Transcript
ZimLZV80bJg • GPT-6 Explained: Timeline, Features & How Close We Are to AGI
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Language: en
You've probably been hearing all this
hype about GPT5, GPT6, and maybe you're
wondering, is any of this actually going
to change how you use AI? Or is it just
another tech buzzword that sounds
impressive but delivers the same old
results? Well, I've been tracking every
single Open AI release, digging through
the research papers, analyzing the
benchmarks, and here's what surprised
me. We're way closer to AGI than most
people realize.
and GPT6.
It's not just going to be smarter, it's
going to be different. Welcome back to
bitbiased.ai,
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So, in this video, I'm going to break
down everything you need to know from
the evolution of GPT models all the way
to what GPT6 will actually bring to the
table. More importantly, I'll show you
exactly where we stand on the path to
artificial general intelligence and why
the next 12 to 24 months could change
everything.
Let's start with how we got here because
understanding the journey from GPT1 to
GPT 5.2 2 will help you see why GPT6 is
such a big deal. From GPT1 to GPT 5.2, a
rapid evolution.
To truly appreciate where we're headed,
you need to understand how fast this
technology has moved. And trust me, the
speed of progress here is almost hard to
believe.
GPT1 launched in June 2018 with just 117
million parameters.
It could generate basic text, but it was
repetitive, often nonsensical, and
really just a research experiment.
Think of it as a proof of concept,
showing that transformer-based models
could actually work for language tasks.
Then came GPT2 in February 2019.
At 1.5 billion parameters, it was a
massive leap. OpenAI actually considered
it too dangerous to release fully
because it could generate surprisingly
realistic text.
But here's the thing, it still struggled
with consistency and needed serious
compute power to run. Now, here's where
it gets interesting. GPT3 dropped in
June 2020 with 175 billion parameters.
And this was the breakthrough moment.
Suddenly, you had an AI that could code,
answer questions, summarize documents,
and do it all with minimal examples.
This is when AI went from interesting
tech demo to actually useful tool.
GPT 3.5 and Chat GPT in late 2022
changed everything.
Fine-tuned with reinforcement learning
from human feedback, ChatGpt brought AI
to the mainstream.
Your parents were suddenly asking about
it. It could hold real conversations,
help with creative writing, assist with
coding, and it marked a pivotal moment
in public AI adoption.
GPT4 arrived in March 2023 as a
multimodal model, meaning it could
process both text and images.
Reasoning improved dramatically, context
length expanded to 32,000 tokens, and it
started passing professional exams.
This is when AI assistance became
genuinely capable. But wait until you
hear about GPT5.
GPT5 launched in August 2025, about 28
months after GPT4.
Open AAI called it a significant leap
with multimodal abilities across text,
images, audio, and potentially video.
But here's what most people don't talk
about. The launch didn't go smoothly.
Some users felt it fell short of
expectations.
Open AAI actually had to restore the
older GPT4 model for paying users due to
quality issues. Even worse, researchers
jailbroke GPT5 within 24 hours of
release using something called the echo
chamber method.
This raised serious questions about
safety and alignment. Despite these
hiccups, GPT5 laid the groundwork for
what came next.
GPT 5.2 2 released in mid December 2025.
And this is where things get really
impressive.
OpenAI describes it as faster, more
reliable, and built specifically for
complex professional tasks. And the
benchmarks back this up on OpenAI's
internal GDP valve benchmark, which
simulates 44 different occupations like
writing, marketing, legal analysis, and
coding. GPT 5.2's 2's thinking mode beat
or tied human professionals on 70.9% of
tasks. That's up from just 38.8% with
GPT 5.1. On competition level math
problems, 100% success rate on AM 2025.
On the hardest ARC reasoning benchmark,
it jumped from 17.6% to 52.9%. These
aren't small improvements. This is a
fundamentally more capable model. GPT
5.2, the model built for work. Here's
what makes GPT 5.2 different from
everything that came before. OpenAI
explicitly designed it to be your AI
co-worker, not just a chatbot.
Think about what that means.
It can handle longer inputs, maintain
coherence across complex documents,
interpret images more accurately, and
integrate with tools in ways that
actually work for real business
applications.
Companies like Notion, Box, and Shopify
have already reported that GPT 5.2
excels at long- form reasoning and
practical tool usage. Data teams at Data
Bricks and Hex found it performs
exceptionally well at Agentic Data
Science and Document Analysis.
OpenAI released GPT 5.2 in three
variants to match different needs. an
instant version for quick responses, a
thinking version for complex reasoning,
and a pro version designed for deep
research level tasks.
But here's the competitive context you
need to understand.
GPT 5.2's release came right as Google
unveiled Gemini 3, which they called our
most intelligent model and a big step
toward AGI.
Reports suggest OpenAI internally called
it a code red situation.
The AI race is now fully accelerating
with Open AI, Google, Anthropic, and
even XAI's Gro trading rapidfire
releases for users. This competition
means faster progress, but it also
raises the bar for what each new model
needs to deliver. Looking ahead to GPT6,
what do we know?
All right, now here's what you've been
waiting for. What's actually coming with
GPT6?
First, the timeline. OpenAI has
explicitly denied that GPT6 will launch
in 2025.
When an analyst claimed it was coming by
year's end, an OpenAI employee quickly
shut that down. We might see a GPT 5.3
or GPT 5.5 first with GPT6 likely
arriving in 2026 or later.
However, Sam Alman has indicated that
the gap between generations is
shrinking. GPT4 to GPT5 was about 28
months. GPT6 should come faster,
possibly late 2026.
Second, the features. This is where it
gets exciting. Altman has emphasized
that GPT6 will be different in
fundamental ways. The biggest changes
personalization and long-term memory.
Imagine an AI that actually learns your
preferences, remembers your past
conversations, and adapts to your
specific style and needs. Not a
one-sizefits-all model, but something
that develops a unique flavor aligned to
you over time.
Altman has also talked about
customizable alignment. Following new US
government guidelines for ideologically
neutral AI, GPT6 might let users set
their preferred tone or perspective from
a neutral baseline.
You could ask for different approaches
depending on your needs while the model
maintains safety guard rails.
Third, a smoother roll out.
After GPT5's rocky launch, OpenAI is
clearly focused on reliability.
Expect more rigorous testing, better
safety alignment, and possibly a gradual
rollout that gives users choice rather
than forcing everyone onto the new model
immediately. Fourth, and this is the big
one, the super assistant concept.
Leaked internal road maps suggest OpenAI
isn't just building GPT6 as a model.
They're building it as the engine for a
completely transformed chat GPT
experience. Think managing your
calendar, booking travel, sending
emails, controlling apps, an AI agent
that can actually act on your behalf.
We're already seeing early steps.
Browsing, code execution, even shopping
checkout through Stripe integration. By
the time GPT6 arrives, it might
represent the point where AI assistants
evolve from clever chat bots into
genuine autonomous agents.
closer to AGI, GPT6
in context. Now, let's address the
question everyone's really asking. Will
GPT6 bring us to AGI? Here's what the
people actually building this technology
are saying. Sam Alman wrote in 2024.
We are now confident we know how to
build AGI as we have traditionally
understood it.
That's a remarkable statement. It
suggests OpenAI believes the blueprint
is essentially complete. It's now about
execution and scaling.
Alman predicted that by 2025 we'd see AI
systems that join the workforce and
materially improve company output.
Looking at GPT 5.2 being used for
professional tasks. That prediction is
playing out right now. His timeline for
AGI about 5 years, meaning around 2029.
But he also suggested it might arrive
with surprisingly little societal
disruption at first.
Daario Amode, CEO of Anthropic, is even
more aggressive. He predicted AGI could
arrive by 2026 or 2027, saying there's
no ceiling below the level of humans.
There's a lot of room at the top for
AIS.
Even Elon Musk has claimed X AI or
others could achieve AGI by 2026.
If these predictions are right, GPT6
expected around 2026 could be hitting
that critical threshold.
But there are hurdles. Data and funding
constraints could slow progress.
Training these models requires enormous
highquality data sets and we may be
running out of readily usable internet
text. The compute requirements are
staggering. Billions of dollars and new
chip fabrication plants.
Open AAI itself has faced financial
strain though recent funding rounds have
helped.
Whether GPT6 achieves AGI or just gets
us tantalizingly close depends on
overcoming these engineering challenges.
What AGI might actually look like.
There's ongoing debate about what
constitutes AGI, but most definitions
center on an AI that can perform
virtually any intellectual task a human
can. If GPT6 doesn't fully achieve that,
it could very well be the first that
feels extremely close. Imagine expert
level performance across dozens of
fields: science, law, arts, plus the
ability to handle unseen tasks by
learning on the fly.
With expected memory and tool use
abilities, GPT6 could operate as a
general problem solver rather than a
specialized chatbot.
Not necessarily conscious or humanlike,
but from a capability standpoint, as
capable as a human consultant in most
knowledge domains. Each incremental
update has already shown more general
intelligence.
GPT 5.2 can draft legal contracts, debug
code, compose music, and interpret
images. GPT6 will push that even
further. As we prepare for GPT6, it's
incredible to reflect on how rapidly
we've progressed.
In 2018, GPT1 could barely hold a
conversation.
By 2025, GPT 5.2 is surpassing human
professionals on the majority of a wide
benchmark of work tasks.
GPT 5.2 shows that OpenAI is making AI
more practical, reliable, and integrated
into daily work. It's a powerful tool,
but also a signpost that even bigger
things are coming.
GPT6 is expected to bring not just more
raw power, but smarter ways of
interacting, personalization, memory,
and autonomy that could transform how we
use AI in our lives. If GPT 5.2 is about
AI becoming a co-worker, GPT6 might be
about AI becoming a partner.
One thing is certain, the race toward
AGI is accelerating. Open AAI, Google,
Anthropic, and others are pushing each
other to new heights.
In the next couple of years, we're
likely to see AI systems that were
previously confined to science fiction.
Ensuring these systems are developed
safely and responsibly is as important
as making them powerful. OpenAI's
iterative approach, testing models in
real world use, learning, and improving
will be crucial as we move forward.
For now, GPT 5.2 gives us a glimpse of
what cuttingedge AI can do. GPT6
promises to raise that bar even higher.
If the timelines hold, we may not have
to wait long to see it in action and to
find out how it reshapes the
conversation about AI on the path to
artificial general intelligence.
If you found this breakdown helpful,
make sure to subscribe and hit that
notification bell because the AI
landscape is evolving fast and I'll be
covering every major development as it
happens.
Drop a comment below. What feature are
you most excited to see in GPT6?
Is it the personalization, the memory
capabilities, or the super assistant
functionality?
Thanks for watching, and I'll see you in
the next one.