OpenAI’s GPT-4o brings us closer to the ‘Her’ experience

OpenAI held a webcast Monday to roll out a new version of its free ChatGPT app, which sounds and acts a lot like the AI in the 2013 Spike Jonze film, Her.

The experience is powered by a new version of its GPT-4 large language model—available on desktop and mobile—called GPT-4o (“GPT-four-oh”). The new model, OpenAI says, returns answers much faster than GPT-4, and improves on its text, vision, and audio capabilities.

The model is a showcase for OpenAI’s development of multi-modal AI. GPT-4o can recieve and reason about text, audio, and visual inputs, then deliver outputs in natural language and natural-sounding voice.

OpenAI researcher Mark Chen demonstrated the new model’s impressive conversational capabilities during a live demo. He told the chatbot that he was nervous about the demo, and asked her for advice to help calm down. Chen then mock-hyperventilated into phone, to which the app responded “Mark! You’re not a vacuum cleaner.” The AI was spontaneous and funny, much like the voice assistant (voiced by Scarlett Johansson) in Her, which has become a North Star for people developing consumer AI.

The app was asked to tell a story with various levels of “drama” in its voice, which it did, convincingly. The AI then told the same story in a stereotypical robot’s voice, and then again in sing-song fashion.

Chen also demonstrated how he could interrupt the AI voice, and she would quickly stop talking. ChatGPT, in other words, is getting more “emotionally” intelligent. This is very similar to what Inflection.ai was developing with its Pi AI app. But Inflection.ai was essentially bought out by Microsoft, the same tech giant that owns almost half of OpenAI.

The ChatGPT app also has the ability to “see” things and reason about them. Through the phone camera, the app was shown a math problem written on a white board and asked for help in working it out. It was then asked to explain some computer code. The app also did a live translation from Italian to English and back.

The new features in the ChatGPT app will roll out to users of the free version of ChatGPT over the next few weeks. OpenAI says it’s also making GPT-4o available to developers through its API. OpenAI’s live streamed announcement Monday seemed timed to steal some thunder from Google, which is expected to make a series of AI-related announcements at its I/O developer conference Tuesday.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91123206/openai-gpt-4o-announcement?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Erstellt 1y | 13.05.2024, 18:40:08


Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen

Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

‘We’re short about a million workers’: Rebecca Shi on immigration’s economic toll

As the Trump administration ramps up mass deportations, impacting businesses across numerous sectors, the American Business Immigration Coalition (ABIC) is advocating for policy reform. Rebecca Sh

06.08.2025, 10:10:06 | Fast company - tech
Palantir hits $1 billion in quarterly sales for the first time, avoids DOGE cuts

Shares of Palantir Technologies sailed past previous record highs Tuesday after

05.08.2025, 20:20:04 | Fast company - tech
How Tesla’s Autopilot verdict could stifle Musk’s robotaxi expansion

A court verdict against Tesla last week, stemming from a fatal 2019 crash of an Aut

05.08.2025, 17:50:11 | Fast company - tech
Cloudflare vs. Perplexity: a web scraping war with big implications for AI

When the web was established several decades ago, it was built on a number of principles. Among them was a key, overarching standard dubbed “netiquette”: Do unto others as you’d want done unto you

05.08.2025, 17:50:09 | Fast company - tech
Taiwanese authorities investigate TSMC chip trade secrets leak

Taiwanese authorities have detained three people for allegedly stealing technology trade secrets from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (

05.08.2025, 17:50:08 | Fast company - tech
AT&T to pay $177 million in data breach settlement. Here’s how to claim up to $5,000

After suffering two significant data breaches in recent years, AT&T has agreed to pay $177 million to customers affected by the incidents. Some individuals could receive

05.08.2025, 11:10:02 | Fast company - tech