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OpenAI Frontier

https://openai.com/index/introducing-openai-frontier/
81•nycdatasci•1h ago

Comments

turbocon•1h ago
OpenClawd for the business is here. Wow that was fast.
baxtr•1h ago
Vibe coded?
paradite•1h ago
Okay now this is gonna trigger mass layoffs, if it works.
bilekas•1h ago
Misguided mass layoffs though so nothing new.
thepasch•1h ago
It's not going to "trigger" mass layoffs; it'll be used as a convenient scapegoat for mass layoffs that were always going to happen anyway to make room for more stock buybacks. Business as usual. Same shit, different hat.
falloutx•1h ago
if only companies like openAI can put this much effort into actually curing Cancer.
andsoitis•1h ago
> if only companies like openAI can put this much effort into actually curing Cancer

https://openai.com/index/color-health/

falloutx•38m ago
Lets be honest color is not solving cancer when they make money from managing cancer. you just searched openai cancer and gave me back the first result.
ninja3925•1h ago
TLDR: « Today, we’re introducing Frontier, a new platform that helps enterprises build, deploy, and manage AI agents that can do real work. Frontier gives agents the same skills people need to succeed at work: shared context, onboarding, hands-on learning with feedback, and clear permissions and boundaries. That’s how teams move beyond isolated use cases to AI coworkers that work across the business. »
yanis_t•1h ago
Stock sell-off again?
turnsout•1h ago
As someone who would be in a position to advise enterprises on whether to adopt Frontier, there is simply not enough information for me to follow the "Contact Sales" CTA.

We need technical details, example workflows, case studies, social proof and documentation. Especially when it's so trivial to roll your own agent.

WarmWash•1h ago
Looks like 2026 is indeed shaping up to be the year of the agent.
jaredcwhite•13m ago
Hilarious! Year of the Agent, hahahaha. Good one!
bilekas•1h ago
> The way work gets done has changed, and enterprises are starting to feel it in big ways.

Why do they say all of this fluff when everyone knows it’s not exactly true yet. Just makes me be cynical of the rest.

When can we say we have enough AI? Even for enterprise? I would guess that for the majority of power users you could stop now and people would be generally okay with it, maybe some further into medical research or things that are actually important.

For Sam Altman and microslop though it seems to be a numbers game, just have everyone in and own everything. It’s not even about AGI anymore I feel.

Waterluvian•1h ago
> when everyone knows it’s not exactly true yet

I think two things:

1. Not everyone knows.

2. As we've seen at a national scale: if you just lie lie lie enough it starts being treated like the truth.

dbshapco•58m ago
I'm agnostic, but ...

"And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness."

For a more modern take, paraphrasing Hannah Arendt.

“The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the convinced Communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists.”

We live in a an age where for many media is reality, uncritical, unchecked. Press releases are about creating reality, not reporting it, they are about psychological manipulation, not information.

> As we've seen at a national scale: if you just lie lie lie enough it starts being treated like the truth.

This actually happened in reverse with the spread of social media dynamics to politics and major media. Twitter made Trump president, not the other way around.

* No LLMs were harmed in the making of this comment.

baxtr•1h ago
Is there any reason not to assume that the article was created by an LLM?
bilekas•1h ago
It sure reads like it.. These days unfortunately so many things do, there is a real “impersonality” (if that’s the right word) to the whole new communication theme.
pixl97•1h ago
>a real “impersonality”

I mean that's been a lot of corporate writing for some time.

pegasus•1h ago
These two are not unrelated. It's just a step further along the same path.
mcmcmc•1h ago
Without a byline it’s probably the safer assumption.
imafish•1h ago
Well, it is OpenAI - I would be disappointed if it wasn't in some way created by an LLM.
rvnx•51m ago
If anything with the latest OpenAI releases, it's that they are probably developed using Claude Code
pier25•1h ago
> Why do they say all of this fluff

They're desperate?

WarmWash•1h ago
For classic engineering it's been a boon. This is in a pretty similar vein to the gains mathematicians have been making with AI.

These models can pretty reliably bang out what once was long mathematical solves for hypothetical systems in incredibly short periods of time. It also enables you to do second and third order approximations way easier. What was a first order approach that would take a day, is now a second order approach taking an hour.

And to top it off, they're also pretty damn competent in at least pointing you in the right direction (if nothing else) for getting information about adjacent areas you need to understand.

I've been doing an electro-optical project recently as an electronics guys, and LLMs have been infinitely useful in helping with the optics portion (on top of the mathing electronics speed up).

It's still "trust, but verify" for sure, but damn, it's powerful.

infecto•58m ago
To be frank I don’t think your worldview is directionally accurate. OpenAI is certainly trying to sell something but every incremental update to these models there are more avenues of value generation being unlocked. For sure it’s not as it was hyped up to be as all the talking heads in the industry were spouting, but there is a lot of interesting ways to use these tools and it’s not for generating slop.
mikemarsh•57m ago
It's a kind of gaslighting, probably first and foremost for themselves before others.
throwaw12•37m ago
I disagree with your sentiment and genuinely think something big is coming. It doesn't need to be perfect now, but it could be good enough to disrupt SaaS market.

> say all of this fluff when everyone knows it’s not exactly true yet

How do you know it's not exactly true? I am already seeing employees in enterprises are heavily reliant on LLMs, instead of using other SaaS vendors.

* Want to draft email and fix your grammar -> LLMs -> Grammarly is dying

* Want to design something -> Lovable -> No need to wait designer, no need to get access to Figma, let designer design and present, for anything else use lovable, or alternatives

* want to code -> obviously LLMs -> I sometimes feel like JetBrains is probably in code red at the moment, because I am barely opening it (saying this as a heavy user in the past)

To make message shorter, I will share my vision in the reply

throwaw12•32m ago
Let's imagine AI is not there yet and won't be there for 100% accuracy, but you still need accountability, you can't run everything in autopilot and hope you will make 10B ARR.

How do you overcome this limitation?

By making human accountable, imagine you come to work in the morning and your only task is to: "Approve / Request improvement / Reject". You just press 3 buttons all day long:

* Customer is requesting pricing for X, based on the requirements, I found CustomerA had similar requirements and we offered them 100$ / piece last month. What should I do? Approve / Reject / "Ask for 110$"

* Customer (or their agent) is not happy with your 110$ proposal, I used historical data and based on X,Y,Z min we can offer is 104$ to make our ARR increase 15% year-over-year, what should I do? Approve / Reject / Your input

....

throwaw12•29m ago
> for the majority of power users you could stop now and people would be generally okay with it

Why stop though? Google didn't say Altavista and Yahoo is good enough for the majority of power users, let's not create something better.

When you have something good at your hand and you see other possibilities, would you say let's stop, this is enough?

intended•18m ago
> When can we say we have enough AI?

I’m good for now.

I am already tired of the disaster that is social media. Hilariously, we’ve gotten to the point that multiple countries are banning social media for under 18s.

The costs of AI slop are going to be paid by everyone, social media will ironically becoming far less useful, and the degree of fraud we will see will be … well cyber fraud is already terrifying, what’s the value of infinity added to infinity.

I would say that tech firms are definitely running around setting society on fire at this point.

God, they built all of this on absurd amounts of piracy, and while I am happy to dance on the grave of the MPAA and RIAA, the farming of content from people who have no desire to be harvested is absurd. I believe wikipedia has already started seeing a drop in traffic, which will lead to a reduction in donations. Smaller sites are going to have an even worse time.

estsauver•1h ago
I have a hard time believing that the right move for most organizations that aren't already bought into an OpenAI enterprise plan is going to be building their entire business around something like this. This ties you to one model provider that has been having issues keeping up with the other big labs and provides what looks like superficially some extremely useful tools but with unclear amounts of rigor. I don't think I would want to build my business on this if I was an AI-native company that was just starting right now unless they figure out how to make this much more legible and transparent to people.
chairhairair•1h ago
Upside: your employees don’t have to use WorkDay.

Downside: your employees’ agents decide that they should collectively bargain.

Oras•1h ago
Weird that it doesn't support MS Office, unless this would affect OpenAI <=> MS partnership.
moralestapia•1h ago
What's MS Office?
xena•1h ago
Ah, right, GP meant Microsoft Copilot 365 Enterprise Edition (with Copilot).
moralestapia•1h ago
Beautiful!
anematode•1h ago
Never heard of it.
1899-12-30•1h ago
M$ already has a program like this doesn't it? Microsoft™ 365™ Copilot™ agents™

Weird amounts of overlap between the two.

Insanity•1h ago
Building on OpenAI as a long term business strategy is dubious. Better go with an established cloud player for these solutions imo.

OpenAI might burn through all their money, and end up dropping support for these features and/or being sold off for parts altogether.

ecshafer•1h ago
I doubt that there is any risk at all. One is that this is probably a minor aspect of the business seeing these AIs. AIs that ive seen deployed so far for real work seem to best be done in side business offerings that you can tolerate a high false positive / false negative rate, but also isnt price sensitive enough that building a fully done automated pipeline classically is worth it or possible.
WarmWash•1h ago
There is a reason Apple chose gemini for apple intelligence, despite Google being in many ways a foe, and OpenAI and Anthropic both having way more "Apple flavor" to them.
Insanity•30m ago
Exactly. OpenAI is riding out a first mover advantage, but they have no moat. Plus a company like Google can bundle Gemini with other corporate offerings like Drive and Google Docs etc.

I just don’t see OpenAI winning this in the long run. And I’m saying that while I am subscribed to ChatGPT lol.

j16sdiz•1h ago
placing State Farm's testimonial first really tell you something
andsoitis•1h ago
There are many ways to interpret it. What’s your interpretation?

It is also interesting to contrast calling them by name vs. the other example, “a major semiconductor company”, not called by name. Though of course, there are also different reasonable ways to interpret that.

an0malous•1h ago
Great, some more bullshit our founders are going to force onto the company while they never use it, ignore everyone’s feedback that it doesn’t work, and expect everything to be done twice as fast now
Sol-•1h ago
Is it their version of virtual AI employees that some startups were previously getting into, plus on-site support by FDEs and such?
bix6•1h ago
> “Partnering with OpenAI helps us give thousands of State Farm agents and employees better tools to serve our customers. By pairing OpenAI’s Frontier platform and deployment expertise with our people, we’re accelerating our AI capabilities and finding new ways to help millions plan ahead, protect what matters most, and recover faster when the unexpected happens.” — Joe Park, Executive Vice President and Chief Digital Information Officer at State Farm

Ok how about you tell us one thing this shit is actually doing instead of vague nonsense.

franktankbank•1h ago
I'm sorry do you have some problem with protecting things that matter most?
Aeroi•1h ago
products and features are starting to get spread thin...
anzerarkin•1h ago
Well, even working as an AI engineer is no longer secure. It may soon be the case that all humans work for bots created by others. Is that the universal salary we are talking about?
andsoitis•1h ago
“Never send a human to do a machine’s job.” — Agent Smith, The Matrix
ossa-ma•1h ago
> "75% of enterprise workers say AI helped them do tasks they couldn’t do before."

> "At OpenAI alone, something new ships roughly every three days, and that pace is getting faster."

- We're seeing all these productivity improvements and it seems as though devs/"workers" are being forced to output so much more, are they now being paid proportionally for this output? Enterprise workers now have to move at the pace of their agents and manage essentially 3-4 workers at all times (we've seen this in dev work). Where are the salary bumps to reflect this?

- Why do AI companies struggle to make their products visually distinct OpenAI Frontier looks the exact same as OpenAI Codex App which looks the exact same as GPT

- OpenAI going for the agent management market share (Dust, n8n, crewai)

simonw•1h ago
I imagine the salary bumps occur when the individuals who have developed these productivity boosting skills apply for jobs at other companies, and either get those jobs or use the offer to negotiate a pay increase with their current employer.
falloutx•1h ago
> apply for jobs at other companies

Ahh, but its not 2022 anymore, even senior devs are struggling to change companies. Only companies that are hiring are knee deep into AI wrappers and have no possibility of becoming sustainable.

ossa-ma•1h ago
I haven't seen any examples of that.

Over the past few months mentions of AI in job applications have gone from "Comfortable using AI assisted programming - Cursor, Windsurf" to "Proficient in agentic development" and even mentions of "Claude code" in the desired skills sections. Yet the salary range has remained the exact same.

Companies are literally expecting junior/mid level devs to have management skills (for those even hiring juniors). They expect you to come in and perform on the level of a lead architect - not just understand the codebase but the data, the integrations, build pipelines to ingest the entire companies documentation into your agentic platform of choice, then begin delegating to your subordinates (agents). Does this responsibility shift not warrant an immediate compensation shift?

Der_Einzige•56m ago
The only group whose salaries have gone up as a result of LLMs are hardcore AI professionals, i.e. AI researchers.
falloutx•1h ago
> Why do AI companies struggle to make their products visually distinct OpenAI Frontier looks the exact same as OpenAI Codex App which looks the exact same as GPT|

Because that requires human thought and it might take couple weeks more to design and develop. Do something fast is the mantra, not doing something good.

boppo1•1h ago
>Where are the salary bumps to reflect this?

Revenue bumps and ROI bumps both gotta come first. Iirc, there's a struggle with the first one.

throwaw12•6m ago
> Where are the salary bumps to reflect this?

Let me increase salary to all my employees 2x, because productivity is 4x'ed now - never said a capitalist.

loveparade•1h ago
Slopware as a service?
mhitza•1h ago
> This is happening for AI leaders across every industry, and the pressure to catch up is increasing.

> Enterprises are feeling the pressure to figure this out now, because the gap between early leaders and everyone else is growing fast.

> The question now isn’t whether AI will change how work gets done, but how quickly your organization can turn agents into a real advantage.

FOMO at its finnest. "Quick before you're left behind for good this time!"

The idea itself has sensibility. It is the kind of AI application I've been pitching to companies, though without going all in on agents. Though I think it would be foollish for any CEO to build this on top of OpenAi, instead of a self-hosted model, and also train the model for them. You're just externalizing your internal knowledge this way.

songodongo•1h ago
More bullshit from OpenAI.
franktankbank•1h ago
The only numbers mentioned are speed of output. Any associated loss due to rework/ missed contracts?
Nextgrid•1h ago
> At a major semiconductor manufacturer, agents reduced chip optimization work from six weeks to one day.

I call BS right there. If you can actually do that, you’d spin up a “chip optimization” consultancy and pocket the massive efficiency gain, not sell model access at a couple bucks per million-tokens.

There should be a massive “caveats and terms apply” on that quote.

So far the AI productivity gains have been all bark and no bite. I’ll believe when I see either faster product development, higher quality or lower prices (which indeed happened with other technological breakthroughs, whether the printing press or the loom) - if anything, software quality is going down suggesting we aren’t there yet.

d--b•1h ago
MAybe the agent returned "nope, can't be optimized any more".
wongarsu•59m ago
I'm willing to bet "chip optimization work" doesn't mean "the work required to optimize a chip", but "some work tasks performed as part of chip optimization". Basically they sped up some unknown subset of the work from six weeks to one day. Which could be big or could be negligible
Der_Einzige•57m ago
It's only time #50952 that scam altman has lied. He's in a race right now with Elon and Trump to see who can lie hardest and most often.
techpression•1h ago
Funny how not a single one of those companies they use as examples works as a upsell for me. I’m clearly not the target audience.
simianwords•1h ago
I didn't quite grasp what this is trying to solve but I hope its doing this:

In our company we have a list of long tail "workflows" or "processes" that really just involves reading a document and filling a form.

For example, how do I even get access to a new DB? Or a new AWS account?

Can this tool help us create an agent that can automate this with some reasonable accuracy?

I see OpenAI frontier as quick way to automate these long tail processes.

infecto•55m ago
I think that’s sort of right. Said differently and the way I process these tools. You have mundane tasks that a human does where there are clear guidelines on acceptance. The underlying tools being used have clear APIs for automation. You can use natural language to automate said task without a full blown engineer in the loop. For non business engineers this sounds silly but it can save a lot of time for business users.
miltonlost•1h ago
Love all these anecdotes and magic stats that they don't have citations for and we're just supposed to believe.
TrackerFF•1h ago
If your employee does (with intent/malice) something very egregious, you can always fire and sue them for the damage done. Out of curiosity, what will the option be if some AI agent does the same?
imafish•58m ago
Fire the employee that created the agent xD
falloutx•1h ago
Another day, another blog post about managing Agents. Its for pretend companies who think they are doing something worthwhile if they run 4000 agents at once.
CuriouslyC•1h ago
The animations look nice, but why does OpenAI want to be the substrate for intelligence? It's at a disadvantage there vs competitors with strong domain experience.
mobiuscog•1h ago
Can those agents get my company legal team to approve the use of AI so I can at least try these modern things that make everyone's life better ?

Because for many of us, AI is "not approved until legal say so".

spprashant•1h ago
They are starting to sound less like a frontier AI lab, and more like a consultancy staffed with AI agents.

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