All posts tagged: narrowly

OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 is here, and it’s no potato: narrowly beats Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview on Terminal-Bench 2.0

OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 is here, and it’s no potato: narrowly beats Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview on Terminal-Bench 2.0

After months of rumors and reports that OpenAI was developing a new, more powerful AI large language model for use in ChatGPT and through its application programming interface (API), allegedly codenamed “Spud” internally, the company has today unveiled its latest offering under the more formal name GPT-5.5. And to likely no one’s surprise, it’s hardly a “potato” in the disparaging sense of the word: GPT-5.5 retakes the lead for OpenAI in generally available LLMs, coming ahead of rivals Anthropic’s and Google’s latest public offerings, and even beating the private Anthropic Claude Mythos Preview model narrowly on one benchmark (essentially a statistical tie). “It’s definitely our strongest model yet on coding, both measured by benchmarks and based on the feedback that we’ve gotten from trusted partners, as well as our own experience,” explained Amelia “Mia” Glaese, VP of Research at OpenAI, in a video call with journalists ahead of the launch earlier today. OpenAI positions GPT-5.5 as a fundamental redesign of how intelligence interacts with a computer’s operating system and professional software stacks. “What is really …

Anthropic releases Claude Opus 4.7, narrowly retaking lead for most powerful generally available LLM

Anthropic releases Claude Opus 4.7, narrowly retaking lead for most powerful generally available LLM

Anthropic is publicly releasing its most powerful large language model yet, Claude Opus 4.7, today — as it continues to keep an even more powerful successor, Mythos, restricted to a small number of external enterprise partners for cybersecurity testing and patching vulnerabilities in the software said enterprises use (which Mythos exposed rapidly). The big headlines are that Opus 4.7 exceeds its most direct rivals — OpenAI’s GPT-5.4, released in early March 2026, scarcely more than a month ago; and Google’s latest flagship model Gemini 3.1 Pro from February — on key benchmarks including agentic coding, scaled tool-use, agentic computer use, and financial analysis. But also, it’s notable how tight the race is getting: on directly comparable benchmarks, Opus 4.7 only leads GPT-5.4 by 7-4. Annotated Claude Opus 4.7 benchmark chart. Credit: Anthropic edited by VentureBeat using Google Gemini 3.1 Pro Image It currently leads the market on the GDPVal-AA knowledge work evaluation with an Elo score of 1753, surpassing both GPT-5.4 (1674) and Gemini 3.1 Pro (1314). GPDVal-AA knowledge work benchmark comparison chart of Opus …

Two cheetah cubs narrowly escape the illegal pet trade

Two cheetah cubs narrowly escape the illegal pet trade

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. In an intervention that might one day inspire the animated animal version of Argo, the Cheetah Conservation Fund and Somaliland’s Ministry of Environment and Climate Change rescued two cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) cubs on the verge of a terrible fate.  The Cheetah Conservation Fund carried out the extraction after receiving urgent intelligence that traffickers in the Somaliland capital were about to load the two cubs onto a boat and illegally move them into the exotic pet trade. Just hours later, the organization put a rescue team in action and worked with local authorities to take possession of the cheetahs.  The next day, the cubs ended up at Somaliland’s Cheetah Rescue and Conservation Centre, where veterinary and wildlife experts will care for them. The conservation centre opened in Somaliland in 2016 by Laurie Marker for cheetahs pulled out of the illegal wildlife trade. At the moment, 125 rescued cheetahs live at the facility. Images: Courtesy of Cheetah Conservation Fund “This outcome …

Valerie Perrine, Oscar-nominated Lenny and Superman actor who narrowly avoided Manson tragedy, dies aged 82

Valerie Perrine, Oscar-nominated Lenny and Superman actor who narrowly avoided Manson tragedy, dies aged 82

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Valerie Perrine, the Oscar-nominated actor best known for her performances in Lenny and Superman, has died. She was 82. The Texas-born actor started her career as a showgirl in Las Vegas. Prior to her film career, Perrine was invited to a party at Sharon Tate’s home in 1969 by Hollywood hair stylist Jay Sebring. She was unable to attend, and that night the Manson Family murdered six people including Sebring. In 2022, Perrine was the subject of Stacey Souther’s documentary Valerie, which looked back at her career and her resilience after being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2015. Her death was announced by Souther in a post on Perrine’s official Facebook page. She wrote: “It is with deep sadness that I share the heartbreaking news that Valerie has passed away. She faced Parkinson’s disease with incredible courage and compassion, never once …

Pickup truck narrowly misses kids at bus stop in Maryland

Pickup truck narrowly misses kids at bus stop in Maryland

IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Charges dropped against Georgia teens in fatal prank 00:15 House calls prison guard working night of Epstein death 01:28 Trump says military targets on Iranian island ‘obliterated’ 01:15 Michigan synagogue suspect seen buying fireworks before attack 01:23 Fans gather for Dolly Parton’s return post-health struggle 00:32 Team USA sled hockey advances to gold medal game 01:22 Mayor: Michigan suspect lost family in Israeli airstrike 00:32 Judge blocks subpoenas for Fed Chair Powell 01:03 Video appears to show Michigan suspect buying fireworks 00:49 Messages show Live Nation employees joking about fees 01:06 Alysa Liu welcomed back to Oakland as hometown hero 00:41 Hegseth says Iran’s leader is ‘likely disfigured’ 00:43 Gaza suffers food shortages as Iran war escalates 00:31 Explosion rocks Tehran during Quds Day rally 00:22 Noma chef René Redzepi resigns amid abuse allegations 00:50 Red fox stows away from England to New York on cargo ship 00:19 Now Playing Pickup truck narrowly misses kids at bus stop in Maryland …

England narrowly avoid ignominious T20 World Cup defeat to Nepal

England narrowly avoid ignominious T20 World Cup defeat to Nepal

Bam’s consecutive blows into the stands seemed to be the stuff of instant legend. First he launched Archer down the ground for six; then he pummelled his next delivery over midwicket. Either side of dismissing Aarif Sheikh flashing behind, Archer conceded 22 from the over, his most expensive ever in a World Cup game. Nepal now needed just 24 from the final 12 balls. The equation was swiftly reduced to 18 from 11: Bam slashed an edge for four, and then Luke Wood bowled consecutive wides, just outside the tramlines on the offside. After a dot ball, Bam then thrashed a straight boundary. Wood then bowled the third wide of the over, reducing the equation to 13 from nine balls. Jacks then made a crucial intervention on the straight boundary, restricting Bam to two. A single from Bam from the penultimate delivery left Nepal needing 10 from seven balls. Gulshan Jha swiped at a straight delivery, but missed. The denouement Now Curran had 10 runs to defend from the final over: the sort of situation …