The CEO of Openai, Sam Altman, took Tuesday to rent his team for what he considers one of the most important scientific breakthroughs in recent decades. However, what made him even more proud was a premature baby who learned to eat alone. He referred to his newborn son who was delivered before the end last week.
“Very proud of the Openai team for what is perhaps the most impressive scientific / technical breakthrough of the last decades. I thought it was the thing that I would always be the most proud of in life … It turns out that I am now more proud of a pre-emissary baby to learn to eat alone,” he said on the social media platform X.
“I realize that I am a neurochemical hacker here but IDC, it is the best,” he followed in another tweet.
Altman shared that his first child was born prematurely in February and is currently receiving care in a neonatal intensive care unit (USI). He expressed a deep love for his son, describing this experience as a transformer. “Welcome to the world, little guy! He came early and will be the factory for a while. He is fine and it’s really nice to be in a small bubble taking care of him. I never felt such love,” Altman had tweeted.
In addition to his reflections on paternity, Altman announced the last update of the Openai product, the launch of Chatgpt 4.5. This advanced version of the AI chatbot represents a technological leap for the company. Altman also launched a new idea of a Subscription model for Chatgpt, suggesting that users could convert their subscriptions to $ 20 to credits. These credits could be used for various features, in particular in-depth research and the GPT-4.5, without limits of fixed use by characteristic.
Altman asked for comments on this proposed model, which allows users to buy additional credits if necessary. “An idea of paid plans: your $ 20 Plus subscription is converted into credits that you can use on features such as Deep Research, O1, GPT-4.5, Sora, etc.”, he proposed, highlighting a flexible approach to access OpenAi offers. The objective is to provide users with more control over their use.