Key players include OpenAI (GPT-5.4 launch), Google (TurboQuant memory compression on April 2, 2026), DeepMind's Shane Legg (50% chance of minimal AGI by 2028) and Demis Hassabis (50% by 2030), and figures like Elon Musk, whose 10x compute scaling claims underpin Morgan Stanley's warning of a "massive AI breakthrough" in early 2026.[2][3][6] No companies, agencies, or legislation are tied directly to April 5.
This builds on 2026's rapid timeline: neuromorphic chips (Feb 14), physics-informed AI (Feb 19), GPT-5.4 (March 5), TurboQuant (April 2), amid predictions of AGI by 2028-2041 and compute-driven "shocks."[2][3][6] Pre-2026 scaling laws held, enabling efficient large models, but growth is expected to sigmoidally plateau per critics.[1]
Newsworthy due to hype around imminent transformative AI (e.g., autonomous "digital coworkers"), economic shocks from compute accumulation, and debates on AGI timelines vs. illusions, amplified by investor alerts just days prior.[2][3][6]