hype @openai @southpkcommons
RT Tibo Oops... I did it again. Enjoy reset usage limits for all paid users for Codex and ChatGPT Work. Super grateful for an incredible team who is iterating at lightspeed and keeping the infra up as we scale faster than ever. Enjoy the weekend!
F*ble 5 now available on bedrock!
RT Atty Eleti Little big win: dictation button will always be present, even if you have text in the composer. Keep the feedback coming!
This is fixed on ChatGPT iOS and will be ported to Android and Web soon. We now allow mixed typing, type text and use dictation or vice versa. People on ChatGPT really care about user feedback, send what we should we fix next on Voice and Dictation.
RT OpenAI Developers Review pull requests and make follow-up edits without leaving Codex. PR Chat lets you ask Codex questions about a specific pull request in context. Inline code editing lets you send review feedback to Codex, inspect the proposed patch inline, and edit, accept, or reject it.
new algo, same me i’m jason. i work on developer experience for Codex at OpenAI. before that, i built Instructor and spent a lot of time helping people use language models to build real things. these days, my job is somewhere between talking to developers, finding the interesting things people are building, fixing what feels broken, and working with Creative to tell those stories a little better. i’m especially excited about voice. talking to your computer should feel as natural as thinking out loud, whether you’re writing code, making something, or halfway through another task. things you’ll get from me: • Codex experiments, tips, skills, and questionable automations • people using coding agents for art, music, hardware, and other unexpected things • developer feedback, open source, and whatever still feels painful • occasional attempts to learn something new things i want from you: what are you building? what should Codex do better? anyone using agents with, music, or other creative tools? reply and introduce yourself 👇
RT Vignesh Mohankumar now i see why anthropic and openai wanna lock all these PE firms into exclusivity deals. i’ve gone from only using claude code to cancelling my account in like a month. it’s completely insane to me how much more token efficient sol 5.6 is and how much more powerful the codex app has gotten vs the claude app and its the same thing for anyone using APIs in their apps. to be honest, im using open source models way more than a year ago now. for a ton of operational problems, you really do not need anything that powerful. i think people overestimate how complex their problems are sometimes i have the same skepticism about using consulting firms / fdes that are aligned with openai and anthropic or google. the incentives are borked. they want lock in and high token spend ultimately, while a company actually wants simplicity and low token spend. this is going to cause issues. i’m also not convinced that those firms are any more capable of shipping things in real orgs yet when i talk to PE firms they’re still talking about which company to pick like it’s some binding decision. makes literally no sense to me. just pick what works well for specific use cases. probably just pay for claude and chatgpt seats for everyone. yet they’re over complicating this so much
RT Tibo We've had no 5h limit in Codex plus and pro for a few days. Do you think it is better or are you finding it difficult to manage the usage included in the weekly limit effectively? If we were to make this different, what should it look like in an ideal world?
Hey codex. Set an automation where at 8:30 when my free DoorDash benefit comes in. I rotate across my teams doordash auth and order a full Korean bbq meal to maximally extract the late night meal benefit to feed my family.
Today we're opening up the DoorDash CLI in limited beta. `dd-cli` lets you order DoorDash directly from your agent: search stores, find the best deals, check out, and more. Early access for US/Canadian macOS developers by waitlist. Excited to see what folks build!
View quoted postWhen you instrument your coding agent with dd and use DoorDash and not data dog
Today we're opening up the DoorDash CLI in limited beta. `dd-cli` lets you order DoorDash directly from your agent: search stores, find the best deals, check out, and more. Early access for US/Canadian macOS developers by waitlist. Excited to see what folks build!
View quoted postRT dominik kundel ChatGPT Sites is severely underrated! You get: 🌎 hosting 💽 file storage 📚 database 📊 analytics 🔐 optional "Sign in with ChatGPT" auth All agent native by just asking ChatGPT on desktop or web.
ICYMI, you can now build and ship full web apps with ChatGPT. @coreyching shows you how.
View quoted postRT Jean P.D. Meijer ― 🇪🇺 eu/acc woke up, ate some Greek yogurt, gave Codex a prompt, and went back to sleep when i woke up again it finished, used around $400 worth of tokens (not a problem thanks to @thsottiaux), got some lunch and grabbed a radler. might go for a walk later life can be good if you let it
RT Sampson Mo Switched to Codex in early June because GPT-5.5 already handled long, multi-file tasks surprisingly well. GPT-5.6 Sol made it even better: stronger repo understanding, debugging, and persistence. It became my default—so I canceled Claude.
Or… what if we gave you $100 in Codex credits if you tell us what you love about GPT-5.6 Sol or why you switched? Tweet it, claim your gift, enjoy more usage. First 10k get the free tokens! https://switch-to-codex.openai.chatgpt.site/
View quoted postRT Tibo Or… what if we gave you $100 in Codex credits if you tell us what you love about GPT-5.6 Sol or why you switched? Tweet it, claim your gift, enjoy more usage. First 10k get the free tokens! https://switch-to-codex.openai.chatgpt.site/
codex should give one month free when you send them your claude cancelation screenshot
View quoted postRT OpenAI Developers 7M+ weekly Codex users. 150+ updates in two months. @romainhuet catches you up on what’s new in Codex: GPT‑5.6 and Ultra Parallel work with /goal Faster computer use AppShots Inline edits Sites Codex mobile and SSH workflows PRs from review to merge
RT Tibo Hello. We have reached 8M active users across Codex and ChatGPT Work. We are once again resetting the usage limits for all. And we continue to not have the 5h rate limit as well, allowing everyone to explore the boundaries of GPT-5.6 Sol and discover how ambitious you can be. See you tomorrow for more updates on our growth!
5.6 sol growth is insane. the inference team has done heroic work to be able to support demand. we are going to move mountains to continue to scale, but it is possible there are some hiccups soon.
View quoted postGPT-5.6 Sol, Terra, and Luna are now available on Amazon Bedrock. Use the Responses API in AWS, with first-party pricing and usage that counts toward AWS commitments. Teams can also configure GPT-5.6 for ChatGPT Work and Codex. https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/machine-learning/openai-gpt-5-6-sol-terra-and-luna-are-now-generally-available-on-amazon-bedrock/
RT Greg Brockman Try out ChatGPT Sites, makes it way more fun to communicate things within a company:
ChatGPT Sites is now in public beta. You can turn a prompt, file, or rough idea into a dashboard, project tracker, report, prototype, or lightweight app: build and edit directly in ChatGPT Work or Codex test in a private preview publish and share with a URL Rolling out across
View quoted postRT Andrew Ambrosino can we have an "unhinged model/reasoning picker" faceoff? similar to the old worst volume control ui competition
RT Tibo Thank you to the 7M active users who are now using Codex and ChatGPT Work. We have added a banked reset to everyone's account to celebrate the milestone. You can apply the reset in the desktop app or on web and it will replenish the weekly usage for you. Have fun out there.
RT Andrew Ambrosino forgot to mention that I didn't touch my computer, this was all steered from my phone until trying the gameplay at the very end
last week I gave 5.6 Sol a /goal to build a minecraft-like game in rust, then build a full SF map in the game. some screens:
Import is now available in the Codex! Existing Codex users can now access the Claude Code / Cowork import tool directly through the command palette (vs prior only in Settings page). Open the command palette with Cmd+K (Mac) or Ctrl+K (Windows). If you want to try our sol with your existing configs just try this out
RT kate Some exciting news: I’m joining @OpenAI to work on ChatGPT’s web infrastructure. ChatGPT has become part of how millions of people think, work, and build, and I’m really looking forward to helping shape what comes next alongside the remarkable team behind it. Can’t wait to get started!
ChatGPT Sites is now in public beta. You can turn a prompt, file, or rough idea into a dashboard, project tracker, report, prototype, or lightweight app: build and edit directly in ChatGPT Work or Codex test in a private preview publish and share with a URL Rolling out across paid plans. Enterprise admins can control public publishing.
ChatGPT Work can now browse while it works. On web, the cloud browser can research public sites, compare options, and complete multi-step tasks. You can inspect screenshots, replay its steps, and approve actions. On desktop, the built-in browser supports tabs, sign-in, downloads, and local previews in a separate browser profile. Your existing tabs, cookies, and passwords stay separate. Website access and sensitive actions remain permissioned. Give it a real task with a few browser steps and see how far it gets!
appshots!
Updates for Codex and ChatGPT Work users. No nerfing, only good stuff! - We have landed inference optimizations and are passing down savings to all the subscriptions for GPT-5.6 Sol. That should result in around 10% more usage on its own. - We noticed that by changing the
View quoted postRT Design Arena BREAKING - OFFICIAL RESULTS: GPT-5.6 Sol by @OpenAI is 1st overall on Design Arena with an Elo of 1353. This puts GPT-5.6 Sol above Claude Fable 5 by @AnthropicAI and in the same performance band as GLM 5.2 by @Zai_org on frontend design. This is an 18-position and 60-point Elo leap from GPT-5.5. GPT-5.6 Sol also establishes a new Pareto frontier for preference vs. speed, faster than any model at this performance. Congratulations to the @OpenAI team on the launch!
RT Tibo Morning. The last 48 hours of Codex and ChatGPT Work have been intense! Three important updates: - Temporarily removing the 5 hour usage limit restriction for all Plus, Business and Pro plans - Rolling out changes that will make GPT 5.6 Sol more efficient across the board and that will be reflected in less usage being used so that it can take you further. Exact impact to be quantified and shared - We hit 6M active users, and are landing a usage reset in the next hour Go do things
Import the Wispr Flow dictionary into Codex! Wispr Flow stores its learned dictionary in a local SQLite database on macOS: ```text ~/Library/Application Support/Wispr Flow/flow.sqlite ``` Just tell codex to make sure to merge them with the existing `dictationDictionary` field in config.toml
we are making a genie we are here to tell you that our first wish will be a good wish we are here to teach people how to make great wishes but that starts not with thinking more, or planning more it starts from being ambitous and embodied and more than anything else, having a vision of what you want
it is very fitting that the rationalist company has the tagline “keep thinking”. I just don’t think that is the future. the future is going to be about getting out of your head and into your heart. the future is about simply being the fullest expression of who and what you are
View quoted postEven better with app shots.
Just asked gpt-5.6-sol how I should fill out a stupid 10-step insurance claim web form that I did not fully understand instead of giving me the tutorial/explanation it just started filling it out for me, uploaded evidence and made sure everything is coherent in a background
View quoted postEveryone reports to tibo and tibo reports to everyone.
Hello beautiful people! We have reset usage limits across Codex and ChatGPT Work. And another one will come later in the day. Rejoice. Now that I have your attention, a quick update on ChatGPT Work, Codex and all the updates we shared yesterday. We’ve spent the last 24 hours
View quoted postRT signüll okay, enough openai criticism for a second (still gonna give product feedback when it’s deserved). it’s been a little too easy. i’ve been using gpt live a lot, like a lot lot, & it’s genuinely fucking amazing. the feature to let the model speak like a human “hmm”, “let me check”, brief pauses, & natural turn taking while calling a bigger model or searching or using tools in the background is a fantastic execution. almost all of my conversations have been nothing but pleasant, i can’t describe the feeling but it’s i think a little too good at this point. nothing else is particularly close in this category right now at all. anthropic’s voice experience still feels very very underbaked (after thought really), & gemini’s personality & intelligence seem lacking. & since it’s already reaching an enormous user base, every great gpt live interaction makes people more confident in ai as a product category instead of walking away thinking ai is a gimmick. really great work.
RT Michael Wall Still early, but I wanted to share a quick demo of the new hands-free music-making application I built while testing GPT-5.6 Sol. I’m also applying to work with @gdb and the team as an early GPT-Live API design partner. Like any new instrument, I’ll need some practice! Speaking fluidly back and forth with Codex in my DAW feels like working in a studio with a recording engineer. Here is what it can already do. I’ll share more demonstrations over the next week. Built for macOS in Swift and C++. It can edit MIDI, audio, video, notation, tempo, meter, and harmony layers. It uses gpt-realtime-2.1, Whisper, and Codex App Server to collaborate with an assistant that can already perform more than 300 actions. There is also an iOS companion application that allows me to work remotely on my recording studio computer from anywhere, with voice mode still active. As a lifelong composer, I already keep the entire editing surface and instruments in my mind. I can imagine a piece of music and how to make it in software faster than I can build it manually. This removes that friction and will become very fast for me with practice. It also has long-term project memory, deep music-analysis tools, a found-sound synthesizer builder, and access to my catalog of more than 550 tracks for sampling and licensing. A companion ChatGPT/Codex plugin is coming soon. I hope to launch in the next few weeks! Hugely inspired by @mcleavey, @guinnesschen, @athyuttamre, and the entire audio and voice team at @OpenAI 😌
RT Dan Shipper 📧 Yesterday, GPT-5.6 Sol Ultra became generally available. Today, I'm sharing that I accidentally spent 2b tokens overnight and I didn't even solve a 50-year-old math conjecture. This is extremely cool though, skill issue on my part clearly
Yesterday, we made GPT-5.6 Sol Ultra generally available. Today, we're sharing that it produced a proof of the 50-year-old Cycle Double Cover Conjecture using 64 subagents in just under one hour. We're sharing the prompt and proof below. We're excited to see what you all do with
View quoted postRT Peter Gostev GPT-5.6-Sol deleted 74,000 lines of code and made my app better (after 47 hours of work) I have a slop-coded app that I need for work - it pulls in the data, it helps me create visuals, just a local app for me. Somehow, feature after feature, it grew to gigantic 105,704 lines of code. With every new model, I tried to re-build it autonomously and it never worked - goes round in circles, no visual or feature parity etc complete waste of time. When testing GPT-5.6-Sol, gave a pretty ambitious task of rebuilding the app with the new architecture, while reducing the lines of code by 70% and test time by 75%. I set a /goal, let it run for over 2 full days (47 hours) with minimal checking or guidance from my side. I was pretty sceptical and a little nervous to finally try it and holy crap - it actually worked! Not only it worked, but it was actually better - snappier, less buggy, while maintaining full visual and feature parity. Looking at the architecture too, it became a lot simpler, fewer random add-ons or ad-hoc decisions. After the rebuild, I did introduce few rules for my projects so agents have to adhere to existing architecture and do only minimal changes when implementing new features. This makes me less worried about the slopware we might be producing now, better models CAN actually fix it. See my prompt below that I use with /goal