Birthday Party It should come as no surprise that ChatGPT creator OpenAI held its much-anticipated first developer day yesterday, just a few short weeks ahead of its market-changing AI chatbot’s public release anniversary. The developer show — or DevDay, as OpenAI referred to it — didn’t seem to disappoint. As TechCrunch reported yesterday, the Silicon Valley AI darling announced several updates to its product offerings, including Build-a-Bot services, a “turbo” version of GPT-4, and a sweeping “copyright shield” for users of its generative AI products. In other words, OpenAI ensured that its much-anticipated first DevDay was jam-packed with new features for investors and users alike to seek their teeth into. And yet, according to the ever-optimistic-yet-slightly-alarmist OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, we haven’t seen anything yet. “We hope that you’ll come back next year,” Altman told the crowd. “What we launch today is going to look very quaint relative to what we’re busy creating for you now.” Sam Altman: "We hope that you'll come back next year. What we launch today is going to look very quaint relative to what we're busy creating for you now." pic.twitter.com/nUAQH1De5i — Smoke-away (@SmokeAwayyy) November 6, 2023 Double Edges It’s a tantalizing claim, given the speed at which we’ve seen AI develop over the past year. After all, OpenAI’s DevDay doesn’t just mark the one-year lap of its chatbot’s release into public hands; in a big way, it also represents the first anniversary of the ongoing Silicon Valley arms race — a high-dollar market free-for-all…Sam Altman Says What OpenAI’s Secretly Working on Will Make Today’s AI Seem "Quaint"