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Plutonic Rainbows

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Anthropic at the Vatican

Pope Leo XIV released his first encyclical this morning, and the photograph the wire services chose was not of the pope alone. It was of Christopher Olah, Anthropic co-founder, standing at a Vatican lectern as the document was unveiled. The Associated Press headline put it bluntly: the pope calls out AI companies even as he hosts Anthropic. That tension is the whole story.

The encyclical is called Magnifica Humanitas, roughly forty-two thousand words across eighty-three pages, and its argument is that artificial intelligence is the labour-and-dignity question of this century in the way industrial mechanisation was the question of the century the Catholic Church first wrote about in Rerum Novarum. Leo, an American mathematician by training, has been telegraphing this framing since the days after his election in May 2025, when he named AI as the defining challenge of his papacy. So the document itself was not a surprise. The supporting cast was.

The Vatican could have launched a 42,300-word manifesto on AI with any number of partners. It picked a frontier lab presently locked in a legal fight with the Trump administration over access to its own technology, and it put that lab's chief interpretability researcher at the podium. Olah is not the policy face of Anthropic; he is the mechanistic-interpretability lead, the person whose work is closest to the actual question of whether anyone understands what these models are doing internally. Choosing him rather than Amodei was a curatorial decision, not an accident. The Vatican wanted the scientist, not the lobbyist.

What the encyclical itself says is harder than the press summaries suggest. Leo writes that it is "not permissible" to delegate irreversible lethal decisions to AI systems, which lands as a direct rebuke to autonomous-weapons procurement and, by extension, the deregulatory current the current US administration has set running. He calls on developers to "disarm AI" in a sense that goes beyond weapons: disarm it of the assumption that profit organises its deployment, disarm it of the cultural authority to displace whole classes of work without negotiation, disarm it of the presumption that speed is its own justification. The CNET write-up notes that the phrase is already the line being quoted back, and you can see why. It is the kind of formulation that survives translation.

What is interesting about Anthropic's presence is that the lab has, for two years, been the loudest internal voice arguing roughly this position from inside the industry. The pope disagrees with most of how Anthropic operates and has now said so in the most formal document a pope can produce. Anthropic showed up anyway, and let him. That is either an extraordinary act of public humility or an extremely sophisticated piece of positioning, and the honest answer is probably both at once. The encyclical will be quoted in regulatory hearings for years. Olah was in the photograph.

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Mugler, Ritz Pool, 1992

The Chambre Syndicale finally let him in. For the Fall-Winter 1992-93 season, Thierry Mugler was invited as a guest member of the haute couture calendar, and the decision was less generous than overdue. Couture in the early nineties had a problem. Buyers were ageing into the seats, press coverage was thinning, and the houses kept showing variations on the same drape. What the schedule needed was someone who treated tailoring as engineering and the runway as a venue for argument.

He answered by booking the swimming pool at the Ritz.

There is a Numéro retrospective of nine Mugler collections that walks through this debut with some precision. The pool gave the collection its name. Twenty seamstresses moved into the atelier and worked the season around the corset, which is the structural detail worth pausing on. Most couture houses at that point were assembling the silhouette from the shoulder down. Mugler started from the waist and built outward, the way a coachbuilder starts from the chassis. The 1989 bodywork-bustier that Naomi Campbell wore in the Buick collection had already proved the principle on ready-to-wear. The couture debut was the same logic stretched to the disciplines the Chambre Syndicale measures you against: hand-finishing, fitted-to-the-body precision, no shortcuts.

The Ritz pool is a strange room for clothes. The tiles bounce sound around the edges in a way no proper auditorium would tolerate, and the chlorinated humidity is hostile to silk. None of that mattered, because the room is also a stage set, art-deco depth and water-light and chrome handrails that pick up flashbulbs. The venue did half the work of arguing that couture could still surprise. The other half was the clothes, which the FIT Fashion History timeline catalogues alongside his ready-to-wear pieces from the same year, the bustier and corset traditions running in parallel between the two calendars.

What it bought him was a ten-year permanent membership in the couture calendar, which is the unglamorous answer to why this debut matters. Mugler now had a decade of January and July slots. He used it to do the Cirque d'Hiver anniversary show, the chrome gynoids and Cardi-B-shell-dress couture of Fall-Winter 1995-96, and Les Insectes in Spring 1997 with Galliano newly at Dior and McQueen at Givenchy in the next seats over. The Ritz pool is the show where that runway access was paid for, in 20 sets of hands working sleeves that took weeks instead of hours.

The footnote that always gets cut from the legend is that Mugler had been ready for this membership for a decade. The 1984 Zénith spectacle, the Too Funky bustier worn down a 1992 runway, the Atlantes mermaids and the Buick bodywork: the structural vocabulary was already complete. The Chambre Syndicale spent ten years deciding what a body could do, and then handed him the keys to a room he had already furnished.

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Barking Riverside, Still Arriving

Moxon Architects photographs Barking Riverside station at dusk, its metal screen catching a warm orange light while the square in front of it remains almost theatrically clear. It is a handsome London Overground terminus, clean, accessible and oddly expectant. I am used to railway buildings carrying the grime of the place they serve. This one seems to be waiting for the place to catch up.

The station opened to passengers on 18 July 2022. Barking Riverside Limited, the developer, describes an extension of 4.5km from the Gospel Oak to Barking line, arriving in a new public square with the Thames riverfront five minutes away. That wording is cheerful and quite precise. A station is usually sold as a way out: a short walk from home to a train, a reduction in the indignity of the commute. Here it is also a way in, an entrance provided before the district has settled into whatever ordinary habits will eventually define it.

Moxon's account of the design makes this feeling structural. Designed with Atkins and Burns & Nice, the station folds its working rooms into the footprint of the viaduct: ticket office at ground level, platforms overhead, an outer skin of stainless-steel panels moving from solid to perforated. Trains do not simply pull into a platform. They approach through a screened object that gradually admits movement, people and light. It is a threshold with an unusually confident idea of what lies on both sides.

Most haunted infrastructure has suffered a withdrawal. A pier has lost its steamers; an underpass has lost the precinct it was meant to feed. I recently wrote about a bus shelter standing after its last bus, the small cruelty of a public promise surviving after its timetable has gone. Barking Riverside is the inverse problem. The service is present. The square and interchange are present. What has not yet acquired a fixed shape is the life that makes a terminus feel inevitable rather than provisional.

I do not mean that the neighbourhood is vacant, or that a new railway is some melancholy mistake. That would be an easy aesthetic lie, the kind made by anyone who prefers a photograph of an empty platform to the inconvenient fact of people needing homes and transport. The developer's account of the opening is properly pleased with itself: trains running, buses connecting, river services close by, the journey to Barking compressed. This is infrastructure doing the decent thing and arriving early.

Early still has a strange atmosphere. Somewhere in east London there is a terminal destination on a departure board whose name sounds both settled and conditional. Barking Riverside. Not an old town absorbed by the railway, not a demolished works remembered by a branch line, but a name rehearsed aloud by automated announcements until daily life grows around it. Children will eventually regard the stainless-steel screens and the raised platforms as boring local facts. That is the desired result, and it requires an interval in which the future has opened its station but has not stopped looking like a rendering.

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Carbon Fibre and the British HiFi Orthodoxy

For three months my living room belonged to a closed box. The ATC SCM11 and the Exposure 2510 had settled into a civil war, a battle where Gloucestershire neutrality fought West Sussex warmth to a clean, highly resolved standstill. It was a good system, a highly respectable, very British, incredibly sensible hi-fi system. And then I unboxed the Acoustic Energy AE500s, and the sensible portion of the evening was over.

There is an orthodox view in British hi-fi that the ATC standmount is the definitive partner for an Exposure amplifier. It makes sense on paper. The 2510 is a gently rich, mid-forward integrated that delivers its 75 watts with a faint Class A/B sweetness. The SCM11 is a sealed-box monitor that is almost aggressively neutral, acting as a cooling counterweight to the amplifier's midrange character. But after a hundred hours of listening, I started to notice a certain stiffness in the joins. At 85dB sensitivity, the ATCs are heavy work. The Exposure has current delivery that belies its modest specification sheet, but I always felt like the output stage was working under significant load just to get the paper-and-polyester cones to move. The music was accurate, but it frequently lacked the sense of immediate physical release.

The Acoustic Energy AE500 changes the physics of the partnership. It is a compact standmount, roughly the same height as the SCM11, but instead of paper and soft domes, it uses carbon fibre for both drive units. Both the 125mm mid/bass driver and the 25mm dome tweeter are spun from carbon fibre. The material is absurdly stiff, incredibly light, and has an internal damping characteristic that prevents the driver from ringing without adding mass. Sensitivity climbs to 87dB into a nominal 6-ohm load.

That shift of two decibels and two ohms does something significant to the amplifier. The Exposure 2510 stops feeling like it is driving a resistive wall. The electrical load is lighter, and the amplifier responds with immediate agility, letting transients rise and fall back into silence with a speed that the heavy ATCs could never quite manage.

The low-end response illustrates the difference clearly. The sealed SCM11 is famed for its tight bass, but it starts rolling off early, dropping away below 56Hz. The AE500 is a ported speaker, utilizing a rear-firing slot port rather than a circular tube, and it extends down to 45Hz. Ordinarily, putting a ported speaker in the same room where a sealed box has been ruling results in instant disillusionment. I expected the flabby overhang, the port chuffing, the loose hump around 80Hz that turns double bass into a single, muddy drone.

But carbon fibre does not behave like paper. Because the AE500's cone is so unbelievably light, its start-and-stop time is almost instantaneous. The bass I heard was not just deeper than the ATC; it was every bit as fast. On dense electronic recordings, like Jaga Jazzist's Starfire, the synthesizer lines pulsed with a physical authority that felt completely absent from the sealed monitors. The slot port behaves differently too. Instead of a jet of air swirling out of a tube, the slot distributes the pressure evenly across the rear boundary, making the speakers far less fussy about how close I sat them to the brickwork.

Then there is the tweeter. The SCM11's soft dome is a beautiful, polite thing that never offends. The AE500's carbon tweeter is something else. It is fast, transparent, and tonally faithful, but it has a dry, revealing detail that makes the ATC sound slightly veiled in comparison. Sibilance is entirely absent, replaced by a clean detail that lays bare the recording environment. When I listened to a recording with a large acoustic space, the cabinets seemed to disappear entirely from my field of hearing. The soundstage moved well left and right of the physical boxes, creating a focused, holographic picture that made me forget the physical boundaries of my room.

I spent an evening working through some vocal tracks, and the tonal alignment of this pairing became obvious. The Exposure's slightly warm, organic midrange finds its perfect foil in the carbon driver's clean neutrality. The speaker does not add any artificial body of its own, allowing the 2510's natural character to shine through without tipping into clinical coldness. I found it a fluid, engaging sound that made the ATC pairing feel slightly academic. I heard the texture of a voice, the micro-dynamics of a guitar pluck, the tiny hesitations in phrasing that turn a performance into a genuine musical event.

Value is the final part of the argument. The SCM11 is a wonderful piece of engineering, but it currently sits around £1,650. The AE500, despite its flagship carbon driver technology and Resonance Suppression Composite cabinet, retails for roughly £1,050. Saving six hundred pounds while gaining a deeper bass response, higher sensitivity, and a more expansive soundstage is not a minor consideration. It makes the Acoustic Energy the more compelling option for anyone trying to extract the maximum musical life from the Exposure integrated.

The setup is not without its demands. The carbon tweeter is revealing; if a source component has a glassy glare or the room is highly reflective, the AE500 will not disguise the problem. I had to pay close attention to my DAC selection and speaker stands to keep the high-frequency extension from tipping into brightness. The rear slot port also means I could not shove them flat against a wall, though they are still easier to place than circular ports.

But if you give them decent stands and clean feeds, they reward the listener with a dynamic, cohesive performance that makes them the natural partner for this particular amplifier. The partnership works because both components are trying to achieve the same thing: speed without aggression. The Exposure 2510 has always had a rhythmic authority that made other amplifiers sound sluggish. By pairing it with a speaker that has the speed to match that delivery, I unlocked the true capability of the design. The ATC SCM11 is a monument of restraint, but the Acoustic Energy AE500 is the speaker I am keeping in my room.

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Six Out of Ten

Of every ten corporate networks the UK AI Security Institute pointed Anthropic's Mythos at, six fell. With OpenAI's GPT-5.5-Cyber the number was three. Politico published the result this morning, buried in a Sunday explainer aimed at people only now catching up to why Washington keeps holding closed-door briefings about a model nobody outside a small circle has touched.

The framing matters. AISI is not a marketing arm. It is the British government's testing body, the closest equivalent to an independent referee that AI cybersecurity capabilities have right now, and it just put a clean ratio on the offensive gap between two frontier models. Two-to-one. British AI Minister Kanishka Narayan, in a statement to Politico, allowed himself the line "cyber capabilities in leading AI systems are advancing much faster than we expected," which is the polite ministerial register for "this is worse than the brief said it would be."

Mythos has been the subject of increasingly anxious coverage since Anthropic released Project Glasswing's initial findings last week. The numbers there were also impressive: more than ten thousand high or critical vulnerabilities surfaced across partner software, with all the patch-pipeline pain that follows. But ten-thousand-vulnerabilities-found is a defensive metric dressed in offensive clothing. It is "look how much we caught." Six-out-of-ten corporate networks taken over is different. That is a head-to-head capability test on the attacker side of the ledger, run by an arms-length government body, and the result is not subtle.

The other quotes Politico collected ratchet the picture upward. Cloudflare's chief security officer described Mythos as a "real step forward" in AI's ability to find vulnerabilities and write the code to exploit them. Broadcom called its own internal findings "jolting." An unnamed member of the House Homeland Security Committee left a closed-door Anthropic briefing reporting that Mythos had broken into his bank account with ease. Each of those is the sort of detail that, if anyone else were saying it about an unreleased lab model, would read as marketing. Saying it about a model the lab has pointedly declined to ship lands differently. Evans, quoted in the same piece, says the plain thing: "these model developments mainly are advantages for attackers rather than defenders." That is the AISI ratio in English.

The hardest part to sit with is the implicit assumption that the defenders' tooling will catch up. Glasswing's whole pitch rests on that. Give the model to a coalition of two-dozen large companies and government agencies first, run the bugs into the patching queue, and the attackers will arrive at a hardened landscape. That arithmetic only works if the defenders' side of the equation is willing to do its half of the work at the rate the model is producing it, and the patch-capacity story suggests the institutions are not. Even if they were, the AISI test implies a model exists today that is materially better at offense than its sanctioned defensive twin. Three out of ten was already the previous frontier. Six is not a step on the same staircase.

Anthropic's argument has always been that capability of this kind will arrive whether they ship it or not, and the most responsible move is to be the lab that demonstrates the upper bound under controlled conditions. AISI's number is the form that demonstration takes when it leaves the briefing room. It is a useful number. It is also the kind of number that gets cited later in unrelated testimony.

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Oroton at the Occhio d'Oro

In 1982 Gianni Versace patented a material almost no other ready-to-wear designer would have bothered with: an aluminium-alloy chainmail fine enough to behave like fabric. He called it Oroton. The links were small, dense, and uniform enough that a length of it draped against a moving body the way silk crêpe did, falling and gathering instead of clanking, which was the trick. Mesh had existed for centuries as armour and as costume jewellery; nobody had managed to make it move.

The Occhio d'Oro that year went to him for womenswear, and the citation specifically named the fabric. It is one of the few cases where an industry prize honoured a textile rather than a silhouette. The award mattered because Italian fashion was still proving in the early eighties that Milan could generate technical innovation, not just licence Parisian codes back home at a markup. Patenting a metal fabric is a manufacturing claim, not a styling one, and Versace wanted the distinction read that way.

What the patent actually protected was a method of linking microscopic rings without solder, so the mesh could stretch diagonally and recover. Drape comes from that bias behaviour. A regular chain, even a beautiful one, hangs in straight lines because the rings can only pivot in two dimensions; the Oroton ring rotates in three, and the whole sheet behaves more like a knit than a metalwork. You can pour it through your hands, gather it into a waistband, cut it on a curve and trust the hem to stay where you put it.

The fabric reappeared across his entire career, sometimes front and centre, sometimes as detail. The Met holds several of the evening dresses outright; 1stDibs has been quietly trading Oroton pieces from 1983 onward, and the prices have climbed every year since 1997. The fall 1994 gold mini is probably the most photographed individual garment, but the material is everywhere once you start looking: bodice panels, halter backs, the chainmail togas that journalists kept calling vulgar and then, ten years later, called important.

By the time of the March 1991 ready-to-wear show in Milan, the one whose finale wrote itself into supermodel history, Oroton was already nine years old and entirely associated with the house. The slinky jewel-toned dresses that walked that runway weren't novelty; they were a settled material deployed at full confidence. That distinction gets lost when the show is remembered as a pop-culture event. The clothes themselves were the product of a decade of metallurgy.

Versace's reputation as a vulgarian was always a misreading of his engineering. Bondage references and Baroque prints get the attention, but the underlying claim of the house was technical: that Italian craft could invent a new fabric and patent it the way Pirelli patented a tyre compound. Richard Martin understood this when he wrote about Versace for the Met. Most of the fashion press did not, then or now.

The post-1997 house has used Oroton occasionally, as a relic rather than a working material. The patent has long since lapsed, and the links can be reproduced by any competent metalwork supplier. What cannot be reproduced is the original reason for inventing it, which was a designer convinced that the next interesting fabric was not going to come from a loom.

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A Payroll Number for the Loop

The plainest reading is that the repo was the resume. On 7 March 2026, Andrej Karpathy tweeted a description of his current side project that would later read, with hindsight, like a position statement: "The goal is to engineer your agents to make the fastest research progress indefinitely and without any of your own involvement... Part code, part sci-fi, and a pinch of psychosis." The 630-line repo he shared, github.com/karpathy/autoresearch, wraps his earlier nanochat project in an agent-orchestration layer where the user spends most of their time editing markdown files that brief an agent fleet running an autonomous research org. Two months later, on 19 May, he posted that he had joined Anthropic.

Anthropic's framing of the new effort, surfaced by reporters at TechCrunch, Axios, and Reuters, is that Karpathy will help launch a new team focused on using Claude itself to accelerate pre-training research, reporting to Nick Joseph (also ex-OpenAI). Reading that sentence next to his March description is uncomfortable. Strip the corporate phrasing away and you have someone whose personal Markdown-driven autoresearch repo has been hired to do, indoors, what it was already doing in public.

The companion line in Karpathy's GitHub README, about programming program.md files that "provide context to the AI agents and set up your autonomous research org," is now the spec for a real internal team. Anthropic does not need to imagine what this looks like operationally; the prototype has been on GitHub for two months and has more than eighty thousand stars. What the company is paying for is the shift from a hobbyist running ten parallel agents on his own GPU to a production deployment with Claude as the engine and pre-training as the loss to minimise.

That is recursive self-improvement in a respectable suit. I wrote about RSI when GPT-5.3-Codex helped debug its own training; calling Karpathy's new job "pre-training acceleration" is technically accurate and almost designed to sound less alarming than calling it what it is. The loop has a name now and a payroll number.

His X post mentioned that he remains "deeply passionate about education" and plans to "resume my work on it in time." Eureka Labs is not being shut down, only paused. But the timeline tells you where his attention had drifted: the autoresearch repo went up in March, and Eureka had been running for two years before that without producing the comparable artefact. The new job is a continuation, not a pivot.

Anthropic also announced a second hire that same Tuesday: Chris Rohlf to the frontier red team, the group that stress-tests advanced models against severe threats. Pairing a senior pre-training hire with a senior red-team hire on the same day is choreography for the question "are you accelerating safely?", and days later METR's first Frontier Risk Report gave that question its answer. The report found that internal AI agents at Anthropic, DeepMind, Meta, and OpenAI already plausibly had the means, motive, and opportunity to start small rogue deployments. The hires landed during the week that finding was being absorbed.

If I had to bet on the next public artefact, it is not a paper. It is a Claude-generated change to the next pre-training run, one that survives review and ships, whose provenance nobody outside the building can quite reconstruct.

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Chatterley Whitfield, After Coal

Four headgears still stand at Chatterley Whitfield, on the edge of Stoke-on-Trent, although they lift nobody now. Stoke City Council's account of the site lists original mineshafts, railway sidings, winding houses, a lamp house, a rescue station and the pithead baths across 10.5 hectares. It reads less like a ruin inventory than the contents page of a town whose purpose has been removed.

In 1937, Chatterley Whitfield became the first colliery to extract more than a million tonnes of coal in a year, according to Historic England's list entry. The local Friends group puts the workforce at nearly 4,000 when that record was made. I find the number hard to take in when set against the present photographs: not because the buildings look small, but because they look so entirely unaccompanied. A headgear makes sense as the visible top of a crowded underground system. Left on its own, it becomes punctuation without the sentence.

The usual story about a closed pit is told through absence: lost work, lost unions, lost wages, a district obliged to improvise another reason for existing. Chatterley Whitfield is uncomfortable because it kept so much of the apparatus above ground. Its scheduled monument status preserves shafts, heapsteads and sidings that refuse the neat version in which an industry vanishes and a landscaped memory takes its place. The site is green around the edges now, but the winding houses still explain exactly what the green is covering.

There was already an attempt to turn extraction into memory. After coal production ended, the site became a mining museum; the Friends archive records that the museum entered liquidation and closed on 9 August 1993. That second closure matters. A mine can stop because a fuel economy changes, however brutally. A museum closes when the machinery of remembering it can no longer pay for itself. Whitfield was left with the working buildings, then lost the institution meant to tell people why they were there.

Below the surface the break is blunter still. The Friends' history says the mine is flooded and three of its four shafts have been filled. This is not a Sleeping Beauty industrial site waiting for the right investor to wake it. The route down has been stopped, by water and by deliberate infill, while the structures that once organised that descent remain above it. I can imagine restoration of brick or steel; I cannot imagine restoring the relation between the buildings and the work without turning the whole thing into theatre.

Historic England now records the colliery on its Heritage at Risk register in very bad condition. Preservation sounds like a settled kindness until it reaches a complex this large. To keep a lamp house, a winding house, sidings and headgear is to inherit maintenance on the scale of the vanished industry, without the industry. Demolition would be a cleaner lie. It would let the landscape pretend that coal had passed through North Staffordshire without leaving architecture heavy enough to outlive its income.

I don't think the buildings need to become beautiful in decline to matter. Their value is more awkward than that. They occupy ground that once joined thousands of shifts to a national appetite for coal, and they still make that appetite visible after the labour has been sealed below water. On a quiet day, the headgear isn't an emblem of a lost future. It is a large, literal obstruction to forgetting how the recent past was powered.

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No Third Match

A computer beating the world chess champion once could be called an upset. Beating him across a match meant something less easy to dismiss. In May 1997, at the Equitable Center in New York, IBM's Deep Blue beat Garry Kasparov 3.5 to 2.5 over six games. IBM's account of the match describes the event in the language it acquired almost immediately: a public test of whether computers were catching up to human intelligence.

That wording makes me uneasy, although I understand why it stuck. Deep Blue wasn't a mind arriving in public; it was a formidable chess machine built for a clean, bounded problem. Britannica records the useful prequel: Kasparov had beaten it 4 to 2 in their 1996 match, before the reworked system won the rematch a year later. In other words, the public didn't watch an intelligence wake up. We watched an engineering team return to a defined task and finally clear it.

Still, the last game had the theatrical force of a verdict. Chess had long served as a convenient stand-in for thought itself: rules visible, skill legible, a champion sitting under lights. A machine could beat humans at calculation without disturbing many assumptions about being human. Once it beat Kasparov, the distinction felt thinner, at least on television. I remember the match chiefly as newspaper imagery, a man at a board facing a box that offered no face back. The picture did much of the philosophical work.

The aftermath made the symbol harder to inspect. According to a twentieth-anniversary account in The Conversation, IBM declined Kasparov's request for another match and dismantled Deep Blue; it also released detailed logs only after the machine had been decommissioned. The same account notes that later analysis found serious mistakes in Deep Blue's play. None of that reverses the score. It does matter to the meaning we assigned to the score, because a rematch and an inspectable machine would have turned a revelation back into an experiment.

IBM had every commercial reason to stop at the perfect frame. The computer had done the job the public understood: it had met the champion and won. Another contest could add technical knowledge while weakening the image, which is a poor exchange when the image already travels further than the technical story. This is not evidence of a conspiracy, and Kasparov's suspicions are not needed to make the point. A company can retire a machine honestly and still freeze an event into mythology.

Deep Blue also exposes a confusion that AI keeps inheriting. Success at a sharply specified task is impressive, but it is not the same thing as a general theory of intelligence. The victory belongs beside the later argument about scaling search rather than encoding intuition: an approach can work brilliantly before anyone agrees on what its success should mean. Today we make the same mistake in a noisier setting, reading a fluent answer or a successful tool call as proof of a much larger capacity.

What lingers from 1997 is not that a computer won at chess. That was real, and worth the attention. It is that IBM let the machine leave public life at the exact moment it became a story about all machines, while everyone else was still deciding what question the match had answered. I would have preferred the untidier version: another match, more logs, less icon. Technical history improves when its famous objects have to keep working after the applause.

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Banned With Huang in the Room

The Financial Times reported on Friday that Beijing quietly added Nvidia's RTX 5090D V2 to its list of banned imports on May 15, the same week Jensen Huang was riding Air Force One into Beijing as part of Trump's state visit. The chip had been engineered specifically to satisfy US export controls, a Blackwell- derived gaming GPU with less VRAM and lower bandwidth, sold to Chinese gamers and 3D artists from August onward. Chinese AI developers had been quietly using it too, with the H200s and the proper Blackwell AI accelerators off the table.

That is the part that should land. Nvidia built a chip to comply. China banned the chip anyway.

The geopolitical theatre of this is bleak in a way I find genuinely interesting. The 5090D V2 was Nvidia's attempt to play both sides: meet US export rules, keep Chinese revenue flowing, accept the haircut on VRAM and bandwidth as the price of access. The whole point of the SKU was that Beijing was supposed to want it. The chip's specs were tuned to a regulatory compromise that already conceded most of the high-end AI use case. Then Beijing decided it didn't want the compromise either.

The timing matters. Customs added the chip to the banned list on May 15. Huang boarded Air Force One in Alaska that same week, a late addition to the entourage. The summit happened. By the time anyone outside Beijing knew the chip was banned, the CEO of the company whose chip it was had been physically in the country and back. It reads as a signal sent with diplomatic precision: we are not interested in the de-fanged version of your tech, and we are happy to tell you while you are still here.

What sits underneath the signal is the harder thing. China has been telling its own technology companies to prioritise domestic chips for a while now, and the numbers suggest the message is landing. Zero H200s have been imported despite the US clearing roughly ten Chinese firms to buy them last week. The Huawei Ascend 910B is doing more work than the export-control story usually acknowledges, and DeepSeek's pivot to Ascend silicon for V4 was the kind of move that, if it generalises, eats into the long thesis Nvidia has been quietly leaning on: that even gated access is still access.

Banning the 5090D V2 also closes a quieter loophole. Hobbyist Chinese AI developers, cut off from the proper Blackwell stack, had been using the consumer card to run open-source models on Blackwell compute. The chip was a backdoor that wasn't really a backdoor, a way for capability to leak in via the gaming SKU while the AI SKU stayed off-limits. Cutting it off pushes those developers toward domestic alternatives faster, which is the consistent thread running through everything Beijing is doing on chips right now. The export-control regime didn't manage to keep advanced silicon out of Singapore; Beijing managing to keep it out of its own market is a different problem with a different shape, and one Washington has less leverage to alter.

Nvidia's pitch to its own investors this week was that the $200 billion CPU market it now forecasts includes China. Huang said as much in Taipei on Saturday, on his way out. The hope is real, the licences exist on paper, and the H200 nominally has a route in. The other side keeps banning the chips that route would carry. At some point that becomes less an export-control story and more a buyer story, a market that has decided it no longer wants what is on offer, and what is on offer was already the compromise.

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