OpenAI Enhances ChatGPT with Interactive Math and Science Learning Tools Amidst Mounting Legal Challenges and Pentagon Deal Backlash
OpenAI has introduced new interactive visual tools within ChatGPT, allowing users to manipulate mathematical and scientific formulas in real-time. This educational feature covers over 70 core concepts, from the Pythagorean theorem to Ohm's law, and is available to all logged-in users globally. The company reports 140 million weekly users for math and science learning on ChatGPT. This product launch comes during a turbulent period for OpenAI, marked by a lawsuit from a mass shooting victim's family alleging the company knew of planned violence via ChatGPT, the departure of its head of robotics over a Pentagon deal, a legal brief filed by over 30 employees supporting rival Anthropic, and scrapped data center expansion plans with Oracle. Concurrently, competitor Claude's app has surpassed ChatGPT in the App Store, and OpenAI is estimated to be burning through $15 billion in cash this year.
The past ten days have been among the most consequential in OpenAI's history, with developments stacking up across product, politics, personnel, and the courts. OpenAI on Tuesday launched a set of interactive visual tools inside ChatGPT that let users manipulate mathematical and scientific formulas in real time — a genuinely impressive education feature that landed in the middle of the most turbulent stretch of the company's corporate life. The new experience covers more than 70 core math and science concepts, from the Pythagorean theorem to Ohm's law to compound interest. When a user asks ChatGPT to explain one of these topics, the chatbot now generates a dynamic module with adjustable sliders alongside its written response. Drag a variable, and the equations, graphs, and diagrams update instantly. The feature is available today to all logged-in users worldwide, across every plan, including free.
OpenAI tells VentureBeat that 140 million people already use ChatGPT each week for math and science learning. That is a staggering number. It also means the feature arrives with unusually high stakes: since late February, OpenAI has been sued by the family of a 12-year-old mass shooting victim who alleges the company knew the attacker was planning violence through ChatGPT; lost its head of robotics over a Pentagon deal that triggered a near-300% spike in app uninstalls; watched more than 30 of its own employees file a legal brief supporting rival Anthropic against the U.S. government; and scrapped plans with Oracle to expand a flagship data center in Texas. Its chief competitor's app, Claude, now sits atop the App Store. The interactive learning tools are, on their merits, a strong product. They also arrive at a company fighting on every front simultaneously — and burning through an estimated $15 billion in cash this year to do it. The feature is built on a simple peda.