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Theodora in Paris, 1990

Romeo Gigli showed his spring 1990 collection in Paris, and the moment that survived was not a silhouette but a sound. Kirsten Owen came out wrapped in a fringe of large glass beads, the kind blown on Murano in the Venetian lagoon, with long pendant earrings and a glass diadem set into her hair. Tim Blanks, returning to the show decades later, described her as the model embodiment of Gigli's fragile, romantic ideal, and wrote that she could have been the Byzantine empress Theodora. The beads tinkled like wind chimes while she walked. Then they began to shatter.

That detail is the whole argument of the collection in miniature. Gigli was reaching back to Venice as a former Byzantine province, pulling a thousand years of craft into a runway, and the material refused to behave like a costume. Glass is not a sensible thing to hang on a moving body. It rings, it catches light, and it breaks. He used it anyway, because the breaking was part of the point. Beauty that survives intact is just decoration. Beauty that comes apart as you watch is something closer to an event.

Gigli's reputation rested on this kind of soft refusal. While the late eighties were busy with power shoulders and hard tailoring, he was making cocoon coats, cutaway jackets that skimmed rather than gripped, high-waisted trousers as skinny as leggings, and skirts that swaddled the legs in a tulip shape. The palette ran to jewel-toned silks, earthy velvets, shadowy chiffons and gilded gauzes. It read as romantic, even nostalgic, but the construction underneath was precise. He was not draping fabric for atmosphere. He was building a quieter proposition about how a woman might occupy space without armouring herself into it.

There is a useful contrast with Azzedine Alaïa's almost exactly contemporary work, where the body was mapped and held by seaming engineered to the millimetre. Alaïa controlled the body through tension. Gigli let it dissolve into folds and shadow. Both were arguing against the decade's appetite for rigidity, but from opposite ends. One sculpted, the other veiled. The Murano beads belong to the veiling instinct, a surface that hides as much as it shows and announces its own fragility while doing so.

The show was his Paris debut and it landed at the peak of his influence, with a standing ovation. That timing is worth sitting with, because the peak was already close to the edge. Gigli had launched his label in 1983, with production handled by Zamasport from 1985, and by 1991 the structure around him fractured. He split from his business partners Donato Maiano and Carla Sozzani in a traumatic separation that dragged on for more than a decade, the kind of dispute that slowly separates a designer from his own name. The Gigli trademark was eventually sold to IT Holding in 1999. The romantic who made glass sing in 1990 spent much of the rest of the decade in litigation over who got to use the word that was his surname.

I find the spring 1990 show more moving for knowing that. It is not just a pretty piece of Byzantine revivalism. It is a designer at his most assured, making a material that was guaranteed to break, in the same few years that his own commercial footing was about to. The beads shattering on the runway look, in retrospect, less like a flourish and more like a forecast nobody in the room could have read. The same instinct that built something exquisite and doomed into a single walk was the one the business could not protect.

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Beckton Alps, 1989

East London once had a ski slope built on the waste from making town gas. The name was Beckton Alps, an old local joke promoted into civic branding, and the whole arrangement sounds invented until the dates and photographs begin to line up. Skiers in bright late-1980s clothes took a tow up a grey artificial hill near the A13. Princess Diana came to open it. Beneath the matting sat the chemical residue of the Victorian city.

Beckton Gas Works began operating in 1870 and grew across roughly 500 acres. Coal arrived, gas and useful by-products left, while ash and contaminated material accumulated in spoil heaps. The remaining Alp rises about 35 metres, according to the University of Edinburgh's Reimagining Waste Landscapes project. It is a modest mountain, but London does not require much altitude before a heap starts behaving like geography.

The dry slope opened in the late 1980s and lasted until 2001. Former Newham councillor Jack Hart filmed skiers there on Super 8, footage later preserved by Newham Archives and partly digitised through a BFI project. The grain of that film suits the place. Beckton Alps already belonged to the category of things that looked like memories while they were still open.

Beckton Alps turned industrial waste into leisure without ever making the waste disappear. The slope borrowed the language of escape, while the hill beneath it remained an account of how London had been heated, lit, poisoned, landscaped, and sold another future.

There is a familiar Docklands confidence in the conversion. A contaminated heap becomes recreation; recreation will become regeneration; regeneration will eventually become an investment prospect. None of those uses is wholly false. People really did ski there, and I doubt the pleasure was diminished by the strange foundation. Still, the sequence makes the site feel less renewed than repeatedly renamed.

The nearby gas industry has already left London with absences large enough to shape the skyline. I wrote about that in Grey Lungs Over Town, where gasholders survive as frames, luxury geometry, or remembered landmarks. Beckton is the opposite form of industrial afterlife. The structure vanished, but its waste acquired contour, vegetation, a ski lift, fencing, and a road junction that still carries the name.

After the slope closed, plans for an indoor centre using real snow stalled. That unrealised replacement is almost too perfect: a refrigerated winter promised on top of poisoned ground, itself left by the fuel system that made modern London possible. Instead, the fenced hill became scrub and habitat. The Edinburgh project notes that parts of the western slopes gained nature conservation status. Toxicity restricted development and helped preserve the place. Damage became a crude form of protection.

I am wary of making dereliction sound noble. A hazardous site is not improved by being picturesque, and the romance of waste usually belongs to somebody who does not have to live beside it. Yet Beckton Alps resists the tidier story in which regeneration cleans the slate. A few miles east, Barking Riverside has the atmosphere of infrastructure waiting for ordinary life to catch up. The Alp has ordinary life growing over infrastructure's bill.

The Londonist history describes a clay cap over the contaminated heap. That detail stays with me more than the royal visit. A cap is neither erasure nor cure. It is an agreement with the ground: stay there, hold still, let something else happen on top. For thirteen years, the something else was skiing.

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Desert Solitaire Still Bites

Edward Abbey's Desert Solitaire is usually filed under nature writing, which is accurate in the way that calling a knife a kitchen utensil is accurate. First published in 1968, the book draws on Abbey's seasons as a ranger at Arches National Monument. It contains ravishing descriptions of rock, heat, silence, snakes, and stars, then turns around and starts an argument.

That argument is the book's real force. Abbey despises what he calls "Industrial Tourism": the roads, cars, facilities, and bureaucratic thinking that make wilderness easier to consume while steadily removing the wildness. His anger can be funny, precise, and exhilarating. It can also become tiresome. He is arrogant and far too pleased with his own performance as the solitary man who sees through civilisation.

I wouldn't sand those qualities away. They give the book its difficult energy. Abbey's desert isn't a backdrop for personal healing. It is indifferent, dangerous, and valuable without needing to serve us. The University of Arizona Press description stresses his love of the canyonlands and his disgust at the "improvements" intended to increase visitation. Abbey wants people to encounter wilderness, yet still resents the machinery that lets more of them arrive.

The prose is strongest when he stops lecturing and pays attention. A stone, a moonlit road, or the body of a dead animal receives an intensity that makes urban vision seem half-awake. Abbey makes solitude feel less like escape than a necessary correction to the scale at which modern life operates.

More than fifty years later, the polemic still bites because the problem has not gone away. We preserve landscapes partly by opening them to public love, then risk wearing them down through that same access. Desert Solitaire does not solve the contradiction. It makes comfort with it impossible.

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Chain of Command

The White House has stopped treating military AI as a future procurement question and started treating it as a live operating layer. On 5 June, President Donald Trump signed National Security Presidential Memorandum 11, a directive called "Artificial Intelligence in the National Security Enterprise." The title is bureaucratic in the usual way, but the memo itself is not coy. It tells the intelligence and warfighting parts of the state to speed up adoption.

The four headings are adoption, adaptation, assurance, and accountability, which sounds tidy until you look at what sits underneath them. Agencies are told to bring on advanced models from multiple vendors, protect high-security AI compute, build an AI test range, and create an AI talent reserve. The White House fact sheet frames the goal as advanced, secure, reliable AI for warfighters and intelligence professionals. The real policy move is not that Washington wants AI in the national-security machine. That was already happening. The move is that the machine is now being told to make room for AI as infrastructure: procured, tested, secured, reserved, and kept online.

One line does a lot of work. The memo says national-security AI must not be used to censor speech, enforce ideological bias, or conduct unauthorized or unlawful surveillance. That language belongs in the document, and it matters. It also reveals the thing everyone can see from the outside: once these systems are inside military and intelligence workflows, the debate shifts from whether they should exist to how much institutional friction remains around them.

AP's account catches the same tension, describing a push to accelerate AI use while acknowledging civil-liberty protections and oversight of autonomous weapon systems. The memo also gives the Department of Defense 90 days to update Directive 3000.09, the policy governing autonomy in weapons systems. That is where the phrase "chain of command" becomes less comforting than it first sounds. A chain of command is a human doctrine, but the systems being introduced are built to compress recognition, recommendation, and action into shorter intervals.

I wrote earlier this week about the White House's voluntary frontier-model review, where the government asked leading AI developers to submit powerful models for cybersecurity tests before public release. NSPM-11 feels like the other half of that same week. One hand asks the labs to show their homework before the models reach the public. The other hand tells national-security agencies to move faster with the technology once it is useful enough to matter.

There is an uncomfortable symmetry with Anthropic's new argument for a verifiable pause. Anthropic is worried about recursive self-improvement and the inspection problem around labs. Washington is worried about adversaries, reliability, and whether the United States can keep AI systems available when warfighters depend on them. Both arguments end up in the same place: verification, resilience, and control. Different rooms, similar furniture.

The phrase "high-security compute" will probably pass most readers by because it sounds like procurement furniture. It may be the most revealing phrase in the memo. Compute used to be talked about as capacity, then as economic power, then as a choke point in export controls. Here it becomes something closer to a protected military utility. Not just machines that run models, but machines whose degradation becomes a national-security concern.

That is the nightmarish part and also the boring part. AI policy keeps arriving in grand claims, but the lasting changes are often administrative: who may buy which model, which facility may host it, who signs off when it fails, what office owns the exception, how fast the old directive must be rewritten. The future turns up as a memo with numbered sections and a deadline in 90 days.

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Memory Starts to Move

OpenAI's new memory system is interesting because it moves the awkward part of personalisation into the background. The old saved-memory model made ChatGPT feel like a notebook with a chat box attached. Dreaming V3 points at something more unsettled: a system that keeps revising its idea of the user while the user is still changing.

The company announced Dreaming V3 on 4 June, describing it as a more capable and scalable architecture for synthesising memory in ChatGPT. The rollout starts with Plus and Pro users in the United States, with additional countries and Free and Go users due over the following weeks. In the release notes, OpenAI gives the plain-language version: memory should stay more up to date, reduce stale or contradictory saved memories, and let people review what the system thinks it knows through memory sources or a memory summary.

This is not just a quality-of-life change. It changes the implied contract of the interface. Saved memories, launched in 2024, were legible because they looked like entries: facts the user could ask the model to keep. In 2025, OpenAI added the first version of dreaming, which let ChatGPT draw on chat history in the background. Dreaming V3 makes that background process more central, more compute-efficient, and more visibly managerial. OpenAI says the compute needed to serve dreaming has fallen by about five times.

There is a clean product reason for all of this. A model with better memory can stop wasting the first third of every useful conversation on reintroductions. It can know the camera gear, the food preferences, the long-running project, the thing you corrected last month and don't want to correct again. In that sense, memory is less like storage than grip. The system holds the shape of the work for longer.

However, the word "memory" does a lot of softening here. We use it because it sounds intimate and human, but the machinery is closer to ongoing profile maintenance. The official FAQ says the memory summary updates automatically as you chat, and that memory sources can include past chats, saved memories, custom instructions, files, and Gmail depending on the plan. That may be useful. It is also a reminder that personalisation is made from access.

I don't mean this as a simple objection. The dumb version of privacy talk says all memory is creepy and all forgetting is freedom. That is too neat. Most people who use these systems for real work want continuity, and continuity requires some kind of retained context. I wrote recently about MiniMax making long context feel cheaper, but memory is a different pressure. Context is what the model can hold in the room. Memory is what the product decides to bring back into the room next time.

That distinction matters because it shifts agency around. With a long context window, the user often chooses what to paste. With memory, the system helps choose what follows them. OpenAI is trying to make that visible through summaries and sources, which is the right direction, but visibility is not the same thing as authorship. A summary can be corrected and still leave you with the strange feeling that another system has been drafting a version of you in parallel.

There is an old AI lesson hiding inside the new surface. ELIZA worked because people supplied more continuity than the program deserved. ChatGPT has the opposite problem now: the continuity is increasingly real, operational, and hard to dismiss as projection. The question is not whether the model remembers. The question is who gets to edit the memory before it starts editing the conversation.

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Steel, Gold, and a Refill

"Some men are made of steel and gold." That's the line across the top of the old Cartier advertisement, set above a huge, lacquered close-up of what looks like the crossguard of a watch case. Down in the corner sits the actual product, a small amber bottle held inside a brushed silver shell. The whole composition is selling hardware as much as scent, which is exactly right for what Santos de Cartier was trying to be.

It launched in 1981 as the first men's fragrance from the jewellery house, with Daniel Moliere as the perfumer. Fragrantica files it as an Oriental Woody, a spiced, aromatic thing built on lavender and juniper over sandalwood, amber and vanilla. It reads as an evening scent for colder weather, and it carried the name of the Santos wristwatch Cartier had made decades earlier for the aviator Alberto Santos-Dumont. Among the louder masculines of 1981 it kept its voice down, more interested in dignity than swagger, the same understatement I liked years later in Bleu de Chanel L'Exclusif.

The packaging is where the jeweller's instincts really show. Cartier shipped its early perfumes in what collectors now call jewel-type boxes, an outer cardboard sleeve around an inner case made of leather and velvet, the kind of thing built to look like it held a ring rather than a spray. Each scent got its own colour code, and Santos was assigned white. You can see the logic of the period bottle in that advertisement, where the metal case does the talking and the glass inside is almost an afterthought.

The case took its idea straight from refillable cigarette lighters, the everyday object you topped up rather than threw away. The perfume bottle slid into the metal shell and could be lifted out and swapped for a full one once it emptied, so the expensive-looking exterior stayed put and only the cheap glass core got replaced. That's why the bottle in the ad reads as a component inside a holder rather than a finished flacon.

The refillable edition was the 50ml spray. It worked on the same logic as the old case, a metal-collared atomiser you topped up rather than discarded, sold right alongside the plain full-size bottle. Cartier ran the format across its men's line, so the 50ml refillable turned up in both Santos and its stablemate Pasha de Cartier rather than being something unique to one scent.

There was never a 100ml refillable Santos. The 100ml is the conventional flacon, a sealed bottle you use until it's gone, and the refilling all happened at 50ml in the smaller cased version built for it. So a refillable Santos means the 50ml, not the big bottle, which fits a scent that always wanted to be handled like an object rather than a tank you drain and bin.

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Ferré Draws the Line

Gianfranco Ferré arrived at Dior with the wrong kind of precision, which is probably why the appointment still has a charge. A French house, an Italian designer, Bernard Arnault's recently gathered empire, and a couture mythology that could turn reverence into paralysis if anyone handled it too carefully. Ferré did not handle it carefully. In his first Dior Haute Couture Fall-Winter show in 1989, he put forward the Arbitre suit, and the name still sounds like a decision being made in public.

The La Galerie Dior account of Arbitre is wonderfully exact about the object. The suit was cut in houndstooth wool, a pattern usually associated with men's clothing, then made almost absurd by an enormous bow held aloft in silk organza. The page mentions exaggerated collars, sleeves and bows, plus voluminous balloon sleeves: all the late-1980s appetite for amplitude, but disciplined until it becomes severe rather than frothy. It isn't prettiness that does the work. It is pressure.

I like the brutality of that choice. Dior's New Look had already carried a memory of masculine tailoring inside its tiny waists and engineered skirts, because Christian Dior was never simply making softness. Ferré seems to have understood that. He did not copy the New Look as a silhouette to be quoted; he treated it as an argument about control, weight, and where the body should be asked to negotiate with cloth. Houndstooth gives the suit a dry, almost clerical authority. The bow should undermine that authority. Somehow it doesn't.

That tension helps explain why Ferré's Dior years can be hard to flatten into the usual succession story. I wrote recently about his 1996 Indian Passion collection, a later moment where density, ornament, and construction became nearly ceremonial. Arbitre is earlier and colder. It feels like the opening legal statement before the long argument. The suit says that Ferré will honour the house by testing how much structure it can bear.

The numbers are tidy enough to make the period look more stable than it was. Ferré began designing for Dior in 1989, replacing Marc Bohan, and stayed until 1996. The European Fashion Heritage Association notes that he designed fifteen haute couture collections there, using clear lines and construction that confirmed his reputation as fashion's architect. Numéro, writing about the Assouline volume on his Dior years, gives the lineage as Christian Dior, Yves Saint Laurent, Marc Bohan, then Ferré. A dynasty on paper. In practice, an Italian modernist standing in a Parisian archive and deciding which ghosts were still useful.

The Assouline book frames the period from the Ascot-Cecil Beaton collection of Autumn-Winter 1989 through Indian Passion in Autumn-Winter 1996, with Alexander Fury describing Ferré's effort to balance his own taste with Christian Dior's. That balance is the polite version of the story. The sharper version is that Ferré understood inheritance as a technical problem. What can be carried forward without becoming costume? Which house codes are living systems, and which ones are just theatre with better lighting?

There is a useful link here to McQueen's Highland Rape, not because the work looks similar, but because both moments refuse the comforting museum version of fashion history. McQueen put violence back into tartan. Ferré put discipline back into Dior romance. One used rupture, the other compression, but both treated heritage as something more dangerous than a mood board.

Arbitre also makes late-eighties volume look less silly than it often does in retrospect. Big sleeves, big bows, big collars: the vocabulary can sound like caricature. On this suit the exaggeration has a job. It makes the woman's body look adjudicated, framed by cloth that has stopped pretending to be merely decorative. I don't mean that as a simple compliment. There is something almost punitive in the elegance, as if couture were saying that glamour is a form of jurisdiction.

That may be why Ferré's Dior debut still feels unsettled rather than archival. The Arbitre suit belongs to 1989, with all the decade's appetite for width and command, yet it doesn't dissolve into period comedy. It is too stern for that. The bow floats, the wool insists, the sleeves swell, and the house of Dior briefly looks less like a temple of femininity than a court where femininity has been called to give evidence.

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Rediffusion in the Walls

Some houses still have a dead television network in the wall. A small plastic switch by the skirting board, a junction box outside, a bundle of balanced pairs disappearing into brickwork. It doesn't look like much because it was never meant to be spectacle. Rediffusion was a pipe for the future, and pipes are allowed to become invisible once people have agreed to depend on them.

The company began as Broadcast Relay Service Ltd in March 1928, after Joshua Powell's early relay work in Clacton. By January 1929 it had opened a cable radio service in Hull, offering households an easier bargain than weak wireless reception: a selector switch and a loudspeaker, with programmes carried in by wire. A 1941 Broadcast Relay Service account describes the system in almost municipal language, with central control, receiving stations, feeders, sub-amplifier stations, and transformer kiosks. Broadcasting again, but with less weather in it.

That is the part I like, and mistrust. Rediffusion made radio and television feel domestic before they were fully domesticated. The signal didn't arrive as a general atmosphere anyone could tune. It arrived as a service, routed, selected, maintained, and billed. Later cable systems used multiple twisted-pair cables, wall or window-frame rotary switches, and simplified TV sets without tuners or RF front ends. The set in the corner was not quite an ordinary receiver. It was a terminal.

There is a line from this to the television rental shop, though Rediffusion feels colder and more infrastructural. Renting a set gave modernity a counter, a payment book, an engineer who might call on Thursday. Rediffusion put the same dependency behind plaster. You didn't just rent the object. In some streets, you rented the path by which the object knew what to show.

The technical oddness is beautiful in the wrong way. Hackaday's account of a Canterbury Rediffusion installation describes telephone-derived cabling, street-corner repeater boxes, a 12-position selector switch, and older houses where the remnants still sit under paint or dust. Terence Eden opened a Rediffusion junction box at a London house in 2020 and found what looked like sets of six twisted pairs. That is not nostalgia as an idea. It is nostalgia with screws in it.

The network also had stranger ambitions than local inconvenience. Rediffusion was tied to British Electric Traction, then overseas relay systems, rented sets, commercial television, and colonial media pipes. In Hong Kong, Radio Rediffusion began in 1949, and subscription television launched on 29 May 1957 using the same high-frequency wired distribution technique as the UK. By 1967, RTV had more than 60,000 subscribers. The future was exported as cabling, too.

By the end of the 1980s, the old UK wired radio and television distribution system had gone. Better aerial reception, different cable technology, cheaper receivers, corporate mergers, all the usual practical reasons. However, the more interesting disappearance is architectural. Rediffusion did not vanish like a shop sign. It retreated into the fabric of houses, leaving behind switches nobody turns, junction boxes nobody recognises, and phrases like "on the pipe" or "on the relay" that make television sound briefly physical again.

Rediffusion belonged to a stranger domestic settlement: the future arrived by subscription, through a socket, with a company van somewhere in the background. The programme was public culture. The route into the room was private infrastructure. Now streaming has made that arrangement feel normal again, except cleaner, quieter, and harder to see. The old box on the outside wall was at least honest enough to rust.

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Nvidia Opens the Agent Stack

Nvidia's new Nemotron 3 Ultra is not subtle about its intended job. The company describes it as an open 550-billion-parameter mixture-of-experts model for long-running agents: systems that plan, call tools, write code, research, and keep working past the tidy two-minute demo. The useful number is not only 550 billion. It is 55 billion active parameters, the slice doing work for each token, because Nvidia's pitch is about capability that can still be served without turning every agent run into a boutique compute event.

The release landed on June 4 in an Nvidia Developer post by Chris Alexiuk and Chintan Patel, with the technical report and model card filling in the harder details. Nemotron 3 Ultra uses a hybrid Mamba-Transformer design, LatentMoE, multi-token prediction, and NVFP4 quantization. MarkTechPost's summary adds that the model was pre-trained on 20 trillion tokens and extended to a one-million-token context window. The technical report gives the fuller title: "Open, Efficient Mixture-of-Experts Hybrid Mamba-Transformer Model for Agentic Reasoning." A title like that doesn't leave much room for mystery.

I don't read this as Nvidia trying to become another chatbot company. That would be too small, and probably the wrong business. The interesting move is that Nvidia is making the model legible to the machinery around it: NIM packaging, Hugging Face weights, build.nvidia.com, OpenRouter, Perplexity, Anaconda, and the usual cloud-adjacent routes by which a research artefact becomes a thing people can actually run. This is the company that already owns too much of the physical substrate of AI deciding that the software layer above the chips should also speak its language.

The open part matters because it changes where trust is supposed to sit. Nvidia is not asking developers to admire a leaderboard number from outside the glass. It is offering weights, data, recipes, quantized checkpoints, and deployment routes, then daring the rest of the stack to form around them. The Hugging Face card lists the OpenMDW 1.1 license, a June 4 release date, the 550B total and 55B active parameter counts, and the same one-million-token context length. That is a very specific kind of openness: not a hobbyist toy, not a sealed API, but an industrial object with enough handles for other companies to build around.

There is a familiar Nvidia pattern here. In the AlexNet story, two GTX 580 cards helped make a neural-network result suddenly impossible to ignore. The hardware did not invent deep learning, but it changed what could be repeated quickly enough to matter. Nemotron 3 Ultra sits much further up the stack, yet the logic rhymes. Nvidia keeps turning constraints into platforms: memory limits, throughput, quantization, inference cost, now the long, expensive drift of agent work.

The risk is that "open" becomes another way of tightening the ecosystem. If the model, serving layer, quantization format, optimization story, and preferred deployment surface all line up around Nvidia, developers gain access while the centre of gravity still moves toward the same vendor. That is not hypocrisy. It is strategy. A closed API can own the user relationship. An open model can own the default architecture, especially when the default architecture has to run somewhere expensive.

Nvidia says the supporting video describes up to five times faster inference and up to 30 percent lower cost. Those numbers need the usual caution, because vendor launch claims are not neutral field reports. However, they point at the real argument. Long-running agents are not only a model-quality problem. They are a patience problem, a scheduling problem, a bill problem, a question of whether anyone wants to wait while a machine thinks, searches, checks, fails, and tries again. If Nvidia can make that loop cheaper and more deployable, the model itself is only part of the release.

This also explains why the China-chip story keeps haunting Nvidia's AI news. I wrote recently about Beijing banning Nvidia's compromised 5090D V2, a reminder that hardware access is political before it is technical. Nemotron 3 Ultra is the other side of the same company: not merely selling scarce accelerators, but shaping the work those accelerators are meant to do. The agent future, if it arrives in the form Nvidia wants, won't just need chips. It will need a stack, a license, a recipe, and somewhere to run.

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Anthropic Reaches for the Brake

Anthropic has put a brake pedal into the AI race, or at least a drawing of one. In a new Anthropic Institute post, Marina Favaro and Jack Clark argue that frontier labs should have a coordinated, verifiable way to slow down or temporarily pause development if recursive self-improvement starts to arrive before governments, safety researchers, and the public have any usable grip on it. The careful phrase is doing a lot of work. Anthropic is not saying the machine has started rebuilding itself in the strong science-fiction sense. It is saying the slope now points that way.

The post is called "When AI builds itself", which is blunt by Anthropic standards. It says recursive self-improvement has not happened yet and is not inevitable, but could come sooner than institutions are prepared for. The evidence offered is not a single threshold crossing. It is a pattern inside Anthropic's own workflow: as of May 2026, the company says more than 80 percent of production-merged code was authored by Claude. In Q2, a typical Anthropic engineer was merging about eight times as much code per day as in 2024. A March poll of 130 research staff put the median self-estimated output gain with Mythos Preview at four times.

I don't read those numbers as proof that Claude is already inventing its successor. The Guardian's account is useful here because it says the described advances do not yet amount to recursive self-improvement, and quotes Steven Murdoch at University College London saying Anthropic has shown no fundamental step change in capability. That skepticism matters. A lab can be genuinely worried and still have every incentive to make its worry sound like evidence of unique frontier status.

However, the proposal is sharper than ordinary safety theatre. Anthropic says a unilateral slowdown would mostly hand the lead to someone else. The useful version would need multiple well-resourced labs, multiple countries, agreed conditions for triggering and lifting the pause, and some way to verify that everyone had actually stopped. AP framed it as a way for top AI companies to coordinate instead of letting a secret holdout jump ahead. The WSJ-syndicated piece in To Vima catches the nasty detail: "Training runs are far easier to conceal than missile silos."

A pause button is only a button if someone can tell whether it has been pressed. Otherwise it is a press release with a nicer verb. Anthropic knows this, which is why the interesting part of its proposal is not the word pause. It is verification. The company says the Institute will convene policymakers, researchers, civil society, and other AI firms to work through those mechanics. That sounds dry until you imagine the actual inspection problem: private data centres, model weights that can move, synthetic data pipelines, distributed research teams, national-security exemptions, and investors who did not fund a frontier lab so it could politely wait at the lights.

The timing is almost too perfect. Anthropic only just made its confidential IPO filing, and this spring has already been a long exercise in making Claude look like critical infrastructure rather than a chatbot. I wrote this week about Mythos moving into infrastructure, where the same company is expanding access to a restricted model through governments and security partners. I also wrote about the White House's voluntary frontier-model review, which has the same problem in a milder form: cooperation is useful only until it becomes inconvenient.

That is the uncomfortable bit. Anthropic may be right about the need for a brake, and also right that no single lab can safely use it alone. It may also be using the language of restraint to state a market position: we are close enough to danger that you should treat us as one of the few institutions able to manage it. Both things can be true. Frontier AI politics keeps producing that double image, civic duty and competitive theatre sharing the same stage, with nobody quite able to prove where one ends.

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