In January, Dan Shipper wrote that whoever wins vibe coding wins how you work on your computer—and OpenAI had some serious catching up to do.
Three months and the release of GPT-5.5 later, Codex has more than caught up. Austin Tedesco, Every's head of growth, now spends about 80 percent of his working time inside the Codex desktop app, doing everything from drafting go-to-market plans from a stack of meeting transcripts to rebuilding the company's KPI dashboard.
On this episode of AI & I, Dan sat down with Austin to discuss why the agent management interface—a desktop app built on top of a coding agent—is becoming the new operating system for knowledge work, and why Codex has become his daily driver.
If you found this episode interesting, please like, subscribe, comment, and share!
To hear more from Dan Shipper:
Subscribe to Every: every.to/subscribe
Follow him on X: twitter.com/danshipper
Join the membership for Where You Live at joinbilt.com/dan
Timestamps for YouTube:
00:00:00 Introduction
00:00:57 How Codex went from a tool for senior engineers to a daily driver for knowledge work
00:02:42 How Claude Code proved that a great coding agent works for any knowledge work
00:07:24 Austin's switch to Codex
00:13:48 How Austin set up Codex with folders, keys, and reviewer agents
00:18:24 Using Codex to brainstorm automations across Gmail, Slack, and Notion
00:22:42 How Austin manages the human review step when Codex is drafting communications
00:28:54 Using Codex to build specialized agents inspired by product executive Claire Vo
00:31:09 Synthesizing meeting transcripts and Slack threads into a go-to-market plan
00:40:15 Building a live KPI tracker in Notion that agents can read
00:44:54 Using Codex for recruiting
Links to resources mentioned in the episode:
Austin on X: @tedescau
Dan's January essay on OpenAI's catch-up problem: every.to/chain-of-thought/openai-has-some-catching-up-to-do
Every's vibe check on GPT-5.5: every.to/vibe-check/gpt-5-5