← Back to context Comment by iamjs 17 hours ago I think the `/remote-control` feature does this, if I understand you correctly. 4 comments iamjs Reply DonsDiscountGas 17 hours ago It's supposed to. I've always found it buggy and unreliable but maybe that's just me. (This command exists in Claude btw not sure about Codex) rovr138 17 hours ago Looks like codex has it too since last week, https://github.com/openai/codex/releases/tag/rust-v0.130.0 rovr138 17 hours ago You can also connect remotely. Tailscale to connect to your network/machine. Then use SSH to login. Then use tmux to persist the session even if you log out. maille 17 hours ago Does it work on windows? And how do you then remote in?
DonsDiscountGas 17 hours ago It's supposed to. I've always found it buggy and unreliable but maybe that's just me. (This command exists in Claude btw not sure about Codex) rovr138 17 hours ago Looks like codex has it too since last week, https://github.com/openai/codex/releases/tag/rust-v0.130.0 rovr138 17 hours ago You can also connect remotely. Tailscale to connect to your network/machine. Then use SSH to login. Then use tmux to persist the session even if you log out.
rovr138 17 hours ago Looks like codex has it too since last week, https://github.com/openai/codex/releases/tag/rust-v0.130.0
rovr138 17 hours ago You can also connect remotely. Tailscale to connect to your network/machine. Then use SSH to login. Then use tmux to persist the session even if you log out.
It's supposed to. I've always found it buggy and unreliable but maybe that's just me. (This command exists in Claude btw not sure about Codex)
Looks like codex has it too since last week, https://github.com/openai/codex/releases/tag/rust-v0.130.0
You can also connect remotely. Tailscale to connect to your network/machine. Then use SSH to login. Then use tmux to persist the session even if you log out.
Does it work on windows? And how do you then remote in?