Codex uses and ships with bubblewrap on Linux and will attempt to use the version installed on the path before falling back to the shipped version with a warning message.
You should be able to configure the sandbox using https://developers.openai.com/codex/agent-approvals-security if you are a person who prefers the convenience of codex being able to open the sandbox over an externally enforced sandbox like jai.
I wasn't familiar with the PIP acronym so I asked $AI:
> A PIP (Performance Improvement Plan) is a formal document a company uses when they believe an employee isn’t meeting expectations. It’s framed as “support,” but depending on the environment, it can be anything from a genuine improvement tool to a pre-termination protocol.
Eclipse Collections also comes with an API that seems nicer than the one provided by the standard library - so it might be worth checking out even if you're not interested in primitives.
I will make any excuse to use Streams but understand the negativity. They are difficult to debug and I feel the support for parallelism complicated, and in some cases even crippled, the API for many common use cases.
Rocksmith+ recently got a piano mode. The default interface is similar to Guitar Hero but you can also toggle to a sheet music view. I haven't tried it.
I have tried Playground Sessions and recommend it.
It's pretty much their one and only chance to warn the authorities that there's a risk, so if they choose to ignore it, well, nobody can claim they weren't informed.
Nice article.
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