OpenAI's first hardware product is a $230 mini keypad for AI coding

Shawn Knight

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In a nutshell: OpenAI has announced its first consumer hardware product, and it's not the smart speaker or phone that some were expecting. The Codex Micro is a mechanical keyboard designed for use with the company's Codex coding agent – think of it as a Stream Deck for ChatGPT.

Late last year, OpenAI announced a partnership with former Apple designer Jony Ive to build a screen-free AI gadget. Details are still pending, but the company said the gadget would be equipped with multiple cameras and sensors for spatial awareness. This is not that, but something else entirely.

Built with help from the team at Work Louder, the keypad features 13 mechanical switches, a touch sensor, a rotary dial to adjust reasoning level on the fly, and an analog stick. All of the inputs are fully customizable to best fit your workflow, and the kit ships with a few dozen extra keycaps to further fine-tune it to your needs.

Aesthetically speaking, the peripheral looks great. The integrated RGB lighting is more than just a cheap party trick as it is used for various alerts and notifications. Connectivity options include Bluetooth or USB-C, and it is compatible with both Windows and Mac.

OpenAI is now accepting pre-orders for the Codex Micro. Pricing is set at $230, and the first units are expected to ship later this month. OpenAI told TechCrunch to think of the accessory as more of a limited-run project meaning it probably won't stick around long after launch. If you want one, it would be best to go ahead and toss your name in the hat sooner rather than later.

Some are already questioning the high price, and rightfully so – it is a lot of money for a handful of inputs. That said, if it can save you time as a productivity enhancer, it could be a worthwhile investment in the long run. Of course, that is assuming the AI bubble doesn't burst before you get your money's worth out of it.

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So is this an advertisement or a story? If the latter, I'd like to point out that "Aesthetically speaking, the peripheral looks great." is not an objective sentence and really shouldn't be included here...

Might look good to some - I'm sure many will argue it's ugly... Perhaps "it looks unique" or "it looks like a premium device" could be seen as more objective?
 
Software side seems alright although nothing special. Hardware side really is something I'd expect from Kickstarter rather than from a company going through hundreds of millions a month.

Anyone that wants something like that but cheaper, get yourself a macropad from Aliexpress (probably in the $30-100 range) and I'm sure AI can help you out with the scripting for it. Plenty of RGB capable macropads with some buttons and knobs. Heck, they even have ones with a joystick as well, for example:
https://aliexpress.com/item/1005010056232870.html
 
Shameless plug eh TechSpot? And that YouTube sales demo dude is so flat; no charisma. They might as well have just used an actual robot to pitch it. This whole thing feels so meh. All that investment $ and they couldn’t come up with anything better? Kinda tracks. Two thumbs up there Sammy! /s
 
Definitely not what I expected.

It's obviously not something you carry around, it stays on your desk ... but I already have a keyboard there. Why do I need 1/3 of my keyboard repeated once more? And why a chunk of a keyboard needs "spatial awareness"?
So many mysteries.
 
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