Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 463: AI News That Matters - February 17th, 2025
Episode Date: February 18, 2025Sam Altman laid out plans for GPT-5. Elon Musk says Grok-3 is dropping today. We finally have plans about Claude's new 'hybrid' model. AI news doesn't slow down. Neither should you...r company's AI adoption. Don't waste time. Join us on Mondays as we bring you the AI News that Matters.Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan questions on AIUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:1. OpenAI GPT model updates2. Grok 3 launch3. Apple and Amazon voice assistants4. YouTube Veo 2 Integration5. Apple and Meta's RoboticsTimestamps:00:00 Weekly AI News Guide05:25 Elon Musk's OpenAI Strategy Unpacked07:51 XAI's Ambitious AI with Grok12:03 Apple & Amazon Voice Assistant Delays16:07 Perplexity AI Launches Free Deep Research19:25 "Challenges of AI Copy-Pasting"20:14 "Upcoming AI Research Revolution"23:38 YouTube AI Backgrounds Access Guide29:09 OpenAI's Upcoming Model Releases31:11 GPT 5 Tiered Access36:22 OpenAI Aims to Rival Google38:46 Claude SONNET 3.5 Update Stagnation41:47 Big Tech Embraces Robotics Expansion45:12 Adobe Faces AI Competition47:22 AI Developments: GPT, Claude, and MoreKeywords:AI models, Grok three, OpenAI, GPT five, Anthropic, hybrid model, everyday AI, Elon Musk, XAI, Sam Altman, Grok two, ChatGPT, Siri, Alexa, Perplexity AI, deep research, large language models, YouTube, VO two, Dream Screen, Google, Claude, Meta, humanoid robots, Adobe, Firefly, NVIDIA, reasoning models, GPT four o, LLM arena, DeepSeekSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
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That is the name of the game this week when it comes to AI news.
The big companies are releasing some big updates.
Some probably coming as soon as today.
Others probably coming within the next week or two.
So Elon Musk says that X-A-A-A-E.
AI's GROC 3 is being released tonight.
Open AI has laid out the plans for GPT5 and more.
And new reports are saying that Claude's highly anticipated new model,
so the new model from Anthropic will be a hybrid model.
So we're going to be talking about what those stories mean and a whole lot more today on Everyday AI.
What's going on, y'all?
My name's Jordan Wilson and I'm the host of Everyday AI.
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Thank you very much.
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And our daily newsletter, we not only recap each podcast and live stream each and every weekday,
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So that's where you go do that, all for free, hundreds of back episodes as well.
So your everyday AI.com.
All right.
So enough.
Well, one other thing you got to do when you're there.
go check out our 2025 AI predictions in Roadmap series.
Y'all, like you have to.
It's wild, right?
So played these a month ago.
And so many of the things that I talked about,
which at the time seemed a little weird,
have already come to fruition.
So go check those out on our website,
episodes 443 through 447.
All right, let's get into it.
So each, almost every single Monday,
we bring you the AI news that matters.
So what that is is, well,
every single day we do this.
And then on Mondays, that's kind of our guide to help you start the week off right.
So you can walk into the workplace knowing exactly what's happening in the world of AI and how it will impact you.
So we cut through the fluff, cut through the PR, and hopefully just bring you the realists on what actually matters.
All right.
Let's get into it.
And hey, thank you, live stream audience for tuning in.
Big Bogeyface, Sandra and Dr. Harvey, joining on YouTube.
Douglas, Allen, Brian, Woozy, Graham, lots of faces in the house.
Max, Jordan from Chicago holding it down like me.
Perimi, Pedro, everyone else.
Thank you for joining.
Appreciate you all tuning in.
So, Open AI is not for sale, regardless of what Elon Musk is trying to say.
So Elon Musk's bid to acquire Open AI has been officially rejected amid the ongoing feud with the old company that he helped co-found.
So Open AI's board has unanimously rejected a $97.4 billion acquisition bid from a group led by Elon Musk,
reinforcing its commitment to remain independent and focus on its new nonprofit status.
So the rejection was made public through a statement on X, a social media platform obviously owned by Musk,
emphasizing that Open AI is not for sale and aims to ensure that artificial general intelligence or AGI benefits all,
of humanity. So CEO Sam Altman humorously responded to Musk takeover bid by attempting to instead
buy Twitter or acts for $9.74 billion, which I think would be overpaying for it. I know Musk bought it for like
$44 billion, but most estimates say it's worth like 10 now. So it's just kind of highlighting this
ongoing tensions between Musk, a co-founder of Open AI and the current Open AI leadership, namely
CEO Sam Altman. So Musk has a longstanding feud with Open AI's leadership, accusing them of
straying from their nonprofit ideals and is currently involved in a legal action to prevent the
company from becoming for profit. Open AI's attorney dismiss must offer as a not serious bid,
further underscoring the board's unanimous decision to reject it. Y'all, can we just be honest?
most of what Elon Musk does in the AI space, it's, it's for engagement.
It's for theater.
It's to drive a narrative, right?
Unfortunately, a lot of people believe this, right?
Which is sad, right?
Spoke to a group of CEOs actually on Friday, you know, helping them, doing a keynote for
them in a workshop.
And one of their hesitations in rolling out open AI was, well, they weren't sure on what
was going to happen with this whole, you know, Elon Musk and,
Open AI takeover, right? So, you know, people that don't follow this every single day like me
probably didn't realize that this wasn't a serious, it wasn't serious from Elon Musk. What he's
trying to do is he's trying to essentially drive up a fair market value price for open AI that
they'll have to deal with when it comes to their transition from a for-profit to a nonprofit,
right? Also, I don't know. It's kind of funny coming from Elon Musk, you know, that he said when he
released GROC, I think GROC 2 that he was going to open source GROC 1, said the same thing,
you know, oh, when we released GROC 3, he's going to open source GROC 2, right?
So his big thing, at least, you know, on paper.
And by on paper, I mean, on mean tweets is saying that, you know, open AI is no longer,
it's, you know, nonprofit mission and no longer, you know, open source, right?
Like he, but that was never the case, right?
And there's been so many emails and lawsuits floating around.
But this is, you know, it was more or less, I think, if I'm being honest, what I think this was all about was to drum up conversation specifically for releasing GROC, right?
Because that is our next AI news story.
So Elon Musk, GROC 3 is set to launch tonight, at least according to Elon.
So Elon Musk's XAI group is preparing to launch GROC 3.
which is being described as the smartest AI on Earth tonight.
So, yeah, Monday, February 7th.
So this new AI model is expected to surpass its competitors by offering enhanced reasoning capabilities,
faster computation speeds, and a groundbreaking approach to learning.
GROC3 has been trained on XAI's Colossus supercomputer, which uses an impressive 100,000
an NVIDIA H100 GPU.
So yeah, it is the largest kind of AI super center that's up and running right now in the world.
And, you know, impressive and hats off to XAI and Elon and the team for getting that
set up so quickly.
So that setup provides 10 times the computing power to train GROC versus its predecessor.
So the AI reportedly employs synthetic data sets to simulate a wide range of real world
scenarios. So this approach helps in, well, on paper, reducing bias and enhancing the system's
adaptability. GROC 3 reportedly features self-correction mechanisms that allow it to refine
errors in real time and maintain logical consistency. Elon Musk's goal to redefine AI development
is positioning XAI as a significant contender against established players like Google, OpenAI, and
Anthropic. A recent $6 billion funding round has attracted major investors, such as
Nvidia and AMD, providing XAI with a somewhat of a competitive edge in the market.
At least, you know, there's very few companies that have raised $6 billion plus.
You know, I'm curious, live stream audience.
Are you going to be using Grock?
My hot take, right?
and this is judging by the original GROC and GROC 2, I would never use it.
Not for a real business use case.
I would never tell a business or advise a business to use it either.
We'll see if GROC 3 changes that.
One of the main reasons is that, unfortunately, Twitter slash X has been a main source of its training data, which is not good.
And you might say, oh, Jordan, well, you know, Lama uses Facebook data.
and you know,
Instagram data.
And it's like, yes, it does,
but not as one of its main training sources.
So, you know,
kind of one of the biggest USPs for GROC has been its real-time integration with X data, right?
And I've done plenty of videos on this channel.
It actually does worse of a job at connecting in real-time to X
than other large language models do.
So it's kind of,
or at least than other large language models do in connecting to real-time data.
right? So you would think, oh, if I could use grok, you know, I can know up to the minute information.
And it often doesn't work like that. So, I mean, we'll see. I would love to be proved wrong.
I do think if I had to give predictions, I think that Grock will bench very, very well.
I think it could be a, you know, maybe top three or number one model in terms of ELO scores on the LM arena.
but I really don't think that we're going to see widespread adoption,
especially here in the U.S. for that very reason, right?
You have to have a high level or at least some level of trust in security
in how models were trained.
And if a large portion of GROC 3, at least, is trained off of real-time Twitter and X data,
that's not something most companies are even going to stick their toe in.
But, you know, people on Twitter are going to yell at
me for this because they love Elon and everything he does.
And they say everything he touches his gold.
But, you know, again, I don't think most serious businesses will use GROC for the most part.
Joe, Joe here on LinkedIn says, I won't touch GROC just like I won't touch Deepseek.
I will say from a data and privacy perspective, I will say GROC should be safe, right?
It should be safe to use because it's based here in the U.S.
So, you know, we have our nice data in privacy laws protecting us.
But yeah, I still don't think we're going to see much widespread use of GROC, right?
It'll probably explode on Twitter.
Like I said, it's probably going to do a great job, some different benchmarks.
But I think that's probably where it will end.
All right.
Speaking of things that I wish were a little better, tech giants,
Siri, sorry, Apple and Amazon are facing some major AI powered delays in their voice assistance.
So yeah, seems like Alexa and Siri might not be getting very AI smart anytime soon.
So Apple and Amazon are both experiencing significant delays in launching their new and improved AI-enhanced voice assistance,
primarily due to software glitches and inaccurate responses during internal testing.
So that is according to Bloomberg, Apple's revamped Siri initially planned for release in April
may be postponed until May or later due to persistent software bugs and engineering issues.
Apple's major Siri enhancements are supposed to include improved user data access,
app control, and screen context understanding are not consistently performing as expected.
Similarly, the Washington Post reports that Amazon is delaying the release of its large language model powered Alexa initially launched as a limited demo in 2023 due to incorrect responses found during testing.
Amazon plans to announce the Alexa update on February 26, but public access is not expected until at least March 31st.
So the new version of Alexa will offer premium features like personality customization,
call reminders, and service ordering capabilities, although some features are already available
in the current free version.
Apple is considering various launch strategies for its new and improved Siri, including adding
new features in April's update, but disabling them by default until the iOS 18.5 update in
May.
A fully LLM powered Siri capable of human-like,
conversations is not expected until next year. Why? Why? Why? Why? I don't know how many times I got a
belly egg about this. We've had very great AI voice assistants from Open AI and from Google for
many months. All right. So yes, Google is a giant tech conglomerate. But we've had,
had extremely impressive options now, dating back to the latter part of 2024.
And reportedly, Amazon and Siri have been working on this for many years, reportedly,
many, many millions of dollars.
I don't understand.
I don't understand how I still can't ask Siri or Alexa for absolutely anything other
than the time and the weather, which is like exactly.
what I used it for 10 years ago, right?
I don't understand.
I literally don't understand.
And, you know, I've been lucky enough to talk to people that have been very involved in its development.
And I still don't understand how Apple and Amazon have dropped the ball so hard, right?
Because I do think that we're going to see, especially with some new advancements from Open AI and from Google,
I think those are going to catch on very mainstream, right?
I think, first of all, I mean, you have to tip your cap to Amazon and Apple for having this technology, what, 10 years ago?
At the time, it didn't feel nice.
It felt advanced.
Now it's obviously very stale and frustrating to use.
But now I just on my new iPhone, I just programmed, you know, the side button to automatically launch chat GPT voice search.
right? So now it's like at least at my phone, I don't know if I'll ever use Siri, right?
As long as I can touch one button, I'm instantly chatting with chat GPT, which is seemingly a hundred times smarter and a hundred times more useful than Siri.
I don't think Siri can really do anything right now, which is a little disappointing.
But hey, hopefully that'll change. Hopefully that'll change.
All right. Next piece of AI news.
Percisey has released its version of deep research to compete with OpenA.I. and Google.
So Perplexity AI has launched its version of deep research, a new mode designed to provide extensive research capabilities in minutes, making its newsworthy for its potential to transform how users conduct complex research tasks.
So the big, I think, news here is it's free, right?
So users with free accounts can make up to five queries per day while pro users essentially have unlimited use of it.
I guess you're capped at 500 deep research queries a day.
But like I'm doing the math, right?
Because they take two to five minutes.
That'd be very hard to actually hit 500 of these deep research queries a day.
So yes, users with a free perplexity account can do up to five.
And essentially, if you're a paid perplexity pro,
user like I am, you have unlimited access to this feature.
So the feature is adapt at handling expert level queries in fields like finance, marketing,
and product research offering detailed responses quickly.
Deep research has shown strong performance, scoring a 21% on humanity's last exam, a new
kind of AI benchmark for large language models.
So the company is expanding its reach by planning to offer.
deep seek research also on iOS, Android and Mac platforms, and it is currently live and available
on the web.
So despite facing legal challenges from media organizations over copyright issues, perplexity
AI is not only just rolling this out and still, it looks like using some of these even
same sources that they're facing some legal challenges against, but also they're currently
negotiating revenue sharing agreements with publishers.
like time and fortune, according to reports.
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So yeah, great, great comment here from Max on LinkedIn.
So saying that you can use Deepseek R1 through perplexity too.
Yeah.
So it's a little confusing because they've had essentially a reasoning search where you
could tap in.
into either Deepseeks R1 or Open AIs O3.
So they did have this kind of, it was like almost like a research, like a deep research
light version because they had essentially a reasoning search already available.
And it is a little confusing.
So actually what we have going tomorrow, we are doing a deep research, perplexity deep
research episode.
So we're going to be talking about what it is.
and if you should use it.
All right.
And then, yeah, back to back.
Because I think this new deep research category,
it is going to be huge, right?
And I think one of the reasons being there was a lot of initial,
which makes sense, right?
But there was a lot of initial hesitation for companies to use large language models
because they thought, okay, all this means is our employees are going to be copying and
pasting, right?
They're going to just copy and paste things from these large language models.
which is often bad, right?
Because large language models, at least like two years ago,
unless you were using chat GPT,
which had good access to the web via browse with Bing,
Google really struggled to,
or sorry, Google Gemini really struggled to use Google, right?
Microsoft Copilot did a good job at accessing Bing.
But for the most part, you run into a lot of issues
that people were just lazily,
not really trying to understand how these AI models worked.
They were just copy and paste things from a large language model.
Oftentimes, that's just using its internal training, its internal data set, which, you know,
people always look at the cutoff date, right?
Like as an example, the cutoff date for GBT 4-0 right now is June 2024.
And they're like, oh, all the information out of here is from June 2024.
No, it's not, right?
So much of what makes it into these large language models can be many years old, which
makes sometimes the outputs kind of dangerous to use, especially for novice users who don't know
what they're doing, which is why I think the deep research boon is going to be huge, right?
Because essentially what this does is it ensures a higher accuracy rate because these,
both from perplexity, OpenAI, and Google, it really goes and it sometimes researches
dozens or hundreds of websites.
And then it kind of relies on the underlying model.
So I do think this is going to be a sweeping new category of tools.
And it is going to be kind of like a second ripple.
So we kind of saw the chat GPT moment of November 2022, which really brought generative
AI into the mainstream.
I do think for those companies that have not widely adopted generative AI yet, I do think
this is going to be kind of the second, I won't say wave, but this is going to be a second
ripple, right?
Most companies, they don't care about AI images.
Most companies don't care about AI video, but they are going to care about this, right?
So that's why we're actually doing back-to-back episodes.
So tomorrow, we're going to be going over.
So tomorrow, Tuesday, February 18th, we're going to be going over perplexity, deep research.
And then the next day, so Wednesday in two days from right now, we're going to be doing a deep research throwdown.
We're going to be comparing perplexity, Google, and Open AI's versions of deep research.
I'm excited about this episode.
I'm a geek, y'all.
Like, yeah, I spent like my weekend doing this, you know, making charts and testing things, right?
Like, this is what we do.
I spend hours at night and on the weekends testing all of these things so you don't have to.
And I share my results and I give it to you straight, right?
I'm not going to lie to you on, oh, this one's great.
This one's garbage, right?
So make sure you join us for those episodes.
All right, our next piece of AI news.
Well, the world's most powerful AI video tool is now published.
publicly available, but not in the way that you would think.
So YouTube has upgraded its dream screen feature with Google's new V-O-2 AI model,
enabling faster and higher-quality AI generated backgrounds and standalone clips for YouTube shorts.
So yeah, the V-O-2 access was extremely limited, right?
It still is not generally available, but you can now use it in,
very limited fashions, right? So if you're working on a YouTube short in the dream screen feature,
then you can use it. So the integration of VO2 allows for quicker generation of AI videos and
images supporting a wider range of subjects with more detailed visual output. New capabilities include
the creation of standalone video clips in addition to AI-driven backgrounds, offering creators more
versatility in content production.
It's not available to everyone yet, but the initial rollout of this feature does cover users
in the U.S., Canada, Australia, and New Zealand with plans for future expansion to other
regions.
So users can access Dream Screen by selecting the Shorts Camera within the YouTube app.
Okay, so open the YouTube app, go to the Shorts Camera, then you can access the Dream Screen
powered by the YouTube.
V2 by tapping the green screen option and entering a text prompt to generate AI backgrounds or
standalone clips.
Google is trying to ensure a little bit more AI transparency by applying their synth ID
watermark and to create clear labels that it is AI generated media.
So not exactly the rollout of Google's VO2 that a lot of people were hoping for, but anyone that
want to at least go test it out to see if especially, I think for, you know, creative companies,
visual companies or any marketing department, really, I think you should at least be testing
this out. You should be looking at it. So when and if we get V02 access, right, V-O-1 was never
publicly made available. V-O-2 still not publicly made available. If you had good timing on their
Discord server. You probably got, you know, early access to it, but most people do not have access to it just yet.
Let's get to some OpenAI updates. So OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced on Twitter slash ax slash whatever
you want to call it that they have released an updated version of their GPT40 model.
So this normally isn't very big news, right? Because Open AI and other.
You know, AI companies do release kind of under the hood updates.
So what that means is they'll release updates to a model without necessarily renaming it.
Right.
So this isn't a GPT 4.5 or anything like that.
So it is still called GPT40.
However, it is extremely more impressive, right?
I don't know if anyone else has been using it over the last two days.
But no real updates on what's included, which is bonkers.
All right.
So, hey, AI companies, sometimes you do a great job at this.
Sometimes you fail, right?
So OpenAI release this out.
No change log, no model notes, absolutely nothing, right?
So why is that problematic?
Well, when companies roll out updates to models, especially on the API, right?
So you might be running a huge part of your software off of GPT40 or GPT4O as an example.
So if there's not detailed updates on what was changed, you essentially just have to do a bunch of engineering over again to try to figure it out on your own.
So I'm sure there's thousands of companies right now in grumpy developers that are waking up Monday morning and being like, oh, you know, they're getting tickets on saying, hey, you know, our system isn't working correctly.
You know, we're not getting ideal customer support, right?
Whatever you're using the GPT4 or model for, it could be going much better or much worse, right?
So kind of disappointing that OpenAI doesn't release a little bit more details.
But what I've seen and what other people have talked about, a better personality, a better writing style, less censored, and just better benchmarks, right?
Let's check this out.
So looking at the LM Arena chatbot leaderboard, the GPT4.
model is back in a three-way tie for first.
So if you don't know what the LM chatbot arena is, essentially you go in, you put a prompt,
you get two responses, you don't know who's, like what company it is, you vote on which
one's better.
So it's essentially like a blind taste test, right, like the Pepsi versus Coke marketing
campaign of the 90s, right?
And then the winner gets a score, right?
So you have this thing called an ELO score, and then there's kind of a margin of error.
So what that means is that technically GPT40 is in a tie for the top ranking with Gemini 2.0
pro, the new version that just came out, and Gemini 2.0 flash thinking.
Both of those were just released in the last couple of weeks.
So one other thing, kind of some unique reporting here.
from us. Well, looks like OpenAI is taking even more shots at Google, some original reporting
here. I didn't see this anywhere. I didn't know if this was a mistake that, you know, showed up
over the weekend. You know, on the weekends is normally where I do a lot of my LLM testing because
during the week I'm busy bringing you guys a daily live stream podcast and newsletter. And I noticed
that I'm like, what is this? Is this Open AI is showing an auto-complete suggestions? Yes.
Yes, they are. So interesting here, a very Google-esque, right? So when you go into Google search
and you start typing something and you see all of these suggestions, right? It's actually very
helpful in Google search. I don't know how helpful it will be in chat GPT, but this is a new
feature. I didn't see literally anyone else in the world because I was Googling it. I was
using AI search engines to look for it, looking on Twitter. I couldn't find anything.
So it could be a feature that is slowly rolling out,
but essentially when you start to type a query,
you may get auto-complete suggestions.
So a couple new things from OpenAI.
But speaking of it, the big news, I think,
probably the biggest piece of news this week,
is Sam Altman announced on Twitter,
their upcoming, essentially, roadmap and releases for models,
which is something that they generally don't do a lot.
kind of the open AI playbook over the last like year has been kind of these just like teasing online, right?
Like they drop these little hints.
It's almost like little Easter eggs.
And then, you know, then they build up a ton of hype.
And then, you know, either they're going to announce something out of nowhere or, you know, like they did in December, they had the 12 days of open AI, you know, ship miss.
But this one is interesting because actually a much higher level of transparency here from Sam Altman.
and really just talking openly about some of the challenges that they're facing and some of their plans.
But the biggest thing is announcing the upcoming release of GPT-4-5 and GPT-5.
So they are aiming to simplify the company's complex product offerings.
So Altman described GPT-5, which is known internally as Orion, as the final non-chain-of-thought models.
Okay.
So this is marking a shift toward a unified AI system.
So there, even after this tweet announcement and all the press coverage,
there's still some things that are a little vague.
There's still some gray areas.
So just keep that in mind.
And, you know, we'll, we'll link to that tweet thread in our newsletter today if you want to read it.
But essentially, he said that GPT5 is going to be more of a system.
And it's not and it's going to integrate different.
reasoning models into a cohesive system.
So the free tier of chat GPT in the future will have unlimited access to GPT5,
while paid subscribers will get higher intelligence levels.
And then pro subscribers, which are those paying, you know, $200 a month, will get the highest.
So it doesn't, so it looks like essentially GPT5 will not be a traditional GPT model because
GPT 4.5 is going to be the last of the non-reasoning model.
So that is the standard transformer model.
So it looks like GPT5 will still have a maybe it's just an updated version of GPT4.5.
I'm not sure.
But essentially, it's going to have some sort of GPD5 that's going to be more of a system
that is going to recognize if it needs to use a transformer type model to answer your query
or if it's going to use a reasoning model and then at what level it is going to give it to you as well.
Because as an example, right now, right, I have a pro plan.
So I have access to GPT4O, GPT40, GPT4O or sorry, 01 normal, O1 Pro, O3Mini, 03 Mini,
high, right?
It's confusing.
And then you have all the tools, right?
You have canvas, you have tasks,
You have operator.
You have deep research, right?
So it looks like GPT5 is going to be more of a system.
And it will essentially have use of all the tools and all of the models.
And so it's not going to be going into this, you know, pick your model, choose your tool.
It looks like GPT5 will be a system and will have a use a combination probably of a transformer type model and a O series or a reasoner model, but doing it all under the.
hood. So Altman indicated that these releases are expected within weeks or months. All right. So, you know,
that could be six months, who knows, or it could be as soon as a couple of weeks. So they're aiming to
streamline the user experience by eliminating that current model picker. And Open AI has been very
transparent that they kind of stink at naming models, right? Yeah, like 03 Mini, 03 Mini,
high, 01, 01, O1, Pro, GPT40, GPT40 Mini, right? It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
It's so confusing.
It's so confusing.
So despite delays and reports of increased costs,
Altman dismissed claims that AI progress has stalled,
maintaining optimism about OpenAI's advancements.
Yeah, it's funny.
Yeah, Denny here is saying,
when is Open AI going to hire a marketing person to help name its models?
Well, it looks like this new GVD5 system approach.
There might not even be any model names.
Who knows?
I mean, we'll see.
I'll save most of my judgment.
for when this comes out.
I'm obviously a power user, right?
I think one of the problems maybe is, you know,
I'm guessing 99% of the population
and it's not a power user like me, right?
I generally use large language models.
Depends on the day.
I'd say anywhere from nowadays,
three to 10 hours a day, right?
So let's say I average using large language models
for like five or six hours.
That's a ton of time.
I have no problem right now with the current feature sets.
of Open AI or any other tool,
but I do assume the overwhelming majority of users
can get quite confused.
And that probably keeps people maybe from paying
a paid subscription or upgrading to a higher tier
because they're just confused.
They're like, I don't know what any of these things are,
let alone if I need them, right?
But we have seen a huge push from Open AI and y'all,
this is in response, I think, to Google.
People are like, oh, you know, Deepseek came out
with this amazing model.
No, go look at Deep Seek now.
It's banned in so many countries.
U.S. businesses, I think, aren't going to be adopting it at a high level, right?
Let's just be honest, right?
There's legislation out there that would find companies for using it.
I don't think that version of the bill is actually ever going to make it into actual legislation.
But, you know, Deep Seek had its moment for like a week.
And now it's, you know, it's no longer the cheapest model in terms of, you know, price per
quality, it's not even close, right?
So I do think OpenAI did this in response to Google, right?
That's who they're going after, y'all.
Look at everything they did.
They made chat GPT search free.
You don't even have to be logged in.
They made their biggest model or one of their more powerful models in 03 Mini free for
limited use cases, even for free users, right?
People are like, oh, this isn't responsive.
No, it's not.
It's not in response to deep seek.
I don't know. I just don't think people like to use their brains. Open AI is going after Google. And Google
went bonkers in December. And they continue to go bonkers, you know, all the way through February.
They're very silent for a long time, right? But Google came out straight up swinging. So I personally think
that and yeah, I talk to people off the record, you know, at Open AI and at Google. But this is my personal,
my personal thoughts.
I think all of this is in response to Google, right?
Even Sam Altman, you know, on Super Bowl Sunday, there was a tweet, or maybe it was the
Saturday before looking at the top websites in the world.
And Open AI had actually the biggest growth of any of those.
I think it was a list of the top seven.
And his response was have a long way to go to catch Google because Google was obviously number
one.
That's who they're after.
They're not after.
They don't care about deep.
seek, I don't think they necessarily care even about, you know, Claude, right, even though that's
probably on paper their closest competitor. They are going after billions of users, all right?
That's what they're going after.
All right.
Speaking of some of their closest competitors and new models, so Anthropic Claude is set to launch a
new hybrid model in weeks.
So Anthropic is preparing to release its next major AI model, which is expected to work.
within weeks, according to reporting by the information.
So the new model is described as a hybrid capable of switching between deep reasoning and
fast responses, offering flexibility for various applications.
So a sliding scale will be introduced for developers, allowing them to manage costs associated
with the model's deep reasoning capabilities.
So according to the report, Anthropics soon to be released new model outperforms OpenAIs
03 mini high reasoning model in specific programming tasks and excels at analyzing large codebases.
So CEO Dario Amodi expressed the company's focus on creating differentiated reasoning models,
questioning the distinction between normal and reasoning models.
So this development highlights Anthropics commitment to advancing AI technology and could
significantly impact businesses relying on AI for complex problem solving.
So, I mean, we'll see.
We'll see what actually happens here.
And I'd be very interested on the timing, right?
So I don't know.
We might see a GPT 4.5 release right after we get this new model from Anthropic because it's been, I don't know, I lost track.
It's been like nine or 10 months since we've seen an updates from Anthropic, which in like AI in large language model terms is like decades, right?
Claude, they did update kind of, Sonnet 3.5, Claude Sonnet 3.5, but they still just called it
Claude Sonnet 3.5. So was it really an update, right? Or is it what just, you know, Open AI did over the
weekend with GPT4O? You know, but Claude, Claude 3.5 saw it. It still does remain extremely popular for
developers and for coders, right? So even though we don't talk about it a ton on the show, that's because right now,
I don't think there is a ton of general business use cases outside of just development for Claude 3.5s on it.
I think in almost everything else, you should be probably looking at or using Google Gemini models or OpenAI models or, you know, obviously Microsoft co-pilot is powered by Open AIs model.
So for the most part, I don't see a ton of use cases.
And one of those reasons is, well, Claude has been offline this whole time.
Right.
So there's been reports that Claude will have some internet connectivity, maybe alongside these reasoning models.
Maybe it'll be a different release.
But that's one of the reasons I've been saying all along.
Companies shouldn't be using Claude, right, unless you're using it on the back end, but
you know, for front end users, which is a lot of times what I'm talking about on this show, right?
If you have a chat GPT enterprise account or if you have, you know, Google Gemini across your
workspace or maybe you have, you know, Microsoft 365.
pilot. Those are all connected to real-time information on the internet, right?
Claude is not on the front end. So if you're using, you know,
Claude.a.I, if you have a team's account, whatever, you could be working with extremely
old information, which makes the outputs unreliable, period. So I am excited to see what
anthropic release is next. And I hope this new hybrid model includes the ability for it to have
real-time information from the internet. All right, more tech giants in the fold this week. So we have
Apple and META reportedly competing in the AI-powered humanoid robotics field.
So Apple and META are entering a new territory for their rivalry, focusing on AI-powered humanoid robots,
according to a report from Bloomberg.
So the competition between these two tech giants is significant as it could really change
the way that everyday tasks are automated in homes, impacting industries and consumer
lifestyles. So according to reports, Meta is adopting a software first strategy, creating a new
unit within its Reality Labs division to develop a foundational software platform for humanoid robots
similar to Android for robots. So the company aims to leverage its expertise in sensors,
computing and AI, including its Lama AI models to gain a competitive edge. Meta has started hiring
engineers to support its vision of helping other companies bring humanoid robots to market in the
coming years. Apple, on the other hand, is focusing on seamless hardware and software integration,
developing a tabletop device with a robotic arm that could either be extremely weird or extremely
cool, and exploring mobile robot concepts akin to Amazon's Astro. So the company Apple may
eventually create a full-fledged humanoid robot competing with,
Tesla's Optimus or figures 01 and 02, although it faces huge challenges in AI development,
particularly with those buggy, Siri things that we just talked about.
So Apple's decade-long experience in self-driving car technology could provide valuable insights
for its robotic navigation within homes.
Meta's robotic division is led by Mark Witten, former CEO of GM's Cruise, self-driving
units, while Apple's initiative is headed by Kevin Lynch, known for his work on Apple Watch.
All right.
Last but not least, Adobe has launched public beta for its AI video generator enhancing its creative
tool sets.
So Adobe has released its text and image to video AI generator, generate video to the
public in beta form, marking a pretty significant step.
from the powerhouse that is Adobe.
So this tool is part of Adobe's Firefly web app,
which now includes updated image generation and translation capabilities,
making it a comprehensive platform for creators.
So generate video offers two main features.
Here's the gist.
Text to video and image to video,
allowing users to create video content from text descriptions
or by using reference images.
So the video output quality has been improved.
to 1080p HD at 24 frames per second,
though the maximum clip length is currently limited in just five seconds.
So bummer there.
Adobe is working on both a faster and a lower resolution model,
as well as a 4K model to enhance future capabilities.
So it looks like they're kind of going this small, medium, large,
and it looks like what's available now is probably more of a medium tier.
The Firefly web app now integrates with Creative Cloud apps, such as Photoshop and Premiere Pro,
streamlining the workflow for those users.
Adobe emphasized that Firefly, this is the big thing, is trained on public domain and license
content, ensuring its tools are safe for commercial use.
And that will be a big talking point over the next couple of years, if I'm being honest,
because both OpenAI and Google have been a little bag and every other company, right,
Runway, Luma, everyone else.
They don't really talk about how their video models are trained.
Presumably, they just scrape any video or photo it can find on the internet, presumably, right?
But Adobe has really emphasized more of a safer approach, you know,
using tools that it has for commercial use.
although previous reports have said that up to, I believe it was 5% of what Adobe had trained
previously for some of its visual models included images from Mid Journey, which kind of makes
the whole like, oh, we have commercial use rights for this moot's point if you're using things
from Mid Journey.
So the AI video market is becoming increasingly competitive with Adobe facing challenges from
companies like OpenAI, Google, ByteDance, peeking.
of labs, there's another handful or so from China over the last month that have really been
impressive. So two additional tools called Scene to Image and Translate Audio and Video are also
now available in public beta, offering new creative possibilities for users. So how much will it cost?
Adobe has introduced two Firefly subscription plans, FireFide Standard at 999 a month, and Firefly Pro at
2999 per month, each offering various levels of credits and access to features.
All right, that's it.
Let's do the very quick rundown as a recap.
Here is the AI News that matters for this week.
Number one, Elon Musk bid to acquire open AI was rejected amid their ongoing feud.
Number two, Elon Musk's Grock AI chatbot is set to release tonight.
So we'll see how that goes.
Number three, we've seen some pretty sizable now delays,
according to reports for Apple's AI-powered Siri and Amazon's AI-powered Alexa.
Number four, perplexity has unveiled its deep research tools.
So make sure to join us tomorrow as we give a rundown on that.
And then on Wednesday, as we compare the three major deep research tools,
AI story.
Number five, YouTube.
We finally now have a VO2 released, but just on YouTube shorts.
So very limited scope that you can use it.
AI news story number six, GPT40.
We saw some under the board, sorry, under the hood updates from the GPT4O model that shot
it back up to tied for first in the LM chatbot arena leaderboard.
Number seven, Open AI CEO, Sam Altman, went to Twitter to talk about new GPT5 updates and kind of how these models might just get married together.
Number eight, finally seeing some movement from Anthropics Claude, and they will reportedly be launching a new hybrid AI model in the coming weeks.
Number nine, both Apple and Meta are reportedly going much deeper into the AAPE.
AI-powered humanoid robotic space.
And last but not least, number 10, Adobe has launched a public beta for its AI video generator.
All right, y'all, I hope that this was helpful.
We spend a ton of time, not just on our show every single day, but on this show, the news that
matters.
There's literally hundreds of news stories every single week.
I don't want you to be confused, right?
I don't want you to be worried about, oh, what does this mean?
right, that's what we do.
So if you can only join us once a week, join us Mondays so you can keep up.
I hope you join us every single day because I think that there is so much value in tuning
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Yes, the show might not, you know, be highly applicable to you every single day as we bring
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Thanks y'all.
Meet Firefly AI Assistant.
Now live in Adobe Firefly, the Allman One Creative AI Studio.
Just describe what you want to create in your own words and the assistant handles the rest,
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including Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface.
You direct the outcome while the assistant accelerates execution.
Stand control with the ability to step in and refine at any,
time. See it today at firefly.adobie.com.
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