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I Ran Home To Try This New AI Feature

Video thumbnail: I Ran Home To Try This New AI Feature
Jun 10, 20261m 8s video lengthMatt Wolfe

The Signal

Microsoft recently debuted a new GitHub Copilot application at its Build conference, positioning it as an evolution of the existing Codex programming experience. While the app promises the ability to select models from various providers—allowing users to swap between the fastest or most cost-effective options—the product is currently inaccessible to many, as new plan sign-ups are paused to ensure a high-quality rollout.

The Case

  • GitHub aims for a Codex-like workflow that functions under a broader model-agnostic umbrella, differing from the firm-locked experience currently offered by the standard Codex tool that relies exclusively on OpenAI models.0:06
  • Access is strictly gated; a user must have an active GitHub Copilot subscription to start, creating an immediate barrier for those outside the existing customer base.0:37
  • The company justifies the current signup freeze by citing the need to guarantee a high-quality experience, though this claim remains unverified by independent auditors and is the primary reason the tool cannot be tested yet.
  • The narrator expresses high-confidence enthusiasm for the app's potential to pick current state-of-the-art models, but this remains an unproven assertion without concrete detail on which providers or models will ultimately be supported.

The 1 Minute Signal Take

This is a textbook example of a product announcement outpacing its actual availability. Skip the video if you are simply looking for a review or technical verdict; the summary provides all the relevant context, as the speaker is currently blocked by a digital locked door and cannot offer a real-world evaluation of the platform.

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