OpenAI plans to simplify AI products in new road map for latest models, CEO Altman says

Its announcement comes at a time when companies in the US are facing greater investor scrutiny over their massive spending on the technology

    • The generative AI pioneer aims to merge the o-series and GPT-series models in a bid to create AI systems that can utilise all available tools and handle variety of tasks.
    • The generative AI pioneer aims to merge the o-series and GPT-series models in a bid to create AI systems that can utilise all available tools and handle variety of tasks. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Thu, Feb 13, 2025 · 09:01 AM

    OPENAI will not release “o3” as a standalone artificial intelligence (AI) model, as the ChatGPT maker looks to simplify its products, CEO Sam Altman said on Wednesday (Feb 12).

    The Microsoft-backed startup will release a GPT-5 model as a comprehensive AI system that will incorporate o3 along with other technologies, he said.

    OpenAI had unveiled o3 and o3 mini models in December 2024.

    Its announcement comes at a time when companies in the US are facing greater investor scrutiny over their massive spending on the technology, after Chinese startup DeepSeek unveiled a low-cost AI model last month.

    “We want to do... a much better job simplifying our product offerings. We want AI to ‘just work’ for you; we realise how complicated our model and product offerings have gotten,” Altman said, without sharing any timeline for the release of these products.

    OpenAI did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

    The generative AI pioneer aims to merge the o-series and GPT-series models in a bid to create AI systems that can utilise all available tools and handle variety of tasks.

    OpenAI will also release a GPT-4.5 model, internally referred to as “Orion”, as its last “non-chain-of-thought” model – a reasoning process which generates direct answers without clear intermediate steps.

    The model often struggles with complex reasoning tasks, particularly in domains such as physics and mathematics. REUTERS

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