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This is the Everyday AI show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips. Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business and everyday life. It seems like the holy grail of AI that the masses have begged for for years is actually here today for anyone to use, yet hardly no one is paying attention. So what is that? Well, we've wanted the best model, the best limits agents that do our work for us and connect to almost any platform we use. I mean, that was kind of like the AI pipe dream of 2022-2025, right? We all wanted some futuristic AI that could be so advanced it could write entire programs for us and complete our big projects and triage our daily grunt work and run around the clock with or without our inputs. Oh, and you should be able to talk to it from your phone and control the whole thing, even when you're not in front of your computer. Well, guess what? That holy grail of AI day, it's here and 99% of people are sleeping on it. It exists in OpenAI's codex. And I've been doing this everyday AI thing for more than three years. And I'm not exaggerating when I tell you that individuals in code companies that are going all in on Codex right now have the biggest and most unfair advantage that we've seen in the generative AI era. Claude doesn't come close, Gemini doesn't come close, even Chat GPT itself doesn't come close. OpenAI's Codex desktop program is the AI that the world has always wanted, but, well, apparently they're too afraid to touch it because of the word code in the name. So we're going to break it all down for you today on our AI at work on Wednesday's series as we break down Codex for Beginners Part two in our two part series, and this is one trust me, you cannot miss. So here is the big picture. Codex has been the best kept AI secret for the past few months, but people are finally starting to catch on, right? I'll say this, there was a ton of anthropic Claude momentum in December and January and it was well deserved. And I think how things happen. I've noticed this, that I'm in the bubble of the bubble when it comes to AI. Even things that I see, I feel the rest of the AI world doesn't always see them until maybe a couple months later because I'm one of the only people in the world that spends 10 to 12 days or 10 to 12 hours a day, literally Doing only this, right? So there was a lot of momentum around Claude Code, Claude cowork in December and January, and I think the general world really didn't feel that until like April. So I'm telling you right now, this, if you haven't seen the shift yet, it is going to happen. So whether you feel this wave, I don't know if you're like me in Chicago or New York or Miami, wherever. I think probably in the Silicon Valley bubble, people have already felt the Codex wave and it is coming. So you should probably get on it now. And here's what else is happening. All the big players are moving to desktop and Codex is by far the best. Claude Code is good, right? The quad desktop program. But the problem is, well, it's siloed. They don't talk to each other. Even Google Gemini went desktop, you know, last month, bringing Gemini to desktop and yesterday with their Anti Gravity 2.0, which, funny, like, funny enough, I don't know if anyone says this, it just kind of looks like Codex. Maybe that's a good thing, I don't know. But Codex power features are the difference maker. So that's what we're going to cover on part two. We're going to go over scheduled automation skills, plugins, computer use, remote control. So stick with me for today's show. Here's what you're going to learn. We're going to do a very quick recap of the basics, what we went over in part one. You're going to know the reasons most of your normal ChatGPT usage should probably just be done inside Codex. You're going to know how the Chat GPT mobile app is now the most powerful AI controller in the world. That one's not even close anymore either. And you're going to learn how to properly set up Codex, be your around the clock agent that actually does your work. Sounds awesome, right? It's not too good to be true. I'm going to be showing it all to you today live on everyday AI. What's going on? If you're new here, my name is Jordan Wilson and yeah, I do this every day. It's unedited, unscripted, just bringing it to you raw and real as it gets with our daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter. So if you're trying to be the smartest person in AI, you're in your company trying to grow your career. Well, starts here with this live stream podcast, but make sure to go to our website at your everyday AI dot com. We're going to be breaking down all of the details of today's show. It's going to be a fast and furious one full of facts. I mean, I could turn this into like a six hour course. Instead it's going to be like a 30 minute podcast. So make sure you check out the recap in our newsletter and we're going to have all the other AI news that you need there. All right? Also, I went crazy overboard on this one, y'. All, I'm not gonna lie. All right, so make sure to repost this and not only are you going to get early access and first access to our co work Codex cohort. Still not sure what the name's going to be. Could just call it CCC, right? Like our old PPP. So we're hoping to launch that in quarter two. So go repost this on LinkedIn. I'll make sure you get early access to that. All right. And if you are listening on the podcast, the LinkedIn link is always in the show notes. So check out the show notes for today's show and you find that LinkedIn link. But I also went absolutely bonkers and I spent way too much time in probably a couple million tokens putting together the Codex Cookbook. All right, so this is some advanced tactics we have, I think 50 plus use cases by job type, by category, by skill level. I've been using Codex around the clock since it came out in February. And this is some of my the best of the best stuff that I don't have time to put in today's show. So when you repost Today's show on LinkedIn, not only are you going to get early access to the Codex co host cohort and the co work Codex cohort, but also the Codex Cookbook. All right, let's get into it. We're going to start live. I'm letting you guys know this one could get messy because we're going to be doing some. Well, we're going to try to be pushing, you know, Codex to the limits here, but I'm going to be sharing my screen and a lot of other things. So live stream audience, if you could let me know if you can see this here. All right, and to our podcast audience, FYI, the video version of this one might be helpful for you to watch. I know people are always like, put your video on Spotify. I don't know why I don't. Maybe I should have Codex do that. But to go get the video version, just look on our website at your everyday AI dot com. All right, so we're going to do this live. And here's why I do it. I don't edit this show. If it breaks, it breaks. If it blows up, it blows up. If it works, it works great. But there's a good chance it might not. The thing with generative AI, you get different things every single time. And I like to show you all the, you know, the. The real. Right? Not just the polished version. All right, so here's what we're going to do. I'm going to go ahead. I have this queued up in my Codex now. So Codex is a desktop app. It is literally free to use, right? Your limits aren't going to be good. But I've already said this on the last show. Even if you have a paid chat GPT account, $20 a month, you're going to get a ton of Codex usage. I've done testing. You get more out of a $20 a month Codex plan or chat GPT plan, then you do $100 a month anthropic plan. So it's a good deal. But yeah, if you're like, oh, I don't have a Codex plan, it's not a separate plan. Go use your paid chat GBT plan. So you download the app. I am on the Mac, but they also have this for Windows. It is a desktop program. You connect one time with your chat GBT account and you're good to go. All right, so I have a prompt dialed up here. Let's see how it works. This is, this is hefty. Okay, this is hefty. So let's see. I do have a lot running on my computer, but hopefully. All right, I'm going to read this off. I'm not going to read all of it, but I'm going to read most of it. Here's, here's. I have a problem. Okay, I have a problem. You probably notice lately I haven't done a lot of guest shows. And one of the reasons was we had too many guests pitching. Some of our guest shows unfortunately ended up not being the best people just sold way too much. Even though I had a hard no sell policy, right? And I got so many emails and like, this guest stinks. Don't do guest shows. So, like, for five months, I've done hardly any guest shows, but I'm going to bring them back. But I wanted a different format. And right now I'm also just to give you guys, like, I want you to feel the pain, right? And as I'm going through this use case, I want you all to think of what are some of those projects that you just put off doing, or they're so timec consuming or they're hard to do. Because I'm telling you my pain point right now. I'm telling you my story and how I'm, well, automating this in Codex, right? Some new features over the last week or two have now gotten to one of my pain points that I don't like doing. I can automate a big chunk of it. I still keep myself in the loop intentionally. I could automate 100% of this, but I don't want to. All right? Anyways, I get too many guest pitches. They come all over. They go to my personal Gmail, have no clue how it gets there. You know, my old company called Accelerant Agency, I have a couple info emails, people. Guess my private email that I just set up and I'm transferring everything over there. Anyways, I. I get guest pitches from about six different places, so different emails. Some of them are automated into spreadsheets. I have a form on my website, so it's. It's. It's a mess, right? It wasn't like this three years ago. I was begging for anyone to be on the show. But now we get thousands of GU pitches a year, so it's hard. Also, it's a lot of time to research people. Obviously, in people's guest pitch, they're like, this is the best thing since sliced bread. But I what I generally do as well, I look at people's background. You know, I'll use obviously AI to do that. But it's still a lot of these, these steps, right, where I'm having to copy and paste a bunch of stuff, and then I get lost, I get distracted, right? And I go down a rabbit hole and whoops, I just wasted an hour seeing if this person should be on the show or not. All right, so here's what I have Codex doing. So I already have full disclosure. This isn't for vetting guests. It's for researching. So kind of our new guest format, it's essentially like steal the secrets, right? It's going to be based on. And let me know if you like this. Or maybe, you know, live stream audience, let me know. Or podcast audience too. Spotify people, you can leave a comment. The three things that I'm going to have guests focus on in the future are use cases, right? So here's the use case. Here's our secrets trading. Here's what didn't work. Here's exactly what worked. Here's our secrets. And then change management, right? Here's what didn't work. Here's how we got it figured out. Here's how we're continuing to invest in people. Here's our secrets. So essentially, you come on the show, you give all your secrets away, and then our audience, you know, you get the secrets. So, yeah, let me know. Just use case change management. What was the other one? I think one was roi. See, now I'm confused. Anyways, let me know which one of those sound good. Anyways, so here we go. In Codex, I said, please look at my Google Calendar because I do have three guests booked for next week. These are pre recorded. I want to make sure they're good before, you know, we start doing these things live, get the format worked out, all that good stuff. So I said, please look at my Google Calendar and these things that are highlighted here in the Codex prompt. For those of you watching along, these are technically plugins, slash, slash, apps inside Codex. All right, so I said, please look at my Google Calendar and find my everyday AI guest for the next week. Then carefully search for them in my Gmail, including inbox, outboxes. There's a lot of back and forth, right? I'm skipping over some of this. I need to find their original guest pitch info, which may be in the guest pitch form Google Sheet in my Google Drive. So so far I'm having it look in my Google Calendar, my Gmail and my Google Drive and kind of triaging or triangulating all this information between them. All right? And then I'm saying, most importantly, oh, I made a mistake, y'. All, well, this is good. You're going to learn something as we go. So I'm going to. AI moves too fast to follow, but you're expected to keep up. Otherwise your career or company might lag behind while AI native competitors are leap ahead. But you don't have 10 hours a day to understand it all. That's what I do for you. But after 700 plus episodes of everyday AI, the most common questions I get is, where do I start? That's why we created the Start Here series, an ongoing podcast series of more than a dozen episodes you can listen to in order. It covers the AI basics for beginners and sharpens the skills of AI champions pushing their companies forward. In the ongoing series, we explain complex trends in simple language that you can turn into action. There's three ways to jump in. Number one, go scroll back to the first one in episode 691. Number two, tap the link in your show notes at any time. For the start here series or you can just go to starthereseries.com which also gives you free access to our inner circle community where you can connect with other business leaders doing the same. The Start Here series will slow down the pace of AI so you can get ahead. I meant to upload my, my stats. I'm going to say here's the stats. Please continue. All right, I meant to give the stats originally anyways, so I said most importantly, I'll need you to methodically go through the attached everyday AI Spotify Analytics GS copy file. So it's essentially this. I have a bunch of agents, codecs, Claude code, you know, running all the time, looking at all these in depth Spotify analytics and then putting them together in a sheet. All right, and then I'm telling Codex to go find the most relevant, popular and aligned shows that might overlap with the guests based on their experience that they pitched and research what made those shows successful and why. All right, and then I'm giving it essentially six different tests to do. Okay, so first I'm just telling you to do extensive research on the guest background and I'm saying come up to with five to seven specific follow up questions to dig deeper based on what they pitched and based on what's working recently in our analytics. This is something again this is my manual step that I would have to do every time if I was the most focused, most locked in I've ever been. Just getting through step. The first part of step one would sometimes, especially in like 2023 when you know, AI systems were, were non reasoning and they weren't that great. Just getting through that first part of the first step would take multiple hours. Right. This whole process might take a day or longer. All right, so I'm saying come up with five to seven specific follow up questions to dig deeper. And then I'm saying right, a short and informal email draft in my tone style with proper formatting. So I'm literally having a go understand my style and then go through research. All these guests research the best episodes that are most aligned with their experience on what they pitched and then come up with very specific follow up questions so the guests are more prepared. And then I'm saying to start that draft in the email. That's not all. All right, then I'm having it use the either the browser use or the Chrome to go into streamyard.com that's what we use to stream. I'm having it click a new recording. So I'm giving it step by step on how to set this up. All Right, So it's like go click the new recording, put the guest name as the title, click Create, recording, all this stuff and then essentially you're going to get a link and then we're going to send that to the guests themselves. All right? Then I'm saying, so that's step one, that's a lot, right? So looking at all of our analytics, looking at what the guest pitch, seeing where the crossover is, seeing where the value is, coming up with questions, creating a streamyard link and then putting all of that information in a, in an email draft that if I want to, I could have it send it, but I don't want to in this case. All right, step two, coming up with three potential episode titles. Step three, I'm tell, I'm saying to do additional research for me to prep for the interview, such as highly relevant case studies, stats, facts, trends that are highly relevant to the suggested show number four. All right, and here's where I'm bringing in some other plugins or apps. All right, I'm saying create two versions of a presentation, prepping me one in presentations which will open as a Google Slides file and also one in canva. I'm saying include everything I need to know about the guest, their background, the show type, the show topics, etc. Then I'm saying, then create a simple web app using the build with apps skill. So this is a, actually I'm trying to remember if this is a skill or a plugin. I'll, I'll have to check. All right, in case that is more convenient for me. Then last but not least, I'm saying also save the text only recap as a word doc in Google Docs as well as a suggested outline for the interview based on what might, might, what might work best. So this is all, you know, especially now I'd have a big guest, right, like the CEO of a Fortune 500 company, you know, back in 2023, just to do this, these steps, right? I wouldn't create a web app and all these things I'm just trying to show, showcase some of the capabilities. But you know, it would take me a half day, sometimes longer to do this. Now I can. Well, we'll see how good it is, right? We're doing it all live. All right, so you'll see right now on my screen, it's already going through, it's already working. You know, I had to interrupt it midway through with the stats that I forgot to attach and it's still going. And then on the right hand side, it's Showing me the progress. So at any point you can see the progress of Codex because it's an agent, right? So by default it breaks things down into multiple steps and you can kind of track it as it goes along. So I can both follow along and see what it's working on, you know, what website sites it's going to, what files it's, it's pulling, you know, out of my Google Drive, I can see all of these ha. Things happening in real time. This is literally like giving this project is if I just spit it out to a team of 10 people on the computer, right. And they're in a circle and I just sit there in the middle of the circle and I look around and see what everyone's doing. I peek over their shoulder. This is the best way to get better at AI and specifically Codex because it does work a little bit differently than, you know, even if you're using. Right. I'm using GPT 5.5 extra high. So the best version. And I think I have it on. Yeah. Speed. Okay. I did put it on 1.5 speed. So using more credits. But the credits on Codex, I mean, it's like free candy. It's. It's free candy at a parade. I, I literally can't hit my limits and I'm running it around the clock anyways. I'm on the, the best model and running it to 1.5 speed. So hopefully we can see the end result here. But it still works a little bit differently than, you know, working with GPT55 in ChatGPT would work. So it's important to have this kind of visibility and observability as you work so you can see the progress on the right hand side. It broke, broke this big task down into. Looks like 7 or 8 smaller subtasks and then outputs. So this is where the final kind of artifacts are because I believe I asked for at least six things and then right now it's the different sources. So for the sources, these are all my connected plugins. So it's actually pulling in my dynamic data. So my Google Drive, my Gmail, Canva, Google Calendar and web Search. All right, so we're going to let that cook and then let's get back into a quick recap. Right, all that but quick recap of part one. All right, so this is part two where we're going to get go over some of the more advanced techniques and not even super advanced. Right. I'm not even going to get into, you know, customizations and, you know, doing different things in The Diff Viewer and mcp. Right. I'm not even getting into that. This is more. The more advanced tactics for beginners. Okay, so this is still for beginners, but in part one, we covered this, the basics. So that was episode seven 76, so last Wednesday. So make sure to go check that out. But here's the very quick recap. Here's what we covered. Number one, Codex is the super app. There's been all this reporting and hype around. Oh, OpenAI is creating this new super app in the future. Well, it looks like the Chat GPT desktop app and the Atlas browser are probably gonna, you know, eventually go away. That's what I think. I don't know. They haven't actually said that, but it looks like they've said all along they're gonna come out with a super app. And they alluded to the fact that Codex is that. So if you want to be on the future, Codex is the future. So right now, Codex is positioned as the operating layer for repeatable workflows and not just a chatbot interface. That's the biggest thing. And we're going to see that in today's episode. All right? And a lot of people are instantly going to go to Claude, right? And let me just say, Claude is like the minor league baseball player right now, and Codex is the MLB all star. They're not in the same league. They're not in the same division. They aren't. Right. I'm not biased when I say that. I go back and look right when I was covering, you know, Claude code, Claude cowork in, you know, December, January, February, I said that time, Cowork, you know, is in a league of its own. And it was, but it was clunky. And it, at least what we have today, not comparable. So some of the biggest differences. And I did go over this a lot more, but Claude Desktop is siloed, all right? It's essentially three different programs that don't know the others exist. So you have to choose between Chat or Cowork or cloud code. And as an example, Chat doesn't know what you're working on in Cowork, Cowork doesn't know what you're working on in cloud code, and vice versa. And to make matters even worse, and I demoed this live. Even if you go in cowork or code, as an example, and you do, you know, new thread, new thread, new thread, right. If you're on thread five, it doesn't know anything. It only knows thread five. It doesn't know what you talked about in thread two. It doesn't know anything else. So not only is quad desktop up siloed, but it doesn't have working memory in cowork or code, thread to thread or task to task, which is absolutely bonkers. Bonkers, right? When I, like when I do trainings and I tell like enterprise clients that and they're spending a lot of money and they all scratch their head and they're like, wait, what? Yeah, that's the reality. And so Codex is unified. It is one. There's not three separate entities. And it has memory. So I did demo that for all you naysayers. I did demo that live in part one. And then last but not least, Codex and ChatGPT. Well, there's different use cases. I still do use ChatGPT on the web for some things. I'm using the mobile app now around the clock. More on that later. But there are still some reasons to use ChatGPT on the web. For me, I'm using it for GPT5.5 Pro because I do feel GPT5.5 Pro is a little bit better than the 5.5 extra high in codecs. I also use it for workspace agents, which are a little better. Not bad or different. All right, so for these Codex automations that we're going to run, Codex has to be up and running, but there's all these settings that keep it on and then I use it for deep research. So at least for me, there's three things I still use ChatGPT on the web for, because I know that's another thing people are confused about. Like, oh, well, should I just move everything to Codex? For me, I've moved 95% of my chat GPT web usage into Codex and I haven't looked back. All right, so the five advanced features that you need to know that we're going to be going over scheduled automations, skills, plugins, computer use, and remote control. All right, let's go ahead and reshare our screen. So we'll check in. All right, looks like we're still, we're still cooking here. Still, still taking, taking some time. I do have a version of this that's done just in case because I did tweak a couple of things. I always tell you guys, run these things multiple times, especially if you're trying to, you know, automate a big chunk of your workflow. You should always be iterating, always be changing. So even though I have a version of this that works and I'm ready to show, after I looked at It I'm like, oh, we should change a couple of things here to make it better. So technically haven't run this, but we'll see how it goes. All right, so I'm going to go ahead and open a, a new window of Codex. Yeah, you can have as many windows as you want. I love using computer use and having codecs control Codex and Codex control Claude code and all these things. All right, anyways, let's do a quick overview of these five features. So first let's look at plugins. So on the left hand side of your Codex app, you're going to see some different pans. Some panes. I went over the basics of this, but your settings at the bottom you have all of your projects that are tied to a folder and they can read and write. Right? That's another huge advantage of Codex. It can read and write files, which can be good or bad if you don't know what you're doing. And then you have chats. And then these chats are kind of individual and they're not tied to a certain project. All right, so and then up in the top you have your plugins and your automations. So let's look at plugins. So there's no dedicated space for skills. So sometimes people are like, where are skills? Well, you have to click on plugins first, then click in skills. But we're going to talk about those in a minute. So plugins there are. I counted these earlier but I forgot there's probably about 60 or 70, maybe more. Maybe actually closer to a hundred skills or sorry, plugins in here so you can search for them or you know, there's featured. There's coding, there's design, there's lifestyle, there's productivity and there's research. So very easy to install. You would just click on something. So, you know, linear. I don't have linear set up. I can click on linear. I can just go click add to Codex and then I would log in with my linear credentials. Usually it's one or two clicks and then you're set up. All right, but let's, let's a little bit more about plugins. So essentially ChatGPT changed the name, right? So originally they were connectors in ChatGPT and then they turned into apps. So now they're plugins inside Codex. And the reason why is because they're a little bit more than connectors and apps. And let me show you what I'm talking about by going into the Gmail connector. So let me zoom in here. So the description, it Says read and manage Gmail. Use Gmail to summarize inbox activity, draft replies, and organize email threads through the connected Gmail app. So includes, and here's why. Plugins are not exactly the same thing as apps in ChatGPT or as they were previously called, connectors. That's because they also include skills. Not all of them do, but many of them have prepackaged skills. And we're going to be talking about skills next. All right, so these plugins are essentially connectors that combined skills and they link codecs to the tools that you already use. Like I said, there's a ton of popular ones. So you know everything from computer use and controlling Chrome, which we're going to talk about later, to spreadsheets, Slack, Notion, Linear, Gmail, you know, your calendar both in Google and in outlook, Vercel, SharePoint, Figma, I mean, hugging face, Netlify. I'm just, you know, scrolling through naming some of the more popular ones. Twilio, Remotion, Canva. Hey, Gen, let's see, what else do we got here? Obviously Docs, Atlas and Stripe, Box Jam. I mean Bangers here, ClickUp, Conductor. So many I use Fixer, Fireflies, Granola, HubSpot, Monday.com pipedrive. So you have your CRMs in there. Semrush, Streak, Zoom. Right. Something a lot of people use like half the world. Asana. Right. So yeah, that's, that's some of the more popular ones. So these are a lot of the day to day tasks that you use on an ongoing or the day to day apps that you use on an ongoing basis. And if you didn't see the visual. Right. You can use multiple of them at the same time. When I kind of read out that prompt I was using, I think about six different apps. Okay, so these are all, you know, permission is case by case. So you should go see and understand what they can do. So as an example, if I go back and click on Gmail, so it includes the Gmail app and then two different skills. But I can go down. Let's see. I always forget where this is. Where do I find this? The Gmail app? Website privacy policy. I had all this up beforehand and I'm like, oh, I should. Okay, there we go. So you can right click or you can click on the. See how. How did I do that? They should make this a little more clear. Okay, you just click on it. But you don't know you can click on it anyways. You can click on it to see all of the different permissions or all of the different things that it can do. So in the Gmail's sense, this is different than in chat GBT because you know, early on in the connectors and app stays they were one one way streets, now they're bi directional and they can read. So, so in this case, gmail app has 24 actions, 11 are right and 13 are read. So it can, you know, go through, create drafts, create labels, all these things. But it can also read emails, right? So it can write emails, read emails, do all these batch tasks. So you can click on any app and see exactly what it can do by looking at those different permissions or different tasks. And this is important too because you know, if you're just giving very vague prompts to, especially to these plugins that have a lot of different read write actions and you're not watching the chain of thought, you might not get the desired result. That's why number one, it's important to look at the chain of thought because you will see essentially the tool calling that's happening there, right? You'll see if it's, oh, it's grabbing the right permission or the right, you know, tool out of those 24 from Gmail as an example. All right, so that is plugins. So I mean the big upside here is, you know, no more bouncing between 37 taps. Right now you can just, you know, be talking to six or seven different plugins at once. And the good thing is, well, they can be updating each other. So let's say you need to update your HubSpot in there according to all your emails in something in a spreadsheet. Well, you don't have to do anything, right? You can set all of that up and you don't have to open anything. All right, next let's go on to skills. So again to get to skills, a little confusing. In the left hand pane you're going to click plugins and then there's a little spot up top. A lot of people like struggle to find it and they're like, where are the skills? Well, there they are, they're at the top. So skills, what's the difference? Skills are. If you've used quadrant, you probably know skills. Because I think that's one of the things that really has set, you know, Claude apart. They really leaned heavily into skills, Chat, GPT, not all account tiers even have access to skills. Which to me I'm like, come on, if you're paying 200amonth for Chad GBD Pro, you gotta have skills anyways, you know, they have them on like team plans. So skills are essentially like reusable instructions and they act kind of as recipes. So it's like teaching your agent exactly how you want a task done every time. So that's in simple terms, in technical terms, it's a series of markdown files, right? That's all it is. So you can type a forward slash command and then the skill name and then your full set of rules, formatting and logic loads instantly. So it's why they matter is, well, you get the same high quality output every time. So you're not going to get the exact verbatim, but you're going to get the same quality every time. So this is like, think of it as like a series of prompts, very specific, well written prompts over and over. Right. But that's all skills really are, is they're very specific questions formatted in a meticulous way that ensures between the different, you know, agentic nature of these models, between all the tool calling, the harness that's always changing, it makes sure that it really does what you want it to do consistently each time. And the easiest one to, to build one inside Codex, well, there's a couple ways you can go into the skills. You can manage the skills that you already have. Looks like I have about 56 of them here that I use. It's actually not a lot. This is one of one. This is one of my dummy accounts that I don't use a lot. This is just for kind of demos. But you can, in the upper right hand corner you can go to create a plugin or create a skill. So then you can create a skill. There's actually a skill called skill creator that you just talk to. So you don't even have to be writing anything in code. It's just in natural language. All right, so those are skills and why they're important. All right, next, let's go to computer use. This one's fun. All right, let's see what, what could go wrong here. All right, let's, let's go ahead and try Computer use. So I'm just going to say computer. So I'm going to say use Computer use. And let's see, I'm going to say open my Apple News. We'll try that. We'll see. Open my Apple News and tell me what's trending. All right, we'll do this, we'll make it, we'll go medium to go a little faster here. So computer use is actually that it's using my computer. All right, so it's Always funny when people are like look, I'm doing this with no hands, right. But what's, what's going to be happening here on my screen, I'm not going to be doing. The difference is the computer use plugin is very, very good. I actually should have, yeah, it's already done. I should have used Codex 53 Spark which is amazing. It's so fast. That's the one with their partnership with Cerebras. So you'll see right here it's scrolling again, it's scrolling through Apple News. So it launched a program on my desktop. It's going through right. Simple stuff. But it's so good. It's so, so good. So I say that because Claude's computer use went crazy viral when they announced it. It was a couple months before OpenAI announced theirs in Codex. And I've done a lot of side by side. Now not only is the Codex computer use the default one faster and more accurate when you use that 53 spark cerebras I've done side by side in, in my experience and it depends on what you ask it, right. Generally I have a do very simple task when I'm doing these tests. You know, open two or three programs, create a document, save it, right. Something like that. Something that the average knowledge worker would be doing over and over. Computer use in Codex is about five times faster than computer use in Claudia Cowork. And if you use the cerebras it's like 15 to 18 times faster. All right, so the cerebras 5.3spark is not as powerful of a model but if it's basic, if you're just doing basic computer use work, it is absolutely mind boggling how good that is. All right, so that's computer use. So right. It just. So I click over here, it said oh, I Apple. I opened Apple News trending stories and it recapped six of the top stories there. So essentially it gives your agent its own cursor to look at the screen, clicks buttons and type. And that's the biggest difference between the computer use via codecs and the computer use via Claude code. I think the cloud coded one has gotten a little bit better since they announced it. But for the first 2ish months it was a train wreck. The main reason why is well number one it was too slow. Number two, if you were on the 20amonth plan, good luck even getting it to complete a task you would quickly hit your limits. But number three, it's screen jacked it, mouse jacked it, window jacked Everything. So you couldn't work at the same time as computer use. So you know, I was trying to integrate computer use into my day to day workflow, but it had to have its own computer. So I don't know what kind of wizards work over there in Codex, but it has its own cursor and even if it's using an active window, you can still use your own window. So if you've ever used computer use in quad desktop and you're like, oh, this is cool, yeah, go use Codex again. Minor league baseball player, you know, Sammy Sosa. I don't know why I said Sammy Sosa. I was trying to think of, you know, an MLB all star from Chicago and Sammy Sosa came out. All right, so, so that is computer use. It is good. Has its own cursor, it runs in the background, no interruptions. Great. All right, let's go next. Scheduled automation. So now that I showed you plugins, right, which are essentially apps with skills. I showed you skills and I showed you computer use. What if you could just, I don't know, do all those things together and run them as a scheduled automation? Well, you can't. All right, so at any point, right, I could just do it here. I could say, you know, run this every day. So I'm just doing the, the one that I was doing with Apple News, you know, I could say run this every day at, you know, 8:00am as a scheduled automation, right? That's all I have to do. So if you spend a lot of time in a thread and if you get something just right, you know, first say, hey, take a look at this. You know, go step by step and let's create a scheduled automation out of this to make sure that we get this kind of output every single time. And that's it. So I just say create a scheduled automation and it's done. All right? And then you'll see up here I have that new automation. So this is called the Heartbeat. So that means it runs daily, all right? And then I can go and click it and I can modify it if I need to, I can pause it, I can delete it, I can change the schedule. Or you can just go into the automations tab. So that's on the left hand side. So you have your new chat, your search, your plugins, your automations. Then you have your projects in your chats. So I can just go into automation, I can just click a new one and I can also just build it from scratch. You can have it work locally in a work tree on GitHub you can select the different project that you want it tied to. So it can be. It can just be a normal chat that's not tied to a project, or you can tie it to a specific project. Then you can set the cadence, whether you want it to run daily at a certain time, things like that. You can also pick the model and pick the reasoning effort. And there are also templates which are absolutely right. It's like, how easy. Right. Again, if the reason you haven't used Codex is because the word code. Have you seen me write any code yet? Absolutely not yet. I'm doing things that, you know, I'm accomplishing. I would say a lot so far. All right, let's see here how we're doing on my other one. I have it open. All right. I don't know if this one is going to finish in time. It must have been some of the. The new things that I added. So, last but not least, let's go to remote control. So, unfortunately, this is something I'm not going to be able to accurately demo because I'm using my phone to record this, right? The. This was just announced and now the Chat GPT app is, I think, literally the best app on the App Store. If I'm being honest, I didn't really use it a lot until the Codex control came out. Mainly because I hate doing work. I've said this before, I hate doing work on my phone. I have fat thumbs up, right? So if anyone out there, if you've ever texted me before, I'm not texting you on my phone. I'm waiting till I get home and, or office or whatever. If I'm on the go and you text me, I don't text you back, right? I. I hate it. I hate it. But now I'm actually using my phone a lot more and I'm using the Chat GPT app because now I can control Codex via the Chat GPT app. I know this a little confusing. It's not a Codex app, it's the normal ChatGPT app app, and it's a new remote control feature. So essentially you're going to download or, or make sure you have the most updated version of Codex, the most updated version of the Chat GPT app. And there's going to be a Codex tab in the Chat GPT app and then it's going to take you through a pairing process, which is pretty simple. If you get caught up, there's a QR code. Mine somehow just automatically just worked after I did that on each device and it worked. So at any point you can go here into Settings. All right? And then I'm trying to remember, I think it's under Connections. There we go. So as an example, I have, I'm on my Mac Studio here, but I also have connected my phone, so my iPhone via the Chat GPT app. And I've also connected my MacBook. So at any time I can control other devices as well. So my MacBook is shut off and not powered on. Right. But the cool thing is on my MacBook, because my Mac Studio is always plugged in, I can control my Mac studio from my MacBook at any time, or vice versa, I can just control it via my phone. And that's the best part. All right, and let me quickly call out how, again, how minor league. And the only reason I said this is because I think I like, read some comments on the last Spotify episode and people are like, oh, this guy must not, must not use Claude. Yes, I use Yes y'. All. I know every feature of everything. This is all I do all day. Right? I know and understand that Claude has a similar feature to this called Dispatch. Okay? But if you're talking about the equivalence Dispatch, it's a similar ish feature. So you can control Claude Cowork. Okay, Claude Cowork. Again, it's three different silos from the Claude mobile app. But it's weird. It's just Dispatch and it's one thread. So here's why that's absolutely useless. All right? Right. It's essentially just a. I won't even say it's a two way road, it's a piece of string. Because the only thing it's really good for is if you have a file on your computer and you need it to send. Right? Because you can't actually work on meaningful projects in there. And that's the only feature that the Dispatch has to control Claude Cowork. It is not a full control your computer. It's. You have access to one thread and you can go back and forth on that singular thread and that's it. But if you have everything else, all your other big projects in Claude Cowork, it's not going to do anything. Right? It's just a dedicated single thread. That's not how it is in, in Codex. With the Chat GBT app, you can control everything, any of your projects. You have one thing. There are some bugs, but the bugs on this are way less than the bugs in Dispatch. Because I've said this multiple times, my dispatch completely broke. I had to uninstall It. I think it's because I literally uploaded a. I uploaded a Excel file that was like six megabytes and it crashed dispatch permanently. I had to uninstall everything and it still didn't work. Anyways, this. The. The bugs on the ChatGPT, you know, codecs, Connect and Connection app are very small. Like, that's the biggest one I see is it sometimes won't sync an updated folder name. Right? Big deal, right? Because I changed the name of a folder on the desktop, but when I open it up on the iPhone, it still had the old folder name, but I still went in, I found the thread in that folder, and it's up to date and I'm controlling it. So literally, I. This is what I did last night. Oh, can I get super dorky? I used Codex to open up Claude in the browser. Because again, you can control the browser, you can control your desktop, anything, right? I had to go through all of my Claude, all of my Chat GBD history, and recap everything, put it all in a spreadsheet, and then write me, like, dozens of skills and create dozens of new projects with custom instructions based on my usage. Right? Talk about AI doing work for you. That's it right there. All right, so. So let's see. Did we. Did. Did this finish? Did this finish? Let's see. I don't think this one. Let's see. It's gonna finish. It didn't. It didn't. It's. It. It. It is gonna take. It is gonna take a little. A little bit of time. So let me just show you the. The finished version here, if I can. All right, so I did run this right before. Pretty much the same prompt. I actually added two or three small things in the one that I just did and unfortunately didn' one that did work successfully. The other one will work. It's just going to take a little bit longer. That's the beauty of doing live demos of generative AI. So this one worked for 22 minutes, but I added a couple of things. That's why it took a little longer. All right, so if I go. Click out the side panel. Let me do this. There we go. And I have all of my outputs here and all of the sources. So let me go to the bottom and let's just take a look at what this created for me. Me. So it has all of these key links. So let me see. Click this. Okay. Obviously it's opening all this in a different window. Sorry, this is a little hard to jump around, but here's my executive Readout. Very good. Everything I wanted all the different guests. My gosh, this is really good. Just one sheet that has absolutely everything. Love that. Here's the Google Slides version. All right, so it created a pretty, you know, basic looking, but it did the job. All right, let's see the canva doc. See if that worked. There we go. All right, this looks nice here. It has the everyday AI guest prep for next week. The executive readout, the Spotify analytics overview that tied to these different guests, the briefing on the three different guests, the current AI context, all this stuff. Pretty good there. The delivery index. All right, here's all the different links. So it did go through in streamyard, created all these. All right, and then it's. I'm checking in another window here. If I can bring up these Gmail drafts without showing too much. All right. Yeah, I can't. I can, I can just take away this person's email so then it won't matter. There we go. All right, check it out there. There is the, the email with the seven specific questions, the potential title directions. Everything's in there, including the link to the stream yard where we would record this. All right, so amazing. This is amazing. All right. And then a couple more deliverables as well. Here's a web app it literally created. Okay, look at this. It created an actual web app here for all of this. It's interactive. All right, So I can click on it. The overview, the different guests, the analytics that tie to these guests, the sources, the draft emails. My gosh, this is so good. The word doc. I think I already showed this. Yep, there's the word doc. And then also it created a PowerPoint so it's previewing all these things, FYI in the code. So Codex has a built in web browser, so I can, you know, go into. Can actually browse the web. And it also has a built in file viewer as well. So I was actually looking at those in the file viewer. But at any time I can also open a browser as well. So did a great job. Like, my gosh, like, I can't wait to see when the other one does finish because I did throw a couple more things at it, how much better it is because I'm always iterating, always trying to make things better. All right, I know that was a lot, y', all, but. But we went live. Sometimes it works perfectly. Sometimes it's a little slower, but it's always worth it. But here's the thing. It doesn't matter if a task like this takes 22 minutes. Or 42 minutes. And the reason being is because these types of tasks, number one, I don't even have the capabilities right for me pre AI to code a little interactive website for all my upcoming gas. Like, like, it's cool. Do I need it? No. Like I can suffice with a word doc or, you know, the little PowerPoint presentations, those are helpful as well. But these are tasks that would have taken me easily four to six to eight hours if I was absolutely locked in. But the problem is I can never lock in, right? I have a lot going on. I have a lot of, you know, great opportunities, you know, being able to talk with a lot of, you know, really cool people in the field. I rarely ever have more than an hour or two to do dedicated focus work. So that's why it's like, okay, if this thing takes 20 minutes, 40 minutes, it doesn't matter because I can have all of these things running for me around the clock. I can wake up to the work that used to take me weeks. Yes. I have to invest in the time, I have to stay up with the technology, I have to read the chain of thought, I have to iterate. But once I get it to that point, it's on autopilot, right? So now I'm probably going to have this running at least twice a week. It's going to look out two weeks in advance and it's going to do this exact same thing. I'm going to go through, look at the next version, try to make it a little bit better, and then settle on it and say, okay, this one's good to go. And that's my new. My new routine is I wake up and I see that work that agents do for me. Y', all, I told you this when I did my 2025, you know, prediction series, I said, the future of working with AI or the 2026, it is front end orchestration and back end taste making. That's what I do. That's what I want you to do as well. And that's where we're at now. This is what we've always wanted, right? We've always wanted an AI that just does my work. This AI just did my work, right? I have to provide the instructions on the front end, but it's cutting down the time that it would take for me to do this by at least 90 to 95%. And the output is better, let's be honest, because I'm looking at the chain of thought. It's going to sometimes dozens or hundreds of websites. I wouldn't have had the time to do that level of research in the high quality that it's outputting in all of these different artifacts that I have saved in there. And now I can just have all of these things running for me around the clock. All right, so was this helpful? I hope it was. This is one of those ones. Again, you might want to go to our website, your everyday AI.com check the video version of this and then if you are listening on the podcast, I always have in the show notes a little thing there that says join the conversation on LinkedIn. So go do that and repost this. You're going to get early access to our cowork Codex cohort. Maybe we'll call it the CCC because that's a mouthful. As well as the Codex Cookbook, y'. All. Chef Jordan Wilson went absolutely nuttier than a squirrel on keto on this one. The Codex Cookbook, it is going to be your guide. You are going to want it. I don't sell this stuff, y'. All. I give it to you for free because I want to be your trusted source for knowing how to traverse the wild ro that is generative AI. So I could be selling all these things for a lot of money and people would pay for them because they're extremely valuable. This is hundreds of hours of my experience using Codex. I've been using the Codex app since the day it came out in February. And I literally use it around the clock aside from when I restart my computer. So putting some of the best of the best stuff in that we didn't have time to to get to in these two parts. A ton of different use cases. You know, filter it by category, by level. Right. A lot of different ways that you can use these kind of different recipes to get the most out of Codex. So I hope this was helpful if it was. Aside from sharing all that, make sure you go to your everyday AI.com we're going to be recapping the highlights of today's show and a whole lot more. So thank you for tuning in. Hope to see you back tomorrow and every day for more Everyday AI. Thanks, y'. All. And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI. Thanks for joining us. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a rating. It helps keep us going for a little more AI magic. Visit your everydayai.com and sign up to our daily newsletter so you don't get left behind. Go break some barriers and we'll see you next time.
Title: OpenAI’s Codex For Beginners Pt 2: Advanced Agentic Strategies Broken Down for Newbies
Host: Jordan Wilson
Date: May 20, 2026
In the second part of the "Codex for Beginners" series, host Jordan Wilson dives into the advanced—yet beginner-friendly—agentic strategies enabled by OpenAI's Codex desktop app. The episode goes beyond basics, showcasing how Codex can automate complex workflows, integrate with the user's digital ecosystem, and act as a persistent, resourceful AI agent. Jordan provides live demonstrations and actionable insights, aiming to demystify Codex for everyday professionals seeking to dramatically boost efficiency and output.
The episode focuses on five advanced, agentic features:
(Timestamps refer to roughly the main walkthrough section: 12:10 – 35:00, revisit at 105:00 for results)
Jordan walks through a full, multi-step Codex workflow for automating his podcast guest research process:
Notable moment:
| Timestamp (MM:SS) | Segment | |-----------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 00:01 | Codex as the 'Holy Grail' of AI, current landscape | | 11:30–35:00 | Live demo: Podcast guest pitch automation via Codex | | 36:00 | Recap and comparison to competitors (Claude, Gemini) | | 65:00 | Plugins explained; advantages over connectors/apps | | 69:00 | Skills explained | | 76:30 | Computer use demo and distinctions | | 80:30 | Scheduled automation—turning workflows into daily routines | | 86:00 | Remote control with ChatGPT mobile app | | 105:00 | Reveal of live demo outputs, artifact review | | 112:00 | Reflections: Agentic AI, impact on productivity, what listeners should do next |
Tip: For visuals and deeper dives, Jordan recommends watching the episode video on youreverydayai.com.
To learn more or join the Early Access Co-Working Codex Cohort and get the Codex Cookbook, repost the show on LinkedIn as per Jordan’s instructions.