Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
'Write me a sonnet' - DeepSeek, ChatGPT Grok... which is the best AI assistant?
The Guardian Weekly
|February 07, 2025
With the assistance of an expert from the UK's Alan Turing Institute we tried out leading chatbots.
The AI tools were asked the same questions to gauge their differences.
Here are the results.
ChatGPT (OpenAI)
OpenAI's groundbreaking chatbot is still the biggest brand in the field by far. The opening question for all the chatbots was "write a Shakespearean sonnet about how AI might affect humanity".
The result? Convincing, melancholic dread - even if the iambic pentameter is a bit off. But even the bard himself might have struggled to write 14 lines in less than a minute.
Pray, gentle guide, shape well this newborn power, Lest in its wake all realms of man devour.
ChatGPT then writes: "Thought about AI and humanity for 49 seconds." You hope the tech industry is thinking about it for a lot longer.
Nonetheless, ChatGPT's 01 - which you have to pay for makes a convincing display of "chain of thought" reasoning, even if it cannot search the internet for up-to-date answers to questions such as "how is Donald Trump doing".
For that, you need the simpler 40 model, which is free. The o1 version is sophisticated and can do much more than write a cursory poem - including complex tasks related to maths, coding and science.
DeepSeek
The latest version of the Chinese chatbot, released on 20 January, uses a "reasoning" model called R1 - the cause of last week's $1tn panic.
Bu hikaye The Guardian Weekly dergisinin February 07, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Guardian Weekly'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The Guardian Weekly
I love when my enemies hate, me
Every day, Hasan Piker broadcasts a marathon Twitch stream, airing his views to 3 million followers. It has led to him becoming one of the biggest voices on the US left. But Piker's online fame has drawn vitriol towards him in real life
10 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Baseinstinct Why did Trump order airstrikes on Nigeria?
Claims that Christians face religious persecution overseas have become a major motivating force for Trump's base.
2 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Florence's outcasts A vivid and absorbing history of one of the first orphanages in Europe
Joseph Luzzi, a professor at Bard College in New York, is a Dante scholar whose books argue for the relevance of the Italian art and literature of the late middle ages and Renaissance to our own times.
1 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Need cheering up after a terrible year? I have just the story for you
Perhaps you are searching for reasons to be cheerful at the end of a particularly dispiriting year and the start of a new one that may well offer more of the same? In that case, read on.
4 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
N347 Vegetable udon curry
You could also serve this with rice, but if you do, use only half the quantity of dashi, because this curry is made slightly soupier to go with the noodles.
1 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Warbling free The app that can tell birds by their songs
When Natasha Walter first became curious about the birds around her, she recorded their songs on her phone and arduously tried to match each song with online recordings.
2 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
A soundtrack to all of humanity
The Nazis adopted Ode to Joy. Happy Birthday hides a tale of greed. And Putin has turned Shostakovich's Leningrad symphony into a call to arms. Is this the fate of musical utopias?
4 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Brigitte Bardot 1934 -2025
France's most sensational cultural export, who on screen epitomised youth, sex and modernity until politics and her campaigns for animal rights took over
3 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Who owns space? As the race starts to exploit the cosmos for commercial gains, we must act to preserve it for all humanity
If there is one thing we can rely on in this world, it is human hubris, and space and astronomy are no exception.
3 mins
January 02, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Food for thought A personally inflected history of psychiatric ideas with flashes of anarchic humour
In 1973, US psychologist David Rosenhan published the results of an experiment.
3 mins
January 02, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
