Just a brief note to mention that when I was fighting Codex CLI earlier this week to call the OpenAI Whisper API , what was really going on was that Codex CLI was sandboxed. ChatGPT helped me modify the script I was creating so that the script itself punched through the sandbox by clearing the proxies that had been setup to keep Codex CLI in the secondbox. It's interesting that ChatGPT didn't just tell me to add the --yolo argument to my codex cli command line. I wonder if that's part of its guardrails, or if ChatGPT doesn't know about the arguments to Codex CLI yet through training. I saw similar things happen when ChatKit was announced. ChatGPT wasn't quite sure what it was on the day of the announcement. The good new is that I'm now calling APIs without any shenanigans because I learned to simply add '--yolo' the following day. That argument comes with its own set of risks, but I'm ok with those for the moment.
I finally got Beads working on Windows… sort of. The trick? I used WSL. I hadn’t tried to do serious work on Windows in quite a while, so I was genuinely surprised to discover that WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) just worked. I’d been struggling with Beads— a system that helps to automate workflows for LLM agents by essentially creating revision controlled context for them —for several days. Some of the things Beads wanted simply weren’t available on Windows. The big one was tmux (which I also needed for Gastown). I spent about three days fighting with that. Then I finally took the plunge and went all-in on WSL. And… it just worked. It worked especially well combined with OpenAI Codex. From WSL/Linux, I can fire up Codex CLI and tell it to install things for me. No worrying about which Windows installer to use. No chasing down extra packages. Everything just works. Need ffmpeg and Gimp ? You need merely ask.. I did have to start Codex CLI with: codex --yolo Then, with basic sudo ...