OpenAI is building hardware for Codex — AI leaves the screen
Sam Altman's company plans to unveil a physical control panel for its coding agent on July 15. AI is starting to take physical form.
Artificial intelligence has lived almost entirely inside the screen. OpenAI wants to change that: the company is preparing to unveil, on July 15, new physical hardware for Codex, its coding agent.
A control panel for AI
The idea, from what is known, is to create a kind of physical control panel — a dedicated device that acts as a bridge between the developer and the AI agent writing code. Instead of being just another window on the computer, Codex would gain a presence of its own on the desk.
It fits OpenAI’s strategy. As AI agents become more capable of carrying out tasks on their own, it makes sense to give them a dedicated interface, designed to monitor and control what the machine is up to. It is a curious step: AI leaving pure software behind and starting to take physical form.
The money race
Behind these announcements is a torrent of investment that is hard to picture. Alphabet, Google’s parent, recently closed the largest equity financing in corporate history — around 84.75 billion dollars — just to feed its AI infrastructure. That is the scale at which the game is now played.
For Portugal, all this still feels distant, but it defines the tools we will be using tomorrow. See also our piece on the Transformer’s creator switching camps and follow the official announcements at openai.com.
Illustrative · Photo: Kindel Media / Pexels