OpenAI's Codex Push Feels Familiar, and That's Not Necessarily Good
Watching OpenAI announce enterprise partnerships and Slack integrations for Codex reminds me of every 'revolutionary' factory software rollout I lived through. Some worked. Most didn't.
Crédito da imagem: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
You know what this reminds me of? Back in 2008, when I was at Kuka, we had a vendor come in promising their new programming interface would 'transform how robots are deployed.' Six months later, we were still debugging edge cases while management wondered where the transformation went.
OpenAI's recent Codex announcements have that same energy. Not bad, necessarily. Just... familiar.
The Announcement Parade
So here's what happened: OpenAI rolled out Codex as generally available, complete with a Slack integration, an SDK for developers, and admin dashboards for the IT folks who have to actually manage this stuff. They're claiming 4 million weekly active users, which is a big number if it's real.
Then came the enterprise play. They launched something called Codex Labs and partnered with Accenture, PwC, Infosys, and others to help big companies deploy this across their software development lifecycle. And there's a Figma integration now too, letting designers and developers supposedly move seamlessly between code and visual design.
Look, I'll be honest. I'm not a software guy. My background is industrial automation, welding cells, palletizers, the stuff that actually makes things. But I've watched enough enterprise software rollouts to recognize the pattern.
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