OpenAI is going to let users access Codex, its desktop AI tool that can write code and use apps on your computer, from the ChatGPT app on your phone.
Following the surge in popularity for Anthropic's Claude Code, OpenAI has been working quickly to try and catch up, including by cutting back on "side quests," shutting down projects like the Sora video-generation tool, and focusing on growing its enterprise business. The company's push included the recently released major update for Codex that lets it operate apps on macOS - a potentially major step as part of its ambitions to make a desktop "superapp."
Codex in the ChatGPT mobile app lets …
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Microsoft first started opening up access to Claude Code in December, inviting thousands of its own developers to use Anthropic's AI coding tool daily. It was part of an effort to get project managers, designers, and other employees to experiment with coding for the first time, and sources tell me that Claude Code has proved very popular inside Microsoft over the past six months. Perhaps a little too popular, as Microsoft is now preparing to walk back its Claude Code push.
I understand that Microsoft is planning to remove most of its Claude Code licenses and push many of its developers to use Copilot CLI instead. While Claude Code has been …
Read the full story at The Verge.
The era of “all-you-can-eat” AI coding and agent subscriptions may well be ending. Beginning June 15, Anthropic will separate programmatic Claude usage from standard chat subscription limits, introducing a dedicated monthly credit system, billed at API-style rates, for tools including its Agent SDK, GitHub Actions, and third-party frameworks such as OpenClaw, the company wrote in a blog post.
The monthly credit for programmatic usage will depend on a user’s existing Claude subscription tier and generally mirror its monthly price, with Pro users receiving $20 in credits, Max 5x users $100, and Max 20x users $200.
In April, Anthropic had announced via a post on X that Claude subscriptions would “no longer cover usage on third-party tools like OpenClaw”, citing compute capacity restraints, and effectively forcing developers using external agent frameworks either to purchase additional usage bundles or switch to direct API access.
Before that change, programmatic workloads and interactive
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Cerebras Systems priced its IPO at $185 per share on Wednesday evening, targeting a $5.5 billion raise and valuing the AI chipmaker at $40 billion, according to the Financial Times. The company, a maker of chips purpose-built for the workloads powering tools like Claude Code and ChatGPT, was valued at $8.1 billion just eight months ago, the Financial Times said. The rapid increase highlights just how fast investor capital is flowing into artificial intelligence, a trend that has become a significant headwind for digital assets as attention shifts toward AI-related equities. The frenzy has made U.S. equities the undisputed destination for risk capital in recent months. Intel (INTC) is up 218% year to date. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and Micron Technologies (MU) have more than doubled. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index is up 66% while the benchmark S&P 500 has gained 8