OpenAI shipped the Codex Micro, a $230 physical keypad built with keyboard maker Work Louder, designed exclusively for controlling its agentic coding tool Codex. The device features six frosted keys with LEDs that track agent status, plus programmable controls for accepting code, branching threads, and switching between reasoning levels, making it the company's first consumer hardware product ahead of its rumored Jony Ive-designed smart speaker.
Key Points
The keypad includes customizable controls like a dial for adjusting Codex reasoning levels and a joystick for switching between workflows, with additional keycaps for personalized shortcuts.
OpenAI recently merged Codex into a "super app" combining ChatGPT, Codex, and the new productivity agent ChatGPT Work, the keypad simplifies navigation for power users juggling multiple workflows.
Work Louder warns it has only a "limited quantity" available, suggesting the device may sell out quickly despite its $230 price point.
Relevance
For enterprise teams running agentic coding workflows, the Codex Micro signals OpenAI's bet on dedicated hardware for heavy AI users. Companies testing Codex across dev teams now have a physical interface option that could reduce context-switching and improve agent control. This also hints at OpenAI's broader hardware strategy, if dedicated controls improve adoption for coding agents, expect similar products for other enterprise use cases.