- OpenAI Unveils First Branded Hardware, Codex Micro, a Programmable Macro Pad Built with Keyboard Maker Work Louder
- Codex Micro appears to be based on the layout of Work Louder’s Creator Micro 2, mapped to Codex Coding Agent shortcuts.
- The move strengthens OpenAI’s Codex offering as one of its key focus areas by enabling developers to complete tasks or interact with AI more quickly.
The first OpenAI-branded hardware isn’t a long-awaited consumer device it’s building with former Apple design chief Jony Ive, but rather a programmable macro block called the Codex Micro.
The keyboard, which consists entirely of macro keys designed to “optimize people’s use of the Codex,” according to an OpenAI spokesperson at the AI Engineer World Expo, is said to be a collaboration between the iPhone creator and custom macro creator Work Louder.
With OpenAI’s developer-focused account on
A simple rebadge or a sign of things to come?
The still-pending version, “Codex Micro,” appears to take inspiration from Work Louder’s existing Creator Micro 2, a compact macro pad that offers thirteen mechanical keys, a joystick, a rotary encoder, and touch controls, arranged on programmable layers for power users needing faster or more precise control over AI-assisted coding tasks.
The move is understandable for OpenAI, both in terms of winning with developers and brand recognition, and essentially testing the waters on how it would handle the hardware launch for the company’s next AI device aimed at more general users.
This can also, to some extent, be seen as OpenAI essentially recognizing that its previous position of focusing on its core business might be one that the company is willing to make exceptions to, particularly when it comes to coding tools or enterprise use hardware.
OpenAI Applications CEO Fidji Simo reportedly told staff that the company was looking to deprioritize areas outside of its core focus to allow it to take the lead where it mattered.
In 2025, OpenAI launched the Sora video app, the Atlas browser, e-commerce features in ChatGPT, advertising work, and hardware efforts, a “startup series” approach that insiders said had produced organizational confusion and constant reworking of a rare computation, distracting it from a truly centralized purpose.
In other words, hardware was explicitly on the list of distractions. A physical keyboard is arguably as clear a violation of this guideline as one could conceive.
OpenAI is also reeling from a smaller-than-expected gap to rival Anthropic and its Claude models in areas where its GPT models compete. This can perhaps be attributed to the much narrower focus of Anthropic, which is aimed specifically at coders and businesses through its Claude Code and Claude Cowork offerings.
It can be argued that OpenAI’s move does not distract from its core focus, but rather complements it, even though R&D and integration is for the most part something Work Louder will engage in.
This allows the AI giant to both test the marketability of an OpenAI-branded hardware product and appease developers and founders with effortless play, even as they increasingly consider tools from Anthropic and Google as well as other AI solution providers.
None of OpenAI’s previous concerns can apply here; the exercise does not consume compute, it is aimed at a key audience for OpenAI, with Codex supporting 5 million weekly users as of June, and it does not significantly engage an engineering team as some of its other projects do.
With OpenAI and Anthropic expected to go public soon, both are engaged in a race to secure as many active users as possible to justify their valuations, even as they compete to build the most powerful models to cater to various industries, including defense, telecommunications, pharmaceuticals, and software development, to name a few.
OpenAI’s move may well be a sign of things to come, as it leverages ChatGPT’s massive brand recognition to develop marketable, revenue-generating solutions such as a custom macro keyboard, although it is reluctant to devote its engineering or computational resources to anything other than the most important of its tasks, even as enthusiasts continue to await the release of its next collaboration with legendary Apple designer Jony Ive.
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