ChatGPT Files: From Upload to Insight in Seconds Flat
Imagine dumping a messy spreadsheet into ChatGPT and watching it spit out charts, summaries, risks flagged. That's file magic now — and it's reshaping how we wrangle data.
The latest breakthroughs in foundational models, reasoning capabilities, and prompt engineering from OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and open-source challengers.
Imagine dumping a messy spreadsheet into ChatGPT and watching it spit out charts, summaries, risks flagged. That's file magic now — and it's reshaping how we wrangle data.
OpenAI's pitching ChatGPT as your new research sidekick. I've seen this movie before—buzzwords masking mediocre tech.
ChatGPT just hallucinated a key fact in your report. OpenAI's new safety playbook says: keep humans in the loop. But does it go far enough?
You've got a deadline, a blank doc, and zero inspiration. ChatGPT whispers sweet drafts—but is it your savior or just another buzzword crutch? Let's cut through the hype.
Imagine your marketing team with an infinite idea machine that never sleeps. ChatGPT isn't just a tool; it's the accelerator pedal for campaigns.
Everyone figured bloated giants like GPT-4o owned document parsing. Baidu's scrappy 0.9B model just flipped the script—94.5% accuracy, cheaper, faster. But is it hype or hardware shift?
Picture this: flat traffic, yet your LLM invoice triples. Blame the invisible agent handoffs multiplying calls behind the scenes. Here's how to trace and slash those costs.
Chandra OCR 2 just clocked 92.3% on the brutal DocVQA benchmark—nipping GPT-4o's 91.2%. But does this tiny open-source upstart really fix OCR's endless headaches?
Tweak the system prompt, and your chatbot turns poet or pirate. But here's the cynical truth: that's not a feature; it's the whole damn product, hidden behind PR gloss.
Chatbots that predict the next word? They're fun, but useless for real intelligence. LeCun's JEPA flips the script — predicting the world, not just text.
Anthropic just previewed Claude Mythos, a beast that crushes SWE-Bench at 93.9% and sniffs out zero-days overnight. Problem is, you can't touch it — and here's why that stinks of Silicon Valley smoke.
OpenAI just slapped a $100/month price tag on a new ChatGPT Pro tier aimed at code hogs. It's a direct shot at rivals like Anthropic—but at what cost to users?