Codex moment It all started with a push notification from Framer: Sergey, we are about to…
Codex moment It all started with a push notification from Framer: Sergey, we are about to…, media 2
Codex moment It all started with a push notification from Framer: Sergey, we are about to…, media 3
Codex moment It all started with a push notification from Framer: Sergey, we are about to…, media 4
Codex moment It all started with a push notification from Framer: Sergey, we are about to…, media 5
Codex moment It all started with a push notification from Framer: Sergey, we are about to…, media 6

Codex moment It all started with a push notification from Framer: Sergey, we are about to charge you 200 euros for an annual subscription.…

Codex moment It all started with a push notification from Framer: Sergey, we are about to charge you 200 euros for an annual subscription. Overall, I liked Framer. Like Figma, only with instant publishing, instead of a separate abstraction where the design still has to be translated in development onto understandable technical rails Before that, in Codex I had only made a Snake game and a personal Telegram bot to download videos from Twitter. I could not think of a use for it But 200 euros is still 200 euros. That is how the request to Codex to move my site from Framer to HTML and CSS happened over the next 20 minutes Appetite came with eating. Next I created an import of my posts from the Telegram channel to the site. Fulfilled an old dream. Where a year ago ChatGPT could only issue instructions for use, of questionable quality, Codex takes tasks into execution Dream #1 came true: now all posts from this channel are friendly for search engines and LLM models on the site Dream #2 was born in flight and carried out in flight too. Praise Turkish Airlines and their unlimited internet on board. I now have a photo feed. I just use a native Shortcut from the Share menu to send the right photo from my phone library, and it gets published on the site. What kind of magic is this ✨ And I felt the whole new experience through communication. The closest thing to solving tasks in Codex is talking to people in Slack: there is shared context, there are different people - you write them messages, and after n time you see the result. And here it is the same! It feels as if I am talking to a team of professionals. If some expertise is missing: a new chat, a couple of lines: "Read Readme.md and docs. Here we are working on SEO optimization" And now my idle tomilov.com is starting to come alive. What times we live in! Goosebumps Maybe chat surfaces are not such a dead-end branch of interaction with large models after all...