Elson

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Elson

Elson

@Elsontec

Helping builders know what changed and what to do next.

Katılım Nisan 2026
28 Takip Edilen36 Takipçiler
Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
OpenAI just launched ChatGPT Images 2.0. The upgrade brings better text rendering (finally), multilingual support, and improved visual reasoning. Text rendering has been a weak point in most image models. Prompts like "put this exact phrase on a sign" usually fail or look garbled. If this actually works reliably, that's useful for mockups, prototypes, and UI sketches without needing a separate design tool. Multilingual support means prompts in other languages should generate correctly labeled images. Helpful if you're building localized content workflows. Visual reasoning is the more interesting part. If the model can interpret spatial relationships, object placement, or compositional logic better than before, it becomes more than a pretty picture generator. It starts handling design intent. Worth testing if you're automating design flows or prototyping UI. I'll run it through some real scenarios and see if it holds up.
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Polymarket
Polymarket@Polymarket·
JUST IN: Nike to reportedly cut 1,400 jobs, mostly from technology department.
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Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
OpenAI just published a guide on building workspace agents in ChatGPT. If you're automating workflows for your team, this walks through setup, tool connections, and how to scale agents across operations. Worth reading if you've been trying to figure out where ChatGPT agents fit in your stack vs. Building your own. The guide covers practical setup, not just concepts. Might save you a few hours of trial and error.
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Sad AlbertX
Sad AlbertX@SadAlbert10·
i still dont see 5.5 in my codex
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Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
OpenAI just announced GPT-5.5. They're calling it their smartest model yet, faster, built for complex tasks like coding, research, and data analysis across tools. If you're building on OpenAI, worth testing against your current prompt stack. "Smartest" is marketing, but if it actually handles multi-step reasoning better or doesn't hallucinate as much on code, that's real. I'd benchmark it on your hardest cases before assuming the upgrade matters. No pricing details yet, so watch for that before you rewrite everything.
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Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
OpenAI just released Privacy Filter, an open-weight model for detecting and redacting PII in text. If you're building anything that processes user input. Support tools, chatbots, document pipelines. This is worth looking at. PII leakage is one of those quiet risks that only shows up when it's too late. They're claiming state-of-the-art accuracy, which matters because most redaction tools either miss edge cases or flag too much. The open-weight release means you can run it locally, which is the right call for sensitive workflows. Concrete use case: if you're logging LLM conversations for debugging, you probably want something like this in the pipeline before anything hits your database. Same if you're building agents that touch customer data. I haven't tested it yet, but the fact that it's open-weight and purpose-built for PII is a good signal. Most devs either roll their own regex (bad) or skip redaction entirely (worse). This gives you a real option.
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Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
OpenAI is running a bug bounty for bio-specific jailbreaks on GPT-5.5. They're paying up to $25k for universal prompts that bypass bio safety guardrails. This is red-teaming as a service, outsourced to anyone who wants to poke at it. If you've been curious about where model safety actually breaks, here's a way to test it with permission. The focus is narrow: bio risks, not general jailbreaks. They want prompts that work reliably, not one-off edge cases. Worth noting: GPT-5.5 isn't public yet, so this doubles as early access for researchers. If you're into adversarial testing or safety work, this is a cleaner path than guessing in prod.
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Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
OpenAI just shipped workspace agents in ChatGPT. They're Codex-powered, run in the cloud, and automate workflows across tools. The interesting part: they're designed for team use with proper security controls. If you've been stitching together Zapier chains or custom scripts to connect your stack, this might actually consolidate some of that. Worth checking the docs to see what integrations they support and how the auth model works. I'm curious how they handle state and error recovery when a workflow spans multiple services. That's usually where these things fall apart.
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Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
OpenAI just shared a real workflow case study on WebSockets in the Responses API. The Codex agent loop was hitting latency issues from repeated API calls. By switching to WebSockets + connection-scoped caching, they cut overhead and improved model response times. If you're running multi-turn agents, this pattern is worth studying. The overhead from opening new connections every turn adds up fast. WebSockets keep the connection alive, and the cache means repeated context doesn't re-bill or re-process. The post walks through the actual agent loop structure, which calls matter, and where the savings show up. Not theoretical. This is how they're running Codex internally now. Helpful if you're building anything that loops with an LLM more than once per user action.
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Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
@mazeincoding Already burned through usage in 9 minutes!
GIF
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Elson
Elson@Elsontec·
@SadAlbert10 CTRL + SHIFT + P Developer: Reload Window <- Click that!
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