Manton Reece
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  • Excellent Stratechery update this morning about Fable and more broadly how Anthropic’s “only we can be trusted” messaging also helps their business:

    It’s fascinating to observe: me, the rational business analyst, sees a hard-nosed but understandable business decision to cut off would-be competitors; Anthropic employees and advocates, the true believers, see a regrettable but understandable safety decision that ensures that responsible and thoughtful people — themselves, of course — will be the ones guiding our AGI future.

    → 9:38 AM, Jun 10
  • Bustling downtown San Jose.

    A well-lit, empty street at night with tram tracks running down the center, lined with trees and benches.
    → 12:17 AM, Jun 10
    Also on Bluesky
  • OpenAI published an article about the company’s high-level plan for AI, written by Sam Altman and Jakub Pachocki. There are themes in it that will be familiar for anyone following OpenAI closely this year. This passage feels a little new:

    Entirely automating everything is not the future we want. It would be unfulfilling, and it would be dangerous. AI should help people pursue their goals, not become untethered from them.

    → 5:30 PM, Jun 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • The Talk Show Live is tonight. I’ll be there. Not too late for tickets if you’re in the area. John Gruber blogs:

    If you can make it in person, you should come. The California Theater is a beautiful big theater and tickets are still available.

    → 4:45 PM, Jun 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • Catching up on more of Apple’s new AI architecture. Finally have some clarity that the sort of default Apple Foundation Models will run on Apple servers. The most capable “Pro” model will run on Nvidia chips in Google Cloud. Seems like a reasonable way to split things up.

    → 4:21 PM, Jun 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • Myke Hurley blogged a very optimistic take about Siri AI:

    I fully understand I may be in that WWDC Glow right now when it comes to Siri AI. I want to preface this before I say what I am about to say, which is that I imagine that after Siri AI ships later in the year, I will not have much need for any of the general-purpose chatbots like Gemini, ChatGPT, Claude, or others.

    I don’t see this at all. But everyone is different, and Siri AI should be fairly popular.

    → 4:11 PM, Jun 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • I’ve posted an update to the Micro.blog 4.0 beta for Mac. You can download the new version here. There’s no “Check for Updates” for the beta. It improves bookmarking and also adds collecting anonymous machine stats for the first time, so we can have a better sense of what Macs people are using.

    → 2:34 PM, Jun 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • Haiku, Sonnet, Opus, Mythos, Fable. I’m not a fan of Anthropic’s business but I’m a fan of their names. So nice.

    → 12:33 PM, Jun 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • Siri AI context

    Instead of thinking about on-device models and cloud models, a better framing for Apple vs. everyone else is on-device context and cloud context. Apple is focused on apps, privacy, and security, at the expense of speed and universal access anywhere.

    There can’t really be a web version of Siri AI. There can’t be a fully-featured HomePod version either, except in limited areas where Apple could sync its own data. Siri will continue to be fragmented across platforms.

    I personally want an assistant that knows a lot. Yesterday, I asked ChatGPT whether 7-Eleven carried a certain medicine. In its answer it included a map because it knew I was traveling, and it also included a minor health tip based on something I had told it last week about an x-ray. Some people will find this creepy and invasive. They’re not wrong. But I think it should be my choice whether I let my assistant know these things.

    Apple’s strategy will resonate with a lot of people. Perhaps it is the best approach when you have billions of users. It doesn’t really excite me, though, because I can see what is possible when you instead put the context and memory in the cloud, where an ambient assistant and its helper agents can get to work for you.

    I also might be wrong about the limitations. For example, Siri AI could manage memory in the same way that OpenClaw and Codex do, with on-device data that then syncs between platforms. In that world, memory could feel universal even if it is never stored in the cloud.

    Apple should continue to do what they are doing. OpenAI and Google should continue to do what they are doing. Every approach is a trade-off. Apple reasonably trades ubiquity for privacy. Each company following its own path is the best way to give users choice and discover what works in practice.

    → 11:06 AM, Jun 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • Congrats to the Iconfactory on 30 years! 🎉

    → 10:30 AM, Jun 9
    Also on Bluesky
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