×
OpenAI launches GPT-4 Turbo with enhanced capabilities
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

OpenAI’s latest model upgrade marks a significant leap forward in AI capabilities and affordability, strengthening the company’s competitive position amid growing challenges from rival models. The introduction of GPT-4.1 with its massive context window and improved performance across all dimensions signals OpenAI’s commitment to maintaining its leadership position while addressing developer concerns about efficiency and cost.

The big picture: OpenAI has released GPT-4.1, a successor to GPT-4o, featuring a one million token context window and improvements across coding, instruction following, and overall performance.

  • The company is also releasing two smaller versions—GPT-4.1 Mini and GPT-4.1 Nano—with the latter being OpenAI’s “smallest, fastest, and cheapest” model to date.
  • All three models can process up to one million tokens of context, dramatically exceeding GPT-4o’s previous 128,000-token limit.

Cost considerations: GPT-4.1 is 26 percent cheaper than GPT-4o, addressing growing industry concerns about model efficiency.

  • This pricing strategy appears to be a direct response to competition from DeepSeek’s ultra-efficient AI model that gained attention earlier this year.
  • The focus on affordability suggests OpenAI is prioritizing developer adoption and commercial viability alongside raw performance metrics.

Transition timeline: OpenAI plans to phase out the two-year-old GPT-4 model from ChatGPT on April 30th, with GPT-4.5 API access ending July 14th.

  • The company cited GPT-4.1’s improved performance, lower cost, and reduced latency as justification for deprecating these older models.
  • These changes reflect OpenAI’s shift toward consolidating its model offerings around newer, more efficient architectures.

Context for developers: The full million-token context window represents a substantial technical achievement for real-world applications.

  • OpenAI claims the new model has been trained to “reliably attend to information across the full 1 million context length” and better identify relevant content while ignoring distractions.
  • This capability opens possibilities for processing entire codebases, lengthy documents, or complex multi-modal interactions in a single context.

Behind the schedule: The GPT-4.1 release marks a pivot in OpenAI’s product roadmap, with CEO Sam Altman recently announcing that GPT-5 has been delayed by several months.

  • Altman admitted integration challenges, noting it was “harder than we thought it was going to be to smoothly integrate everything.”
  • OpenAI is also preparing to release its full o3 reasoning model and an o4 mini reasoning model, with references already spotted in ChatGPT’s web interface.

Capacity challenges: The release follows recent infrastructure strain when OpenAI’s GPT-4o image generation capabilities proved so popular that the company had to limit access.

  • The overwhelming demand temporarily forced OpenAI to pause free ChatGPT accounts to prevent its GPUs from “melting.”
  • This incident highlights the balancing act between introducing powerful new features and maintaining stable service infrastructure.
OpenAI debuts new flagship AI model

Recent News

Scaling generative AI 4 ways from experiments to production

Organizations face significant hurdles when moving generative AI initiatives from experimentation to production-ready systems, with most falling short of deployment goals despite executive interest.

Google expands Gemini AI with 2 new plans, leak reveals

Google prepares to introduce multiple subscription tiers for Gemini, addressing the gap between its free and premium AI offerings.

AI discovers potential Alzheimer’s cause and treatment

AI identifies PHGDH gene as a direct cause of Alzheimer's disease beyond its role as a biomarker, offering a new understanding of spontaneous cases and potential treatment pathways.