OpenAI, Codex and Ona
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The Computer Use feature of Codex is now on Windows 11, letting the AI control apps, test code, and manage workflows on your PC.
Thibault Sottiaux helped make AI coding one of OpenAI’s fastest-growing businesses. Now he’s overseeing a sweeping overhaul of ChatGPT.
OpenAI has expanded Codex from a coding assistant into a desktop-operating agent on Windows, officially documenting support for Computer Use
OpenAI continues to push Codex beyond an agentic coding desktop app to a general productivity tool for everyone. As
OpenAI is making it easier to build dashboards, planner apps, and simple tools. Here’s how it works.
OpenAI has rolled out Computer Use for its Codex desktop app on macOS, and its latest trick is that your Mac doesn't even have to be unlocked for the coding agent to use your apps while you're away. In a post on X,
Codex’s new plugin collection is rounded out by two extensions for salespeople and data science teams. Both can automate data analysis tasks such as analyzing customer records for sales signals. The data science plugin includes a broader set of integrations with third-party analytics tools such as Tableau.
OpenAI is giving 10x Codex usage limits for a month to select users. The offer is aimed at people who are doing impressive or useful work using Codex.
Confirming it has reached 3 million weekly developers, OpenAI is massively updating its Codex developer environment via its Mac and Windows desktop apps today to bring it closer to the “Super App” the company has confirmed it is pursuing. Before today ...