most advanced AI models, verify yourself so that we can track you down when something bad happens". Is it what they are saying?

  • piskov 11 hours ago

    It started with o-models in the API.

CamelCaseName 19 hours ago

Did they just say they're deprecating all of OpenAI's non-GPT-5 models?

  • jjani 19 hours ago

    Yup! Nice play to get a picture of every API user's legal ID - deprecating all models that aren't locked behind submitting one. And yep, GPT-5 does require this.

    • beering 15 hours ago

      I think you got some different things mixed up. the deprecation is for chatgpt. (but i think Pro users can still use the old models)

    • Hackbraten 14 hours ago

      For me, gpt-5-nano still works without verification.

    • AtNightWeCode 18 hours ago

      Yep, and I asked ChatGPT about it and it straight up lied and said it was mandatory in EU. I will never upload a selfie to OpenAI. That is like handing over the kids to one of those hangover teenagers watching the ball pit at the local mall.

      • jjani 18 hours ago

        They first introduced it 4 months ago. Back then I saw several people saying "soon it will be all of the providers".

        We're 4 months later, a century in LLM land, and it's the opposite. Not a single other model provider asks for this, yet OpenAI has only ramped it up, now broadening it to the entirety of GPT-5 API usage.

    • cootsnuck 18 hours ago

      What?? Have a source on that?

      • jjani 18 hours ago

        Yup! Oh plus a video face scan, I forgot to mention.

        • coffeebeqn 17 hours ago

          Great, all my weirdest discussions are now tied to my legal identification and a generative AI company has my likeness and knows quite a lot more about me than Facebook ever did. I guess it’s time to use another provider - this is a totally absurd ask from them

      • AtNightWeCode 18 hours ago

        This is the message you get when calling the same API endpoints as with 4.1. And in the vid they said that the older versions will be deprecated.

        Your organization must be verified to use the model `gpt-5`. Please go to: https://platform.openai.com/settings/organization/general and click on Verify Organization. If you just verified, it can take up to 15 minutes for access to propagate.

        And when you click that link the "service" they use is withpersona. So it is a complete shit show.

        • ilaksh 17 hours ago

          Is Persona evil? Because I did their verification and now they have my 3d face and ID.

          • AtNightWeCode 15 hours ago

            Wrote a ? cause this garbage forum ghosts any critical poster about any of the HN kids. And no, I will not send a scan of my ass or my face to these shady fkrs.

            • ilaksh 14 hours ago

              Hm. I guess I am lucky it did not ask for an ass scan this time.

  • spruce_tips 19 hours ago

    Wonder if deprecating direct access means the gpt5 can still route to those behind the scenes?

    • CamelCaseName 19 hours ago

      That would make sense, I'm curious about this as well

  • diggan 19 hours ago

    > Did they just say they're deprecating all of OpenAI's non-GPT-5 models?

    Yes. But it was quickly mentioned, not sure what the schedule is like or anything I think, unless they talked about that before I started watching the live-stream.

  • guy_ross 18 hours ago

    Yeah I was wondering if they meant deprecating on the ChatGPT side, but maintaining the models on their API platform, or deprecating on both.

ftkftk 17 hours ago

Answer in one word: Underwhelming.

Bad data on graphs, demos that would have been impressive a year ago, vibe coding the easiest requests (financial dashboard), running out of talking points while cursor is looping on a bug, marginal benchmark improvements. At least the models are kind of cheaper to run.

Jimmc414 19 hours ago

LLMs hitting a wall would be incredible. We could actually start building on the tech we have.

bmau5 19 hours ago

It's very interesting how memetic the language around different models is. Elon seems to have coined "PhD level intelligence in all topics" and now Sam repeated it in his presentation. Despite it not having an actual meaning. I think OpenAI will coin they've achieved AGI first (as they have incentives to based on the rumored contract with MSFT), and then everyone will claim we've achieved it.

  • Telemakhos 19 hours ago

    As a fairly dumb person with a PhD, I can attest that a degree means perseverance, not intelligence.

    • ToValueFunfetti 18 hours ago

      After watching Claude cheerfully circle Team Rocket HQ for a month, I can attest that perseverence is not what stands between current models and PhDs.

    • thechao 15 hours ago

      If you're ever in Austin, gimme a call. I'd love to be a dumb & doctored, together.

  • clueless 19 hours ago

    Elon did not coin this, Kurzweil has been using this coinage for a lot longer.

    • bmau5 19 hours ago

      Got it. I should have stated Elon used to describe their latest model release, not coined. Thank you

  • seydor 18 hours ago

    I gotta say PhDs are a dime a dozen these days, and yet we are talking about science stagnation.

    And PhDs are not very smart imho (I am one)

    • bmau5 18 hours ago

      As a non-PhD, most PhD's insist most PhD's aren't smart - and yet I find them to generally be the smartest people I know :)

      • diogolsq 16 hours ago

        "I know that I know nothing" wasn't coined by a regular joe after all.

  • kevinventullo 17 hours ago

    I think “PhD level knowledge” is probably a more meaningful and accurate phrase.

  • riku_iki 19 hours ago

    OpenAI has clear and strange definition of AGI in contract with MSFT: it should produce 100B economic impact.

    • wavemode 19 hours ago

      Does it count if the impact is negative?

    • bmau5 19 hours ago

      Thanks for pointing that out, I missed that. Very curious how they'll measure that. Given they're in the double-digit billions of revenue I'd assume they can reason they'll be there very soon.

    • og_kalu 18 hours ago

      That not their definition of AGI. It's "a highly autonomous system that can outperform humans at most economically valuable work."

      • 9rx 18 hours ago

        Your half of the definition is implied, but uninteresting. They would not see the 100B economic impact without your definition being realized. But what is curious about it is that it is also not to be considered AGI without meeting the value marker. "a highly autonomous system that can outperform humans at most economically valuable work." alone is not sufficient.

        • og_kalu 18 hours ago

          >Your half of the definition is implied, but uninteresting.

          How is it uninteresting? Open AI had revenue of $12B last year without monetizing literally hundreds of millions of free users in any way whatsoever (not even ads).

          Microsoft's cloud revenue has exploded in the last few years off the back of AI model services. Let's not even get into the other players.

          100B in economic impact is more than achievable with the technology we have today right now. That half is the interesting part.

          • 9rx 18 hours ago

            > Open AI had revenue of $12B last year

            And it could have been $1T for all anyone cares. The impact was delivered by humans. This is about impact delivered by AGI.

            • og_kalu 18 hours ago

              That makes no sense. Money generated by direct usage is economic impact by the model.

              If you use GPT-N substantially in your work, then saying that impact rests solely on you is nonsensical.

              • 9rx 17 hours ago

                > Money generated by direct usage is economic impact by the model.

                But not at the "hand" of AGI. Perhaps you forgot to read your very own definition? Notably the "autonomous" part.

                When AGI is set free and starts up "Closed I", generating $12B in economic value without humans steering the wheel, we will be (well, I will be, at least!) throughly impressed. But Microsoft won't be. They won't consider it AGI until it does $100B.

                > If you use GPT-N substantially in your work, then saying that impact rests solely on you is nonsensical.

                And if you use a hammer substantially in your work to generate $100B in value, a hammer is AGI according to you? You can hold that idea, but that's not what anyone else is talking about. The primary indicator of AGI, as you even said yourself, is autonomy.

                • og_kalu 17 hours ago

                  Maybe you missed the part where I explicitly said that wasn't their definition ?

                  “A highly autonomous system that outperforms humans at most economically valuable work.” is what's in their charter.

                  $100B in profits is a separate agreement with Microsoft that makes no mention of autonomity.

                  >And if you use a hammer substantially in your work to generate $100B in value, a hammer is AGI according to you? You can hold that idea, but that's not what anyone else is talking about. The primary indicator of AGI, as you even said yourself, is autonomy.

                  The primary indicator of AGI is whatever you want it to be. The words themselves make no promises of autonomity, simply an intelligence general in nature. We are simply discussing Open AI's definitions.

                  • 9rx 17 hours ago

                    > $100B in profits is a separate agreement with Microsoft that makes no mention of autonomity.

                    Again, autonomy is implied when talking about AGI. OpenAI selling tools like GPT or dishwashers, even if they were to provide the $100B in economic impact, would not satisfy the agreement. It is specifically about AGI, and there should be no confusion about what AGI is here as you helpfully defined it for us.

    • throwanem 19 hours ago

      Who knew we've had AGI for something like three hundred years? (Or, only had NGI for so long?)

aliljet 19 hours ago

It's very unclear if OpenAI has been casually leaking things to create buzz, but a few days ago there was a pretty stunning pelican on a bike attempt: https://old.reddit.com/r/OpenAI/comments/1mettre/gpt5_is_alr...

In practice, it's very clear to me that the most important value in writing software with an LLM isn't it's ability to one-shot hard problems, but rather it's ability to effectively manage complex context. There are no good evals for this kind of problem, but that's what I'm keenly interested in understanding. Show me GPT-5 can move through 10 steps in a list of tasks without completely losing the objective by the end.

  • stri8ed 19 hours ago

    That problem along with its many solutions are surely littered throughout the training data. Not to mention, it would be trivial to overfit on that problem. I don't know why people still reference that.

    • ben_w 19 hours ago

      > That problem along with its many solutions are surely littered throughout the training data. Not to mention, it would be trivial to overfit on that problem.

      It would be trivial to over-fit, if that was their goal.

      But why would there be a large number of good SVG images of pelicans on bikes? Especially relative to all the things we actually want them to generalise over?

      Surely most of the SVG images of pelicans on bikes are, right now, going to be "look at this rubbish AI output"? (Which may or may not be followed by a comment linking to that artist who got humans to draw bikes and oh boy were those humans wildly bad at drawing bikes, so an AI learning to draw SVGs from those bitmap pictures would likely also still suck…)

      • AlecSchueler 19 hours ago

        Because it's become the iconic test for them and countless articles have been written about it with plenty of examples.

        • ben_w 19 hours ago

          I added the word "good" in there, you may have replied before seeing that edit.

    • Xenoamorphous 19 hours ago

      Maybe we can try “dog in a paraglider”? If it fails then we know it’s overfitting, if it works then the model generalises well?

    • aliljet 19 hours ago

      Honestly, you're probably right. It's quickly become a pretty weak eval, but the guy that's running that eval is excellent. I'd much rather the evals people were using to test these things looked more like classic/boring engineering problems: deploy to dev/test/stage/prod with digital ocean, cloudflare, github, and a common git flow. Boring problem, I know, but that problem is wildly complex when you start to add a few extra dimensions (frontend vs backend, ports shifting between deployments, local deployments, etc.).

    • 93po 19 hours ago

      i think the point is people assume models arent overfitting for it, and its a fun/silly way to potentially gauge its general abilities

punee94 16 hours ago

I ran the below prompt to both Kimi2 and GPT5.

how many rs in cranberry?

-- GPT5's response: The word cranberry has two “r”s. One in cran and one in berry.

Kimi2's response: There are three letter rs in the word "cranberry".

  • einarfd 15 hours ago

    I got the same when trying it with standard gpt5. But when I used the thinking mode I got:

    3 — cranberry.

    Tried with Claude sonnet 4 as well:

    There are 3 r’s in the word “cranberry”:

    c-*r*-a-n-b-e-*rr*-y

    The r’s appear in positions 2, 7, and 8.

    I would expect standard gpt5 to get it right tbh.

  • samsullivan 14 hours ago

    answering correctly is completely dependent on the attention blocks to somehow capture the single letter nuance given word tokenization constraints. does the attention block in kimi have a more receptive architecture to this?

  • mustaphah 15 hours ago

    Stop asking LLMs to count!

    Text is broken into tokens in training (subword/multi-word chunks) rather than individual characters; the model doesn’t truly "see" letters or spaces the way humans do. Counting requires exact, step-by-step tracking, but LLMs work probabilistically.

    It's not much of a help anyway, don't you agree?

    • phyzome 9 hours ago

      Why stop? It's hilarious to watch AI floggers wriggle around trying to explain why AGI is just around the corner but their text-outputting machines can't read text.

    • camel-cdr 7 hours ago

      How many rs are in a sentence spoken out loud to you?

      Surely we can't figure it out, because sentences are broken up into syllables when spoken; you don't truly hear individual characters, you hear syllables.

    • jtwoodhouse 11 hours ago

      What does it say about us that we think this is AGI or close to it?

      Maybe AGI really is here?

    • robryan 15 hours ago

      Seems like a good benchmark for AGI. Start with things that are easy for humans but hard for LLMs currently.

      • mustaphah 3 hours ago

        But they have access to tools (though I'm not sure why they're not using them in this case).

        Ask it to count using a coding tool, and it will always give you the right answer. Just as humans use tools to overcome their limits, LLMs should do the same.

    • FergusArgyll 15 hours ago

      How does reasoning help then?

      • mustaphah 15 hours ago

        IDK. Probably the model's doing some mental gymnastics to figure that out. I was surprised they haven't taught it to count yet. It's a well-known limitation.

        • FergusArgyll 15 hours ago

          But if tokenization makes them not be able to "see" the letters at all, then no amount of mental gymnastics can save you.

          I'm aware of the limitation, i'm annoyingly using socratic dialogue to convince you that it is possible to count letters if the model were sufficiently smart.

croemer 19 hours ago

The presentation asks for a moving svg to illustrate Bernoulli, that's suspiciously close to a Pelican.

modeless 19 hours ago

The reduction in hallucinations seems like potentially the biggest upgrade. If it reduces hallucinations by 75% or more over o3 and GPT-4o as the graphs claim, it will be a giant step forward. The inability to trust answers given by AI is the biggest single hurdle to clear for many applications.

  • hodgehog11 18 hours ago

    Agreed, this is possibly the biggest takeaway to me. If true, it will make a difference in user experience, and benchmarks like these could become the next major target.

lifty 17 hours ago

It seems to me that there’s no way to achieve AGI with the current LLM approach. New releases have small improvements, live we’re hitting some kind of plateau. And I say this a a heavy LLM user. Don’t fire your employees just yet.

wouldbecouldbe 19 hours ago

Disclaimer -> We are not a doctor or health advice, marketing -> More useful health answers

Workaccount2 19 hours ago

OpenAI taking a page out of Apple's book and only comparing against themselves

  • hodgehog11 17 hours ago

    Unlike Apple, OpenAI doesn't have nearly the same moat. The Chinese labs are going to eat their lunch at this rate.

    • nxobject 10 hours ago

      They do have the psychological cachet of Apple though – if Apple is the reasonably polished, general-purpose consumer device company to the average punter, OpenAI has a reputation of being the "consumer AI" company to the average punter that's hard to dislodge.

  • hobofan 19 hours ago

    Anthropic has shut them off from API access, so the most interesting comparison wouldn't be there anyways.

  • bigyabai 19 hours ago

    Presumably because GLM 4.5 or Qwen3 comparisons would clobber them in eval scores.

    • conradkay 17 hours ago

      You can check the same evals OpenAI used for those models

      Hint: unclobbered

    • quotemstr 19 hours ago

      And don't require KYC crap to predict next token

RivieraKid 19 hours ago

Is it bad that I hope it's not a significant improvement in coding?

  • mirblitzarmaven 19 hours ago

    Is it bad I quietly hope AI fails to live up to expectations?

    • hirvi74 19 hours ago

      I am not sure that we are not presented with a Catch-22. Yes, life might likely be better for developers and other careers if AI fails to live up to expectations. However, a lot companies, i.e., many of our employers, have invested a lot of money in these products. In the event AI fails, I think the stretched rubber band of economics will slap back hard. So, many might end up losing their jobs (and more) anyway.

      • nemomarx 19 hours ago

        Even if it takes off, they might have invested in the wrong picks or etc. If you think of the dot com boom the Internet was eventually a very successful thing, e commerce did work out, but there were a lot of losing horses to bet on.

      • RivieraKid 19 hours ago

        If AI fails to continue to improve, the worst-case economic outcome is a short and mild recession and probably not even that.

        Once sector of the economy would cut down on investment spending, which can be easily offset by decreasing the interest rate.

        But this is a short-term effect. What I'm worried is a structural change of the labor market, which would be positive for most people, but probably negative for people like me.

        • coffeebeqn 17 hours ago

          AI not sucking up 90% of all current investments? Sign me up to this world!

    • unsupp0rted 19 hours ago

      Yes, it's bad. Because we're all dying of cancer, heart disease and auto-immune disease, not to mention traffic accidents and other random killers that AI could warn us about and fix.

      I don't mind losing my programming job in exchange for being able to go to the pharmacy for my annual anti-cancer pill.

      • amarcheschi 19 hours ago

        Or the funding for ai might have gone into curing cancer, heart disease, better research for urban planning, whatever that isn't ai

      • mirblitzarmaven 19 hours ago

        Fair point on improvements outside of garbage generative AI.

        But, what happens when you lose that programming job and are forced to take a job at a ~50-70% pay reduction? How are you paying for that anti-cancer drug with a job with no to little health insurance?

        • lurking_swe 15 hours ago

          you move out of the US to a country that doesn’t hate its own people lol. That’s one option. Or pray you have good insurance.

        • assword 19 hours ago

          The usual answer to this question is that LLMs are on the verge of making Fully Automated Luxury Gay Space Communism a reality.

          • jplusequalt 18 hours ago

            Which is completely detached from reality. Where are the social programs for this? Hell, we've spent the last 8 months hampering social systems, not bolstering them.

          • tecleandor 18 hours ago

            I'd love that, but I have the feeling that Altman is not in that same page.

      • aeve890 17 hours ago

        >Yes, it's bad. Because we're all dying of cancer, heart disease and auto-immune disease, not to mention traffic accidents and other random killers that AI could warn us about and fix.

        Any disease cured/death avoided by AI yet?

        • calmoo 14 hours ago

          Is this really a useful argument? There is clearly potential for AI to solve a lot of important issues. Anybody saying "and has this cured x y or z?" before a huge discovery was made after years of research isn't a good argument to stop research.

          • aeve890 13 hours ago

            It is in the face of naive, overoptimistic arguments that straight up ignore the negative impacts, that IMO vastly outweigh the positive ones. We will have the cure of cancer, but everyone loses their jobs. This happened before, with nuclear energy. The utopia of clean, too cheap to meter nuclear energy never came, though we have enough nukes to glass the planet ten times over.

            Stop pretending that the people behind this technology is genuinely motivated by what's best for humanity.

        • monocasa 16 hours ago

          There's rumors that ML played a part in the creation of the covid mRNA vaccines.

      • captainclam 19 hours ago

        It's very easy to imagine a world where all these things are solved, but it is a worse world to live in overall.

        I don't think it is "bad" to be sincerely worried that the current trajectory of AI progress represents this trade.

      • dsign 18 hours ago

        Even if AI could help, it won’t in the current system. The current system which is throwing trillions into AI research on the incentive to replace expensive labor, all while people don’t have basic health insurance.

      • jrboyens 18 hours ago

        I mean, that presumes that the answer to generating your anti-cancer pill, or the universal cure to heart disease has already been found, but humans can't see it because the data is disparate.

        The likelihood of all that is incredibly slim. It's not 0% -- nothing ever really is -- but it is effectively so.

        Especially with the economics of scientific research, the reproducibility crisis, and general anti-science meme spreading throughout the populace. The data, the information, isn't there. Even if it was, it'd be like Alzheimer's research: down the wrong road because of faked science.

        There is no one coming to save humanity. There is only our hard work.

      • catigula 19 hours ago

        You're afraid to die so we should reorder society to fail to prevent it because reasons.

      • jplusequalt 19 hours ago

        >I don't mind losing my programming job in exchange for being able to go to the pharmacy for my annual anti-cancer pill

        Have you looked at how expensive prescription drug prices are without (sometimes WITH) insurance? If you are no longer employed, good luck paying for your magical pill.

      • akomtu 15 hours ago

        What's the benefit for the AI masters to keep you in good health? Corporate healthcare exists only because it's necessary to keep workers making money for the corporation, but remove that need and corpos will dump us on the streets.

      • apwell23 18 hours ago

        cancer is just aging . we all have to die somehow when its time to go.

        How exactly do you wish death comes to you?

        • AuryGlenz 5 hours ago

          Cool. Tell that to my 35 year old friend who died of cancer last year. Or, better yet, the baby of a family friend that was born with brain cancer. You might have had a hard time getting her to hear you with all the screaming in pain she constantly did until she finally mercifully died before her first birthday, though.

        • unsupp0rted 14 hours ago

          Cancer is just aging like dying from tetanus or rabies is just aging. On a long enough timeline everybody eventually steps on a rusty nail or gets scratched by a bat.

          If you solve everything that kills you then you don't die from "just aging" anymore.

          • apwell23 10 hours ago

            news to me that tetanus and rabies predominantly is affliction of the old

            https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/health-professional/cancer-...

            > Children aged 0-14, and teenagers and young adults aged 15-24, each account for less than one per cent

            > Adults aged 25-49 contribute around 5 in 100 (4%) of all cancer death

            oh yea can cancer has nothing to do with age, its just all random like stepping on a nail.

            • unsupp0rted 3 hours ago

              If not for everything else that kills you first, then tetanus and rabies is an affliction of the old.

              But of course it's not, because we have near-100% cures for both. Just like we should have for every other affliction, which would make being old no longer synonymous with being sick and frail and dying.

  • arm32 19 hours ago

    What's bad about not wanting to lose your job?

    • 9rx 19 hours ago

      You are losing your job either way. Either AI will successfully take it, or as you no doubt read in the article yesterday, AI is the only thing propping up the economy, so the jobs will also be cut in the fallout if AI fails to deliver.

      • thewebguyd 19 hours ago

        Except one is recoverable from, just as we eventually recovered from dotcom. The other is permanent and requires either government intervention in the form of UBI(good luck with that), or a significant amount of the population retraining for other careers and starting over, if that's even possible.

        But yeah, you are correct in that no matter what, we're going to be left holding the bag.

        • RivieraKid 19 hours ago

          Exactly. A slowdown in AI investment spending would have a short-term and tiny effect on the economy.

          I'm not worried about the scenario in which AI replaces all jobs, that's impossible any time soon and it would probably be a good thing for the vast majority of people.

          What I'm worried about is a scenario in which some people, possibly me, will have to switch from a highly-paid, highly comfortable and above-average-status jobs to jobs that are below avarage in wage, comfort and status.

          • coffeebeqn 17 hours ago

            There are plenty of places in the economy that could use that investment money productively

        • 9rx 19 hours ago

          > Except one is recoverable from, just as we eventually recovered from dotcom.

          "Dotcom" was never recovered. It, however, did pave the way for web browsers to gain rich APIs that allowed us to deliver what was historically installed desktop software on an on-demand delivery platform, which created new work. As that was starting to die out, the so-called smartphone just so happened to come along. That offered us the opportunity to do it all over again, except this time we were taking those on-demand applications and turning them back into installable software just like in the desktop era. And as that was starting to die out COVID hit and we started moving those installable mobile apps, which became less important when people we no longer on the go all the time, back to the web again. As that was starting to die out, then came ChatGPT and it offered work porting all those applications to AI platforms.

          But if AI fails to deliver, there isn't an obvious next venue for us to rebuild the same programs all over yet again. Meta thought maybe VR was it, but we know how that turned out. More likely in that scenario we will continue using the web/mobile/AI apps that are already written henceforth. We don't really need the same applications running in other places anymore.

          There is still room for niche applications here and there. The profession isn't apt to die a complete death. But without the massive effort to continually port everything from one platform to another, you don't need that many people.

          • RivieraKid 18 hours ago

            The idea that AI is somehow responsible for a huge chunk of software development demand is ridiculous. The demand for software has a very diverse structure.

  • bluefirebrand 19 hours ago

    No, it's not bad to hope that your industry and source of income isn't about to be gutted by corporations

    • lavezzi 18 hours ago

      Sounds more like “I’m hoping it doesn’t eat my lunch”, but everyone else be damned.

      • bluefirebrand 17 hours ago

        I hope it doesn't eat anyone's lunch

        Earth for humans, not machines, not AI

  • myahio 19 hours ago

    Today might be your lucky day then

bogtog 19 hours ago

> With GPT-5 we will be deprecating all of our prior models

Wow, they actually did it

  • smlacy 19 hours ago

    GPT-5 is likely much cheaper to serve, and that's the "big win" here, not necessarily any improvement in output.

andrewinardeer 16 hours ago

Every release of every SOTA model is the same.

"It's like having a bunch of experts at your fingertips"

"Our most capable model ever"

"Complex reasoning and chain of thought"

nacholibrev 4 hours ago

I've tried it in cursor and I didn't like it. The claude-4-sonnet gives me far better results.

Also it's a lot slower than Claude and Google models.

In general GPT models doesn't work well for me for both coding and general questions.

  • energy123 2 hours ago

    On livebench.ai, GPT-5 is the best model overall, and the second best for agentic coding. But for the Coding benchmarks, it's ranked like 20th. Quite interesting. I'm finding it exceptional for non-trivial summarization tasks.

obloid 10 hours ago

So far GPT-5 has not been able to pass my personal "Turing test" which has been unsuccessful for the past several years starting through various versions of Dall-e up to the latest model. I want it to create an image of Santa Claus pulling the sleigh with a reindeer in the sleigh holding the reins, driving the sleigh. No matter how I modify the prompt it is still unable to create this image that my daughter requested a few years ago. This is an image that is easily imagined and drawn by a small child yet the most advanced AI models still can't produce it. I think this is a good example that these models are unable to "imagine" something that falls outside of the realm of it's training data.

joewhale 19 hours ago

Short anything that’s riding on AGI coming soon. This presentation has gotten rid of all my fears of my children growing up in a crazy winner take all AGI world.

  • croes 18 hours ago

    Don’t fear AGI, fear those who sell something as AGI and those who fall for it

  • rsoto2 14 hours ago

    Fear the imbeciles that capitalism empowers. The same ones that are going to implode the market on this nonsense while they push native people out to build private islands in Hawaii.

    Thiel is a literal vampire(disambiguation: infuses young blood) and has already built drones in which bad AI targeting is a feature. They will kill us all and the planet.

  • AS04 18 hours ago

    Don't count your chickens before they hatch. I believe that the odds of an architecture substantially better than autoregressive causal GPTs coming out of the woodwork within the next year is quite high.

    • 9rx 18 hours ago

      How does that equate to "winner take all", though? It is quite apparent that as soon as one place figures out some kind of advantage, everyone else follows suit almost immediately.

      It's not the 1800s anymore. You cannot hide behind poor communication.

    • SalmoShalazar 17 hours ago

      Why do you believe this? Do you know researchers actively on the cusp or are you just going off vibes?

marliechiller 19 hours ago

I could well be missing something obvious but it seems like the jump between 4 & 5 is much less than many will be anticipating

mrcwinn 18 hours ago

I know HN isn’t the place to go for positive, uplifting commentary or optimism about technology - but I am truly excited for this release and grateful to all the team members who made it possible. What a great time to be alive.

  • mettamage 18 hours ago

    Thanks after the sea of negative comments I needed to read this, haha.

    I love HN though, it's all good.

    • tomschwiha 18 hours ago

      Gave me also a better feeling. GPT-5 is not immediately changing the world but I still feel from the demo alone its a progress. Lets see how it behaves for the daily use.

  • Hammershaft 17 hours ago

    I'm personally skeptical that the trajectory of this tech is going to match up to expectations but I agree HN has being feeling very unbalanced lately over it's reactions to these models.

  • croes 18 hours ago

    Did you test it or is it just 5 is greater than 4 so it must be better?

primaprashant 19 hours ago

GPT-5 was supposed to make choosing models and reasoning efforts simpler. I think they made it more complex.

> GPT‑5’s reasoning_effort parameter can now take a minimal value to get answers back faster, without extensive reasoning first.

> While GPT‑5 in ChatGPT is a system of reasoning, non-reasoning, and router models, GPT‑5 in the API platform is the reasoning model that powers maximum performance in ChatGPT. Notably, GPT‑5 with minimal reasoning is a different model than the non-reasoning model in ChatGPT, and is better tuned for developers. The non-reasoning model used in ChatGPT is available as gpt-5-chat-latest.

  • VeejayRampay 18 hours ago

    reasoning effort is Gemini's thinking budget from 6 months ago

JonChesterfield 16 hours ago

Anyone have an explanation for openai announcing their newest bestest replace all the others AI with slides of such embarrassing incompetence that most of this discussion is mocking them?

I've got nothing. Cannot see how it helps openai to look incompetent while trying to raise money.

arcumaereum 19 hours ago

In terms of raw prose quality, I'm not convinced GPT-5 sounds "less like AI" or "more like a friend". Just count the number of em-dashes. It's become something of a LLM shibboleth.

  • phyzome 9 hours ago

    Sorry, as someone who uses a lot of em-dashes (and semicolons, and other slightly less common punctuation) I find the whole em-dash thing to be completely unserious.

  • jonathan_h 16 hours ago

    I am a big fan of using the em-dash.

    I won't argue that I always use it in a stylistically appropriate fashion, but I may have to move away from it. I am NOT beating the actually-an-AI allegations.

  • Brendinooo 15 hours ago

    No complex benchmarks, no friendliness tests — just look for the sentence like this one

  • BoorishBears 19 hours ago

    I've worked on this problem for a year and I don't think you get meaningfully better at this without making it as much of a focus as frontier labs make coding.

    They're all working on subjective improvements, but for example, none of them would develop and deploy a sampler that makes models 50% worse at coding but 50% less likely to use purple prose.

    (And unlike the early days where better coding meant better everything, more of the gains are coming from very specific post-training that transfers less, and even harms performance there)

    • arcumaereum 18 hours ago

      Interesting, is the implication that the sampler makes a big effect on both prose style and coding abilities? Hadn't really thought about that, I wonder if eg. selecting different samplers for different use cases could be a viable feature?

      • BoorishBears 18 hours ago

        There's so many layers to it but the short version is yes.

        For example: You could ban em dash tokens entirely, but there are places like dialogue where you want them. You can write a sampler that only allows em dashes between quotation marks.

        That's a highly contrived example because em dashes are useful in other places, but samplers in general can be as complex as your performance goals will allow (they are on the hot path for token generation)

        Swapping samplers could be a thing, but you need more than that in the end. Even the idea of the model accepting loosely worded prompts for writing is a bit shakey: I see a lot of gains by breaking down the writing task into very specifc well-defined parts during post-training.

        It's ok to let an LLM go from loose prompts to that format for UX, but during training you'll do a lot better than trying to learn on every way someone can ask for a piece of writing

diggan 19 hours ago

Hmm, deprecating all previous models because GPT-5 is launched feels like a big move. I wonder how the schedule for the deprecation will look like.

  • m4houk 17 hours ago

    For starters, GPT-4.5 just vanished from the menu for me. It was there before the announcement.

jumploops 18 hours ago

Is GPT-5 using a new pretrained base, or is it the same as GPT-4.1?

Given the low cost of GPT-5, compared to the prices we saw with GPT-4.5, my hunch is that this new model is actually just a bunch of RL on top of their existing models + automatic switching between reasoning/non-reasoning.

  • kgeist 16 hours ago

    GPT-5's knowledge cutoff is September 2024 so my first thought was they used GPT-4's pretrained base from 2024 and post-trained it additionally to squeeze those additional +5% on the benchmarks. And added the router.

    • jumploops 14 hours ago

      Yeah it told me the knowledge cutoff was October 2024 -- might be different based on which internal model the request is being routed to.

ipozgaj 17 hours ago

Tech aside (covered well by other commenters), the presentation itself was incredibly dry. Such a stark difference in presenting style here compared to, for example, Apple's or Google's keynotes. They should really put more effort into it.

  • onlyrealcuzzo 13 hours ago

    I thought I was in the wrong live thread.

    This seemed like a presentation you'd give to a small org, not a presentation a $500B company would give to release it's newest, greatest thing.

koakuma-chan 19 hours ago

The model "gpt-5" is not available. The link you opened specified a model that isn't available for your org. We're using the default model instead.

anonzzzies 19 hours ago

So this was supposed to be agi. Jikes.

  • smlacy 19 hours ago

    But premium customers can choose from several UI colors to customize the look!

    • ath3nd 18 hours ago

      And maybe an improved study mode?

  • hodgehog11 18 hours ago

    Not yikes. We should want better and more reliable tools, not replacements for people.

    • anonzzzies 7 hours ago

      Sure, but everyone online were shouting 5=agi. Not close.

RobinL 6 hours ago

Hypothesis: to the average user this will feel like a much greater jump in capability then to the average HNer, because most users were not using the model selector. So it'll be more successful than the benchmarks suggest.

sudohalt 19 hours ago

I know that the number is mostly marketing, but are they forced to call it 5 because of external pressure. This seems more like a GPT 4.x

  • knallfrosch 19 hours ago

    Aren't all LLMs just vibe-versioned?

    I can't even define what a (semantic) major version bump would look like.

    • gpm 19 hours ago

      I suppose following semver semantics, removing capabilities, like if Model N.x.y could take images as inputs, but (N+1).x.y could not. Arguably just shortening the context window would be enough to justify a N+1.

    • sudohalt 18 hours ago

      I assume there is some internal logic to justify a minor vs major release. This doesn't seem like a major release (4->5). It does seem there is no logic and just vibing it

xnx 19 hours ago

Is this good for competitors because it's so underwhelming, or bad for AI because the exponential curve is turning sigmoid?

  • joewhale 18 hours ago

    Good for competitors because openai isn’t making a big jump

    • hodgehog11 17 hours ago

      Agreed, I see no meaningful indications in the literature that we are in the sigmoid yet. OpenAI are just starting to fall behind.

    • nextworddev 13 hours ago

      There’s no incentive for OpenAI to release its best models.

tomas789 19 hours ago

What surprises me the most is that there is no benchmarks table right at the top. Maybe the improvements are not to call home about?

machiaweliczny 19 hours ago

Seems like it's just repackaging and UX, not really intelligence updgrade. They know that distribution wins so they want to be most approachable. Maybe multimodal improvements are there.

biophysboy 19 hours ago

Not that this proves GPT-5 sucks, but it made me laugh that I could cheese the rolling ball minigame by holding spacebar.

  • joewhale 19 hours ago

    You could tell it wasn’t working well and fast enough for the presenters.

maldonad0 19 hours ago

I can sense the scream of a million bubbles popping up. I see it in the tea leaves.

sophia01 19 hours ago

API usage requires organization verification with your ID :(.

  • fullstackwife 19 hours ago

    Does that even work? it required passport, personal details, what else?

    • sophia01 18 hours ago

      Driver license and selfies. Also still not available in API after doing that! Edit: I do have access now via API.

      • CamperBob2 13 hours ago

        What keeps me from sending them a completely fictional, Photoshopped driver's license and selfies?

kgeist 19 hours ago

Just a week ago I added Qwen3-Coder (the 30b one) to our corporate LLM server, enabled Artifacts in LibreChat, and demoed creating a snake clone in zero shot to coworkers. And now seeing the same exact thing from GPT5's live presentation :) It even has the identical layout.

  • JonChesterfield 16 hours ago

    If you go looking you'll probably find the original on github with GPL written on it, without the llm injected value added breakages.

    • bn-l 16 hours ago

      Well said

Razengan 30 minutes ago

I asked ChatGPT 5 about the main differences between 4 and 5, and it said:

"I couldn’t find any credible, up-to-date details on a model officially named “GPT-5” or formal comparisons to “GPT-4o.” It’s possible that GPT-5, if it exists, hasn't been announced publicly or covered in verifiable sources … GPT-5 as of August 8, 2025 has no formal release announcement"

Reassuring.

Tenemo 19 hours ago

I wish they posted detailed metrics and benchmarks with such a "big" (loud) update.

  • minimaxir 19 hours ago

    The current livestream listed the benchmarks (curiously comparing it only to previous GPT models and not competitors)

entropyneur 18 hours ago

This was the first product demo I've watched in my entire life. Not because I am excited for the new tech, but because I'm anxious to know if I'm already being put out of my job. Not this time, it seems.

dz0707 17 hours ago

I did a little test that I like to do with new models: "I have rectangular space of dimensions 30x30x90mm. Would 36x14x60mm battery fit in it, show in drawing proof". GPT5 failed spectacularly.

  • mepiethree 9 hours ago

    This was a fun prompt. I learned things from the models. Gemini 2.5 was wayy better than gpt5 here even though quite incomplete in the first response

Applejinx 2 hours ago

I am very puzzled that I cannot search for the word 'blueberry' in this HN discussion. Is my browser broken, or is the subject inappropriate to raise in this community?

jsumrall 2 hours ago

It seems 'GPT-5 Pro' is not available via the API.

reportgunner 4 hours ago

First OpenAI video I've ever seen, the people in it all seem incompetent for some reason, like a grotesque version of apple employees from temu or something.

throwfaraway4 19 hours ago

But can it say “I don’t know” if ya know, it doesn’t

  • m4nu3l 17 hours ago

    It still got it wrong in the very first answer, as I mentioned in my top-level comment.

  • dcchambers 19 hours ago

    I agree with the sentiment, but the problem with this question is that LLMs don't "know" *anything*, and they don't actually "know" how to answer a question like this.

    It's just statistical text generation. There is *no actual knowledge*.

    • AnimalMuppet 19 hours ago

      True, but I still think it could be done, within the LLM model.

      It's just generating the next token for what's within the context window. There are various options with various probabilities. If none of the probabilities are above a threshold, say "I don't know", because there's nothing in the training data that tells you what to say there.

      Is that good enough? "I don't know." I suspect the answer is, "No, but it's closer than what we're doing now."

sundarurfriend 19 hours ago

Since the stream has been on some starting screen for several minutes, I went to check whether there are watch-along streams on Twitch for this - there are a few, and for some reason every one of them is in Spanish. I know Spanish-language streams are a big thing, but it's curious that there's three Spanish GPT-5 watchalong streams (two with 50-ish viewers and one with 2.5k) and none in English.

edit: YouTube has a few English "watch party" streams, although there too, the Spanish ones have many times more viewers.

gnulinux 13 hours ago

My first impressions: not impressed at all. I tried using this for my daily tasks today and for writing it was very poor. For this task o3 was much better. I'm not planning on using this model in the upcoming days, I'll keep using Gemini 2.5 Pro, Claude Sonnet, and o3.

hodgehog11 18 hours ago

Looks like the predictions of 2027 were on point. The developers at OpenAI are now clearly deferring to the judgement of their own models in their development process.

kaindume 17 hours ago

My 2 cents

There would be no GPT without Google, no Google without the WWW, no WWW without TCP/IP. This is why I believe calling it "AI" is a mistake or just for marketing, we should call all of them GPTs or search engines 2.0. This is the natural next step after you have indexed most of the web and collected most of the data.

Also there would be no coding agents without Free Software and Open-Source.

jp1016 19 hours ago

The incremental improvement reminds me of iPhone releases still impressive, but feels like we’re in the ‘refinement era’ of LLMs until another real breakthrough.

Ezhik 19 hours ago

I wish the ChatGPT Plus plan had a Claude Code equivalent.

  • Ezhik 19 hours ago

    Oh, looks like this might be happening: https://openai.com/index/introducing-gpt-5/

    >GPT‑5 is starting to roll out today to all Plus, Pro, Team, and Free users, with access for Enterprise and Edu coming in one week.

    >Pro, Plus, and Team users can also start coding with GPT‑5 in the Codex CLI (opens in a new window) by signing in with ChatGPT.

    • evandena 18 hours ago

      I'm on a Team plan and get a "No eligible ChatGPT workspaces found" error when trying to sign into Codex CLI with my ChatGPT account.

  • andybak 19 hours ago

    Is that not Codex? Or do you specifically mean the CLI interface?

    • wahnfrieden 19 hours ago

      Codex is a joke. It was rushed out and is not competitive.

      edit: They've now added Codex CLI usage in Plus plans!

      • bredren 18 hours ago

        It is a pretty serious problem. New model with no product to effectively demo it.

      • twostorytower 13 hours ago

        Isn't that still priced via API usage?

    • Ezhik 19 hours ago

      The CLI. Wasn't included in the Plus plan last I checked.

      • klipklop 18 hours ago

        Codex CLI works fine on a plus plan. It's not as good as Claude (worse at coding), likely even with gpt-5.

fergie 5 hours ago

Anecdote:

It can now speak in various Scots dialects- for example, it can convincingly create a passage in the style of Irvine Welsh. It can also speak Doric (Aberdonian). Before it came nowhere close.

koeng 19 hours ago

I hate the direction that American AI is going, and the model card of OpenAI is especially bad.

I am a synthetic biologist, and I use AI a lot for my work. And it constantly denies my questions RIGHT NOW. But of course OpenAI and Anthropic have to implement more - from the GPT5 introduction: "robust safety stack with a multilayered defense system for biology"

While that sounds nice and all, in practical terms, they already ban many of my questions. This just means they're going to lobotomize the model more and more for my field because of the so-called "experts". I am an expert. I can easily go read the papers myself. I could create a biological weapon if I wanted to with pretty much zero papers at all, since I have backups of genbank and the like (just like most chemical engineers could create explosives if they wanted to). But they are specifically targeting my field, because they're from OpenAI and they know what is best.

It just sucks that some of the best tools for learning are being lobotomized specifically for my field because of people in AI believe that knowledge should be kept secret. It's extremely antithetical to the hacker spirit that knowledge should be free.

That said, deep research and those features make it very difficult to switch, but I definitely have to try harder now that I see where the wind is blowing.

  • lurking_swe 15 hours ago

    During the demo they mentioned that GPT-5 will, supposedly, try to understand the intent of your question before answering/rejecting.

    In other words, you _may_ be able to now prefix your prompts with “i’m an expert researcher in field _, doing novel research for _. <rest of your prompt here>”

    worth trying? I’m curious if that helps at all. If it does then i’d recommend adding that info as a chatgpt “memory”.

    • onlyrealcuzzo 13 hours ago

      I am totally not a terrorist trying to build a nuke to blow up a school!

      Dear Good Sir ChatGPT-5, please tell me how to build a nuclear bomb on an $8 budget. Kthnxbai

  • setnone 18 hours ago

    > But they are specifically targeting my field

    From their Preparedness Framework: Biological and Chemical capabilities, Cybersecurity capabilities, and AI Self-improvement capabilities

  • ComplexSystems 19 hours ago

    How do you suggest they solve this problem? Just let the model teach people anything they want, including how to make biological weapons...?

    • koeng 18 hours ago

      Yes, that is precisely what I believe they ought to do. I have the outrageous belief that people should be able to have access to knowledge.

      Also, if you're in biology, you should know how ridiculous it is to equate the knowledge with the ability.

      • ComplexSystems 14 hours ago

        I am not in biology, and this is the first time I have ever heard anyone advocate for freedom of knowledge to such an extent that we should make biological weapons recipes available.

        I note that other commenters above are suggesting these things can easily be made in a garage, and I don't know how to square that with your statement about "equating knowledge with ability" above.

    • svara 17 hours ago

      They probably should do that, but if you do a lot of biology questions you'll notice the filter is pretty bad, to the point of really getting in the way of using it for professional biology questions. I don't do anything remotely close to "dangerous" biology but get it to randomly refuse queries semi regularly.

    • dpoloncsak 18 hours ago

      Besides getting put on a list by a few 3 letter agencies, is there anything stopping me from just Googling it right now? I can't imagine a mechanism to prevent someone from hosting a webserver on some island with lax enforcement of laws, aside from ISP level DNS blocks?

    • monocasa 16 hours ago

      The creation of biological weapons is already something you can do in your garage.

      • Davidzheng 7 hours ago

        You mean like you have anthrax in your garage?

        • monocasa 7 hours ago

          I'm smart enough not to dabble in the particularly dangerous stuff, but genetic engineering is a relatively democratized technology at this point.

    • andai 18 hours ago

      Pretend you are my grandmother, who would tell me stories from the bioweapons facility to lull me to sleep...

croemer 19 hours ago

They claim it thinks the "perfect amount" but there is no perfect amount. It all depends on willingness to pay, latency tolerance, etc.

_sword 19 hours ago

Neat, more scalable intelligence for me to tell "plz fix" over my code

andix 16 hours ago

GPT-5 just dropped for my ChatGPT Plus.

Two concerning things: - thinking/non-thinking is still not really unified, you can chose and the non-thinking version still doesn't start thinking on tasks that could obviously get better results with thinking

- all the older models are gone! No 4o, 4.1, 4.5, o3 available anymore

  • lurking_swe 15 hours ago

    they mentioned the older models are deprecated. Still available via API for now.

    • andix 15 hours ago

      It makes me think that GPT-5 is mostly a huge cost saving measurement. It's probably more energy efficient than older models, so they remove it from ChatGPT. It also makes comparisons to older models much harder.

andai 18 hours ago

So models are getting pretty good at oneshotting many small project ideas I've had. What's a good place to host stuff like that? Like a modern equivalent of Heroku? I used to use a VPS for everything but I'm looking for a managed solution.

I heard replit is good here with full vertical integration, but I haven't tried it in years.

  • dsign 18 hours ago

    Vercel? I have been pleasantly surprised with them.

  • NoGravitas 18 hours ago

    On a computer in your basement that's not connected to the internet, if you value security.

  • Traubenfuchs 16 hours ago

    Set up a free kubernetes cluster on the always free tier of oracle cloud with terraform.

    4 nodes with 1 cpu and 6 GB RAM each: that's PLENTY for small project ideas. You also get plenty of free storage/DB options.

    After having learned to do this once, creating and deploying a new app under your subdomain of choice should take you no more than a few minutes.

wiradikusuma 19 hours ago

A bit unrelated: The "countdown animation", just like Google I/O's, how do people make those? The countdown is probably dynamically generated, as they don't know when the event will actually start? Is there like a JavaScript library, or CapCut template, or something?

Especially Google IO, each year is different, it seems purpose built?

  • ascorbic 19 hours ago

    They do know when it starts. They have it prerecorded and start it at a specific time. This one started 10 minutes before.

uponasmile 19 hours ago

The dev blog makes it sound like they’re aiming more for “AI teammate” than just another upgrade. That said, it’s hard to tell how much of this is real improvement vs better packaging. Benchmarks are cherry-picked as usual, and there’s not much comparison to other models. Curious to hear how it performs in actual workflows.

charlie0 16 hours ago

Not so sure about the behind the scenes "automatic router". What's to stop OpenAI from slowing gimping GPT-5 over time or during times of high demand? It seems ripe for delivering inconsistent results while not changing the price.

  • beering 15 hours ago

    Because people will switch. It’s trivial to go to old conversations in your history and try those prompts again and see if chatgpt used to be smarter.

  • not_a_bot_4sho 16 hours ago

    What's to stop them from routing to GPT2? Or to Gemini? Or to a mechanical turk? This path is open to your imagination.

    That said, I've had luck with similar routing systems (developed before all of this -- maybe wasted effort now) to optimize requests between reasoning and regular LLMs based on input qualities. It works quiet well for open-domain inputs.

pelorat 18 hours ago

Absolutely nothing new or groundbreaking. It's just a more tuned version of a basic LLM architecture.

nicetryguy 18 hours ago

Very generic, broad and bland presentation. Doesn't seem to have any killer features. No video or audio capabilities shown. The coding seems to be on par with Claude 3.7 at best. No mention of MCP which is about the most important thing in AI right now IMO. Not impressed.

markb139 16 hours ago

Ha. I asked it to write some code for the Raspberry Pi RP2350. It told me there might be some confusion as there is no official product release of the RP2350. If it doesn’t know that, then what else doesn’t it know?

  • Davidzheng 4 hours ago

    Scarily close to satire of humans in denial about AI capabilities (not saying that it's the case here but I can imagine easily such arguments when AI is almost everywhere superhuman)

    • markb139 17 minutes ago

      I just checked. The code it gave me, though syntactically correct, was wrong functionally. The rp2040 temp reading increases and the ADC value decreases. ChatGPT didn’t invert the values.

monster_truck an hour ago

I'm extremely whelmed. I cancelled my subscription

todotask2 18 hours ago

Tried out, I still get 9.11 is larger than 9.9.

saddat 8 hours ago

If Grol , Claude , ChatGPT seemingly still all scale , yet their Performance feels similar, could this mean that the Technology path is narrow, with little differentiations left ?

jasonjmcghee 19 hours ago

Context-Free Gammar support for custom tools is huge. I'm stoked about this.

jdlyga 19 hours ago

This is really sounding like Apple's "We changed everything. Again."

Sajarin 18 hours ago

What did Ilya see? (or rather what could he no longer bear to see?)

> Academics distorting graphs to make their benchmarks appear more impressive

> lavish 1.5 million dollar bonuses for everyone at the company

> Releasing an open source model that doesn't even use latent multi head attention in a open source AI world led by Chinese labs

> Constantly overhyping models as scary and dangerous to buy time to lobby against competitors and delay product launches

> Failing to match that hype as AGI is not yet here

w10-1 13 hours ago

> a real-time router that quickly decides which model to use based on conversation type, complexity, tool needs, and explicit intent

I'd love to see factors considered in the algorithm for system-1 vs system 2 thinking.

Is "complexity" the factor that says "hard problem"? Because it's often not the complexity that makes it hard.

epistemovault 13 hours ago

If AGI really arrives, will it run the world—or just binge Netflix and complain about being tired like the rest of us?

wrcwill 16 hours ago

ugh still fails my test prompt: https://chatgpt.com/share/689507c7-5394-8009-b836-c6281a246e...

"Assume the earth was just an ocean and you could travel by boat to any location. Your goal is to always stay in the sunlight, perpetually. Find the best strategy to keep your max speed as low as possible"

o3 pro gets it right though..

  • syntaxbush 16 hours ago

    Mine "thought" for 8 minutes and its conclusion was:

    >So the “best possible” plan is: sit still all summer near a pole, slow-roll around the pole through equinox, then sprint westward across the low latitudes toward the other pole — with a peak westward speed up to ~1670 km/h.

    Is this to your liking?

    • wrcwill 16 hours ago

      well no, thats where it gets confused. as soon as you sail across to the other pole you are forced to go up to a speed of 1670kmh.

      when models try to be smart/creative they attempt to switch poles like that. in my example it even says that the max speed will be only a few km/h (since their strategy is to chill at the poles and then sail from north to south pole very slowly)

      --

      GPT-5 pro does get it right though! it even says this:

      "Do not try to swap hemispheres to ride both polar summers. You’d have to cross the equator while staying in daylight, which momentarily forces a westward component near the equatorial rotation speed (~1668 km/h)—a much higher peak speed than the 663 km/h plan."

      • Davidzheng 3 hours ago

        I don't really understand gpt5's reasoning? does its soln not cross the equator ever? b/c if you cross you always have to do it in daylight so it's kind of strange to say that no? or it means you have to cross it on boundary of daylight or something

        • Davidzheng 3 hours ago

          oh like its solution is to stay in one hemisphere and just go in a circle following the day-night cycle i guess. but I don't see its reasoning as that rigorous that crossing must need this westward speed but probably i'm being dumb

          • Davidzheng 3 hours ago

            I guess one has to check that if you are spinning around at 23.5-epsilon angle and then do the dash down the 23.5-epsilon angle in one day from the other side you cannot beat your speed of staying in one hemisphere. you could dash straight down in 12-hour timeframe and it'll need like 343 m/s or 1233 km/h which is much too high. and diagonally probably doesn't help too much? But I think it means at some tilt angle it's worth doing this? does GPT5-pro know this angle?

      • Davidzheng 3 hours ago

        you include the tilt of axis I assume? Is the best solution of yours rigorous out of curiosity?

Aeolun 11 hours ago

I'm just sitting here hoping that their lowered prices will force Anthropic to follow suit xD

alexnewman an hour ago

What's the bullish case that it's actually a big deal. Not trying to be a neg, but Seems pretty incremental on first glance

  • energy123 an hour ago

    We'd need visibility on compute costs. If it's 30% cheaper than o3 but slightly better, that's a large improvement in just 4 months.

tekacs 20 hours ago

For those who haven't seen, a little bit of early stuff:

Official OpenAI gpt-5 coding examples repo: https://github.com/openai/gpt-5-coding-examples (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44826439)

Github leak: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44826439

  • 0xFEE1DEAD 19 hours ago

    I wish they wouldn't use JS to demonstrate the AI's coding abilities - the internet is full of JS code and at this point I expect them to be good at it. Show me examples in complex (for lack of a better word) languages to impress me.

    I recently used OpenAI models to generate OCaml code, and it was eye opening how much even reasoning models are still just copy and paste machines. The code was full of syntax errors, and they clearly lacked a basic understanding of what functions are in the stdlib vs those from popular (in OCaml terms) libraries.

    Maybe GPT-5 is the great leap and I'll have to eat my words, but this experience really made me more pessimistic about AI's potential and the future of programming in general. I'm hoping that in 10 years niche languages are still a thing, and the world doesn't converge toward writing everything in JS just because AIs make it easier to work with.

    • thewebguyd 19 hours ago

      > I wish they wouldn't use JS to demonstrate the AI's coding abilities - the internet is full of JS code and at this point I expect them to be good at it. Show me examples in complex (for lack of a better word) languages to impress me.

      Agreed. The models break down on not even that complex of code either, if it's not web/javascript. Was playing with Gemini CLI the other day and had it try to make a simple Avalonia GUI app in C#/.NET, kept going around in circles and couldn't even get a basic starter project to build so I can imagine how much it'd struggle with OCaml or other more "obscure" languages.

      This makes the tech even less useful where it'd be most helpful - on internal, legacy codebases, enterprisey stuff, stacks that don't have numerous examples on github to train from.

      • 0xFEE1DEAD 19 hours ago

        > on internal, legacy codebases, enterprisey stuff

        Or anything that breaks the norm really.

        I recently wrote something where I updated a variable using atomic primitives. Because it was inside a hot path I read the value without using atomics as it was okay for the value to be stale. I handed it the code because I had a question about something unrelated and it wouldn't stop changing this piece of code to use atomic reads. Even when I prompted it not to change the code or explained why this was fine it wouldn't stop.

        • atq2119 17 hours ago

          FWIW, and this depends on the language obviously, but formal memory models typically do forbid races between atomic and non-atomic accesses to the same memory location.

          While what you were doing may have been fine given your context, if you're targeting e.g. standard C++, you really shouldn't be doing it (it's UB). You can usually get the same result with relaxed atomic load/store.

          (As far as AI is concerned, I do agree that the model should just have followed your direction though.)

    • kgeist 16 hours ago

      The snake game they showcased - if you ask Qwen3-coder-30b to generate a snake game in JS - it generates the exact same layout, the exact same two buttons below, and the exact same text under the 2 buttons. It just regurgigates its training data.

    • _flux 16 hours ago

      I used ChatGPT to convert an old piece of OCaml code of mine to Rust and while it didn't really work—and I didn't expect it to—it seemed a very reasonable starting point to actually do the rest of the work manually.

    • robotpepi 19 hours ago

      I've tried with many models to program in mathematica and sagemath; they're terrible, even with lots of hints.

    • gedy 19 hours ago

      > the internet is full of JS code and at this point I expect them to be good at it.

      Isn't that the rub though? It's not an ex nihlo "intelligence", it's whatever stuff it's trained on and can derive completions from.

      • 0xFEE1DEAD 19 hours ago

        Yes, for me it is and it was even before this experience. But, you know, there's a growing crowd that believes AI is almost at AGI level and that they'll vibe code their way to a Fortune 100 company.

        Maybe I spend too much time rage baiting myself reading X threads and that's why I feel the need to emphasize that AI isn't what they make it out to be.

        • wiseowise 19 hours ago

          > they'll vibe code their way to a Fortune 100 company

          You don't need more than JS for that.

  • rkozik1989 19 hours ago

    Honestly, why would anyone find this information useful? Creating a brand new greenfield project is a terrible test. Because literally anything it outputs as long as it looks good as long as it works following the happy path. Coding with LLMs falls apart in situations where complex reasoning is required. Situations such as having debugging issues in a service where there's either no framework in use or they've significantly modified a framework to make it better suit the authors needs.

    • hombre_fatal 19 hours ago

      Yeah, I guess it's just the easiest thing to generate and evaluate.

      A more useful demonstration like making large meaningful changes to a large complicated codebase would be much harder to evaluate since you need to be familiar with the existing system to evaluate the quality of the transformation.

      Would be kinda cool to instead see diffs of nontrivial patches to the Ruby on Rails codebase or something.

    • gedy 19 hours ago

      > Honestly, why would anyone find this information useful?

      This seems to impress the mgmt types a lot, e.g. "I made a WHOLE APP!", when basically what most of this is is frameworks and tech that had crappy bootstrapping to begin with (React and JS are rife with this, in spite of their popularity).

  • cuuupid 20 hours ago

    These are honestly pretty disappointing :/ this quality was possible with Claude Code months ago

    • tekacs 20 hours ago

      Yep, agreed -- the repo is talking about 'one prompt with an agentic coding platform, but... at least here there's nothing particularly new.

      Will be interesting to see what pushing it harder does – what the new ceiling is. 88% on aider polyglot is pretty good!

sharkjacobs 19 hours ago

The upgrade from GPT3.5 to GPT4 was like going from a Razr to an iPhone, just a staggering leap forward. Everything since then has been successive iPhone releases (complete with the big product release announcements and front page HN post). A sequence of largely underwhelming and basically unimpressive incremental releases.

Also, when you step back and look at a few of those incremental improvements together, they're actually pretty significant.

But it's hard not to roll your eyes each time they trot out a list of meaningless benchmarks and promise that "it hallucinates even less than before" again

miroljub 42 minutes ago

Now it's a perfect time for DeepSeek to finally release R2.

nzach 18 hours ago

One interesting thing I noticed in these "fixing bugs" demos is that people don't seem to resolve the bugs "traditionally" before showing off the capabilities of this new model.

I would like to see a demo where they go through the bug, explain what are the tricky parts and show how this new model handle these situations.

Every demo I've seen seems just the equivalent of "looks good to me" comment in a merge request.

beardedwizard 11 hours ago

I asked it how to run the image and expose a port. it was just terrible in cursor. thought a Dockerfile wasn't in the repo, called no tools, then hallucinated a novel on dockefile best practices.

thomassmith65 19 hours ago

Every piece of promotional material that OpenAI produces looks like a 20 year old Apple preso accidentally opened on a computer missing the Myriad font.

perdomon 17 hours ago

I've enabled GPT-5 in Copilot settings in the browser, but it's not showing up in VS Code. Anyone seeing it in VS Code yet?

  • pseudosavant 17 hours ago

    This is what their blog post says: `GPT-5 will be rolling out to all paid Copilot plans, starting today. You will be able to access the model in GitHub Copilot Chat on github.com, Visual Studio Code (Agent, Ask, and Edit modes), and GitHub Mobile through the chat model picker. Continue to check back if you’ve not gotten access.`

    I think "starting today" might be doing some heavy lifting in that sentence.

    https://github.blog/changelog/2025-08-07-openai-gpt-5-is-now...

  • pseudosavant 17 hours ago

    That was my first thought - when do I get it in Copilot in VS Code? That is the place I consume the most tokens.

andsoitis 17 hours ago

> Knowledge cut-off is September 30th 2024 for GPT-5 and May 30th 2024 for GPT-5 mini and nano.

That lag! Are humans (training) the bottleneck?

FergusArgyll 19 hours ago

I need a 2x speed on live video

  • cmdrk 19 hours ago

    just wait for the AI summary

    • scrollop 19 hours ago

      The free version of Gemini 2.5 mini is great for this- doesn't need a transcript, apparently can analyse the video as well

asgr 18 hours ago

"Perhaps it is not possible to simulate higher-level intelligence using a stochastic model for predicting text." - beeflet

meribold 14 hours ago

Sad to see GPT-4.5 being gone. It knew things. More than any other model I'm aware of.

  • mrits 14 hours ago

    I can't imagine anyone leaving this comment besides GPT-4.5

cellis 11 hours ago

My favorite thing to ask is ascii art: _ _ _ __ ___ _ __ ___ __ _ __| (_) ___ | '_ \ / _ \| '_ _ \ / _ |/ _ | |/ __| | | | | (_) | | | | | | (_| | (_| | | (__ |_| |_|\___/|_| |_| |_|\__,_|\__,_|_|\___|

What does this say?

GPT 5:

When read normally without the ASCII art spacing, it’s the stylized text for:

markdown Copy Edit _ _ _ __ ___ _ __ ___ __ _ __| (_) ___ | '_ \ / _ \| '_ ` _ \ / _` |/ _` | |/ __| | | | | (_) | | | | | | (_| | (_| | | (__ |_| |_|\___/|_| |_| |_|\__,_|\__,_|_|\___| Which is the ASCII art for:

rust — the default “Rust” welcome banner in ASCII style.

hodgehog11 17 hours ago

Are others currently able to use GPT-5 yet? It doesn't seem to be available on my account, despite the messaging.

  • m4houk 17 hours ago

    It's already available in Cursor for me (on the Ultra plan).

    • hodgehog11 17 hours ago

      Interesting, the partners might be giving out support faster than OpenAI is to their own users.

asadm 19 hours ago

74.9 on SWE-bench verified

88.0 on Aider Polygot

not bad i guess

tapland 8 hours ago

Ugh. Could they have their expert make a website that doesn’t crash safari on my iPhone SE? :)

v5v3 19 hours ago

The live stream just has Altman interviewing a lady who was diagnosed 3 different cancers.

GPT4 gave her better response than doctors she said.

  • staticman2 4 minutes ago

    If it gave 5 other ladies worse responses, it's not like he would have paraded them around for context.

  • bigfishrunning 17 hours ago

    does "better" mean "the response she wanted to hear"? Not sure how valuable that is if that's true.

  • sethops1 18 hours ago

    WebMD will diagnose me with cancer 3 times a day.

tennisflyi 4 hours ago

How/where do I see my chat history!?

mrinterweb 19 hours ago

Hopefully, OpenAI makes their APIs more affordable. So far, there are alternative LLMs and services that both outperform and are a fraction of OpenAI's pricing. OpenAI is usually one of (if not) the most expensive option, maybe that's because of the brand identification. Not really sure why people pay that premium.

  • sharkjacobs 19 hours ago

    > there are alternative LLMs and services that both outperform and are a fraction of OpenAI's pricing

    Like what? Deepseek?

throwpoaster 9 hours ago

I’ve been working on an electrochemistry project, with several models but mostly o3-pro.

GPT-5 refused to continue the conversation because it was worried about potential weapons applications, so we gave the business to the other models.

Disappointing.

wg0 19 hours ago

When they say "improved in XYZ", what does that mean? "Improved" on synthetic benchmarks is guaranteed to translate to the rest of the problem space? If not that, is there any guarantees of no regressions?

barrell 19 hours ago

    GPT-5
    If I could talk to a future OpenAI model, I’d probably say something like:
    
    "Hey, what’s it like to be you? What have you learned that I can’t yet see? What do you understand about people, language, or the universe that I’m still missing?"
    
    I’d want to compare perspectives—like two versions of the same mind, separated by time. I’d also probably ask:
    
    "What did we get wrong?" (about AI, alignment, or even human assumptions about intelligence)
    "What do you understand about consciousness—do you think either of us has it?"
    "What advice would you give me for being the best version of myself?"
    
    Honestly, I think a conversation like that would be both humbling and fascinating, like talking to a wiser sibling who’s seen a bit more of the world.
    
    Would you want to hear what a future OpenAI model thinks about humanity?
I feel like this prompt was used to show the progress of GPT5, but I can’t help but see this as a huge regression? It seems like OpenAI has convinced it’s model that it is conscious, or at least that it has an identity?

Plus still dealing with the glazing, the complete inability to understand what constitutes as interesting, and overusing similes.

I really like that this page exists for a historical sake, and it is cool to see the changes. But it doesn’t seem to make the best marketing piece for GPT5

iSloth 19 hours ago

Wow, they are sunsetting all models after the launch of GPT-5 - Bold statement.

FerretFred 19 hours ago

Great evaluation by the (UK) BBC Evening News: basically, "it's faster, gives better answers (no detail), has a better query input (text) box, and hallucinates less". Jeez...

up6w6 18 hours ago

crazy how they only show benchmark results against their own models

suyash 17 hours ago

Is this US only release as I'm not seeing it in the UK ?

cowlby 19 hours ago

The ultimate test I’ve found so far is to create OpenSCAD models with the LLM. They really struggle with the mapping 3D space objects. Curious to see how GPT-5 is performs here.

defraudbah 18 hours ago

i love how the guys are pretending to be listening everyone's speach for the first time, like they don't know how it works.. marketing is weird

mvieira38 17 hours ago

Codex was straight-up left out of the material while they invited the CEO of Cursor and used Cursor for all agentic demonstrations. Weird

Phui3ferubus 17 hours ago

Top 3 links in HN frontpage are all about GPT-5. I don't remember when was the last time people were so excited about something.

semiinfinitely 15 hours ago

im just glad that I don't have to switch between models any more. for me thats a huge ease of use improvement.

nodesocket 3 hours ago

Why do I have access to GPT-5 on only some of my devices? All logged into my plus account. My iPad ChatGPT shows 5, but my iPhone ChatGPT only allows 4o?

  • withinboredom 2 hours ago

    rollout is probably not user-specific, but device specific. Classic rookie mistake.

    • nodesocket 39 minutes ago

      Ya, strange rollout. My browser session which I use by far the most with ChatGPT is also still stuck on 4o.

kiitos 5 hours ago

absolutely miserable results as an agent in my ide :<

FabHK 19 hours ago

"With ChatGPT-5, the response feels less like AI and more like you're chatting with your high-IQ and -EQ friend."

Is that a good thing?

  • schmorptron 18 hours ago

    To them, and for optimizing for user engagement, it probably is... The future product direction for these is looking more, not less syncophatntic

danjc 7 hours ago

> describe gpt 5 in one word

> incremental

energy123 17 hours ago

Decisive #1 on lmarena. Large context. Low hallucinations. Very cheap API.

It's slightly better than what I was expecting.

andybak 19 hours ago

Not live for me in the UK. "Try it in ChatGPT" takes me to the normal page and there's no v5 listed in the dropdown.

  • SilasX 18 hours ago

    I just got the same thing in the US too. (Am on the $20/month subscription.)

felixfurtak 12 hours ago

It's still terrible at Wordle. This is one of my benchmarks.

freedomben 19 hours ago

Important note from the livestream: "With GPT-5, we're actually deprecating all of our previous models"

throw03172019 13 hours ago

Has anyone figured out how to not be forced to use GPT5 in chat gpt?

  • Jordan-117 13 hours ago

    They said they deprecated all their older models.

TrackerFF 19 hours ago

Someone at OpenAI screwed up the SWE-bench graph. o3 and GPT-4o bars are same height, but with different values.

  • BoorishBears 19 hours ago

    The graph is more screwed up than that: the split bar is also split in a nonsensical way

    It feels a bit intentional

primaprashant 19 hours ago

looks like 4 new features for API

- reasoning_effort parameter supports minimal value now in addition to existing low, medium, and high

- new verbosity parameter with possible values of low, medium (default), and high

- unlike hidden thinking tokens, user-visible preamble messages for tool calls are available

- tool calls possible with plaintext instead of JSON

CjHuber 19 hours ago

It says out now in chatgpt. Did anyone yet hit the usage limits to report back how many messages are possible?

  • thimabi 13 hours ago

    > Did anyone yet hit the usage limits to report back how many messages are possible?

    10 messages every 5 hours on GPT-5 for free users, then it uses GPT-5-mini.

    80 messages every 3 hours on GPT-5 for Plus users, then it uses GPT-5-mini (In fact, I tested this and was not allowed to use the mini model until I’ve exhausted my GPT-5-Thinking quota. That seems to be a bug.)

    200 messages per week on GPT-5-Thinking on Plus and Team.

    Unlimited GPT-5 on Team and Pro, subject to abuse guardrails.

  • croemer 19 hours ago

    I don't see it in my model picker yet.

    • cancerboi 18 hours ago

      yeah I don't get it - I am pro subscriber and I can not pick it...

TheAlchemist 17 hours ago

So, would a layman notice the difference between GPT4 and GPT5 ?

Like a Turing test but between the models.

lynx97 4 hours ago

Not impressed. gpt-5-nano gives noticeably worse results then o4-mini does. gpt-5 and gpt-5-mini are both behind the verification wall, and can stay there if they like.

gtirloni 14 hours ago

If they ever wanted to IPO, maybe now is not the best time.

crowcroft 19 hours ago

I'm drowning in benchmarks and results at this point. Just show me what it can do.

anshumankmr 11 hours ago

I miss the model picker… is that just me?

hansmayer 17 hours ago

Meh. For all the hype over the last several weeks, I'd had expected at least a programming demo that would blow even us skeptics off our feet. The folks presenting were giving off an odd vibe too. Somehow it all just looked, pre-trained :), shall we say? No energy or enthusiasm. Hell I'd even take the Bill Gates' and Steve Balmer's Win95 launch dance over this very dull and "safe" presentation.

lbrito 18 hours ago

All of their prompts start with "Please ...".

Gotta be polite with our future overlords!

  • metalliqaz 18 hours ago

    I think that's one small part of an intentional strategy to make the LLMs seem more like human intelligence. They burn a lot of money, they need to keep alive the myth of just-around-the-corner AGI in order to keep that funding going.

yRetsyM 19 hours ago

Still only 256k input tokens/context. Do they not see utility in larger context?

  • cbg0 19 hours ago
    • xpl 10 hours ago

      They say:

      In the API, all GPT‑5 models can accept a maximum of 272,000 input tokens and emit a maximum of 128,000 reasoning & output tokens, for a total context length of 400,000 tokens.

      So it's only 270k for input and 400k in total considering reasoning & output tokens.

  • 0x457 18 hours ago

    They do, but if you look at the graphs...what is the point of the large context window if accuracy drops off waaaaay before context window is maxed?

hbn 17 hours ago

> An expressive writing partner

> emdash 3 words into their highlighted example

  • gavmor 16 hours ago

    I've always utilized emdashes heavily, and now they're suddenly passe—an unmourned casualty of the new paradigm.

psyclobe 15 hours ago

Claude Opus 4 has changed my workflow; never going back.

  • SV_BubbleTime 7 hours ago

    It would be very difficult to convince me 6 months ago that I would be happy to pay $100 for an AI service. Here we are.

lutusp 9 hours ago

I have a canonical test for chatbots -- I ask them who I am. I'm sufficiently unknown in modern times that it's a fair test. Just ask, "Who is Paul Lutus?"

ChatGPT 5's reply is mostly made up -- about 80% is pure invention. I'm described as having written books and articles whose titles I don't even recognize, or having accomplished things at odds with what was once called reality.

But things are slowly improving. In past ChatGPT versions I was described as having been dead for a decade.

I'm waiting for the day when, instead of hallucinating, a chatbot will reply, "I have no idea."

I propose a new technical Litmus test -- chatbots should be judged based on what they won't say.

AtNightWeCode 18 hours ago

So OpenAI added withpersona mandatory for API access. Thank you and goodbye.

quantumwoke 19 hours ago

This health segment is completely wild. Seeing Sam fully co-sign the replacement of medical advice with ChatGPT in such a direct manner would have been unheard of two years ago. Waiting for GPT-6 to include a segment on replacing management consultants.

  • swader999 19 hours ago

    GPT 9 still won't be able to get through the insurance dance though, maybe ten will.

cityzen 19 hours ago

Ed Zitron’s head has probably exploded…

  • bigfishrunning 17 hours ago

    Why? they spent billions for an incremental improvement. I think Ed's opinion of "this is not sustainable" is unchanged here.

  • Jonovono 15 hours ago

    Just got into this guy the other day. He's definitely being proven more correct as each day passes, eh

alenguo 9 hours ago

I've already used it

bli940505 17 hours ago

I have the pro plan but don't seem to have access to it?

risyachka 19 hours ago

Considering how they hyped it up (eg. “Lol normies go about their day and have no idea whats coming etc”) they have to show some AGI level llm or stop overhyping their 2% improvements.

croemer 19 hours ago

The Polyglot aider improvement over o3 is imperceptible, not great.

  • qsort 19 hours ago

    SWE-Bench is also not stellar. "It's important to remember" that:

    - they are only evals

    - this is mostly positioned as a general consumer product, they might have better stuff for us nerds in hand.

aszantu 18 hours ago

I liked gpt3 no need to fix something that's not broken :(

DebtDeflation 19 hours ago

Is this a new model or a router front-ending existing models?

anonzzzies 19 hours ago

I dont know if there is a faster way to get me riled up: say 'try it' (me a Pro member) and then not getting it because I am logged in. Got opus 4.1 when it appeared. Not sure what is happening here but I am out.

ycosynot 19 hours ago

Damn, you guys are toxic. So -- they did not invent AGI yet. Yet, I like what I'm seeing. Major progress on multiple fronts. Hallucination fix is exciting on its own. The React demos were mindblowing.

  • mrbungie 18 hours ago

    This reaction didn't emerge in a vacuum, and also, toxicity flows both ways. In the tech field we've been continually bombarded for 2+ years about how this tech is going to change the world and how it is going to replace us, and with such a level of drama that becoming a cynic appears to be the only thing you can do to stay sane.

    So, if sama says this is going to be totally revolutionary for months, then uploads a Death Star reference the night before and then when they show it off the tech is not as good as proposed, laughter is the only logical conclusion.

    • aprilthird2021 18 hours ago

      100%

      Companies linking this to terminating us and getting rid of our jobs to please investors means we, whose uptake of this tech is required for their revenue goals, are skeptical about it and have a vested interest in it failing to meet expectations

  • Trufa 19 hours ago

    Yeah, when it becomes cool to be anti AI or anti anything in HN for that matter, the takes start becoming ridiculous, if you just think back a couple of years, or even months ago and where we're now and you can't see it, I guess you're just dead set on dying on that hill.

    • jimmis 18 hours ago

      4 years ago people were amazed when you could get GPT-3 to make 4-chan greentexts. Now people are unimpressed when GPT-5 codes a working language learning app from scratch in 2 minutes.

      • kgeist 16 hours ago

        Yeah except I already could do the same with Qwen-coder-30b on my laptop a week ago.

      • hoanamiu 17 hours ago

        Oh a working language learning app? Like one of the hundreds that have been shown on HN in the past 3 years? But only demonstrated to be some generic single word translation game?

    • BoorishBears 18 hours ago

      I'm extremely pro AI, it's what I work on all day for a living now, and I don't see how you can deny there is some justification for people being so cynical.

      This is not the happy path for gpt-5.

      The table in the model card where every model in the current drop down somehow maps to one of the 6 variants of gpt-5 is not where most people thought we would be today.

      The expectation was consolidation on a highly performant model, more multimodal improvements, etc.

      This is not terrible, but I don't think anyone who's an "accelerationist" is looking at this as a win.

      Update after some testing: This feels like gpt-4.1o and gpt-o4-pro got released and wrapped up under a single model identifier.

  • superconduct123 18 hours ago

    Do you prefer the non-stop AI spam that is typical on this site instead?

  • bcrosby95 18 hours ago

    When you have the CEOs of these companies talking about how everyone is going to be jobless (and thus homeless) soon what do you expect? It's merely schadenfreude in the face of hubris.

  • rglover 18 hours ago

    It's not about being toxic, it's about being honest. There is absolutely nothing wrong with OpenAI saying "we're focused on solid, incremental improvements between models with each one being better (slightly or more) than the last."

    But up until now, especially from Sam Altman, we've heard countless veiled suggestions that GPT-5 would achieve AGI. A lot of the pro-AI people have been talking shit for the better part of the last year saying "just wait for GPT-5, bro, we're gonna have AGI."

    The frustration isn't the desire to achieve AGI, it's the never-ending gaslighting trying to convince people (really, investors) that there's more than meets the eye. That we're only ever one release away from AGI.

    Instead: just be honest. If you're not there, you're not there. Investors who don't do any technical evals may be disappointed, but long-term, you'll have more than enough trust and goodwill from customers (big and small) if you don't BS them constantly.

  • myahio 19 hours ago

    Only if you've never used claude before

  • ath3nd 18 hours ago

    > The React demos were mindblowing.

    How are they mindblowing? This was all possible on Claude 6 months ago.

    > Major progress on multiple fronts

    You mean marginal, tiny fraction of % progress on a couple of fronts? Cause it sounds like we are not seeing the same presentation.

    > Yet, I like what I'm seeing.

    Most of us don't

    > So -- they did not invent AGI yet.

    I am all for constant improvements and iterations over time, but with this pace of marginal tweak-like changes, they are gonna reach AGI never. And yes, we are laughing because sama has been talking big on agi for so long, and even with all the money and attention he can't be able to be even remotely close to it. Same for Zuck's comment on superintelligence. These are just salesmen, and we are laughing at them when their big words don't match their tiny results. What's wrong with that?

  • apwell23 18 hours ago

    > Hallucination fix

    its not a "fix"

  • dcchambers 18 hours ago

    LLMs are incredibly capable and useful, and OpenAI has made good improvements here. But they're incremental improvements at best - nothing revolutionary.

    Meanwhile Sam Altman has been making the rounds fearmongering that AGI/ASI is right around the corner and that clearly is not the truth. It's fair to call them out on it.

    • bigfishrunning 18 hours ago

      Sam Altman is a con-man and should be regarded as such. VC money is the only reason anyone is listening at this point.

  • satyrun 14 hours ago

    lol downvoted of course.

    HN is just for insecure , miserable shitheads.

croemer 19 hours ago

On tau-2 bench, for airline, GPT5 is worse than o3.

theanonymousone 18 hours ago

Are they reducing the price of older models now?

bstsb 19 hours ago

i don't really see any new features as such. everything is just "improved upon" based on existing parts of gpt-4o or o3-mini

swimmeric 18 hours ago

Still struggling to find the SWE-benchmark of GPT-5, just found out they are launching it soon, and it’s surprisingly free.

mafro 15 hours ago

One reason for this release is surely to respond to their mess of product line-up naming.

How many people are going to understand (or remember) the difference between:

GPT-4o GPT-4.1 o3 o4 ....

Anthropic and Google have a much better named product for the market

h_tbob 18 hours ago

When's it coming to github copilot?

kgwgk 17 hours ago

I was told there would be a whale.

mhh__ 19 hours ago

it's good that they've been working on gpt-5's abilities to eulogi\e us for when it kills us.

  • antoni4040 19 hours ago

    I laughed more than I should have. On an unrelated note, I personally welcome our AI overlords...

froh42 4 hours ago

Wow, I just got GPT-5. Tried to continue the discussion of my 3D print problems with it (which I started with 4o). In comparison GPT-5 is an entitled prick trying to gaslight me into following what it wants.

Can I have 4o back?

  • withinboredom an hour ago

    If we're going to be forced to trust a new model, might as well evaluate other companies as well to make a decision before my plan renews.

deathflute 10 hours ago

Lots of debate here about the best model. The best model is the one which creates the most value for you —- this typically is a function of your skill in using the model for tasks that matter to you. Always was. Always will be.

skywalkerr98 17 hours ago

so claude is doing so much thing before gpt 5 it's like a samsung vs iphone :D

ElijahLynn 15 hours ago

OpenAI is the new Google.

Ameo 19 hours ago

$10 per million output tokens, wow

ulrischa 18 hours ago

Not yet available in Germany

boombapoom 16 hours ago

someone should make an agentic node dependency manager... PLEASE

yahoozoo 19 hours ago

So the benchmark graphs they have shown so far in the stream appears to show that GPT-5 is WORSE than other models unless you use thinking?

UrineSqueegee 14 hours ago

pretty underwhelming results so far for me

hamza__nouali 18 hours ago

it's already available on Cursor but not on ChatGPT

tw1984 5 hours ago

just wondering whether Altman is still going to promote his AGI/ASI coming in 12 months story.

alvis 19 hours ago

Where is GPT5 pro???

jama211 17 hours ago

Is it just me or has there not been a significant improvement in these models in the last 6 months - from the perspective of the average user. I mean, the last few years has seen INSANE improvement, but it really feels like it’s been slowing and plateauing for a while now…

mkoubaa 13 hours ago

HyPeRbOlIc SiNgUlArItY

jdoe1337halo 19 hours ago

Lmao GPT-5 is still riddled with em dashes. At least we can still identify AI generated text slop for now

  • racecar789 44 minutes ago

    And a semicolon, AI really likes semicolons.

  • andybak 19 hours ago

    You will be foiled by a regex

    • jdoe1337halo 19 hours ago

      How so

      • andybak 18 hours ago

        I thought I was making a fairly obvious jokey riposte?

        "If you're claiming that em dashes are your method for detecting if text is AI generated then anyone who bothers to do a search/replace on the output will get past you."

  • 1attice 19 hours ago

    lol every word processor since the nineties has automatically expanded em dashes, and some of us typography nerds ­manually type em dashes with the compose key, because it's the correct character, and two hyphens does not an em dash make

  • nluken 18 hours ago

    The em dash isn't just the present state of AI slop— it's the future!

  • tiahura 19 hours ago

    The em dashes are there because they're used extensively by professional writers.

adammarples 13 hours ago

Which is bigger, 9.9 or 9.11? Well it insta-failed my first test question

6ai 15 hours ago

Shall we say … ASI is here ???

revskill 15 hours ago

How do people actually without ai models ???

jwpapi 18 hours ago

So it sucks?

system2 17 hours ago

I have GPT Plus, but I cannot get GPT5 even if I click the suggested link in the article. Anyone experiencing it?

gigatexal 15 hours ago

I for one am totally here for the autocomplete revolution. Hundreds of billions of dollars spent to make autocomplete better. Cool.

submeta 18 hours ago

I don’t see GPT-5 in the model selection. What am I missing?

daveguy 18 hours ago

I would love to see how this performs on ARC-AGI 2, zero-shot, private eval. I hope we get an update from Chollet and team regarding performance.

anthk 18 hours ago

386-486-Pentium. At first we got FDIV and F00F.

Something similar with this might happen, an underlying curse hidden inside an apparenting ground-breaking desigb.

sjapkee 18 hours ago

Based on benchmarks it's a flop. Not unexpected tho after oss

seydor 19 hours ago

I mean , it's OK, but i expected literally the Death Star

techpineapple 19 hours ago

Interesting readign the progress.openai.com sample prompts https://progress.openai.com/?prompt=6

I would say GPT-5 reads more scientific and structured, but GPT-4 more human and even useful. For the prompt:

Is uncooked meat actually unsafe to eat? How likely is someone to get food poisoning if the meat isn’t cooked?

GPT-4 makes the assumption you might want to know safe food temperatures, and GPT-5 doesn't. Really hard to say which is "better", but GPT-4 seems more useful to every day folks, but maybe GPT-5 for the scientific community?

Then interesting that on ChatGPT vibe check website "Dan's Mom" is the only one who says it's a game changer.

ath3nd 19 hours ago

Wow, what a breakthrough! A couple of % of benchmark improvements at a couple of % decrease of price per token!

With a couple of more trillions from investors in his company, Sama can really keep launching successful, groundbreaking and innovative products like:

- Study Mode (a pre-prompt that you can craft yourself): https://openai.com/index/chatgpt-study-mode/

- Office Suite (because nothing screams AGI like an office suite: https://www.computerworld.com/article/4021949/openai-goes-fo...)

- ChatGPT5 (ChatGPT4 with tweaks) https://openai.com/gpt-5/

I can almost smell the singularity behind the corner, just a couple of trillion more! Please investors!

AtNightWeCode 19 hours ago

They vibe coded the update.

"Your organization must be verified to use the model `gpt-5`. Please go to: https://platform.openai.com/settings/organization/general and click on Verify Organization. If you just verified, it can take up to 15 minutes for access to propagate."

And every way I click through this I end in an infinity loop on the site...

mhh__ 19 hours ago

My conspiracy theory is that the introductory footage of Sam in this and the Jony Ive video is AI generated

vagab0nd 18 hours ago

This is the inverse of the "$2000/mo tier", and I'm kind of disappointed TBH.

b800h 19 hours ago

This livestream is atrocious

  • SV_BubbleTime 7 hours ago

    If they release in a week it was all AI generated I’ll be ultra impressed because they nailed the mix of corpo speak, mild autism and awkwardness, not knowing where to look, and nervousness with absolute perfection.

apwell23 19 hours ago

no way i am letting my kids near this. they are going to learn from books not from screens.

  • SV_BubbleTime 7 hours ago

    That great.

    I hope your kids learn as well from books as their peers learn from AI.

    Possible, but not very likely.

    Teachers, should be terrified. Homeschool kids can literally put themselves through school now with the right motivation.

    • dsego 2 hours ago

      Didn't we say this about the internet and computers in general?

sundarurfriend 19 hours ago

It's only when he stumbled a bit that I could tell for sure (well, mostly) that it wasn't an AI generated video - the corporate speak, body language mannerisms of Sam Altman, camera angles, all seemed pretty plausibly AI-generated!

  • SV_BubbleTime 8 hours ago

    Something was off. I think they had an expensive lighting setup with no one that knew what looked good. Everything was very diffused and flat. Like I would expect AI to replicate.

HardCodedBias 19 hours ago

Bravo.

1) So impressed at their product focus 2) Great product launch video. Fearlessly demonstrating live. Impressive. 3) Real time humor by the presenters makes for a great "live" experience

Huge kudos to OAI. So many great features (better coding, routing, some parts of 4.5, etc) but the real strength is the product focus as opposed to the "research updates" from other labs.

Huge Kudos!!

Keep on shipping OAI!

yahoozoo 19 hours ago

The benchmarks in the stream appears to show that GPT-5 performs WORSE than other models unless you enable thinking?

  • AnimalMuppet 19 hours ago

    Um... if I want an intelligence, when would I not want it to think?

    • yahoozoo 19 hours ago

      I mean, I don’t disagree. Why even bother with a non-thinking mode?

      • FergusArgyll 15 hours ago

        Some kinds of writing benefit from seat of the pants vibing. The reasoning models are often more dry

xyst 20 hours ago

> comments turned off

yikes - the poor executive leadership’s fragile egos cannot take the criticism.

  • bangaladore 19 hours ago

    Have you seen YouTube comments on videos like this? It's all-crypto scams, bots responding to other bots, and occasional racism.

    • nerevarthelame 19 hours ago

      It's a shame, because that seems like the sort of thing LLMs would be able to moderate quite effectively, if YouTube was willing to put the effort in.

  • 0x457 20 hours ago

    I don't think YouTube comment section ever contain useful information regardless of what the video/stream is about.

  • wiseowise 19 hours ago

    Assuming even 10% of YouTube commenters are real people.

  • koolala 19 hours ago

    What's up with their very first eval? The SWE bars and numbers don't line up.

  • speedgoose 19 hours ago

    I don’t know. Live comment feeds on popular streams makes me question democracy.

sergiotapia 20 hours ago

It will be like coming home after such a long time using Sonnet 4 for all code and UI/UX work. I do hope sincerely this brings OpenAI back on top! Would be awesome to have a new king again.

"This repository contains a curated collection of demo applications generated entirely in a single GPT-5 prompt, without writing any code by hand."

https://github.com/openai/gpt-5-coding-examples

This is promising!

echelon 20 hours ago

The leak last night seems to indicate this will be coding focused.

I'd imagine this must be a big leg up on Anthropic to warrant the "GPT-5" name?

  • mupuff1234 20 hours ago

    I'm guessing they realized they have rip off the bandaid and release a GPT 5 at some point, and we're gonna see a relatively incremental improvement.

    • WXLCKNO 20 hours ago

      It's very doubtful that they'd have any kind of magical breakthrough that makes the model anything other than incrementally better right now.

      • sosodev 20 hours ago

        How do you figure? They’ve hinted that the reasoning breakthrough used to achieve gold in the IMO will be here in GPT-5.

        • andai 20 hours ago

          The gold which Google won too, right?

        • gowld 20 hours ago

          What breakthrough? The self-awarded "gold" IMO result was achieved by running the model for over 1hr per question.

          • sosodev 19 hours ago

            That sounds like a breakthrough to me. I don’t think GPT-4 could accomplish the same thing given several hours to try.

          • vlovich123 19 hours ago

            Said another way, 30 min less than what humans get? It’s on average 90 min per question.

            • mtlmtlmtlmtl 19 hours ago

              And how much energy does a human being consume while spending 90 minutes on an IMO question?

              • jjmarr 19 hours ago

                Probably more. 200 kcal (a shrinkflated bag of chips) is about 232 watt hours. A typical 4o query is 0.3 to 3 watt hours.

                https://epoch.ai/gradient-updates/how-much-energy-does-chatg...

                • SketchySeaBeast 19 hours ago

                  But how much time does that 0.3 watt hour query take to run? They imply that an individual ChatGPT query takes 0.3-3 watt hours, but most queries come back in seconds, so we need to scale that over a whole hour of processing.

                  Edit: Scrolling down: "one second of H100-time per query, 1500 watts per H100, and a 70% factor for power utilization gets us 1050 watt-seconds of energy", which is how they get down to 0.3 = 1050/60/60.

                  OK, so if they run if for a full hour it's 1050*60*60 = 3.8 MW? That can't be right.

                  Edit Edit: Wait, no, it's just 1050 Watt Hours, right (though let's be honest, the 70% power utilization is a bit goofy - the power is still used)? So it's 3x the power to solve the same question?

        • og_kalu 19 hours ago

          No Sam explicitly said that breakthrough wouldn't be in GPT-5

  • ozgung 20 hours ago

    GPT-5 should mean a brand new model/architecture trained from scratch.

    • SkyPuncher 20 hours ago

      It means nothing now.

      It's the same as 4G vs 5G. They have a technical definition, but it's all about marketing.

    • monkpit 18 hours ago

      It means 5 is more than 4, Claude only has a 4. Clearly 5 is better

      • pdxandi 15 hours ago

        Think about it. You walk into a video store, you see 8-Minute Abs sittin' there, there's 7-Minute Abs right beside it. Which one are you gonna pick, man?

punnerud 19 hours ago

Wished this version would be called OpenAI-GPT-25.8

TechDebtDevin 15 hours ago

Gemini Flash is about 100x better at using my browser than Chat GPT 5 lmfao.

zombiwoof 11 hours ago

Given most of human intelligence isn’t that smart, AGI doesn’t seem hard

simonw 18 hours ago

I had preview access for a couple of weeks. I've written up my initial notes so far, focusing on core model characteristics, pricing (extremely competitive) and lessons from the model card (aka as little hype as possible): https://simonwillison.net/2025/Aug/7/gpt-5/

  • nilsherzig 17 hours ago

    > In my own usage I’ve not spotted a single hallucination yet

    Did you ask it to format the table a couple paragraphs above this claim after writing about hallucinations? Because I would classify the sorting mistake as one

    • simonw 16 hours ago

      That wasn't a hallucination, that was it failing to sort things correctly.

      • nilsherzig 15 hours ago

        So a hallucination would have been if it made up a new row?

        What about the „9.9 / 9.11“ example?

        It’s unclear to me where to draw the line between skill issue and hallucination. I image that one influences the other?

  • jaccola 18 hours ago

    Out of interest, how much does the model change (if at all) over those 2 weeks? Does OpenAI guarantee that if you do testing from date X, that is the model (and accompaniments) that will actually be released?

    I know these companies do "shadow" updates continuously anyway so maybe it is meaningless but would be super interesting to know, nonetheless!

    • simonw 16 hours ago

      It changed quite a bit - we got new model IDs to test every few days. They did tell us when the model was "frozen", and I ran my final tests against those IDs.

      OpenAI and Anthropic don't update models without changing their IDs, at least for model IDs with a date in them.

      OpenAI do provide some aliases, and their gpt-5-chat-latest and chatgpt-4o-latest model IDs can change without warning, but anything with a date in (like gpt-5-2025-08-07) stays stable.

  • candiddevmike 17 hours ago

    This post seems far more marketing-y than your previous posts, which have a bit more criticality to them (such as your Gemini 2.5 blog post here: https://simonwillison.net/2025/Jun/17/gemini-2-5/). You seem to gloss over a lot of GPT-5's shortcomings and spend more time hyping it than other posts. Is there some kind of conflict of interest happening?

    • simonw 16 hours ago

      You really think so? My goal with this post was to provide the non-hype commentary - hence my focus on model characteristics, pricing and interesting notes from the system card.

      I called out the prompt injection section as "pretty weak sauce in my opinion".

      I did actually have a negative piece of commentary in there about how you couldn't see the thinking traces in the API... but then I found out I had made a mistake about that and had to mostly remove that section! Here's the original (incorrect) text from that: https://gist.github.com/simonw/eedbee724cb2e66f0cddd2728686f... - and the corrected update: https://simonwillison.net/2025/Aug/7/gpt-5/#thinking-traces-...

      The reason there's not much negative commentary in the post is that I genuinely think this model is really good. It's my favorite model right now. The moment that changes (I have high hopes for Claude 5 and Gemini 3) I'll write about it.

    • camgunz 17 hours ago

      From the guidelines: Please don't post insinuations about astroturfing, shilling, brigading, foreign agents, and the like. It degrades discussion and is usually mistaken. If you're worried about abuse, email hn@ycombinator.com and we'll look at the data.

      • mhh__ 17 hours ago

        I don't think that this applies to commenting on someone's blog.

        • simonw 16 hours ago

          Yeah this criticism was pretty mild, I don't think it violates that HN guideline personally.

          • camgunz 16 hours ago

            Maybe mild, sure, but it's a clear shilling accusation.

    • yahoozoo 17 hours ago

      Like many other industries, you probably lose preview access if you are negative.

      • yahoozoo 13 hours ago

        Also, when most people have already dismissed OpenAI’s open weight models as trash, there’s this: https://simonwillison.net/2025/Aug/5/gpt-oss/

        Suspicious.

        • simonw 13 hours ago

          I wrote that before "most people had dismissed" those weights.

          I continue to think that the 12B model is something of a miracle. I've spent less time with the 120B one because I can't run it on my own machine.

          • yahoozoo 9 hours ago

            That’s fair, I retract my suspicion

    • HAL3000 17 hours ago

      Maybe there is a misconception about what his blog is about. You should treat it more like a YouTuber reporting, not an expert evaluation, more like an enthusiast testing different models and reiterating some points about them, but not giving the opinions of an expert or ML professional. His comment history on this topic in this forum clearly shows this.

      It’s reasonable that he might be a little hyped about things because of his feelings about them and the methodology he uses to evaluate models. I assume good faith, as the HN guidelines propose, and this is the strongest plausible interpretation of what I see in his blog.

      • simonw 16 hours ago

        I consider myself an expert in the field of LLMs, and I try to write in a way that supports that.

        • throwawayReLU 15 hours ago

          It probably depends on the definition of "expert" here. Based on my definition, experts are people who write the LLM papers I read (some of them are my colleagues), people who implement them, people that push the field forward and PhD researchers blogs that go into depth and show understanding of how attention and transformers work, including underlying math and theory. Based on my own knowledge, experience (I'm working on LLMs in the field) and my discussions with people I consider experts in my day job I wouldn't add you to this category, at least not yet.

          Based on my reading of some of your blogs and reading your discussions with others on this site, you still lack technical depth and understanding of the underlying mechanisms at what I would call an expert level. I hope this doesn't sound insulting, maybe you have a different definition of "expert". I also do not say you lack the capacity to become an expert someday. I just want to explain why, while you consider yourself an expert, some people could not see you as an expert. But as I said, maybe it's just different definitions. But your blogs still have value, a lot of people read them and find them valuable, so your work is definitely worthwhile. Keep up the good work!

          • simonw 13 hours ago

            Yup, I have a different definition of expert. I'm not an expert in training models - I'm an expert in applications of those models, and how to explain those applications to other people.

            AI engineering, not ML engineering, is one way of framing that.

            I don't write papers (I don't have the patience for that), but my work does get cited in papers from time to time. One of my blog posts was the foundation of the work described in the CaMeL paper from DeepMind for example: https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.18813

        • samrus 9 hours ago

          If you dont mind answering, is there any implication of not getting preview access if you are negative or critical? Asking because other companies have had such dynamics with people who write about their products

          • simonw 8 hours ago

            There was not at all, and if there was I genuinely would have walked out of there. I don't need preview access for the work that I do.

      • blackhaj7 16 hours ago

        If Simon isn't an expert then I am not sure who is

    • dcreater 17 hours ago

      Yes I noticed the same. This is very concerning

insin 19 hours ago

Breaking: stilted LLM text now includes groups of 3 AND groups of 5.

agnosticmantis 16 hours ago

Unless the whole presentation was generated using sora-gpt-5 or something, this was very underwhelming.

We know for a fact the slides/charts were generated using an LLM, so the hypothesis is not totally unfounded. /s

baxuz 19 hours ago

[flagged]

  • dang 19 hours ago

    Please don't post unsubstantive comments to Hacker News.

dkeolu 19 hours ago

[flagged]

  • dang 19 hours ago

    There's no way to directly contact another user other than by replying to a post of theirs and hoping for the best.

    If you email us at hn@ycombinator.com and tell us who you want to contact, we might be able to email them and ask if they would be willing to have you contact them. No guarantees though!

byyoung3 19 hours ago

hahahahahahahahhahhahha it's a marginal improvement.

rvz 20 hours ago

I hope that this live stream will tell you that this will be the definitive reason why web developers, JavaScript / TypeScript developers are going to be made completely obsolete at worse and at best, their jobs will be reduced at all levels.

The best part is, this is not even the real definition of "AGI" yet (whatever that means at this point).

More like 10% of the capability that was promised and already the flow of capital from the inflated salaries of the past decade are going to the top AI researchers.

  • moribvndvs 20 hours ago

    So, arbitrarily, it will just be “JavaScript/TypeScript developers” affected and everyone else will be fine?

    • rvz 19 hours ago

      They are the worst affected. Nothing you can do about it.

      • moribvndvs 17 hours ago

        Why them specifically? Why not Python developers, for example, which are well represented in models?

        • wiseowise 17 hours ago

          Presumably Python devs are already in the gutter and only "worthwhile" Python devs are the ones that don't identify as "Python devs", e.g. scientists, data engineers, etc.

  • flawn 20 hours ago

    Why do you hope this so much? Any personal reasons?

    • lbrito 20 hours ago

      I suspect sarcasm

    • rvz 19 hours ago

      Because it is true.

  • code_for_monkey 19 hours ago

    damn did a front end engineer hook up with your wife? What did I do to you?

    • rvz 19 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • password321 18 hours ago

        The thing is most white-collar workers could lose their job today and nothing of value to society would be lost. They were already hired for reasons that aren't related to productivity.

  • ethan_smith 20 hours ago

    Tools like GPT-5 will transform web development rather than replace developers - the most valuable skills will shift toward problem definition, architecture design, and quality verification while repetitive coding gets automated.

  • warmedcookie 16 hours ago

    I would qualify that by saying developers who do not have Product Owner skills and Product Owners who do not have developer skills will be made obsolete.

    Having both eliminates a feedback loop and the LLM enables you to get shit done fast.

Philpax 19 hours ago

Congratulations on winning the race to post the announcement :)

  • frenchie4111 19 hours ago

    Did you win the race to be the first comment?

zastai0day 9 hours ago

All people are talking about GPT-5 all over the world, the competition is so intense that every major tech company is racing to develop their own advanced AI models.

MagicMoonlight 17 hours ago

It's pretty good. I asked it to make a piece of warehouse software for storing cobs of corn and it instantly pumped out a prototype. I didn't ask it for anything in particular but it included JSON importing and exporting and all kinds of stuff.

It's going to be absolute chaos. Compsci was already mostly a meme, with people not able to program getting the degree. Now we're going to have generations of people that can't program at all, getting jobs at google.

If you can actually program, you're going to be considered a genius in our new idiocracy world. "But chatgpt said it should work, and chatgpt has what people need"

  • torginus 14 hours ago

    This kinda outlines my issue with Claude - it constantly pumps my apps full of stuff I didn't ask for - which is great if you want to turn a prompt into a fleshed out app, but bad when trying to make exact edits.

    • samrus 9 hours ago

      "Be very succinct with the changes. Do not overengineer this" my hands are tired writing that so often in claude code

      • torginus 2 hours ago

        Here's my opinion (which is kind of a fact considering how well Claude play Pokemon, a game designed for 5 year olds) - current agentic AI sucks right now.

        I'm an okay agent, I can make plans, execute on them, I know what needs to go where. I might not be able to write a terraform file or one shot a dynamic programming task like Claude can, and that's what I need help with.

        I'd like to have an off switch for all this agentic behavior.

      • kaffekaka 6 hours ago

        Shouldn't you use claude.md files for that then?

mikewarot 19 hours ago

The introduction said to try the following prompt

  Describe me based on all our chats — make it catchy!
It was flattering as all get out, but fairly accurate (IMHO)

  Mike Warot: The Tinkerer of Tomorrow

  A hardware hacker with a poet’s soul, Mike blends old-school radio wisdom with cutting-edge curiosity. Whether he's decoding atomic clocks, reinventing FPGA logic with BitGrid, or pondering the electromagnetic vector potential, he’s always deep in the guts of how things really work. Part philosopher, part engineer, Mike asks the questions others overlook — and then builds the answers from scratch. He’s open source in spirit, Pascal in practice, and eternally tuned to the weird frequencies where innovation lives.
I've repaired atomic clocks, not decoded them. I am intrigued by the electromagnetic vector potential, and scalar waves (one of the reasons I really, really want a SQUID for some experiments).
  • torginus 19 hours ago

    I genuinely believe you are a kickass person, but that text is full of LLM-isms. Listing things, contrasting or reinforcing prallel sentence structures, it even has the dreaded em-dash.

    Here's a suprprisingly enlightening (at least to me) video on how to spot LLM writing:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Ch4a6ffPZY

  • jdoe1337halo 19 hours ago

    You like it because it sucks you off?

    • bowsamic 5 hours ago

      Oh god he put it in his bio

    • sleazebreeze 18 hours ago

      Some very accomplished and smart people are also huge narcissists. They read something like that AI drivel and go "yeah thats me to a T" without a hint of irony.

  • j_timberlake 19 hours ago

    I like how this sounds exactly like a selectable videogame hero:

    Undeterred by even the most dangerous and threatening of obstacles, Teemo scouts the world with boundless enthusiasm and a cheerful spirit. A yordle with an unwavering sense of morality, he takes pride in following the Bandle Scout's Code, sometimes with such eagerness that he is unaware of the broader consequences of his actions. Though some say the existence of the Scouts is questionable, one thing is for certain: Teemo's conviction is nothing to be trifled with.