Skip to content

Plutonic Rainbows

Press Return for semantic search

Anthropic Files First

Anthropic has moved from private-market rumour to SEC machinery. On Monday, the company said it had confidentially submitted a draft Form S-1 for a proposed IPO of common stock. The offering has no share count yet, no price, and no public prospectus. It is still conditional on SEC review, market conditions, and the usual list of factors that mean, in plainer English, this can be paused if the weather turns.

However, the signal is not cautious. Anthropic has put its hand on the door first. CNBC reports that OpenAI is preparing its own confidential filing, while Axios frames the year as a race between SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI for public-market attention at trillion-dollar scale. That sounds absurd until you look at the numbers Anthropic is already asking investors to swallow.

Last week the company announced a $65 billion Series H at a $965 billion post-money valuation, led by Altimeter Capital, Dragoneer, Greenoaks, and Sequoia Capital. Its own Series H note says run-rate revenue crossed $47 billion earlier in May. In February, according to the Guardian's summary of the funding history, Anthropic was valued at $380 billion. The market has not so much repriced the company as yanked it through a trapdoor into another category.

I wrote in April about Anthropic moving past OpenAI in the private valuation story. At the time, the IPO talk sounded aggressive because the company was still being priced in whispers, board meetings, and preemptive term sheets. Now the sequence is visible: raise at almost a trillion, file confidentially, let the public S-1 follow if the regulator's comments and the market both behave. The filing does not guarantee a float, but it changes the tempo.

The public S-1, if Anthropic proceeds, is where the romance gets audited. Axios makes the useful procedural point: a public filing would include financial data, risk factors, and the details that private-market storytelling can blur. Revenue run rate is one thing. Gross margin, compute obligations, customer concentration, stock-based compensation, related-party cloud deals, and the real cost of serving Claude Code are another. A frontier lab can be a religion in private. In public markets it becomes a spreadsheet with a risk section.

This is why the timing matters more than the ceremonial language around going public. Anthropic has spent the spring making itself legible to capital. The company raised at a near-trillion valuation, talked about compute expansion and product partnerships, and kept pushing the enterprise story that makes Claude look less like a chatbot and more like operating infrastructure. Its Wall Street embedding strategy already pointed this way. The model was not merely a product; it was a reason for banks, private equity firms, and portfolio companies to reorganise how work gets done.

Public investors will be less patient with mythology than late-stage private money, at least in theory. They will want to know whether $47 billion of run-rate revenue can hold its shape when discounts, compute costs, and implementation work are all counted honestly. They will also want to know how much of the AI boom is now a queue for the same finite capital. NPR quoted Wedbush calling the moment an opening of the IPO floodgates. Floodgates are a good image, but queues may be better. SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI cannot all be the single impossible listing that defines the year.

The funny part is that confidential filing is meant to reduce drama. It gives the company a private conversation with the SEC before the theatre begins. In this case the privacy is almost beside the point. Anthropic has told everyone where it wants to go, and now the rest of the market has to decide whether a frontier-model lab is a software company, an infrastructure company, a consultancy, a defence-adjacent contractor, or some expensive composite of all four.

Maybe the S-1 will make that cleaner. More likely it will make the argument more interesting.

Sources:

Loopholes Have Jurisdictions

The awkward thing about an export-control loophole is that it is rarely a hole in the law shaped like a cartoon tunnel. It is usually a place where paperwork, geography, corporate structure, and enforcement patience fail to line up. A chip does not have to travel to Shenzhen to end up in a Chinese AI system. It can go to a subsidiary, a cloud tenant, a reseller, a lab in a friendlier jurisdiction, and still do the same work.

That is why the Commerce Department's weekend guidance matters. CNBC reported that the department moved on 31 May to enforce licence requirements for the most advanced AI chips when the entity is headquartered in China, even if the buyer is physically outside China. The article names Nvidia's Rubin and Blackwell processors and AMD's MI350x as the kind of hardware at stake. The important phrase is not "outside China". It is "headquartered in China", because Washington is trying to make ownership and control matter as much as delivery address.

This is also an admission that the old map was too simple. Last year the Commerce Department said it would not enforce the AI Diffusion rule, which had tried to govern global access to AI chips. According to CNBC, that left a year-long opening in which subsidiaries of Chinese AI firms in places such as Malaysia could potentially buy chips that the broader policy was supposed to keep away from China. Chris McGuire, a former State Department official, told CNBC that overseas subsidiaries could buy Blackwell chips without a licence under the previous posture.

I wrote recently about how Huawei silicon was setting a new floor for Chinese AI pricing. This is the same story from the other side of the table. If Chinese labs can get enough restricted Nvidia or AMD compute through offshore entities, the domestic substitution pressure weakens. If they cannot, Huawei, Cambricon, Moore Threads, and the rest of the local stack become less like patriotic alternatives and more like necessity.

The South China Morning Post's broader account of China's chip redesign makes that pressure visible. The fight is no longer just to build a single Nvidia replacement, but to create a domestic ecosystem that can support leading models reliably. That means GPUs where possible, ASICs where useful, and a lot of unglamorous software work around compilers, interconnects, memory, and serving. Export controls don't create that ecosystem by themselves. They do, however, make the unpleasant engineering trade-offs feel less optional.

Nvidia had a different kind of news cycle running at the same time. The BBC reported from Computex that Jensen Huang announced RTX Spark, a PC chip for personal AI agents, with Windows machines due in the autumn from Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, Microsoft Surface, and MSI. Huang called the reinvention of the PC as big as the smartphone shift. That line is keynote-ready, maybe too neat, but the contrast is useful. On one stage Nvidia is selling the future as a domestic appliance: a personal machine that moves from tool to teammate. In Washington, the same company's highest-end silicon is being treated as a strategic material whose customer list has to be read through corporate control.

Those two versions of AI hardware now live together. Consumer abundance at the front of the shop, geopolitical rationing behind the counter. The border between them keeps moving, because every restriction creates a new routing problem and every routing problem creates a new rule. The chip is still just a chip, until someone asks who really owns the company buying it.

Sources:

No Front Row at Margiela

The children got the best seats, which is still the cleanest way to understand Martin Margiela's Spring/Summer 1990 show. Not the clothes first, not the myth of the invisible designer, not the later museum language around deconstruction. Start with the seating. Local children in a Paris playground, watching fashion people arrive somewhere that had not been arranged for them.

The show was for the third collection of a house that was still barely formed. Palais Galliera describes the setting as a derelict Parisian wasteland, with models walking among neighbourhood children in raw hems, deconstructed garments, and repurposed items turned into clothes or accessories. A later runway account places it in the 20th arrondissement, in a North African neighbourhood playground, with an uneven dirt-and-rock surface instead of the ceremonial strip of carpet the industry knew how to read.

That surface matters. A polished runway teaches everyone where to look and who matters. Editors sit where their authority can be photographed. Buyers are placed according to rank. The designer appears at the end, usually for the small ritual of applause and confirmation. Margiela pulled at all of that without giving a speech about it. Put the audience on rough ground, let the children sit where the front row should be, and the hierarchy starts looking less natural than it did ten minutes earlier.

I wrote recently about the Tabi boot, and the playground feels like the next move in the same argument. The boot made authorship visible from the ground up. The playground made the fashion system visible by refusing to build its usual room around it. Both gestures were theatrical, of course. Anti-spectacle is still a kind of spectacle when people have come to watch. However, the difference is that Margiela's theatre kept pushing attention away from polish and back toward circumstance.

The clothes did not become secondary, exactly. They became less obedient. Fifty-nine looks, according to the runway account, moved through a place that would not flatter them automatically. Raw hems and reused fabric can look precious inside a gallery-white fashion space, where every fray reads as a curatorial decision. On dirt, near children, with the show partly slipping out of control, they looked closer to an actual proposition about use, damage, and the social life of clothes.

There is a danger in making this too saintly. Fashion loves a rebellion once it has aged into archive material. The same gesture that first unsettled the room can become a handsome wall text later. Palais Galliera now has the language to hold it: deconstructed garments, challenged fashion aesthetics, visible construction. Vogue, writing about the Galliera exhibition, places his disused car parks, abandoned metro stations, and derelict supermarkets inside the long story of designers taking audiences out of their comfort zones.

All true, but the playground still resists being tidied away. What I like about it is the logistical awkwardness. The dust. The children not behaving like trained extras. The fact that fashion people had to stand around in a place that belonged to someone else. There is more actual critique in that than in most manifestos, because it changes the body before it changes the argument. You can't believe in the sanctity of your assigned seat if there isn't one.

Margiela's best early work often has that quality: a simple displacement that does more damage than a grand refusal. Take away the label. Refuse the usual designer performance. Show the clothes where the audience has to negotiate the ground. After a while the system starts revealing how many of its customs were only customs. A front row is not a law of nature. It is furniture with an ideology.

Sources:

Turn the Handle Once

The old bus ticket was a tiny act of geography. Not the romantic kind, no contour lines or folded sheets spread across a cafe table, just a thin strip of paper with a fare, a date, sometimes a stage number, and the faint authority of something a conductor had made in front of you while the bus moved.

A Setright machine looked too heavy for such a small output. It sat against the body on a strap, all dials, levers, counters, and crank, a portable accounting office for a public vehicle. The conductor selected the fare, turned the handle once, and the machine printed a receipt from a blank roll. Inside, mechanical counters kept the money total and the number of tickets issued. No battery. No network. One hand, one fare, one small proof that the journey had entered the books.

This is not just nostalgia for paper. Paper was often inconvenient and occasionally absurd. It got damp. It hid in coat pockets. It collected in handfuls at the bottom of school bags and handbags, each one too official to throw away immediately and too trivial to keep. However, the printed bus ticket belonged to a system in which travel still had to be declared locally. You did not simply tap into a metropolitan abstraction called mobility. You told someone where you were going.

The TIM machines used in the Tees Valley from the late 1940s make the point beautifully. The museum description has the conductor dialling a price, turning a handle, and producing a ticket that showed boarding stage, price paid, and date. That stage number matters. It tied the fare to a sequence of places: not just distance, but a route understood as named segments, stops, boundaries, little civic units of movement.

London had its own machine culture. Transport for London's archive guide notes that Bell Punch and TIM machines were replaced by Gibson machines between 1952 and 1958, while Setrights were used on Green Line coaches where a larger range of fares was required. The archive names the dull, lovely paperwork around the machines too: conductor instructions, garage procedures, emergency tickets, staff instructions for Gibson, TIM, Almex, Setright, and Ultimate designs. Ticketing was not a mere transaction. It was a discipline with manuals.

I wrote about rural bus shelters that survive after the service has gone, and the ticket machine feels like the smaller companion object. The shelter is the fixed trace, concrete at the edge of a road. The ticket is the moving trace, carried away in a pocket, creased between fingers, then lost. Both belong to a version of public transport that made its promises visible. A roof here. A fare stage there. A printed timetable behind perspex. A conductor with a bag and a machine that clicked.

What changed with driver-only operation, smartcards, and contactless payment was not only convenience. Convenience is real, and I use it without moral drama. A modern ticket machine can store hundreds of routes, track the bus for an app, accept cards, and send messages to drivers. That is genuinely useful. It also dissolves the encounter. The fare becomes a backend event, settled somewhere between a reader, a bank, a transport account, and a data system that knows far more about the journey than the old paper strip ever did.

The Setright did not know much. That was part of its dignity. It knew the fare it had printed, the count it had advanced, the date the conductor had set. It made no behavioural profile and predicted no demand. It did not care whether the same passenger travelled at 8:12 every morning or only on wet Thursdays. Its knowledge was narrow, physical, and accountable in the old literal sense: read the counter, fill in the waybill, pay in the takings.

There is a sound I associate with this whole vanished arrangement, though I cannot swear the memory is clean. The snap of the ticket, the bag shifting against a hip, coins moving somewhere close by, the crank giving its little mechanical answer. A bus was never quiet, so the machine had to join the noise rather than dominate it. It was just another rhythm inside the vehicle.

Now the proof of the journey is mostly elsewhere. On a card statement, in an app, in a database, as a line item only the system really sees. The old ticket was less efficient and less clever, but it let the journey leave a mark small enough to lose and specific enough to remember.

Sources:

Portkey at the Gate

Palo Alto Networks buying Portkey is not the loudest AI story of the weekend, partly because gateways don't demo well. Nobody queues up a keynote clip to watch routing policy, observability, identity, and caching do their work. However, the dullness is the point. Once agents leave the lab and start touching live systems, the interesting question shifts from intelligence to permission.

The deal closed on 29 May, after Palo Alto had announced its intention to buy Portkey at the end of April. In the closing release, Palo Alto describes Portkey's AI Gateway as the core gateway for Prisma AIRS, giving companies a control plane to monitor, orchestrate, and govern autonomous agents at scale. That phrase, control plane, is doing a lot of work. It admits that the agent is no longer just a chat window with better manners. It is becoming a small operator inside the enterprise, passing between models, tools, data stores, and other agents.

I don't think this is mainly a cybersecurity bolt-on story. It is closer to plumbing becoming politics. If an agent can call three APIs, use an internal tool, choose between model providers, and keep working after the employee has gone to lunch, then the gateway becomes the place where the organisation decides what kind of autonomy it can tolerate. Who can an agent speak to? Which model is allowed for a sensitive task? What gets logged? When does a shortcut become an incident?

Portkey's appeal is that it sits in the traffic. Palo Alto's product post says the gateway will offer a unified API to LLMs, an agent registry, semantic routing, caching, and access to more than 3,000 LLMs, MCP servers, and agents. Those are vendor details, but they sketch the same larger movement I wrote about in oversight: the safety argument is moving upstream. Instead of waiting for a bad output or a compromised workflow, the platform wants to shape the route before the agent acts.

There is a faintly comic historical rhythm here. We spent two years talking as if the important boundary was the model itself: which lab had the newest frontier system, which benchmark moved, which chatbot sounded most like an expensive consultant after three coffees. Now the enterprise problem is turning into something older and less glamorous. Gateways. Registries. Logs. Identity. The stuff that makes a network legible to the people who own the risk.

The April acquisition announcement said Portkey processes trillions of tokens per month. That number is useful less as a boast than as a weather report. It says there is already enough model traffic passing through these layers for security companies to treat them as infrastructure, not experimental middleware. Agents don't need to become conscious, charming, or even especially clever for this market to matter. They only need to become common enough that bad routing and weak permissions start producing expensive ordinary failures.

This is where I get less excited and more attentive. Agent security sounds like a niche until the agent is the one reconciling invoices, opening tickets, querying customer records, or deciding which software patch deserves a human page at 2 a.m. The old security perimeter was already half imaginary. Agentic systems make it feel theatrical. The boundary is no longer just where the network begins. It is wherever a model is allowed to turn a sentence into an action.

Sources:

Audio Transcripts

On a few selected posts, I have now added audio transcription, partly as an experiment and partly because it may prove useful for people with accessibility needs, or for anyone who would rather listen than read.

This has involved working with the ElevenLabs API, exploring text-to-speech generation, voice sample technologies, and the practicalities of turning written material into a more natural spoken format. The aim is not simply to bolt on a robotic reading of the text, but to create something that feels more considered: clear, listenable, and sympathetic to the atmosphere of the original post.

The technology around sampled and synthetic voices is becoming increasingly impressive, especially when used carefully. A voice can now carry tone, pacing and emphasis in ways that make long-form writing feel more approachable. For a site that often deals in memory, atmosphere and half-remembered cultural traces, that opens up some interesting possibilities.

At this stage, it is selective rather than universal. Some pieces suit audio better than others. But where it works, it adds another layer: not just text on a screen, but something closer to being read aloud from the other side of the room — hopefully useful, and perhaps faintly uncanny in the right places.

Spark Runs After Hours

Google's most revealing Gemini announcement is not the video model, even though video is the part with the easiest demos. It is the small, almost administrative phrase attached to Gemini Spark: runs 24/7. That sounds like infrastructure copy until you sit with it for a minute. A chatbot answers while you are there. A background agent works while you are not.

The difference is not cosmetic. In Sundar Pichai's I/O note, Spark is described as powered by Gemini 3.5 and Antigravity, built for long-horizon tasks that can keep going in the background. The new Gemini 3.5 Flash is the model underneath that pitch, with Google calling it available across the Gemini app, AI Mode in Search, Antigravity, the Gemini API, AI Studio, Android Studio, and enterprise products. This is not a lab release. It is a distribution event with a model announcement folded inside it.

I wrote earlier this month about Google turning I/O into a Gemini argument, and the argument has hardened since then. Gemini is no longer being presented as one surface. It is the layer that Google wants to move through Search, Android, developer tools, enterprise software, creative tools, and whatever form of assistant hardware survives contact with real life. Spark makes that plain because it changes the unit of interaction from a prompt to an errand.

That is where I get wary. Not because background agents are useless. Quite the opposite: they are useful in the exact boring places that make software stick. Monitor this. Reconcile that. Keep trying until the slot opens. Pull the materials together before I come back. The dull examples are the serious ones, because they don't need wonder. They only need enough reliability that a person stops watching.

Google's advantage is that it owns so many places where not watching is already normal. Search waits. Gmail waits. Drive waits. Android waits in your pocket all day, and Chrome sits between intention and almost everything else. OpenAI can make a cleaner interface; Anthropic can make a better argument about restraint. Google can place the agent inside the room where the task was already going to happen.

The danger is also Google-shaped. A background agent turns permission into a standing condition. It asks for less attention at the exact moment it needs more trust. If Spark is checking, filing, drafting, booking, comparing, or nudging on your behalf, then the old question of "what did the model say?" becomes less useful than "what has it been doing?" That is a different audit problem, and a different kind of intimacy with the machine.

Gemini Omni still matters. Google says Omni can take images, audio, video, and text as input and create video first, with Gemini Omni Flash rolling into the Gemini app, Flow, and YouTube Shorts. I covered the creative side of that in Video Becomes the Prompt, where the edit starts to live inside conversation. Spark is the plainer version of the same strategic move: move the work out of a specialist tool and into the ambient Google layer.

The phrase "agentic Gemini era" is ugly, but the ugliness is useful. It has the bluntness of an internal roadmap escaping into public. Google is not asking whether people want a more charming chatbot. It is asking whether the next interface can be a thing that stays awake after the tab is closed. I don't think users have really consented to that idea yet. I also don't think consent will arrive as one grand yes or no. It will arrive as a thousand small defaults, each one too convenient to refuse on its own.

Sources:

Career Clothes for Metropolitan Women

A woman is halfway out of a chauffeured car, one metallic sandal already on the running board, the other foot still inside. She isn't arriving or leaving so much as holding the pause between the two, which is the whole mood of this Episode advertisement from American Vogue, November 1990. The bronze jacket has real structure, almost lacquered in the light; the black dress under it is plain to the point of severity. Long earrings, sheer tights, a slim clutch held against the door. The ad is selling clothes, but the thing it actually trades on is composure: the idea that a certain kind of woman moves through the city sealed off, unhurried, expensively calm.

Episode is mostly forgotten now, which makes the confidence of the page easy to misread. It wasn't a minor careerwear label. The brand was the flagship of Toppy, the retail business the Fang brothers built out of the family's Hong Kong knitwear manufacturing. The Fangs had spent years as the sole sweater maker for Liz Claiborne and absorbed that company's instinct for dressing working women, then went looking for a customer of their own. In Britain they aimed squarely at the gap between Marks & Spencer and the designer floors. In America they took over a chain of stores and pushed it north, away from the sun belt and into the cities where women needed clothes for offices and appointments. The name itself came from a taxi ride up Sixth Avenue, the brothers comparing the weekly turnover of shop windows to the serial logic of Dynasty and Dallas.

So the Vogue placement wasn't a stretch. By 1990 the ad could list twenty-five stores across New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Dallas, Boston, Washington and Miami, and the register it reached for was European tailoring with an explicitly international address. Not couture, but a long way above the high street. The clothes were silk, suiting, blouses, dresses, the professional separates of a woman who had somewhere to be and the means to look settled getting there.

The setting does most of the persuasion. A car interior photographs as a private chamber, a small salon that happens to move, and Vogue in this period knew exactly how to frame that. The white margins, the restrained type, the stillness that costs money to produce. It is the same promise Azzedine Alaïa's clients were buying from the other direction, the power-dressing argument about claiming space in rooms that had only recently begun to admit women, except Episode made it quieter and more bourgeois. No armour. Just poise rendered as a product you could order in a fitting room.

That is why the image feels stranded in its own decade. It believes, completely and without irony, in polish and discretion and adult authority, in the soft click of a car door and a driver idling at the kerb. None of it reads as aspirational the way it once did. What the page was really selling was a social dream about how a serious adult life should look from the outside, and the brand that sold it has since dissolved almost entirely. The dress survives in the photograph. The world it was dressed to walk into doesn't.

Sources:

Les Tatouages, 1994

Christy Turlington's face was not usually where fashion placed risk. It placed symmetry there, health, American cleanliness, the kind of beauty that looked expensive before any garment had to do work. Jean Paul Gaultier's Spring 1994 runway did something more useful with it. He put her in a tattoo-motif top, a sarong, heavy jewellery, bulky lace-up trainers, and a nose-ring chain that ran across her face, then let the whole image disturb the category she had been hired to represent.

The collection was called Les Tatouages. Vogue described it at the time as "a startling vision of cross-cultural harmony", which now reads as both accurate and too easy. The show gathered men in skirts, eighteenth-century denim shapes, corsetry, Joan of Arc armour, punk graffiti, tribal and Indian references, African beading, faux piercings, and tattoo-currency motifs into one crowded Gaultier sentence. There were joss sticks backstage, carried down the runway by models, because restraint was not the assignment.

What interests me is not whether the collection would pass a cleaner twenty-first-century test of reference and permission. Some of it would not, and pretending otherwise makes the clothes less interesting, not more. The useful thing is the exact place it occupies in the mid-nineties: body modification still close enough to subculture to carry charge, supermodels still famous enough to make a single runway look travel, and luxury still porous enough that a designer could drag tattoos, piercings, devotional imagery, denim, and club-kid collage into the same room without smoothing the joins.

Fashion had already started rehearsing a different body by then. A year earlier, Marc Jacobs had translated grunge into Perry Ellis silk, and the room mostly recoiled. Gaultier's move was rougher because it did not just borrow the clothing of a scene. It borrowed the marks people made on themselves: ink, metal, stencil, scar-adjacent decoration, the deliberate refusal of a body to remain politely unedited. A tattoo-print mesh top is not a tattoo, of course. It is a theatrical substitute, safely removable and sold at a fashion price. Still, substitutes matter. They tell you what the culture wants to touch without quite joining.

British Vogue's later history of tattoos in fashion places Les Tatouages inside that awkward passage from subculture to mainstream image. That is the right discomfort. A runway can make an outlaw sign desirable, but it also neutralises it by turning the sign into styling. Gaultier was good at this because he seemed to understand both sides of the theft. He wanted the shock, the beauty, the costume, the joke, and the old Catholic theatre of transformation. He also wanted a garment that could be bought.

Turlington's look is the one that survives because it made the contradiction legible at once. Vogue France later singled it out among the great supermodel runway moments of the decade: the nose-ring chain, tattoo-motif top, sarong, and trainers. That list sounds almost plain now. In 1993, when the Spring 1994 collections were shown, it was stranger. The face of mainstream beauty had been temporarily rewired into something devotional, touristic, punkish, and slightly absurd.

The absurdity is important. Gaultier's best work often sits one inch from fancy dress, and sometimes crosses the line with a grin. Les Tatouages has that risk in it. A lesser version would have become costume trunk exotica. The reason it still holds is that the collection is too restless to settle there. Every reference is interrupted by another one before it can become a single borrowed mood. The tattoo is print, then stencil, then currency. The piercing is jewellery and fake wound. The sarong is runway styling and beach memory. The body keeps changing status.

I don't think the show predicted the tattooed luxury body so much as gave it permission to appear in polite fashion photography. That is smaller than revolution and probably more exact. The next decade would turn visible tattoos and piercings into ordinary celebrity grammar. Gaultier caught the moment before ordinary arrived, when the chain across Turlington's face could still make the whole machine look briefly unsure of itself.

Sources:

Parcels Took the Train

The old station parcels office belonged to a country where urgency still had to present itself at a counter. You carried the thing there yourself: a box, a suitcase, a padded envelope, a reel of something that mattered to someone else by teatime. The clerk weighed it, labelled it, and handed it to the railway. For a few hours it travelled with passengers, not as freight in the modern logistics sense, but as a small citizen of the timetable.

Red Star Parcels began experimentally on 1 April 1963, and its trick was almost embarrassingly simple. It used scheduled passenger trains. The parcel didn't vanish into a depot hinterland or wait for a lorry route to make sense; it went from one staffed station to another, held inside a public system that already knew how to move quickly between towns. By 1982, one local account notes, there were around 600 Red Star parcel points, including Stalybridge, Bolton, Manchester Victoria, Manchester Piccadilly, Wigan North Western, and Stockport. The list has the plainness of a departure board.

That plainness is what I miss, even though I don't want to romanticise the queues, the forms, or the mild panic of arriving two minutes after the train had gone. Red Star made an urgent object visible. You could imagine its route because the route was also yours: platform, guard's van, junction, terminus, left luggage smell, fluorescent office, someone signing for it at the other end. Modern tracking shows more dots, but the dots are abstract. A parcel now moves through places built specifically to keep people out.

British Rail knew the poetry of the thing, or at least its sales department did. The Science Museum Group holds Red Star publicity material with slogans like "Train your parcels to go faster" and "A fast track through the '90s." Those lines are not elegant, but they catch the weird pride of the service. A parcel could be trained, in both senses: put on rails and disciplined by the clock. I like the bluntness of that. It turns delivery into a civic verb.

The decline was not clean. City Link had been tied into the system from the late sixties, then shifted more of its traffic by road. Rail privatisation made the old national mesh harder to treat as one machine. In August 1995, Christian Wolmar reported in the Independent that Red Star's turnover had fallen from GBP71 million to GBP38 million over five years, with losses still running at GBP9 million. This was not a ghost killed by one villain. It was a service whose assumptions had become expensive in the wrong accounting regime.

Lynx Express acquired Red Star in 1999. After Hatfield, customer confidence was badly damaged, and a trade report from 28 May 2001 described Lynx as still committed to rail despite the previous week's closure of Red Star. A later rail forum account gives the blunt administrative ending: the remaining station parcels offices closed on 25 May 2001, and the staff were made redundant. That date feels recent until I remember how completely the ritual has disappeared.

There are still traces. A small museum blog found the Red Star sign outside Brighton station, the office gone, the name left to do what old railway names do: point at a function the building no longer performs. I find that more touching than the usual railway nostalgia because it isn't about steam, brass, or an imaginary national innocence. It is about a lost use of ordinary space. A station could once accept custody of your object and send it across the country by the same logic that sent your aunt to Preston.

Now the parcel comes to the door in a van whose driver is being squeezed by software neither of you can see. The system is faster in many ways, cheaper in some, and far less intelligible. Red Star belonged to the last period when a piece of private urgency could still enter public infrastructure through a hatch in a wall, get stamped, and leave on the next train.

Sources: