- ChatGPT can now keep in mind information you uploaded in earlier chats
- Free customers now get 500MB of persistent file storage
- OpenAI is popping ChatGPT into one thing nearer to a private AI workspace
OpenAI simply added a neat new function to ChatGPT with out a lot fuss, but it surely’s an actual game-changer. Now, while you add a file, it doesn’t simply disappear. As an alternative, ChatGPT retains it round in a brand new Library in an effort to confer with it once more in future chats.
The identical factor will occur with any information, like spreadsheets or shows, that ChatGPT generates in the midst of following your directions. They’ll now be added to the storage space for future use.
As an alternative of being immediately forgotten as quickly as you finish a chat, uploaded information now persist in ChatGPT, which implies it is beginning to perform extra like an AI workspace, a bit like Google Drive. The new feature includes storage limits for different subscriber types, but the good news is that even Free users get 500MB of storage, which is pretty generous.
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AI is getting useful in a very ordinary way
The new storage feature means you’ll now be able to ask ChatGPT about old tax forms, resurface recipes, compare resumes, and revisit travel plans shared on the platform. I can imagine it being particularly useful for remembering warranty PDFs or finding notes from weeks ago.
We all have a lot of digital clutter with nowhere sensible to keep it apart from a random folder on our laptop’s hard drive. Being able to store it all in ChatGPT could become a lifesaver, because that’s really what most of us want — a way to navigate the digital clutter of modern life.
What you get for your money
The storage limits for the different subscription tiers look like this:
- Free: 500MB
- Go: 4GB
- Plus and Business: 20GB
- Pro: 100GB
The new storage feature can be managed on the mobile app and web interface from a new menu option in Settings called Storage. It means you can reuse old documents, build on previous uploads, and gradually build up your own personal archive over time.
You can see what you’ve uploaded in a new Library menu option in the sidebar next to Images. Any images you create will still appear in Images, but uploaded files now belong in the Library. A new Recent files and Library option is also available in the Composer menu (the ‘+’ menu in the prompt bar).
With this new feature, ChatGPT is taking a step closer to the territory occupied by Google Drive, Notion, and Evernote, and I don’t think that’s a bad thing. ChatGPT is currently terrible at acting as your personal planner because it can’t do things like run a proper to-do list or even set a timer. The first step toward correcting that shortcoming is persistent file storage, and now that’s been addressed.
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