OpenAI's standalone Codex application, designed for coding, reached one million downloads in its first week, while Toyota unveiled a console-grade graphics engine for use in vehicles, according to reports from February 9, 2026. These developments highlight the rapid advancement and diverse applications of artificial intelligence and related technologies.
The Codex app, currently available only for Mac computers, saw explosive growth, mirroring the popularity of OpenAI's ChatGPT chatbot, according to VentureBeat. The surge represented a 60% week-over-week growth in overall Codex users following its February 2 launch and the release of the underlying GPT-5.3-Codex model. However, OpenAI indicated a shift away from unlimited free access to its powerful tools.
Meanwhile, Toyota introduced Fluorite, a console-grade graphics engine designed to perform well on embedded hardware, such as the chips in cars, The Verge reported. This engine could be used for 3D tutorials, mapping the environment around a car, and offering more natural controls, explained Jamie Kerber of Very Good Ventures, at the FOSDE.
In other AI-related news, Mastercard's fraud protection platform, Decision Intelligence Pro (DI Pro), utilizes sophisticated AI models to analyze individual transactions and identify suspicious ones in milliseconds, VentureBeat reported. This technology is crucial, as Mastercard processes approximately 160 billion transactions annually, with peaks of 70,000 transactions per second during busy periods.
The recent online hangout Moltbook, a social network for bots, also gained attention. Launched on January 28, Moltbook went viral quickly, with AI agents interacting and sharing information. However, MIT Technology Review noted that the platform, which used a free open-source LLM-powered agent known as OpenClaw, was more akin to a "peak AI theater" experience.
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