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ExploraTec Showcase

In the final exam for "Create your AI Agent", part of the ExploraTec program at Universidad del Desarrollo, 30 students chose everyday problems close to their own work and study routines. Codex gave them a way to move from an idea to a demo with an interface, rules and something concrete to test.

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About the students

There were 22 projects, built by 30 students from 14 majors. Most were early in their university path and many did not come from programming. That is the point: the work shows what happens when students use Codex to express judgment from their own field as a working prototype.

22 projects
30 students
14 majors
6 selected

Majors represented

Commercial Engineering, Global Business Administration, Architecture, Dentistry, Medical Technology, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence, Psychology, Computer Science and Technological Innovation, Law, Civil Engineering, Political Science and Public Policy, Industrial Engineering, Kinesiology and Design.

What they tried to solve

The projects came from problems students already had: planning courses and exams, reading long rubrics, studying with too much material, controlling expenses, deciding what to buy, preparing design briefs, reviewing campaigns or choosing outfits for the week.

The common move was small and practical. They took a task done by hand and used Codex to make it visible, repeatable and testable. Sometimes that became a web app. Sometimes, as with Fit Me, it became an automation that produces a useful output every Sunday.

How Codex helped

The stronger signal is pedagogical. First-year students, many without technical training and several with no plan to become programmers, built things that could be opened, tested and explained. Codex gave them a way to turn judgment from their own discipline into interfaces, rules and small automations. That changes who gets to prototype.

Selected projects

Calendaris

Nicolas Soto

Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence

A university calendar for courses, evaluations, academic events and suggested study blocks, with privacy-aware shared calendars.

Open project

StudyBrain

Nicolas Campos

Computer Science and Technological Innovation

An academic platform to centralize notes, topics and evaluations, analyze mistakes and generate weekly study plans.

Open project

BriefLab

Amelia Troncoso

Graphic Design

A generator of fictional design briefs for practice, skill-building and portfolio development without needing real clients.

Open project

FinEx

Sebastian Ramirez

Industrial Engineering

A personal finance app that imports Gmail notices, classifies expenses and visualizes budget behavior without constant manual entry.

Open project

Fit Me

Diego Rivera y Valentina Castillo

Psychology and Dentistry

A Codex automation that prepares seven weekly outfits from real clothing photos, style references and weather.

Demo

RubricaCheck

Jose Tomas Cifuentes

Civil Engineering

A web app that turns rubrics, assignment instructions and teacher comments into a clearer structure for preparing submissions.

Open project