
"OpenAI announced yesterday that Codex, its programming agent, is now "generally available." I'll deconstruct the marketing speak of "generally available" in a minute, because it's a bit of a story. But before that, let's discuss some new capabilities OpenAI introduced in Codex. They're cool. (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, ZDNET's parent company, filed an April 2025 lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)"
"But from their patterns of conversation, it wouldn't be hard to imagine that they could be AIs. So it's not that big a jump to feel as if talking to an AI is a lot like talking to a colleague, especially when doing it over Slack. Once you integrate Slack with Codex, all you have to do is ear burn Codex with an @codex mention, and you'll get results back from the machine."
OpenAI made Codex generally available and introduced integrations and tools aimed at developers and enterprises. Codex can be invoked from Slack using an @codex mention to receive code assistance in-channel. A Codex SDK enables applications to call Codex programmatically, and a new GitHub Action simplifies integrating Codex into CI/CD workflows. Enterprise admin tools provide visibility, control, and safer automation for teams. Ziff Davis filed an April 2025 lawsuit alleging OpenAI infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems. The updates focus on embedding Codex into existing developer workflows.
Read at ZDNET
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