@Kappaemme1926 Yes it started from scratch as if it had no context on a thread I have been running for a week and made somw really strange assumptions and choices, also the way it’s talking is like an old model “thanks for calling me out on that” I haven’t seen that at all with 5.5
@OpenAI erm. I had to log out and reload codex earlier. I have an odd account (signed up w/20 year old hotmail, that got turned into gmail May 2025), its an edge case you gotta fix!
I get authentication errors when the system is brittle.
ID - 019e750f-4788-7341-9aaf-f6ad0fb030e6
If you ever get tired of managing your Codex threads, just let Codex manage itself! Codex can now create threads, search them, organize them, pin the important ones, and spin up worktrees for parallel tasks.
UPDATE: Came up with an even better version of this prompt after the feedback
Ask Codex to look across your sessions, Memories, and Chronicle, identify patterns, reuse what already exists, and only create the smallest useful skill, subagent, or automation.
"Look back over my recent work from the last 30 days, or all available history if shorter, and identify repeated manual workflows worth packaging.
Use available evidence in this order:
- Recent Codex sessions and task summaries.
- Codex Memories and rollout summaries to find patterns repeated across sessions.
- Chronicle, if enabled, to spot repeated work outside Codex. Use Chronicle for discovery only; confirm important details in the relevant source system when possible.
- Existing skills, custom agents, and automations, so you reuse or extend what already exists instead of duplicating it.
Look broadly for work that is repeated, time-consuming, error-prone, context-heavy, or benefits from a consistent process. Include workflows across coding, research, writing, planning, communication, operations, analysis, and personal administration.
Only act on a candidate when it:
- occurred at least twice, or is clearly likely to recur and costly to repeat;
- has stable inputs, a repeatable procedure, and a clear output or stopping condition;
- would materially improve speed, quality, consistency, or reliability;
- is not already adequately covered.
Choose the smallest appropriate form:
- Skill: a reusable workflow or playbook.
- Custom subagent: a bounded specialist role or investigation task suitable for delegation.
- Automation: a scheduled or recurring check, report, reminder, or monitor.
- Skip: work that is too one-off, ambiguous, sensitive, or poorly evidenced to package.
First produce a compact shortlist with:
- repeated workflow
- supporting evidence and dates
- frequency/confidence
- recommended form: skill, subagent, automation, extend existing, or skip
- why it is or is not worth creating
Then create only the high-confidence missing items. Keep them narrow, practical, source-aware, and easy to validate. Do not create speculative, overlapping, or overly broad assets.
Finish with:
- what you created or extended
- what you deliberately skipped
- what needs more evidence before packaging"
Copy and paste this into your codex:
“Look through my recent Codex sessions and identify repeated workflows or repeated asks.
For anything I keep doing manually, suggest:
1. a skill if it is a reusable workflow
2. a custom subagent if it is a bounded role or investigation task
Focus on practical things like CI failures, PR reviews, changelogs, docs updates, release prep, debugging, and test triage.
Create the useful ones only. Keep them simple.”
A guy named nbatman on Reddit accidentally built the most useful website on the internet.
It's called FMHY (Free Media Heck Yeah).
This is the website Google delisted from search for DMCA violations, Reddit shadow-banned for promoting piracy, the Motion Picture Association flagged as a top piracy threat, and the RIAA pressured hosting providers to drop. It is still online. It is still updated every month.
Here's how it works.
FMHY is the index. The wiki itself hosts nothing. It just tells you where every free thing on the internet actually lives, organized into 14 categories with safety ratings on every single link.
→ Movies and shows in 4K from 50+ streaming sites
→ Music at Spotify and Apple Music quality
→ Adobe Creative Cloud, Microsoft Office, AutoCAD, JetBrains
→ Every paid course on every major learning platform
→ 100 million books and papers through Anna's Archive
→ Free alternatives to every paid AI tool
→ A SafeGuard browser extension that flags unsafe sites in real time
It started as a single Google Doc maintained by one Reddit moderator in 2018. Google killed it with a DMCA takedown in 2023.
The community rebuilt the wiki on its own domain, mirrored it to GitHub and IPFS, and now runs it across 12 backup domains simultaneously.
There is no company. No CEO. No central server. Six anonymous volunteers maintain the entire thing in their spare time. Donations through Ko-fi pay for the hosting. Nobody profits.
Hollywood can't shut this down. Spotify can't shut this down. Adobe can't shut this down.
The entire subscription economy is held together by you not knowing this wiki exists.
https://t.co/AAr2rLlqgy
I still don't think people understand how CRACKED Codex is at design now.
You can go from concept to fully designed app with production code in under an hour.
Most people blame the tool when their designs look like AI slop.
It's not Codex. It's your workflow.
This is the exact workflow that gets you professional designs on the first pass:
(full breakdown in the article)
Tuner (🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟) might be the best film I’ve seen this year. I’ve been praying to the Gods of Cinema for a real film lately- for a film that will make me feeling something, damn it. And guess what? My prayers were answered. This felt like vintage ‘70s filmmaking. A wildly unpredictable, engaging thriller, I lost myself in Tuner’s story. Leo Woodall, Havana Rose Liu & Dustin Hoffman give a trio of performances that could not have been better. All of which is the reason I’m giving Tuner the 5-Star Treatment & it’s the reason I’m telling you with every last fiber of my being to see this film in theaters.
I am violinist & pianist of over 25 years. The piano is such a beautiful, fascinating & incredibly frustrating instrument. It can bring you to your knees. It can also bring you face-to-face with something truly special. The piano is an utterly essential part of Tuner. The way this film pays homage, honors, and respects the piano is worthy of so much praise, especially when you consider the AI-infested world we find ourselves in right now. To see a film revolve around such a beautiful instrument in this day and age really struck me. It made me miss those precious ivory keys.
That said, Woodall plays Niki, a piano tuner & apprentice to a guy named Harry (Dustin Hoffman). Niki just so happens to suffer from hyperacusis, a hypersensitive hearing disorder that forces him to constantly wear ear protection. Hyperacusis is also the reason Niki can no longer play the piano & it’s why he’s left merely tuning them. The crux of the story here is Niki discovers that his hypersensitive hearing allows him to break into locked safes by listening to the turning of the locks. While tuning a piano one night, Niki stumbles upon a group of thieves breaking into a safe, only to help them finish the job & effectively join their crew. Niki starts to see his life change at the same time he meets a gifted piano student named Ruthie (Rose Liu), who turns into Niki’s girlfriend upon a few chance encounters. The whole idea here is Niki gets caught in the wrong crowd at the wrong time while falling in love with Ruthie.
The story felt like a combination of some of my favorite films. There’s a bit of Damien Chazelle’s Whiplash here, in that our protagonist has such a deep passion for music & once had dreams of pursuing greatness. But then there’s a bit of that Uncut Gems/Anora feeling that starts to creep in as Niki’s safe-stealing starts to kick up. I can’t overemphasize enough the story’s unpredictability: what starts out as a meditation on the piano & a father-son-esque relationship between Niki & Harry transforms into something far more sinister & far more dangerous. At all times, Tuner keeps you on the balls of your feet. Not only that, the script also has the perfect amount of humor. The entire story here is nearly flawless.
I also feel incredibly obligated to point out director Daniel Roher’s filmmaking. There are so many beautiful shots of New York City in this film & such great cinematography. Roher drenches this film in so many spontaneous shots & different lenses- not to mention a handful of wide shots of concert halls & mansions that really took my breath away. It’s part of why I say this film feels like a ‘70s film. Everything felt real.
All that said, I think the best part of this movie is the performances. Leo Woodall is an actor I’ve grown familiar with over the last few years. But this film stands out amongst all of his prior work. He is totally worthy of being this film’s lead, he commands this movie from start to finish & he brings a sensitivity to Niki that forces the audience into Niki’s shoes. His performance blew me away. As did Havana Rose Liu’s work as Ruthie. She was sharp, quick-witted, and in the end, emotionally devastating. Lastly, a word on one of my favorite actors of all time, 88 year old 2 x Oscar winner Dustin Hoffman. I love this man. He’s one of the finest actors I’ve ever seen. And while Hoffman isn’t in this film nearly as much as I would’ve liked, his presence is felt from the opening frame to the final shot. This film didn’t need Dustin Hoffman to earn my approval. But the fact Hoffman is in the mix & giving a rock-solid performance while approaching 90? It just makes this film that much better.
Seeing this in a sold-out theater was unforgettable. What a film.
@jturntdev Seems better for me today, I’ve been going for a few hours and only a couple of % off weekly where as the last few days it had been chewing through it
GOOGLE JUST SHIPPED ITS ENTIRE 2026 ROADMAP IN ONE KEYNOTE
Gemini 3.5 Flash → new flagship. frontier brain, agentic, beats 3.1 pro, 4x faster
Gemini 3.5 Pro → the bigger one, drops next month
Gemini Omni → any input in, editable VIDEO out
Gemini Spark → a personal agent that actually DOES things across your apps
Daily Brief → your morning, pre-read from gmail, calendar and tasks
Neural Expressive → the gemini app got a full redesign
Universal Cart → one agentic cart across gemini, youtube and gmail
Information Agents → search that monitors the web 24/7 FOR you
Intelligent Search Box → expands as you type for real conversations
Search Mini Apps → build your own dashboards inside search
AI Mode → now fully running on gemini 3.5 flash
Gmail Live → talk to your inbox
Docs Live → write and edit docs by voice
AI Inbox → gmail, organized by ai
Google Keep → speak freely, it cleans it into notes
Google Pics → a brand new ai image and design app
Ask YouTube → search the ENTIRE youtube catalogue with answers
Android XR Glasses → "intelligent eyewear," audio glasses this fall
Android Halo → a live strip showing what your agent is doing
Antigravity 2.0 → the agent-first dev platform, upgraded
Flow + Flow Music → now standalone mobile apps
Introducing Agora-1, a multi-agent world model.
Multiple participants—human or AI—can now interact inside the same world simulation, all in real-time.
Try our playable research preview today, with Agora-1 simulating a multiplayer GoldenEye deathmatch!