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I installed codex yesterday and the first thing I'm doing today is figuring out how bubblewrap works and maybe evaluating jai as an alternative.

Nice article.


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.


It's terse and it lines up the variable names.


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 a difficult read.

Cybersecurity and digital systems was not the issue but gets thirteen pages of proposed measures. I feel this could have been left out.

Electric System Operation was the issue and gets seven pages of proposed measures.


Check this shorter report by the operator:

https://d1n1o4zeyfu21r.cloudfront.net/WEB_Incident_%2028A_Sp...


>I feel this could have been left out.

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.


What's unique about this? This is basically what every parent and teacher already does.


True, but this is about adults in a professional context.


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