• long running

ChatGPT Free Users Will Have Access to GPT-4 Level Intelligence and Features @ OpenAI

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Hat-tip to Scrooge McDeal on ozbargain for this.

OpenAI has announced ChatGPT 4o.

This announcement came with some freebies for free users.

When using GPT-4o, ChatGPT Free users will now have access to features such as:

  • Experience GPT-4 level intelligence

  • Get responses(opens in a new window) from both the model and the web

  • Analyze data(opens in a new window) and create charts

  • Chat about photos you take

  • Upload files(opens in a new window) for assistance summarizing, writing or analyzing

  • Discover and use GPTs and the GPT Store

  • Build a more helpful experience with Memory

    There will be a limit on the number of messages that free users can send with GPT-4o depending on usage and demand. When the limit is reached, ChatGPT will automatically switch to GPT-3.5 so users can continue their conversations.

On a personal note, I've been using 4o since the release, and my goodness, it's accelerated my python coding productivity something crazy!

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Comments

  • +1

    Hi beatthatflight,

    I see that someone has reported this, and I am guessing it might be due to there being no actual 'deal' here?

    I suggest you delete this from the deals section, and re-post to the discussion forum.

    Thanks,

    Alan.

  • +2

    Thanks BTF ! Love your work mate

  • I've noticed with the app update, they removed voice conversation for free users. You now have to subscribe to their plus plan.

    • What app are you using?

      I'm on android and not sure if there is an official app or 3rd party on that's recommended?

    • I have the chatgpt android app and have the voice conversation feature available. For me there's a button the looks like a set of headphones next the text input box.

  • Can't be bothered looking this up, but when will GPT-4o become available to free users? GPT-4 isn't even available to free users yet.

    I was paying for ChatGPT Plus for a while (just so I could use the code interpreter functionality of GPT-4). But at I think $40 NZD a month, it was just too pricey to continue. Not only that, but I'm also using the API keys as well, albeit they are much cheaper and have different use-cases. I'm also paying for Github Copilot, so basically MS has me by the balls.

    Meta AI and some other language models seem to be pretty good and in some cases better than GPT these days though, so others may want to check them out.

    • Have you tried www.coze.com? It's powered by ChatGPT 4 and it's free.

      • +3

        Copilot is GPT-4 and is free too

        • Copilot is free? I was paying about $16 a month for a while

          • @marklar: Copilot is free, GitHub Copilot isn't

            • @kfr23: Oh right, the other Copilot :D

      • Haven't tried it but had a brief look just now.

        I think I should clarify what I meant in my earlier comment a bit, as it can be a bit confusing.

        Code Interpreter, or I think it's called Data Analyst now, is a feature that is only available to ChatGPT Plus users. However, you can be on ChatGPT Plus and still not get to use that feature, unless you switch the model to GPT-4. This model is only available to ChatGPT Plus users, not free users.

        Code interpreter basically can take your existing code and run unit tests and whatever and output a new solution for you. This reduces hallucination, because it needs to actually test the code that it has proposed, validate it and then if it fails, it'll just repeat until it has working code, then it'll output the solution to you. There are a lot of other Github projects out there like AutoGPT or whatever that does this too. Copilot Workspace is also somewhat related to this. same with Devin AI.

        Anyway, there are a few features that I occasionally use from ChatGPT Plus and that's why I paid for the monthly subscription.

        As for the API keys, they let you use different GPT models, such as GPT-4 Turbo, etc. A lot of the GPT sites out there will make use of these models, but it's not the same thing as ChatGPT Plus.

        I already use the API keys for my own bots and scripts and they're cheap, which is why a lot of these sites are even able to offer this service for "free" in the first place. But they don't do anything else that I can't already do with my own tools/bots/scripts. I only pay about like $3 a month for my OpenAI API keys, and that's assuming they're heavily used in that month.

        • Do you know what is the last date the model has data upto? I mean I need to rectify some code, but the ms library is only couple of months old and documentation is all over the place.

          • @ace310: which model specifically? It should be listed on OpenAI's site if you're referring to the GPT models.

        • Interesting.
          So for coding purposes, how does that compare with GitHub copilot? Is GitHub copilot worth it?

    • +1

      It is now, I just used it on my free account.

      • Oh yep, I can see it now in mine too.

  • +3

    AI waifus are here!

  • my free account still not received it

  • How do you all use ChatGPT for programming work and daily life?

    • +1

      Debugging errors. Often in the past it'd require searching stackoverflow, hunting versions, reading github comments, but now I ask chatgpt , and often it tells me exactly how to fix it.

      It's also really good at producing 99% correct short python scripts, which I've used for work and personal projects.

      I actually ran the beatthatflight flight finder scripts through it and it found performance improvements and code simplifications that gave one of them a 40% boost in performance!

      My proud moment in my personal stuff though was loading the Consumer Guarantees Act into it and getting it to draft a letter to a retailer on why they should repair a product we bought, citing the Act. I copied and pasted and sent it to them, and they agreed to fix :P

      • I watched a talk by Andrew Ng in Stanford during lunch and it looks like I'ma hafta get better at Python. I'm heavily in PHP and JS at the moment.

        • +1

          When coursera/udemy etc were just starting up, I did two courses, one by Sebastian Thrun (he was the pioneer on the DARPA challenge with self driving cars) and another by Andrew Ng on machine learning. Love that stuff (my honours thesis was building a neural network by hand, things have changed since then!). Php, meh, lots of shops still use it but it is painful. JS used to be awful but it's definitely required for front end testing/dev work these days, but python is just way more…fun to code in.

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