When I woke up, I found a news that GPT4 was released. I am actually the ChatGPT PLUS user so logged into the chatGPT. The best thing is GPT4 can generate the text up to 25,000 words!
Prompt in the login screen
Contents
The first thing I noticed was the ChatGPT login screen shown the GPT4 information to ask to adapt GPT4 or not.

The ChatGPT prompt screen
ChatGPT screen seems same as usual, except that the top of the screen has the option to select model selection for GPT4 options.
The screen also shows “GPT-4 currently has a cap of 100 messages every 4 hours”

Known improvement on GPT4
- 25000 words instead of 3000
- Image recognition
- Data learning up until September 2021
GPT4 can generate the table much different level!
When I tried “Can you make a comparison table between using airplane, bus, and train to travel from Penang to Kuala Lumpur?“, chatGPT created the below table!!
As usual, the contents below is not necessary the accurate one (I personally have some comments below) but the table generated beautifully!

For reference, here is the result for the same question by GPT3.5:

You can see the depth of the information is far greater than the GPT3.5.
Of course, may be same result can be created by giving specific criteria but this signifies the GPT4.
By the way, translation also worked well,

But GPT4 currently feels very slow
I’’m not sure if this is due to the high traffic or optimisation issues, but GPT4 model responses are as slow as free version of ChatGPT experienced in mid-January. Speed of the response and generation of the text is very slow at the moment.
Anyway, now its time to work so I will try more later tonight!

Hiroshi is a project manager specialising in international manufacturing operations, based in Tokyo. Originally from Hokkaido, he has lived and worked across Malaysia, Switzerland, China, the United States, Sweden, and the Philippines — a breadth of experience that shapes both his professional methodology and the perspective he brings to this blog.
His academic foundation is in international relations, and his career has centred on cross-border project management, organisational development, and operations management across multiple industries and geographies. In addition to his professional work, he has led large-scale international projects engaging participants from more than 150 countries, completed a cross-continental cycling expedition through North America, and contributed to disaster relief efforts following major natural disasters in Japan.
This blog covers travel, productivity, technology, and the realities of living and working across cultures. Content is grounded in firsthand experience and independent research.
Discover more from Hiroshi.today
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.