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      OpenAI introduces Codex, its first full-fledged AI agent for coding

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025

    We've been expecting it for a while, and now it's here: OpenAI has introduced an agentic coding tool called Codex in research preview. The tool is meant to allow experienced developers to delegate rote and relatively simple programming tasks to an AI agent that will generate production-ready code and show its work along the way.

    Codex is a unique interface (not to be confused with the Codex CLI tool introduced by OpenAI last month) that can be reached from the side bar in the ChatGPT web app. Users enter a prompt and then click either "code" to have it begin producing code, or "ask" to have it answer questions and advise.

    Whenever it's given a task, that task is performed in a distinct container that is preloaded with the user's codebase and is meant to accurately reflect their development environment.

    Read full article

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    • tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding

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      OpenAI introduces Codex, its first full-fledged AI agent for coding

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025

    We've been expecting it for a while, and now it's here: OpenAI has introduced an agentic coding tool called Codex in research preview. The tool is meant to allow experienced developers to delegate rote and relatively simple programming tasks to an AI agent that will generate production-ready code and show its work along the way.

    Codex is a unique interface (not to be confused with the Codex CLI tool introduced by OpenAI last month) that can be reached from the side bar in the ChatGPT web app. Users enter a prompt and then click either "code" to have it begin producing code, or "ask" to have it answer questions and advise.

    Whenever it's given a task, that task is performed in a distinct container that is preloaded with the user's codebase and is meant to accurately reflect their development environment.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding

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    • Ar chevron_right

      OpenAI introduces Codex, its first full-fledged AI agent for coding

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025

    We've been expecting it for a while, and now it's here: OpenAI has introduced an agentic coding tool called Codex in research preview. The tool is meant to allow experienced developers to delegate rote and relatively simple programming tasks to an AI agent that will generate production-ready code and show its work along the way.

    Codex is a unique interface (not to be confused with the Codex CLI tool introduced by OpenAI last month) that can be reached from the side bar in the ChatGPT web app. Users enter a prompt and then click either "code" to have it begin producing code, or "ask" to have it answer questions and advise.

    Whenever it's given a task, that task is performed in a distinct container that is preloaded with the user's codebase and is meant to accurately reflect their development environment.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagai tagai tagai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagagentic ai tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcodex-1 tagcoding tagcoding tagcoding tago3 tago3 tago3 tagopenai tagopenai tagopenai tagprogramming tagprogramming tagprogramming tagvibe coding tagvibe coding tagvibe coding

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Forgive me Volvo, I was wrong: The 2025 V60 Cross Country review

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025 • 1 minute

    As we often like to remind people, beware buying any car in its first model year. It takes a little while for any OEM to find its feet with a new model, and now there's half-baked software that can need frequent updating to worry about in addition to any mechanical woes. I bring this up because various bugs meant that an electric car we were supposed to review had to be repeatedly postponed, as it was away being fixed, and as a result our week with the 2025 Volvo V60 Cross Country turned into two. And what a pleasant two weeks they were.

    The Volvo station wagon is not in its first production year. Any criticism of its onboard electronics would focus more on the fact that they are now increasingly vintage, but that also means the bugs have mostly been squashed by now. Sadly, Volvo killed off the regular V60 station wagon earlier this year, but you can still buy the Cross Country version, which starts at $51,495, including the delivery charge.

    As the name probably implies, the V60 Cross Country has some adaptations for unpaved roads: it rides a little higher and on softer suspension, and there's protective cladding here and there that gives this wagon a bit of a bold stance.

    Read full article

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    • tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Forgive me Volvo, I was wrong: The 2025 V60 Cross Country review

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025 • 1 minute

    As we often like to remind people, beware buying any car in its first model year. It takes a little while for any OEM to find its feet with a new model, and now there's half-baked software that can need frequent updating to worry about in addition to any mechanical woes. I bring this up because various bugs meant that an electric car we were supposed to review had to be repeatedly postponed, as it was away being fixed, and as a result our week with the 2025 Volvo V60 Cross Country turned into two. And what a pleasant two weeks they were.

    The Volvo station wagon is not in its first production year. Any criticism of its onboard electronics would focus more on the fact that they are now increasingly vintage, but that also means the bugs have mostly been squashed by now. Sadly, Volvo killed off the regular V60 station wagon earlier this year, but you can still buy the Cross Country version, which starts at $51,495, including the delivery charge.

    As the name probably implies, the V60 Cross Country has some adaptations for unpaved roads: it rides a little higher and on softer suspension, and there's protective cladding here and there that gives this wagon a bit of a bold stance.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Forgive me Volvo, I was wrong: The 2025 V60 Cross Country review

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025 • 1 minute

    As we often like to remind people, beware buying any car in its first model year. It takes a little while for any OEM to find its feet with a new model, and now there's half-baked software that can need frequent updating to worry about in addition to any mechanical woes. I bring this up because various bugs meant that an electric car we were supposed to review had to be repeatedly postponed, as it was away being fixed, and as a result our week with the 2025 Volvo V60 Cross Country turned into two. And what a pleasant two weeks they were.

    The Volvo station wagon is not in its first production year. Any criticism of its onboard electronics would focus more on the fact that they are now increasingly vintage, but that also means the bugs have mostly been squashed by now. Sadly, Volvo killed off the regular V60 station wagon earlier this year, but you can still buy the Cross Country version, which starts at $51,495, including the delivery charge.

    As the name probably implies, the V60 Cross Country has some adaptations for unpaved roads: it rides a little higher and on softer suspension, and there's protective cladding here and there that gives this wagon a bit of a bold stance.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagcars tagcars tagcars tagcar review tagcar review tagcar review tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country tagvolvo v60 cross country

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      Carnivorous crocodile-like monsters used to terrorize the Caribbean

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025

    How did reptilian things that looked something like crocodiles get to the Caribbean islands from South America millions of years ago? They probably walked.

    The existence of any prehistoric apex predators in the islands of the Caribbean used to be doubted. While their absence would have probably made it even more of a paradise for prey animals, fossils unearthed in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic have revealed that these islands were crawling with monster crocodyliform species called sebecids, ancient relatives of crocodiles.

    While sebecids first emerged during the Cretaceous, this is the first evidence of them lurking outside South America during the Cenozoic epoch, which began 66 million years ago. An international team of researchers has found that these creatures would stalk and hunt in the Caribbean islands millions of years after similar predators went extinct on the South American mainland. Lower sea levels back then could have exposed enough land to walk across.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Carnivorous crocodile-like monsters used to terrorize the Caribbean

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025

    How did reptilian things that looked something like crocodiles get to the Caribbean islands from South America millions of years ago? They probably walked.

    The existence of any prehistoric apex predators in the islands of the Caribbean used to be doubted. While their absence would have probably made it even more of a paradise for prey animals, fossils unearthed in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic have revealed that these islands were crawling with monster crocodyliform species called sebecids, ancient relatives of crocodiles.

    While sebecids first emerged during the Cretaceous, this is the first evidence of them lurking outside South America during the Cenozoic epoch, which began 66 million years ago. An international team of researchers has found that these creatures would stalk and hunt in the Caribbean islands millions of years after similar predators went extinct on the South American mainland. Lower sea levels back then could have exposed enough land to walk across.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Carnivorous crocodile-like monsters used to terrorize the Caribbean

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 May 2025

    How did reptilian things that looked something like crocodiles get to the Caribbean islands from South America millions of years ago? They probably walked.

    The existence of any prehistoric apex predators in the islands of the Caribbean used to be doubted. While their absence would have probably made it even more of a paradise for prey animals, fossils unearthed in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic have revealed that these islands were crawling with monster crocodyliform species called sebecids, ancient relatives of crocodiles.

    While sebecids first emerged during the Cretaceous, this is the first evidence of them lurking outside South America during the Cenozoic epoch, which began 66 million years ago. An international team of researchers has found that these creatures would stalk and hunt in the Caribbean islands millions of years after similar predators went extinct on the South American mainland. Lower sea levels back then could have exposed enough land to walk across.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagcrocodiles tagevolution tagevolution tagevolution tagmigration tagmigration tagmigration tagpredators tagpredators tagpredators

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