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OpenAI’s Codex Mac app adds three key features that go beyond agentic coding

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Why This Matters

OpenAI’s updated Codex Mac app marks a significant shift by expanding its functionality beyond traditional coding, integrating background computing, in-app browsing, and image generation. These enhancements make Codex more versatile for developers and general users, streamlining workflows and enabling more interactive AI-assisted tasks. This evolution signals a move towards more integrated, multi-purpose AI tools that can operate seamlessly within desktop environments, benefiting both industry professionals and consumers.

Key Takeaways

OpenAI is releasing a new version of its Codex desktop app today. The latest Codex update adds three key features that expand its use beyond agentic coding.

Today’s release signals the start of a shift for Codex. The app is going from strictly developer-focused to having more general utility as an AI tool on the Mac.

Codex adds background computer use, in-app browser, and image generation

Today’s Codex release includes three key features that extend the desktop app’s capabilities.

These include Codex-powered background computer use, an in-app browser built on OpenAI’s Atlas, and image generation powered by gpt-image-1.5 — all without leaving Codex.

OpenAI specifically highlights the “background” aspect of Codex’s computer use capabilities. Codex can use desktop apps on your Mac in the background while you actively use your machine without interruption.

“Multiple agents can work in parallel, without interfering with your own work in other apps,” OpenAI says. “For developers, this is helpful for testing and iterating on frontend changes, testing apps, or working in apps that don’t expose an API.”

Last fall, OpenAI released its first AI-focused web browser with the launch of ChatGPT Atlas. Today, Codex is bringing Atlas technology into the stack with its own in-app browser.

OpenAI says Codex’s in-app browser will let you “comment directly on pages to provide precise instructions to the agent.”

“This is useful for frontend and game development today, and over time we plan to expand it so Codex can fully command the browser beyond web applications on localhost,” the company adds.

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