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    I pitted ChatGPT’s new o3-mini reasoning model against DeepSeek-R1, and I was shocked by the results


    It’s been a rollercoaster week for artificial intelligence, with DeepSeek completely destabilizing the AI market by releasing its R1 reasoning model and not only giving everybody access to it for free (as a chatbot), but also giving developers incredibly cost-effective access to it as an API.

    DeepSeek was then hit by cyber attacks that temporarily took it offline, but it appears to be up and running again. To cap the week off, OpenAI responded by releasing its o3-mini and o3-mini-high reasoning models across all its subscription services, including its Plus and Pro subscriptions and its free tier.

    To use o3-mini on the free tier of ChatGPT, on mobile or the web, is simple. You’ll need to update your ChatGPT app on mobile first, then tap the new Reason button next to search in the Message box. It works exactly the same way in the web browser version of ChatGPT. You’ll find a new Reason button where you type your text prompt:

    The new Reason button in ChatGPT

    ChatGPT has a new Reason button you can select when messaging the chatbot. (Image credit: OpenAI)

    Reasoning models are particularly good at tasks like writing complex code and solving difficult math problems, however, most of us use chatbots to get quick answers to the kind of questions that appear in everyday life. So, I immediately started wondering how the new o3-mini reasoning model would do compared to DeepSeek-R1 since they’re both free to access. I immediately set about asking it some tough questions that would require a little bit of thought to answer.

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