AI Briefing, June 20 — Issue #402
Editorial standards and source policy: Editorial standards, Team. Content links to primary sources; see Methodology.
OpenAI has launched Codex Record & Replay, its first feature enabling real-time conversion of users’ local desktop actions into reusable AI workflow skills. Meanwhile, Intel’s new CEO, Dr. Lip-Bu Tan (66), is confronting the AI compute arms race head-on—initiating a systemic rebuild of the company’s semiconductor supply chain and technology roadmap [1][2].
🚀 Key Updates
- Codex adds Record & Replay [1]: Users can now record their desktop interactions to automatically generate executable, editable, and shareable AI automation scripts.
- Dr. Tan’s first in-depth interview as Intel CEO [2]: He outlines the “Reinventing Intel” strategy across three pillars—accelerating advanced packaging, opening up foundry ecosystems, and rearchitecting AI chips with tighter hardware-software co-design.
- AI workflows are shifting from prompt-driven to behavior-driven [1]: Human actions themselves are becoming a new source of training data—lowering the barrier to automation for non-programmers.
- Global AI compute infrastructure has entered a new phase: supply-chain sovereignty [2]: Dr. Tan sets a clear baseline for next-gen capacity planning—“30% manufactured in the U.S., 40% co-developed with Europe and Japan, and 30% sourced from trusted partners.”
🔗 Sources
[1] Just Now: Codex Gets a Major Update—Your Desktop Actions Are Becoming AI Skill Packages — https://www.bestblogs.dev/article/530d988c?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=resources&entry=rss_article_item
[2] #592. Lip-Bu Tan: At 66, Taking the Helm at Intel Amid the AI Compute War—Rebuilding the Semiconductor Supply Chain — https://www.bestblogs.dev/podcast/667e43d?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=resources&entry=rss_article_item