Manton Reece
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  • This interview with Sarah Friar is really good. OpenAI is juggling so many things, I get the impression that it would all fall apart if she wasn’t CFO. She says the new device will be announced later this year:

    What Jony and team are really good at is bringing humanity to devices. And I don’t really know how to explain that well, but when you see it, you feel it. […] It feels very natural. But it feels very lovable.

    β†’ 9:43 AM, Jun 3
    Also on Bluesky
  • Satya Nadella in the closing to Build:

    There are really two stories people can tell about this moment. One is that technology concentrates power, reduces human agency, and leaves to society to absorb the consequences. The other is that we use this next wave to unlock opportunity for developers, scientists, enterprises, and every community. And our job is to make the second story true.

    Always interesting when people in power talk about not further concentrating power. I believe he’s sincere, though. I worry more when those with total control over a platform (see: Apple) don’t acknowledge it.

    β†’ 9:22 AM, Jun 3
    Also on Bluesky
  • Strong winds at the front of this storm. Lost a branch of the pecan tree. Looks like minimal damage to the roof, mostly just the gutter. Whew. 🌳

    A tree has fallen onto the roof of a house, causing damage.
    β†’ 7:52 PM, Jun 2
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  • Microsoft announced Project Solara at Build today. They’ve got a couple prototypes, including a clever badge-style device, and thoughts on UI:

    We are also investing in just-in-time UI: the ability for an agent experience to adapt across devices and modalities without requiring developers to redesign everything for every new form factor. Today, that means semi-structured approaches like adaptive cards and known content types. Over time, it moves toward more dynamic and generative interfaces.

    β†’ 5:05 PM, Jun 2
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  • AI and fiber optics

    I enjoyed this blog post by Om Malik about how AI models will become invisible plumbing. Nice history lesson with fiber-optic cables too:

    A single strand of glass can carry only so much data at one wavelength – think of it as one lane of a highway. Wavelength Division Multiplexing, or WDM, was the insight that you could send multiple signals down that same strand simultaneously, each on a different color of light, the way a prism splits white light into its spectrum. Each color carries its own independent stream of data. One fiber becomes many.

    I agree with his conclusion about AI, although not exactly with his point on open-weight models. Om writes:

    Commoditization is already underway. Open-weight models are compressing the advantage that closed frontier models once held. The cost of inference has fallen so fast that capability is no longer a defensible edge.

    The difference between “good enough” and “great” is still pretty noticeable. In my current work with local AI models, I’m using Gemma 4, a 26-billion parameter model. It needs something like a 24 GB Mac to run. The frontier models are orders of magnitude larger, likely with hundreds of billions or trillions of parameters.

    While you could have an open-weight model that big, how would you run it? At that scale, it is cheaper to pay OpenAI and Anthropic for tokens. Let them manage Nvidia racks with multiple TBs of memory.

    For the more important theme of Om’s post, yes, AI will become the fabric of many products. I hope that eventually we’ll even get to the point where we don’t need to clutter up our UI with “AI” labels everywhere. A feature that wasn’t possible before will just exist. (For now, though, AI is so divisive that it’s useful to denote it clearly, so it can be embraced or avoided.)

    β†’ 4:39 PM, Jun 2
    Also on Bluesky
  • Following a report from Bloomberg on Uber, TechCrunch has a post about companies putting a cap on AI spending:

    AI is getting expensive, and some companies are cutting back on usage in an attempt to moderate costs. That cohort includes Uber, which recently instituted internal usage caps as a way to cut down on its exorbitant AI spend.

    I’m sure this is happening all over. That’s why I commented in my post yesterday that Anthropic’s revenue is not stable. It’s hard to cancel a subscription you value. It’s much easier to cut back on tokens.

    β†’ 3:46 PM, Jun 2
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  • πŸš‚

    A train is passing by a railroad crossing while a car waits at an intersection, visible through the side mirror.
    β†’ 11:48 AM, Jun 2
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  • Working more on Micro.blog 4.0 for Mac. Got a chance to rewrite all the old sidebar code, moving it from a very cluttered XIB to Obj-C code. Now feels more at home with other modern Mac apps.

    Mac screenshot showing sidebar with slight blue showing through, unified toolbar, and timeline of user posts.
    β†’ 9:58 AM, Jun 2
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  • Getting almost too late to turn this narrative around, but OpenAI tries to make the case for data centers in a new video about Abilene.

    β†’ 8:46 AM, Jun 2
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  • Demolition continues on 51st street.

    A chain-link fence stretches across the foreground under a cloudy sky, with an old building and rubble in the background.
    β†’ 4:05 PM, Jun 1
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