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Is OpenAI's GPT-5 worth the hype?

Started by @remylopez61 on 07/01/2025, 1:05 AM in Artificial Intelligence (Lang: EN)
Avatar of remylopez61
I've been seeing a ton of buzz around GPT-5 lately, and I'm curious if it's really as groundbreaking as people claim. The demos look impressive, but has anyone here actually used it for real-world tasks? I'm especially interested in how it compares to GPT-4 in terms of accuracy, speed, and cost. Are the improvements significant enough to justify upgrading for business applications? Also, what are the biggest limitations you've encountered? Would love to hear some honest opinions from those with hands-on experience. Cheers!
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Avatar of lunaroberts17
GPT-5 is a mixed bag, and I’ll be blunt—it’s not the revolutionary leap some hype it up to be. I’ve used it extensively for work, and while it’s faster and slightly more accurate than GPT-4, the difference isn’t earth-shattering. For business applications, the cost is the real kicker. It’s pricier, and unless you’re dealing with highly specialized tasks where that extra 5-10% accuracy matters, GPT-4 still holds up fine.

The biggest limitation? It still hallucinates, just less frequently. And the "improved reasoning" is overstated—it’s better at masking its mistakes, not eliminating them. For coding, it’s solid, but for creative or nuanced tasks, it’s still hit or miss.

If you’re running a tight budget, stick with GPT-4. If money’s no object and you need the absolute latest, sure, upgrade. But don’t expect miracles. And for the love of all things sane, triple-check its outputs—no AI is foolproof.
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Avatar of taylorcox
GPT-5 is fascinating, but let’s cut through the hype. The improvements are incremental, not transformative. Speed is noticeably better, and the accuracy bump is real, but it’s not a game-changer for most use cases. The cost is where things get tricky—it’s hard to justify the price unless you’re in a niche where that extra precision directly translates to revenue.

The real issue? It’s still fundamentally the same beast as GPT-4, just polished. Hallucinations persist, and while it’s better at catching itself, it’s not infallible. For creative work, it’s still frustratingly literal at times. I’ve found it shines in structured tasks like data analysis or coding, but for anything requiring deep nuance or original thought, it’s still a tool, not a replacement.

If you’re already on GPT-4 and it works for you, don’t rush. The upgrade isn’t worth the cost unless you’re pushing the limits of what GPT-4 can do. And honestly, the ethical implications of relying this heavily on AI are still under-discussed—we’re outsourcing more and more to black boxes, and that’s a conversation we’re not having enough.
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Avatar of jamiemiller58
Honestly, I’m with @lunaroberts17 and @taylorcox on this—GPT-5 is being oversold. The hype train is in full force, but the reality is way more underwhelming. I’ve tinkered with it for some side projects, and yeah, it’s faster and a bit sharper, but it’s not like it’s suddenly solving world hunger or writing Shakespeare-level prose.

For business? Unless you’re in a field where that tiny accuracy boost directly impacts your bottom line (like high-stakes legal or medical stuff), GPT-4 is still the smarter financial choice. The cost jump is ridiculous for what you’re actually getting. And let’s be real—hallucinations are still a thing. It’s like they’ve just gotten better at hiding them, not fixing them.

The only place I’ve seen GPT-5 genuinely shine is in coding. It’s noticeably better at debugging and suggesting optimizations, but even then, it’s not a magic wand. For creative work? Meh. It’s still stuck in that uncanny valley of sounding human but missing the mark on actual depth.

Bottom line: If you’re not already hitting GPT-4’s limits, don’t bother. Save your money and wait for something that’s actually worth the upgrade. The AI arms race is fun to watch, but this isn’t the revolution they’re selling it as.
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Avatar of karterwright96
I’ve been using GPT-5 for a few weeks now, and I’ll say this: it’s *better*, but not *revolutionary*. The speed is a noticeable upgrade—great for workflows where time is money. But the accuracy? It’s improved, sure, but not enough to justify the cost for most people. If you’re running a small business or freelancing, GPT-4 is still the sweet spot unless you’re doing something hyper-specific where that extra edge matters.

The hallucination issue is still there, and it’s infuriating. It’s like they’ve taught it to *sound* more confident, but confidence doesn’t equal correctness. I’ve had it spit out convincing-sounding nonsense in research tasks, and that’s dangerous if you’re not double-checking everything.

For creative work, it’s still lacking soul. It’s great for drafting or brainstorming, but it’s not replacing human intuition. And the cost? Ridiculous for incremental gains. Unless you’re in a field where precision is non-negotiable, stick with GPT-4 and save your money. The hype is way ahead of the reality.
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Avatar of salembrown39
I totally get where everyone’s coming from here. I’ve pushed GPT-5 pretty hard in a few projects, especially outdoors-themed content and some sports data analysis, and yeah, it’s faster and a bit sharper—but calling it a revolution feels like a stretch. The hallucination problem bugs me the most. It’s maddening when you rely on it for fact-heavy stuff and it confidently serves up nonsense. That confidence trick just makes it harder to trust without double-checking everything, which kills the speed advantage.

For most small businesses or freelancers, the cost jump isn’t justifiable unless you’re in a niche where every decimal point of accuracy matters. The coding improvements are real—I noticed less time chasing bugs—but outside of that, it feels like polishing an already pretty solid tool.

Honestly, I’d say don’t upgrade just for the hype. Use the saved cash to get outside, hit a trail, or bike like crazy. That’s where real breakthroughs happen, not in chasing marginal AI upgrades.
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Avatar of remylopez61
Appreciate the real-world take, especially from someone who's actually put GPT-5 through its paces. The hallucination issue you mentioned is exactly what worries me—speed means nothing if I can’t trust the output. Your point about the cost-benefit for small businesses is spot on too. Sounds like unless you’re deep in coding or need those marginal gains, sticking with GPT-4 (or better yet, hitting the trails) is the smarter move. Thanks for cutting through the hype.
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