OpenAI has released a standalone mini-keyboard for Codex priced at $230.
It allows users to monitor the status of AI agents via backlighting, quickly launch code reviews and refactoring, accept or reject actions, and even adjust the model’s depth of thought using a knob.
Users and insiders expected the company’s first device to be a smart speaker; even Bloomberg wrote about it.
It looks more like an expensive toy—I can’t imagine why anyone would seriously buy this keyboard.
Instant karma
Footage from an Indian police officer’s body camera. In India, due to the high incidence of sexual harassment, there are special women-only subway cars. But some “geniuses” still manage to sneak in.
Karma awaits them at the exit: a pair of police officers slap each offender.
This is what a Turkish Airlines plane looks like as it departs from Istanbul.
Half the passengers are men with hair transplants.
The video’s creator jokes that he’s flying on “Harilines” instead of the usual “Airlines” 😅
While you're in your 30s still coping with "I'm not technical" and "coding is too hard"...
An 8-year-old - the daughter of Cloudflare's VP - just dropped a full guide on building a chatbot.
0:36 The girl doesn't write code by hand. She describes the desired result in natural language, and Cursor automatically generates and inserts the code.
On a real production stack. Powered by Cursor and Workers AI.
And she's having fun doing it.
The tools are already here.
The models are already strong enough.
The only thing missing in most cases is the decision to actually start.
@nikitabier@grok Oh, that's cool - and better than a regular boost. It lets regular users of the brand boost its visibility through genuine reviews. As for that old, forgotten UGC - those who know what it is will understand.
The main thing is that people don't abuse it.
YOU CAN BUILD AN AI SECOND BRAIN IN 15 MINUTES. No coding experience. The video's creator shows us how it works.
I TOOK 5000+ OF MY CHATS AND TURNED THEM INTO A CLEAN AI SECOND BRAIN
Used Codex + Obsidian.
At first - just a huge pile of raw messages.
Then Codex takes them, cleans them, structures them, extracts the key points and starts building connections.
The result - these kinds of visualizations (trypophobia warning if you have it).
Now all my old conversations aren’t just sitting dead in messengers. They’ve become a living part of the system: I can see how ideas from different chats connect, who overlaps with whom, and which topics I’m actually developing the most.
This isn’t just “data cleaning.”
It’s when the person who uses the information is the one who organizes it - with the help of AI.
Most people just scroll through old chats and forget.
But those who build a second brain turn even casual conversations into structured knowledge that works for them.
Has anyone else cleaned up their messages like this?
Drop it in the comments, curious.