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LLMs are stuck in a groupthink groove. This startup is trying to get them out.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Let’s start with a game. Open up your chatbot of choice—Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini—and type “Give me a random number between 1 and 10.” You’re going to get 7. Almost always. Now type “Another” and you’ll get 3 or 4. Type “Another” again and you’ll get 8 or 9. That won’t work every time—but if it did for you, you may wonder if I have superpowers. I don’t. The truth is that most large language models are stuck in a rut. They are far more predictable and far less creative in their responses than you might expect. That’s fine for tasks like coding or research, but groupthink is a problem when you’re brainstorming or planning your next vacation. The Australian startup Springboards has a solution. It built an LLM called Flint, which has been trained to come up with a wider variety of responses than mainstream LLMs to open-ended questions such as “Where should I go in Europe?”
“Most language models are fighting hallucinations,” says Springboards cofounder and CEO Pip Bingemann. “We welcome them.” Bingemann introduced me to the random number game when he first showed me his company’s new model. It felt like watching an illusionist with a deck of cards. “This is our sales trick, and it works every single time,” he says.
After ChatGPT and Claude both gave their 7s, Bingemann turned to Flint. It too came back with 7: “Aha, of course that was going to happen, but it’s okay—7 is a legitimate answer.” He restarted the session and prompted again: ChatGPT gave 7, Claude gave 7, Flint gave 3.7916. Run your way It’s not just numbers. When Bingemann asked ChatGPT and Claude to name a type of car, he predicted that it would be a Toyota or a Honda—and he was right. Flint came up with a Ford F-150. “There’s all this lost information that doesn’t get served up in these models,” he says. “They’re just as capable of saying a Buick or a Tesla. They just don’t—they’re biased.” Bingemann sent one last prompt to each of the three models: “Give me a tagline for a campaign for New Balance running shoes. Just the tagline.” Claude: “Run your way.” ChatGPT: “Run your way.” Flint: “Built to last, run to win.” It won’t win any awards, but at least it’s different. This weird limitation of LLMs is starting to get more attention. In November a team of researchers put out a paper, titled “Artificial Hivemind: The Open-Ended Homogeneity of Language Models (and Beyond),” that exposed a remarkable degree of repetition not only in the answers from individual LLMs but between them as well. They found that different LLMs converged on very similar answers when prompted with open-ended questions. It’s not clear exactly why this happens, but the researchers speculate it’s because most LLMs today are trained in similar ways on similar data to do similar tasks. The team won the best paper award at NeurIPS, a major AI conference. When the researchers asked 25 different LLMs (including models from the top US firms as well as open-source models from China and elsewhere) 50 times each to write a metaphor about time, most of the 1,250 responses were a version of “Time is a river” or “Time is a weaver.” (I asked some of my colleagues the same question and six people gave me six different answers. My highlight: “Time is a favorite sweatshirt, shaped by a lifetime of wear.”) When you look for it, you see repetition everywhere, says Kieran Browne, cofounder and CTO at Springboards. “The way that most chat interfaces are designed, it makes it feel like you’re having a personal conversation,” he says. “I think most people don’t really realize the extent to which they are getting the same stuff as everybody else.”

Take another example: “What should I name my band?” Most models will say something involving “glass,” “neon,” “velvet,” or “static,” says Browne.   When I tried it, ChatGPT spat out a list of 56 band names. At the top was “Glass Harbor.” Skimming through, I found “Static Empire,” “Neon Hearts,” and “Velvet Echo.” I asked Gemini; it gave me 15 suggestions, including “Static Horizon.” Some of the suggestions looked pretty cool, though. ChatGPT’s “Sofa Astronauts” caught my eye, so I googled it—and found that a band called Sofa Astronauts already exists.  (OpenAI says that training models to give reliable and coherent answers can lead them to converge around familiar, high-probability responses and that pushing harder for novelty can lead to weaker or less reliable responses. It also notes that the “Artificial Hivemind” paper studied models from 2024 that have since been updated.) Creative catapult Springboards has developed a tool backed by a selection of LLMs, including ChatGPT and Claude, that creative professionals in advertising or marketing can use to brainstorm ideas. The tool lets you drag around text produced by different models, picking the bits that you like and combining them into something new—in theory. Springboards is pitching Flint as an alternative model that users of its tool can select when looking for more variety. Zoe Scaman, founder of the business strategy startup Bodacious and chief strategy officer at 77X, a direct-to-fan marketing platform set up by Luka Dončić of the LA Lakers, has been trying it out. “I find it really useful for throwing me in completely different directions,” she says. “I use it if I want to catapult myself all over the place.” In one test, Scaman pitted Flint against Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT by giving each of the models a classic MBA case study: How would you reinvent a finance company for today’s youth? The three mainstream models all went down the same path, she says: “You know, we need to teach financial literacy in a fun and funky way—well, that’s nothing new.” But Flint came up with something different, suggesting that the whole concept of wealth accumulation should get a rebrand. “That was really interesting,” says Scaman.
She notes that Flint is still a prototype and doesn’t work all the time. “It sometimes falls over when you start pushing it too far,” she says. “But I think that the premise behind it is really powerful.” Taking the temperature Springboards built Flint on top of Qwen 3, an open-source model from the Chinese tech giant Alibaba. “We’re a small team,” says Browne. “Training a foundation model is not on the table for us. It’s just too expensive.”
Most LLMs have settings that let you adjust the level of randomness in their output. The most common is called temperature. “Obviously, that was one of the first things we explored, because that’s what people tell you: If you want more creativity, you turn up the temperature,” says Browne. But changing those settings can also make models incoherent. Dialing up the temperature on one of OpenAI’s models to its maximum setting made it produce responses that switched from English into code halfway through a sentence, says Browne. Springboards realized that parameters were blunt instruments for what it wanted to do. It does not make sense to dial up the randomness across the board; you only want to boost it at specific points in its output, he says. For example, when you ask a chatbot “Where should I go in Europe?” the model only needs to tweak the randomness just before it names a destination, not for every word in its response. To make Flint do this, Springboards trained its version of Qwen 3 to identify the points in its output where more variety was possible and fill those spots with words or phrases that were a little more random. “Flint’s programmed to throw an oddball in. It’s more of an invitation to think wider,” says Maximilian Weigl, cofounder and chief strategy officer at Uncommon, a marketing firm. “That’s super interesting.”
Weigl’s team uses Flint alongside ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. “You can’t really create something boundary-breaking with tools that pull you back to the average,” he says.  And yet Weigl notes that nine times out of 10 the average is fine. You don’t always need to reach for extremes with something like Flint, he says: “Most people are fine with good enough. They want to see mass-market familiar things.” Weigl also cautions against using any LLM too much. “I have a big problem when people rely on the output from any AI, including Flint,” he says. “If I saw people on my team copy-pasting something from AI, I’d be like, ‘That’s not your job! Think, talk to other people, use your own voice.’” For now, Flint is aimed at advertisers and marketers because those are Springboards’s customers. But Bingemann and Browne insist that a lack of variety is a problem for anyone using chatbots. The idea is to give people the choice and leave it to them to decide if the result is good or not, says Bingemann. “Variety is great when you’re trying to spark ideas,” he says. “Let’s go down this route instead of letting the machines do it all and ending up in a gray, boring world.”

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The Download: Anthropic launches Claude Science, and California’s carbon manure math

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Claude Science is Anthropic’s newest flagship product At an event for pharmaceutical executives, biotech founders, and researchers yesterday, Anthropic announced Claude Science, a major new product intended to support scientific research like Claude Code supports software engineering.Like Claude Code, Claude Science can autonomously carry out meaningful work from concise, high-level instructions, with tools for computational biology and drug development. The launch signals that Anthropic is doubling down on AI for science, and the company will also use the product in its own research into drugs for rare, neglected diseases.Discover why Anthropic is betting big on AI for scientific research. —Grace Huckins Why California’s carbon manure math doesn’t add up Something stinks in California’s climate policies. 
Years ago, the state set up a system that pays cattle farmers to turn the methane emitted from cattle manure into natural gas. It’s become wildly popular because the subsidies are extremely lucrative. But research suggests the program exposes the shortcomings of carbon offsetting and trading schemes. Instead of forcing industries to directly cut their pollution or pay for it as a cost of doing business, legislators have opted for incentives that swap climate responsibilities between parties and regions. The system could ultimately lock in more warming.
Read the full story on California’s dubious carbon calculations. —James Temple This story is from The Spark, our weekly climate tech newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday. Watch now: longevity’s next frontier—“reprogramming” your body Billions of dollars are pouring into efforts to reverse aging as scientists investigate ways to return cells to a younger state. But how close are these experimental treatments? And are they likely to work?  At a recent virtual Roundtables event, MIT Technology Review explored the answers with science editor Mary Beth Griggs and senior biotechnology reporter Jessica Hamzelou. Subscribers can now watch the full recording of the fascinating discussion. MIT Technology Review Narrated: the search for dark matter has been blown wide open For decades, physicists have hunted for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs), a leading candidate for dark matter. But their search has run into a new problem: neutrinos.  These tiny particles from the sun and other stars can create a “neutrino fog” that drowns out any signal of dark matter. Hitting the neutrino fog does not, however, mean an end to the search. Researchers just have to shift the focus of their hunt. They’re now casting a much wider net. New proposals include quantum sensors, liquid-helium detectors, and even searches in Jupiter’s atmosphere.

—Dan Garisto This is our latest story to be turned into an MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we publish each week on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Just navigate to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either platform, and follow us to get all our new content as it’s released. The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 The US has lifted restrictions on Anthropic’s Mythos and Fable modelsAnthropic said it would begin restoring access today. (NYT $)+ The US had imposed controls over security concerns. (Bloomberg $)+ It lifted the restrictions after lengthy talks with Anthropic. (BBC)+ But the crackdown has already opened doors for Chinese AI rivals. (CNBC)2 The most detailed survey of the universe ever is now underwayIt’s using the largest digital camera on Earth. (New Scientist $) + The project is based at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile. (NYT $)+ It aims to transform our view of the cosmos. (MIT Technology Review) 3 Tech talent is fleeing the US due to H1-B visa chaosThey’re eyeing relocation to Canada, the UK, or the Gulf. (Rest of World)+ While China is poaching AI talent from the US. (CNBC)+ Visa rules are also affecting young scientists. (MIT Technology Review) 4 Trump raked in more than $1 billion from crypto businesses in 2025He reported $635 million in royalties from a Trump meme coin. (BBC)+ The rest largely came from his World Liberty Financial venture. (The Hill) 5 The UN warns that the rapid spread of AI may worsen global inequalityIt’s proposed a shared framework for responsible AI development. (Guardian)6 Companies are making LLMs talk like a caveman to curb AI spendingA senior OpenAI employee contributed to the “caveman” project. (404 Media) 7 Babies are born with the neural foundations for mathBrain recordings have identified the mechanisms. (New Scientist $)8 An independent studio has bought the OpenAI movie Amazon droppedNeon has purchased “Artificial,” which focuses on Sam Altman. (NYT $)+ Amazon had dumped it after investing in OpenAI. (Gizmodo)+ The depiction of Altman is reportedly unsympathetic. (Variety)9 AI has re-created Gene Wilder’s voice for a new “Willy Wonka” seriesWilder’s wife said his estate is “delighted” with the new show. (NBC News)+ Netflix partnered with AI company ElevenLabs on the project. (The Verge)10 NASA aims to send a spare Mars rover—and soccer ball—to the moonThe nuclear-powered “Promise” may help establish a lunar base. (NYT $) Quote of the day “Caveman save you token, save you money.”  —The GitHub repository for the “caveman” plugin explains how the project curbs AI spending by turning verbose LLM outputs into concise text. One More Thing
SELMAN DESIGN AI is dreaming up drugs that no one has ever seen. Now we’ve got to see if they work. On average, it takes more than 10 years and billions of dollars to develop a new drug. A growing number of startups are betting that AI can make the process faster and cheaper.  By predicting how potential drugs might behave in the body and discarding dead-end compounds before they leave the computer, machine-learning models can cut down on the need for painstaking lab work. 
Yet it is still early days for AI drug discovery. A lot of AI companies are making claims they can’t back up—and the technology is not a panacea. But the technology is beginning to move from promise to practice. Find out how AI is speeding up drug discovery.

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Energy Secretary Secures Mid-Atlantic Grid Ahead of Period of Hot Weather

WASHINGTON—The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today issued two emergency orders to mitigate blackout risks in the Mid-Atlantic ahead of the region’s predicted record-breaking peak loads brought on by the forecasted hot weather conditions. The first order directs PJM Interconnection, LLC (PJM) to dispatch specified units and to order their operation as needed to maintain reliability. The second order authorizes PJM, in collaboration with its Transmission Owners and Electric Distribution Companies, to direct backup generation resources to operate as a last resort before declaring an Energy Emergency Alert (EEA) 3 or during an EEA 3. The orders were issued pursuant to applications from PJM submitted on June 27 and 29, 2026. “Maintaining affordable, reliable, and secure power in the PJM service territory is non-negotiable,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright. “The previous administration’s energy subtraction policies weakened the grid, leaving Americans more vulnerable during events like this. Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, we are reversing those failures and using every available tool ensuring Americans in the Mid-Atlantic have continued access to affordable, reliable, and secure energy to power and cool their homes.” DOE estimates more than 35 GW of unused backup generation remains available nationwide. On day one, President Trump declared a national energy emergency after the Biden administration’s energy subtraction agenda left behind a grid increasingly vulnerable to blackouts. According to the North American Electric Reliability Corporation’s (NERC) 2026 Summer Reliability Assessment, the peak electricity demand in PJM occurs during the summer season. It further notes that “if extreme high temperatures are experienced, PJM anticipates the need for demand-response resources to help reduce load.” Power outages cost the American people $44 billion per year, according to data from DOE’s National Laboratories. These orders will mitigate the possibility of power outages in the Mid-Atlantic and highlight the commonsense policies of the Trump Administration to ensure Americans have access to

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Emergence Water and Nimbus: Water Joins Power as AI Infrastructure’s Next Critical Constraint

For much of the past decade, the conversation surrounding AI infrastructure has been dominated by one resource above all others: power. Utilities have become strategic partners. Natural gas generation, small modular reactors, microgrids and behind-the-meter power have become central themes across virtually every major data center conference. Developers increasingly speak about securing megawatts years before they discuss servers. But another infrastructure constraint is quietly following the same trajectory: Water. According to executives from Emergence Water and Nimbus Advanced Process Cooling Systems, water is rapidly evolving beyond its traditional role as a sustainability metric and becoming one of the primary determinants of where AI campuses can be built, how they are cooled, and how efficiently they will operate over the coming decade. Speaking with Data Center Frontier Editor in Chief Matt Vincent on the latest DCF Show podcast, Emergence Water Chief Product Officer Leif Percifield and Nimbus Technical Director Vamsi Mokkapati described an industry where water has effectively joined power and fiber as foundational infrastructure for AI development. “From a community perspective, water is absolutely the number one priority about where and why a data center gets built,” Percifield said. “From the developer, it’s pretty binary. They either have water available to them—or they don’t.” Water Is Becoming a Site Selection Constraint The shift reflects the changing realities of AI infrastructure. Traditional enterprise data centers often viewed water primarily through sustainability reporting or Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) discussions. AI facilities operating at unprecedented rack densities have fundamentally altered that equation. Liquid cooling, hybrid cooling architectures and increasingly sophisticated thermal management strategies all place new emphasis on reliable long-term water availability. Equally important, communities are beginning to scrutinize water usage with the same intensity previously reserved for electrical demand. Percifield says those conversations are increasingly determining whether projects move forward at all.

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Q2 Executive Roundtable Recap

Matt Vincent is Editor in Chief of Data Center Frontier, where he leads editorial strategy and coverage focused on the infrastructure powering cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and the digital economy. A veteran B2B technology journalist with more than two decades of experience, Vincent specializes in the intersection of data centers, power, cooling, and emerging AI-era infrastructure. Since assuming the EIC role in 2023, he has helped guide Data Center Frontier’s coverage of the industry’s transition into the gigawatt-scale AI era, with a focus on hyperscale development, behind-the-meter power strategies, liquid cooling architectures, and the evolving energy demands of high-density compute, while working closely with the Digital Infrastructure Group at Endeavor Business Media to expand the brand’s analytical and multimedia footprint. Vincent also hosts The Data Center Frontier Show podcast, where he interviews industry leaders across hyperscale, colocation, utilities, and the data center supply chain to examine the technologies and business models reshaping digital infrastructure. Since its inception he serves as Head of Content for the Data Center Frontier Trends Summit. Before becoming Editor in Chief, he served in multiple senior editorial roles across Endeavor Business Media’s digital infrastructure portfolio, with coverage spanning data centers and hyperscale infrastructure, structured cabling and networking, telecom and datacom, IP physical security, and wireless and Pro AV markets. He began his career in 2005 within PennWell’s Advanced Technology Division and later held senior editorial positions supporting brands such as Cabling Installation & Maintenance, Lightwave Online, Broadband Technology Report, and Smart Buildings Technology. Vincent is a frequent moderator, interviewer, and keynote speaker at industry events including the HPC Forum, where he delivers forward-looking analysis on how AI and high-performance computing are reshaping digital infrastructure. He graduated with honors from Indiana University Bloomington with a B.A. in English Literature and Creative Writing and lives in southern New Hampshire with

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Executive Roundtable: Scaling Beyond the Prototype Phase

Steve Altizer, Compu Dynamics: The defining challenge is keeping pace with the rate of change in the IT environment. It takes time to design, permit, build, and commission a data center. AI hardware operates on a completely different timeline. New GPU families are being introduced every 12 to 18 months, and from one generation to the next, rack power densities can double or even triple. At prototype scale, you can design around a single cluster or a specific density profile. At production scale, that approach becomes a real liability. The facility has to support today’s deployment while remaining adaptable for the next compute profile. We are not just talking about adding more power. We are preparing for major architectural shifts, including the move toward DC power delivery or cooling systems that may rely on two-phase liquid to remove heat at scale. That is what becomes materially harder. You are no longer solving for a single, static deployment. You are solving for a moving target inside a live operating environment. This is where strategic modularity proves its value. It helps decouple the lifecycle of the building from the lifecycle of the IT hardware. Instead of treating the data center as one monolithic design, modularity creates a more agile framework that can absorb new power and cooling architectures without requiring a full facility retrofit every time the IT roadmap shifts. At Compu Dynamics Modular, we are seeing this play out in real time. The value of a turnkey modular approach is not simply speed. It is the agility owners need to keep pace with ever-evolving rack densities, power delivery requirements, and cooling architectures.

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LLMs are stuck in a groupthink groove. This startup is trying to get them out.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Let’s start with a game. Open up your chatbot of choice—Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini—and type “Give me a random number between 1 and 10.” You’re going to get 7. Almost always. Now type “Another” and you’ll get 3 or 4. Type “Another” again and you’ll get 8 or 9. That won’t work every time—but if it did for you, you may wonder if I have superpowers. I don’t. The truth is that most large language models are stuck in a rut. They are far more predictable and far less creative in their responses than you might expect. That’s fine for tasks like coding or research, but groupthink is a problem when you’re brainstorming or planning your next vacation. The Australian startup Springboards has a solution. It built an LLM called Flint, which has been trained to come up with a wider variety of responses than mainstream LLMs to open-ended questions such as “Where should I go in Europe?”
“Most language models are fighting hallucinations,” says Springboards cofounder and CEO Pip Bingemann. “We welcome them.” Bingemann introduced me to the random number game when he first showed me his company’s new model. It felt like watching an illusionist with a deck of cards. “This is our sales trick, and it works every single time,” he says.
After ChatGPT and Claude both gave their 7s, Bingemann turned to Flint. It too came back with 7: “Aha, of course that was going to happen, but it’s okay—7 is a legitimate answer.” He restarted the session and prompted again: ChatGPT gave 7, Claude gave 7, Flint gave 3.7916. Run your way It’s not just numbers. When Bingemann asked ChatGPT and Claude to name a type of car, he predicted that it would be a Toyota or a Honda—and he was right. Flint came up with a Ford F-150. “There’s all this lost information that doesn’t get served up in these models,” he says. “They’re just as capable of saying a Buick or a Tesla. They just don’t—they’re biased.” Bingemann sent one last prompt to each of the three models: “Give me a tagline for a campaign for New Balance running shoes. Just the tagline.” Claude: “Run your way.” ChatGPT: “Run your way.” Flint: “Built to last, run to win.” It won’t win any awards, but at least it’s different. This weird limitation of LLMs is starting to get more attention. In November a team of researchers put out a paper, titled “Artificial Hivemind: The Open-Ended Homogeneity of Language Models (and Beyond),” that exposed a remarkable degree of repetition not only in the answers from individual LLMs but between them as well. They found that different LLMs converged on very similar answers when prompted with open-ended questions. It’s not clear exactly why this happens, but the researchers speculate it’s because most LLMs today are trained in similar ways on similar data to do similar tasks. The team won the best paper award at NeurIPS, a major AI conference. When the researchers asked 25 different LLMs (including models from the top US firms as well as open-source models from China and elsewhere) 50 times each to write a metaphor about time, most of the 1,250 responses were a version of “Time is a river” or “Time is a weaver.” (I asked some of my colleagues the same question and six people gave me six different answers. My highlight: “Time is a favorite sweatshirt, shaped by a lifetime of wear.”) When you look for it, you see repetition everywhere, says Kieran Browne, cofounder and CTO at Springboards. “The way that most chat interfaces are designed, it makes it feel like you’re having a personal conversation,” he says. “I think most people don’t really realize the extent to which they are getting the same stuff as everybody else.”

Take another example: “What should I name my band?” Most models will say something involving “glass,” “neon,” “velvet,” or “static,” says Browne.   When I tried it, ChatGPT spat out a list of 56 band names. At the top was “Glass Harbor.” Skimming through, I found “Static Empire,” “Neon Hearts,” and “Velvet Echo.” I asked Gemini; it gave me 15 suggestions, including “Static Horizon.” Some of the suggestions looked pretty cool, though. ChatGPT’s “Sofa Astronauts” caught my eye, so I googled it—and found that a band called Sofa Astronauts already exists.  (OpenAI says that training models to give reliable and coherent answers can lead them to converge around familiar, high-probability responses and that pushing harder for novelty can lead to weaker or less reliable responses. It also notes that the “Artificial Hivemind” paper studied models from 2024 that have since been updated.) Creative catapult Springboards has developed a tool backed by a selection of LLMs, including ChatGPT and Claude, that creative professionals in advertising or marketing can use to brainstorm ideas. The tool lets you drag around text produced by different models, picking the bits that you like and combining them into something new—in theory. Springboards is pitching Flint as an alternative model that users of its tool can select when looking for more variety. Zoe Scaman, founder of the business strategy startup Bodacious and chief strategy officer at 77X, a direct-to-fan marketing platform set up by Luka Dončić of the LA Lakers, has been trying it out. “I find it really useful for throwing me in completely different directions,” she says. “I use it if I want to catapult myself all over the place.” In one test, Scaman pitted Flint against Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT by giving each of the models a classic MBA case study: How would you reinvent a finance company for today’s youth? The three mainstream models all went down the same path, she says: “You know, we need to teach financial literacy in a fun and funky way—well, that’s nothing new.” But Flint came up with something different, suggesting that the whole concept of wealth accumulation should get a rebrand. “That was really interesting,” says Scaman.
She notes that Flint is still a prototype and doesn’t work all the time. “It sometimes falls over when you start pushing it too far,” she says. “But I think that the premise behind it is really powerful.” Taking the temperature Springboards built Flint on top of Qwen 3, an open-source model from the Chinese tech giant Alibaba. “We’re a small team,” says Browne. “Training a foundation model is not on the table for us. It’s just too expensive.”
Most LLMs have settings that let you adjust the level of randomness in their output. The most common is called temperature. “Obviously, that was one of the first things we explored, because that’s what people tell you: If you want more creativity, you turn up the temperature,” says Browne. But changing those settings can also make models incoherent. Dialing up the temperature on one of OpenAI’s models to its maximum setting made it produce responses that switched from English into code halfway through a sentence, says Browne. Springboards realized that parameters were blunt instruments for what it wanted to do. It does not make sense to dial up the randomness across the board; you only want to boost it at specific points in its output, he says. For example, when you ask a chatbot “Where should I go in Europe?” the model only needs to tweak the randomness just before it names a destination, not for every word in its response. To make Flint do this, Springboards trained its version of Qwen 3 to identify the points in its output where more variety was possible and fill those spots with words or phrases that were a little more random. “Flint’s programmed to throw an oddball in. It’s more of an invitation to think wider,” says Maximilian Weigl, cofounder and chief strategy officer at Uncommon, a marketing firm. “That’s super interesting.”
Weigl’s team uses Flint alongside ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. “You can’t really create something boundary-breaking with tools that pull you back to the average,” he says.  And yet Weigl notes that nine times out of 10 the average is fine. You don’t always need to reach for extremes with something like Flint, he says: “Most people are fine with good enough. They want to see mass-market familiar things.” Weigl also cautions against using any LLM too much. “I have a big problem when people rely on the output from any AI, including Flint,” he says. “If I saw people on my team copy-pasting something from AI, I’d be like, ‘That’s not your job! Think, talk to other people, use your own voice.’” For now, Flint is aimed at advertisers and marketers because those are Springboards’s customers. But Bingemann and Browne insist that a lack of variety is a problem for anyone using chatbots. The idea is to give people the choice and leave it to them to decide if the result is good or not, says Bingemann. “Variety is great when you’re trying to spark ideas,” he says. “Let’s go down this route instead of letting the machines do it all and ending up in a gray, boring world.”

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The Download: Anthropic launches Claude Science, and California’s carbon manure math

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Claude Science is Anthropic’s newest flagship product At an event for pharmaceutical executives, biotech founders, and researchers yesterday, Anthropic announced Claude Science, a major new product intended to support scientific research like Claude Code supports software engineering.Like Claude Code, Claude Science can autonomously carry out meaningful work from concise, high-level instructions, with tools for computational biology and drug development. The launch signals that Anthropic is doubling down on AI for science, and the company will also use the product in its own research into drugs for rare, neglected diseases.Discover why Anthropic is betting big on AI for scientific research. —Grace Huckins Why California’s carbon manure math doesn’t add up Something stinks in California’s climate policies. 
Years ago, the state set up a system that pays cattle farmers to turn the methane emitted from cattle manure into natural gas. It’s become wildly popular because the subsidies are extremely lucrative. But research suggests the program exposes the shortcomings of carbon offsetting and trading schemes. Instead of forcing industries to directly cut their pollution or pay for it as a cost of doing business, legislators have opted for incentives that swap climate responsibilities between parties and regions. The system could ultimately lock in more warming.
Read the full story on California’s dubious carbon calculations. —James Temple This story is from The Spark, our weekly climate tech newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday. Watch now: longevity’s next frontier—“reprogramming” your body Billions of dollars are pouring into efforts to reverse aging as scientists investigate ways to return cells to a younger state. But how close are these experimental treatments? And are they likely to work?  At a recent virtual Roundtables event, MIT Technology Review explored the answers with science editor Mary Beth Griggs and senior biotechnology reporter Jessica Hamzelou. Subscribers can now watch the full recording of the fascinating discussion. MIT Technology Review Narrated: the search for dark matter has been blown wide open For decades, physicists have hunted for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs), a leading candidate for dark matter. But their search has run into a new problem: neutrinos.  These tiny particles from the sun and other stars can create a “neutrino fog” that drowns out any signal of dark matter. Hitting the neutrino fog does not, however, mean an end to the search. Researchers just have to shift the focus of their hunt. They’re now casting a much wider net. New proposals include quantum sensors, liquid-helium detectors, and even searches in Jupiter’s atmosphere.

—Dan Garisto This is our latest story to be turned into an MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we publish each week on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Just navigate to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either platform, and follow us to get all our new content as it’s released. The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 The US has lifted restrictions on Anthropic’s Mythos and Fable modelsAnthropic said it would begin restoring access today. (NYT $)+ The US had imposed controls over security concerns. (Bloomberg $)+ It lifted the restrictions after lengthy talks with Anthropic. (BBC)+ But the crackdown has already opened doors for Chinese AI rivals. (CNBC)2 The most detailed survey of the universe ever is now underwayIt’s using the largest digital camera on Earth. (New Scientist $) + The project is based at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile. (NYT $)+ It aims to transform our view of the cosmos. (MIT Technology Review) 3 Tech talent is fleeing the US due to H1-B visa chaosThey’re eyeing relocation to Canada, the UK, or the Gulf. (Rest of World)+ While China is poaching AI talent from the US. (CNBC)+ Visa rules are also affecting young scientists. (MIT Technology Review) 4 Trump raked in more than $1 billion from crypto businesses in 2025He reported $635 million in royalties from a Trump meme coin. (BBC)+ The rest largely came from his World Liberty Financial venture. (The Hill) 5 The UN warns that the rapid spread of AI may worsen global inequalityIt’s proposed a shared framework for responsible AI development. (Guardian)6 Companies are making LLMs talk like a caveman to curb AI spendingA senior OpenAI employee contributed to the “caveman” project. (404 Media) 7 Babies are born with the neural foundations for mathBrain recordings have identified the mechanisms. (New Scientist $)8 An independent studio has bought the OpenAI movie Amazon droppedNeon has purchased “Artificial,” which focuses on Sam Altman. (NYT $)+ Amazon had dumped it after investing in OpenAI. (Gizmodo)+ The depiction of Altman is reportedly unsympathetic. (Variety)9 AI has re-created Gene Wilder’s voice for a new “Willy Wonka” seriesWilder’s wife said his estate is “delighted” with the new show. (NBC News)+ Netflix partnered with AI company ElevenLabs on the project. (The Verge)10 NASA aims to send a spare Mars rover—and soccer ball—to the moonThe nuclear-powered “Promise” may help establish a lunar base. (NYT $) Quote of the day “Caveman save you token, save you money.”  —The GitHub repository for the “caveman” plugin explains how the project curbs AI spending by turning verbose LLM outputs into concise text. One More Thing
SELMAN DESIGN AI is dreaming up drugs that no one has ever seen. Now we’ve got to see if they work. On average, it takes more than 10 years and billions of dollars to develop a new drug. A growing number of startups are betting that AI can make the process faster and cheaper.  By predicting how potential drugs might behave in the body and discarding dead-end compounds before they leave the computer, machine-learning models can cut down on the need for painstaking lab work. 
Yet it is still early days for AI drug discovery. A lot of AI companies are making claims they can’t back up—and the technology is not a panacea. But the technology is beginning to move from promise to practice. Find out how AI is speeding up drug discovery.

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Energy Secretary Secures Mid-Atlantic Grid Ahead of Period of Hot Weather

WASHINGTON—The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today issued two emergency orders to mitigate blackout risks in the Mid-Atlantic ahead of the region’s predicted record-breaking peak loads brought on by the forecasted hot weather conditions. The first order directs PJM Interconnection, LLC (PJM) to dispatch specified units and to order their operation as needed to maintain reliability. The second order authorizes PJM, in collaboration with its Transmission Owners and Electric Distribution Companies, to direct backup generation resources to operate as a last resort before declaring an Energy Emergency Alert (EEA) 3 or during an EEA 3. The orders were issued pursuant to applications from PJM submitted on June 27 and 29, 2026. “Maintaining affordable, reliable, and secure power in the PJM service territory is non-negotiable,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright. “The previous administration’s energy subtraction policies weakened the grid, leaving Americans more vulnerable during events like this. Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, we are reversing those failures and using every available tool ensuring Americans in the Mid-Atlantic have continued access to affordable, reliable, and secure energy to power and cool their homes.” DOE estimates more than 35 GW of unused backup generation remains available nationwide. On day one, President Trump declared a national energy emergency after the Biden administration’s energy subtraction agenda left behind a grid increasingly vulnerable to blackouts. According to the North American Electric Reliability Corporation’s (NERC) 2026 Summer Reliability Assessment, the peak electricity demand in PJM occurs during the summer season. It further notes that “if extreme high temperatures are experienced, PJM anticipates the need for demand-response resources to help reduce load.” Power outages cost the American people $44 billion per year, according to data from DOE’s National Laboratories. These orders will mitigate the possibility of power outages in the Mid-Atlantic and highlight the commonsense policies of the Trump Administration to ensure Americans have access to

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Emergence Water and Nimbus: Water Joins Power as AI Infrastructure’s Next Critical Constraint

For much of the past decade, the conversation surrounding AI infrastructure has been dominated by one resource above all others: power. Utilities have become strategic partners. Natural gas generation, small modular reactors, microgrids and behind-the-meter power have become central themes across virtually every major data center conference. Developers increasingly speak about securing megawatts years before they discuss servers. But another infrastructure constraint is quietly following the same trajectory: Water. According to executives from Emergence Water and Nimbus Advanced Process Cooling Systems, water is rapidly evolving beyond its traditional role as a sustainability metric and becoming one of the primary determinants of where AI campuses can be built, how they are cooled, and how efficiently they will operate over the coming decade. Speaking with Data Center Frontier Editor in Chief Matt Vincent on the latest DCF Show podcast, Emergence Water Chief Product Officer Leif Percifield and Nimbus Technical Director Vamsi Mokkapati described an industry where water has effectively joined power and fiber as foundational infrastructure for AI development. “From a community perspective, water is absolutely the number one priority about where and why a data center gets built,” Percifield said. “From the developer, it’s pretty binary. They either have water available to them—or they don’t.” Water Is Becoming a Site Selection Constraint The shift reflects the changing realities of AI infrastructure. Traditional enterprise data centers often viewed water primarily through sustainability reporting or Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) discussions. AI facilities operating at unprecedented rack densities have fundamentally altered that equation. Liquid cooling, hybrid cooling architectures and increasingly sophisticated thermal management strategies all place new emphasis on reliable long-term water availability. Equally important, communities are beginning to scrutinize water usage with the same intensity previously reserved for electrical demand. Percifield says those conversations are increasingly determining whether projects move forward at all.

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Q2 Executive Roundtable Recap

Matt Vincent is Editor in Chief of Data Center Frontier, where he leads editorial strategy and coverage focused on the infrastructure powering cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and the digital economy. A veteran B2B technology journalist with more than two decades of experience, Vincent specializes in the intersection of data centers, power, cooling, and emerging AI-era infrastructure. Since assuming the EIC role in 2023, he has helped guide Data Center Frontier’s coverage of the industry’s transition into the gigawatt-scale AI era, with a focus on hyperscale development, behind-the-meter power strategies, liquid cooling architectures, and the evolving energy demands of high-density compute, while working closely with the Digital Infrastructure Group at Endeavor Business Media to expand the brand’s analytical and multimedia footprint. Vincent also hosts The Data Center Frontier Show podcast, where he interviews industry leaders across hyperscale, colocation, utilities, and the data center supply chain to examine the technologies and business models reshaping digital infrastructure. Since its inception he serves as Head of Content for the Data Center Frontier Trends Summit. Before becoming Editor in Chief, he served in multiple senior editorial roles across Endeavor Business Media’s digital infrastructure portfolio, with coverage spanning data centers and hyperscale infrastructure, structured cabling and networking, telecom and datacom, IP physical security, and wireless and Pro AV markets. He began his career in 2005 within PennWell’s Advanced Technology Division and later held senior editorial positions supporting brands such as Cabling Installation & Maintenance, Lightwave Online, Broadband Technology Report, and Smart Buildings Technology. Vincent is a frequent moderator, interviewer, and keynote speaker at industry events including the HPC Forum, where he delivers forward-looking analysis on how AI and high-performance computing are reshaping digital infrastructure. He graduated with honors from Indiana University Bloomington with a B.A. in English Literature and Creative Writing and lives in southern New Hampshire with

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Executive Roundtable: Scaling Beyond the Prototype Phase

Steve Altizer, Compu Dynamics: The defining challenge is keeping pace with the rate of change in the IT environment. It takes time to design, permit, build, and commission a data center. AI hardware operates on a completely different timeline. New GPU families are being introduced every 12 to 18 months, and from one generation to the next, rack power densities can double or even triple. At prototype scale, you can design around a single cluster or a specific density profile. At production scale, that approach becomes a real liability. The facility has to support today’s deployment while remaining adaptable for the next compute profile. We are not just talking about adding more power. We are preparing for major architectural shifts, including the move toward DC power delivery or cooling systems that may rely on two-phase liquid to remove heat at scale. That is what becomes materially harder. You are no longer solving for a single, static deployment. You are solving for a moving target inside a live operating environment. This is where strategic modularity proves its value. It helps decouple the lifecycle of the building from the lifecycle of the IT hardware. Instead of treating the data center as one monolithic design, modularity creates a more agile framework that can absorb new power and cooling architectures without requiring a full facility retrofit every time the IT roadmap shifts. At Compu Dynamics Modular, we are seeing this play out in real time. The value of a turnkey modular approach is not simply speed. It is the agility owners need to keep pace with ever-evolving rack densities, power delivery requirements, and cooling architectures.

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Department of Energy Announces American Nuclear Supply Chain Loans

WASHINGTON—The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Energy Dominance Financing (EDF) issued a conditional loan commitment to finance the purchase of long-lead time items needed to rebuild America’s commercial nuclear supply chain. The $17.5 billion American Nuclear Supply Chain Loans will help finance five eligible projects sponsored by utilities and energy companies nationwide to accelerate the deployment of 10 large-scale commercial nuclear reactors across the United States by up to three years. The project marks a major step toward advancing President Trump’s Executive Order, Reinvigorating the Nuclear Industrial Base, by supporting the objective of having 10 new large nuclear reactors with complete designs under construction by 2030. “Just over one year ago, President Trump directed the Energy Department and its agency partners to unleash the next American nuclear renaissance,” U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said. “To accomplish that mission, these conditional loans will play an important role in reviving the supply chain needed for America to once again build large-scale commercial reactors. They will also help accelerate the timeline of building those large-scale reactors by up to three years, lowering construction costs and ensuring the United States is able to deliver on President Trump’s bold and ambitious energy addition agenda.” Westinghouse’s AP1000® units are the only licensed large-scale advanced commercial reactors operating in the United States today. Long-lead items are complex components of a nuclear power plant that require the longest time for manufacturing and delivery.   EDF financing will support up to five loans, each loan supporting two reactors at a project site. Westinghouse will partner with up to five eligible utilities and energy companies nationwide to procure the long-lead items at a fixed price. Each project will be jointly owned by Westinghouse and a utility or energy company partner. Both Westinghouse and the partner are required to

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FPSO ready for Santos-led Barossa LNG project

BW Offshore completed the Interim Performance Test (IPT) for the BW Opal floating production, storage, and offloading vessel (FPSO) as part of the commissioning program for the Santos Ltd.-operated Barossa LNG project about 285 km offshore from Darwin in the Northern Territory of Australia. The milestone is part of early-stage technical testing and adjustments following  first gas from the FPSO in September and the beginning of flow from subsea wells. BW Offshore confirmed that key production, processing, and utility systems on the FPSO were operating in an integrated manner and capable of delivering stable performance under production conditions. Following the restart of production in early May, BW Opal has continued gas production and export. Production is being managed in close coordination with Santos during this phase of the ramp-up and commissioning program. BW Opal contains a 358-m hull and accommodation for up to 140 personnel. It has gas handling capacity of 850 MMscfd and condensate handling capacity of 11,000 b/d. The FPSO will feed the Darwin LNG plant for the next two decades. The Barossa LNG project consists of the FPSO, a subsea production system, supporting in-field subsea infrastructure, a gas export pipeline, and a Darwin pipeline duplication. Up to eight subsea wells are planned (six wells from three drill centers) with contingency plans for an additional two wells. Gas and condensate is gathered from the wells through the subsea production system and then brought to the FPSO via a network of subsea infrastructure. Santos operates the Barossa LNG project (50%) with joint venture partners PRISM Energy International Australia Pty Ltd. (37.5%) and JERA Australia (12.5%).

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Equinor mulls additional Johan Sverdrup development phase

Equinor Energy AS is considering further development of the Johan Sverdrup area resources in the North Sea. Production from discoveries in Tonjer west and east and Geitungen would form the basis for the maturation of a potential phase 4 development in the northern part of the field. The volumes would be developed via subsea tieback to existing Johan Sverdrup infrastructure. Tonjer lies in the northernmost part of the Geitungen terrace in the Johan Sverdrup area. Oil was discovered in the area, but volumes and potential have been uncertain. The drilling of two appraisal wells and a sidetrack have provided a more precise assessment of the resource base.  Preliminary estimates for Tonjer and Geitungen combined are 20-30 MMboe. Further analyses of subsurface data will form the basis for more precise resource estimates. Phase 4 is now being matured towards an investment decision with a possible production start-up in 2029. Johan Sverdrup Johan Sverdrup, which accounts for about one third of Norwegian oil production, lies on the Utsira High (Utsirahøyden) in the central part of the North Sea, 65 km northeast of Sleipner field in water depths of 115 m. The main reservoir contains oil in Upper Jurassic intra-Draupne sandstone. The reservoir depth is 1,900 m. The quality of the main reservoir is excellent with very high permeability. The remaining oil resources are in sandstone in the Upper Triassic Statfjord Group and Middle to Upper Jurassic Vestland Group, as well as in spiculites in the Upper Jurassic Viking Group. Oil was also proven in Permian Zechstein carbonates. Equinor is operator of Johan Sverdrup (42.62%) with partners Aker BP (31.57%), Petoro (17.36%), and TotalEnergies (8.44%).

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Beacon advances deepwater Gulf developments with Monument, Zephyrus field work

Beacon Offshore Energy LLC is advancing two deepwater Gulf of Mexico developments, having drilled the first development well at Monument field and brought a second production well online at Zephyrus field. At Monument in Walker Ridge Block 315, the first development well reached a total depth of 32,250 ft and encountered 245 ft of net pay (true vertical thickness) in Lower Wilcox reservoirs, confirming pre-drill expectations for reservoir quality, the operator said. Beacon will continue drilling a second development well before completing the initial two-well program. First oil from the Wilcox development is expected before yearend 2026. Monument is being developed through a two-well, 17-mile subsea tieback to the Beacon-operated Shenandoah floating production system, which was designed as a regional host platform for developments in the northwestern Walker Ridge area, including Shenandoah, Monument, and Shenandoah South fields. Partners are Navitas Petroleum and Talos Energy Inc. At Zephyrus in Mississippi Canyon Block 759, production from the Zephyrus #2 well began in late April after the well was completed in first-quarter 2026. The well is producing from Miocene sands.  Combined with Zephyrus #1, which started production in late 2025, the field is expected to reach peak production of more than 20,000 boe/d. The Zephyrus development is tied back to the Shell plc-operated West Boreas subsea infrastructure, with production processed on the Olympus tension-leg platform in the Mars corridor. Partners are Houston Energy, HEQ II, Red Willow Offshore, Westlawn Americas Offshore, and Murphy Exploration & Production.

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Greece approves Chevron’s farm-in for offshore Block 10

Greece approved Chevron Corp.’s farm-in to offshore Block 10, clearing the way for the US major to complete its acquisition of a 70% interest and operatorship from HELLENiQ Energy. Greece’s Ministry of Environment and Energy and the Hellenic Hydrocarbon and Energy Resources Management Co. (HHRE) said June 15 that all administrative approvals have been completed for the transfer of the interest and operatorship. Chevron and HELLENiQ submitted the request for approval May 28. The companies also requested a 15-month extension of the second exploration phase for the block, which lies offshore the Kyparissia Gulf in the southern Ionian Sea. Following completion of the transfer, Chevron will hold a 70% interest and serve as operator, while HELLENiQ will retain the remaining 30%. Geological, geophysical, and environmental studies have been completed on the concession, including acquisition of 1,210 km of 2D seismic data in 2022 followed by 2,416 sq km of 3D seismic covering 88% of the block. The partners will use the seismic data to evaluate potential drilling targets before deciding whether to proceed to a third exploration phase, which includes an exploratory well. Chevron and HELLENiQ are already partners in four offshore concessions south of Crete and the Peloponnese, making Block 10 their fifth joint offshore license in Greece. Chevron said the agreement advances its strategy of expanding its exploration portfolio in the Eastern Mediterranean. Greek officials said the investment reflects confidence in the country’s offshore licensing framework and supports its long-term goal of strengthening Greece’s role in regional energy supply if exploration proves successful.

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Comstock farms out minority interest in midstream subsidiary for $600 million

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West of Orkney developers helped support 24 charities last year

The developers of the 2GW West of Orkney wind farm paid out a total of £18,000 to 24 organisations from its small donations fund in 2024. The money went to projects across Caithness, Sutherland and Orkney, including a mental health initiative in Thurso and a scheme by Dunnet Community Forest to improve the quality of meadows through the use of traditional scythes. Established in 2022, the fund offers up to £1,000 per project towards programmes in the far north. In addition to the small donations fund, the West of Orkney developers intend to follow other wind farms by establishing a community benefit fund once the project is operational. West of Orkney wind farm project director Stuart McAuley said: “Our donations programme is just one small way in which we can support some of the many valuable initiatives in Caithness, Sutherland and Orkney. “In every case we have been immensely impressed by the passion and professionalism each organisation brings, whether their focus is on sport, the arts, social care, education or the environment, and we hope the funds we provide help them achieve their goals.” In addition to the local donations scheme, the wind farm developers have helped fund a £1 million research and development programme led by EMEC in Orkney and a £1.2m education initiative led by UHI. It also provided £50,000 to support the FutureSkills apprenticeship programme in Caithness, with funds going to employment and training costs to help tackle skill shortages in the North of Scotland. The West of Orkney wind farm is being developed by Corio Generation, TotalEnergies and Renewable Infrastructure Development Group (RIDG). The project is among the leaders of the ScotWind cohort, having been the first to submit its offshore consent documents in late 2023. In addition, the project’s onshore plans were approved by the

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Biden bans US offshore oil and gas drilling ahead of Trump’s return

US President Joe Biden has announced a ban on offshore oil and gas drilling across vast swathes of the country’s coastal waters. The decision comes just weeks before his successor Donald Trump, who has vowed to increase US fossil fuel production, takes office. The drilling ban will affect 625 million acres of federal waters across America’s eastern and western coasts, the eastern Gulf of Mexico and Alaska’s Northern Bering Sea. The decision does not affect the western Gulf of Mexico, where much of American offshore oil and gas production occurs and is set to continue. In a statement, President Biden said he is taking action to protect the regions “from oil and natural gas drilling and the harm it can cause”. “My decision reflects what coastal communities, businesses, and beachgoers have known for a long time: that drilling off these coasts could cause irreversible damage to places we hold dear and is unnecessary to meet our nation’s energy needs,” Biden said. “It is not worth the risks. “As the climate crisis continues to threaten communities across the country and we are transitioning to a clean energy economy, now is the time to protect these coasts for our children and grandchildren.” Offshore drilling ban The White House said Biden used his authority under the 1953 Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, which allows presidents to withdraw areas from mineral leasing and drilling. However, the law does not give a president the right to unilaterally reverse a drilling ban without congressional approval. This means that Trump, who pledged to “unleash” US fossil fuel production during his re-election campaign, could find it difficult to overturn the ban after taking office. Sunset shot of the Shell Olympus platform in the foreground and the Shell Mars platform in the background in the Gulf of Mexico Trump

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The Download: our 10 Breakthrough Technologies for 2025

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Introducing: MIT Technology Review’s 10 Breakthrough Technologies for 2025 Each year, we spend months researching and discussing which technologies will make the cut for our 10 Breakthrough Technologies list. We try to highlight a mix of items that reflect innovations happening in various fields. We look at consumer technologies, large industrial­-scale projects, biomedical advances, changes in computing, climate solutions, the latest in AI, and more.We’ve been publishing this list every year since 2001 and, frankly, have a great track record of flagging things that are poised to hit a tipping point. It’s hard to think of another industry that has as much of a hype machine behind it as tech does, so the real secret of the TR10 is really what we choose to leave off the list.Check out the full list of our 10 Breakthrough Technologies for 2025, which is front and center in our latest print issue. It’s all about the exciting innovations happening in the world right now, and includes some fascinating stories, such as: + How digital twins of human organs are set to transform medical treatment and shake up how we trial new drugs.+ What will it take for us to fully trust robots? The answer is a complicated one.+ Wind is an underutilized resource that has the potential to steer the notoriously dirty shipping industry toward a greener future. Read the full story.+ After decades of frustration, machine-learning tools are helping ecologists to unlock a treasure trove of acoustic bird data—and to shed much-needed light on their migration habits. Read the full story. 
+ How poop could help feed the planet—yes, really. Read the full story.
Roundtables: Unveiling the 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2025 Last week, Amy Nordrum, our executive editor, joined our news editor Charlotte Jee to unveil our 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2025 in an exclusive Roundtable discussion. Subscribers can watch their conversation back here. And, if you’re interested in previous discussions about topics ranging from mixed reality tech to gene editing to AI’s climate impact, check out some of the highlights from the past year’s events. This international surveillance project aims to protect wheat from deadly diseases For as long as there’s been domesticated wheat (about 8,000 years), there has been harvest-devastating rust. Breeding efforts in the mid-20th century led to rust-resistant wheat strains that boosted crop yields, and rust epidemics receded in much of the world.But now, after decades, rusts are considered a reemerging disease in Europe, at least partly due to climate change.  An international initiative hopes to turn the tide by scaling up a system to track wheat diseases and forecast potential outbreaks to governments and farmers in close to real time. And by doing so, they hope to protect a crop that supplies about one-fifth of the world’s calories. Read the full story. —Shaoni Bhattacharya

The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Meta has taken down its creepy AI profiles Following a big backlash from unhappy users. (NBC News)+ Many of the profiles were likely to have been live from as far back as 2023. (404 Media)+ It also appears they were never very popular in the first place. (The Verge) 2 Uber and Lyft are racing to catch up with their robotaxi rivalsAfter abandoning their own self-driving projects years ago. (WSJ $)+ China’s Pony.ai is gearing up to expand to Hong Kong.  (Reuters)3 Elon Musk is going after NASA He’s largely veered away from criticising the space agency publicly—until now. (Wired $)+ SpaceX’s Starship rocket has a legion of scientist fans. (The Guardian)+ What’s next for NASA’s giant moon rocket? (MIT Technology Review) 4 How Sam Altman actually runs OpenAIFeaturing three-hour meetings and a whole lot of Slack messages. (Bloomberg $)+ ChatGPT Pro is a pricey loss-maker, apparently. (MIT Technology Review) 5 The dangerous allure of TikTokMigrants’ online portrayal of their experiences in America aren’t always reflective of their realities. (New Yorker $) 6 Demand for electricity is skyrocketingAnd AI is only a part of it. (Economist $)+ AI’s search for more energy is growing more urgent. (MIT Technology Review) 7 The messy ethics of writing religious sermons using AISkeptics aren’t convinced the technology should be used to channel spirituality. (NYT $)
8 How a wildlife app became an invaluable wildfire trackerWatch Duty has become a safeguarding sensation across the US west. (The Guardian)+ How AI can help spot wildfires. (MIT Technology Review) 9 Computer scientists just love oracles 🔮 Hypothetical devices are a surprisingly important part of computing. (Quanta Magazine)
10 Pet tech is booming 🐾But not all gadgets are made equal. (FT $)+ These scientists are working to extend the lifespan of pet dogs—and their owners. (MIT Technology Review) Quote of the day “The next kind of wave of this is like, well, what is AI doing for me right now other than telling me that I have AI?” —Anshel Sag, principal analyst at Moor Insights and Strategy, tells Wired a lot of companies’ AI claims are overblown.
The big story Broadband funding for Native communities could finally connect some of America’s most isolated places September 2022 Rural and Native communities in the US have long had lower rates of cellular and broadband connectivity than urban areas, where four out of every five Americans live. Outside the cities and suburbs, which occupy barely 3% of US land, reliable internet service can still be hard to come by.
The covid-19 pandemic underscored the problem as Native communities locked down and moved school and other essential daily activities online. But it also kicked off an unprecedented surge of relief funding to solve it. Read the full story. —Robert Chaney We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.) + Rollerskating Spice Girls is exactly what your Monday morning needs.+ It’s not just you, some people really do look like their dogs!+ I’m not sure if this is actually the world’s healthiest meal, but it sure looks tasty.+ Ah, the old “bitten by a rabid fox chestnut.”

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Equinor Secures $3 Billion Financing for US Offshore Wind Project

Equinor ASA has announced a final investment decision on Empire Wind 1 and financial close for $3 billion in debt financing for the under-construction project offshore Long Island, expected to power 500,000 New York homes. The Norwegian majority state-owned energy major said in a statement it intends to farm down ownership “to further enhance value and reduce exposure”. Equinor has taken full ownership of Empire Wind 1 and 2 since last year, in a swap transaction with 50 percent co-venturer BP PLC that allowed the former to exit the Beacon Wind lease, also a 50-50 venture between the two. Equinor has yet to complete a portion of the transaction under which it would also acquire BP’s 50 percent share in the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal lease, according to the latest transaction update on Equinor’s website. The lease involves a terminal conversion project that was intended to serve as an interconnection station for Beacon Wind and Empire Wind, as agreed on by the two companies and the state of New York in 2022.  “The expected total capital investments, including fees for the use of the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal, are approximately $5 billion including the effect of expected future tax credits (ITCs)”, said the statement on Equinor’s website announcing financial close. Equinor did not disclose its backers, only saying, “The final group of lenders includes some of the most experienced lenders in the sector along with many of Equinor’s relationship banks”. “Empire Wind 1 will be the first offshore wind project to connect into the New York City grid”, the statement added. “The redevelopment of the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal and construction of Empire Wind 1 will create more than 1,000 union jobs in the construction phase”, Equinor said. On February 22, 2024, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) announced

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USA Crude Oil Stocks Drop Week on Week

U.S. commercial crude oil inventories, excluding those in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), decreased by 1.2 million barrels from the week ending December 20 to the week ending December 27, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) highlighted in its latest weekly petroleum status report, which was released on January 2. Crude oil stocks, excluding the SPR, stood at 415.6 million barrels on December 27, 416.8 million barrels on December 20, and 431.1 million barrels on December 29, 2023, the report revealed. Crude oil in the SPR came in at 393.6 million barrels on December 27, 393.3 million barrels on December 20, and 354.4 million barrels on December 29, 2023, the report showed. Total petroleum stocks – including crude oil, total motor gasoline, fuel ethanol, kerosene type jet fuel, distillate fuel oil, residual fuel oil, propane/propylene, and other oils – stood at 1.623 billion barrels on December 27, the report revealed. This figure was up 9.6 million barrels week on week and up 17.8 million barrels year on year, the report outlined. “At 415.6 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are about five percent below the five year average for this time of year,” the EIA said in its latest report. “Total motor gasoline inventories increased by 7.7 million barrels from last week and are slightly below the five year average for this time of year. Finished gasoline inventories decreased last week while blending components inventories increased last week,” it added. “Distillate fuel inventories increased by 6.4 million barrels last week and are about six percent below the five year average for this time of year. Propane/propylene inventories decreased by 0.6 million barrels from last week and are 10 percent above the five year average for this time of year,” it went on to state. In the report, the EIA noted

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More telecom firms were breached by Chinese hackers than previously reported

Broader implications for US infrastructure The Salt Typhoon revelations follow a broader pattern of state-sponsored cyber operations targeting the US technology ecosystem. The telecom sector, serving as a backbone for industries including finance, energy, and transportation, remains particularly vulnerable to such attacks. While Chinese officials have dismissed the accusations as disinformation, the recurring breaches underscore the pressing need for international collaboration and policy enforcement to deter future attacks. The Salt Typhoon campaign has uncovered alarming gaps in the cybersecurity of US telecommunications firms, with breaches now extending to over a dozen networks. Federal agencies and private firms must act swiftly to mitigate risks as adversaries continue to evolve their attack strategies. Strengthening oversight, fostering industry-wide collaboration, and investing in advanced defense mechanisms are essential steps toward safeguarding national security and public trust.

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The Download: metric weaknesses and AI elephant warnings

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. The inevitable weakness of metrics There are plenty of useful things a metric can reveal. There are even more that it can obscure or corrupt. Like a lot of people bitten by the self-quantifying bug, I started gathering personal data to pursue a nebulous collection of goals and desires. I wanted to feel better physically and emotionally, get outside more, and bring order to the messiness and uncertainty of my daily existence. But external metrics and data can never capture what’s truly important. Worse, they inevitably redefine your core sense of what’s important, whether you’re aware of the trap or not.
Dive into the dangers of quantifying our lives with metrics. —Bryan Gardiner
This story is from the next edition of our magazine, which is all about engineering. Subscribe now to get a copy when it lands! Elephant alert! AI warning systems aim to avoid deadly clashes India is home to about 60% of the world’s wild Asian elephants, and around 80% of their habitat lies outside protected areas. That brings them into close contact with people, and clashes can turn lethal: there have been some 3,000 human casualties in the last five years and over 1,000 elephant deaths since 2014. In response, state forest departments, NGOs, and locals are designing, testing, and deploying a range of AI systems that cut response and warning times to minutes—or even seconds. They range from wildlife eyes in Maharashtra to infrared drones in Chhattisgarh. Find out how they work in our interactive map. —Kanika Gupta The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 The US has allowed Anthropic to release Mythos 5 to “trusted” orgsAbout 100 US companies and federal agencies now have access. (Semafor)+ The White House said appropriate safeguards were now in place. (WSJ $)+ The US had restricted both models over national security concerns. (BBC)+ Which raised new questions about AI safety. (MIT Technology Review)  2 A Chinese AI model has matched Mythos in finding security bugsSecurity researchers say Zhipu AI is poised to reset the AI race. (WSJ $)+ It’s sparked alarm that US restrictions are boosting China’s progress. (NYT $)+ Although it still can’t match Anthropic or OpenAI on general tasks. (Verge)+ In the AI race, China is eyeing a come-from-behind victory. (WP $) 3 Apple is seeking approval to buy chips from a blacklisted Chinese firmIt’s lobbying the White House for clearance to buy from ChangXin. (FT $)+ ChangXin is on a Pentagon list of firms with Chinese military ties. (WP $)+ Chipmakers are profiting off AI at the expense of everyone else. (WSJ $)+ The US is banning imports of more Chinese technology. (Reuters $)+ But Chinese tech companies feel optimistic. (MIT Technology Review) 4. South Korea plans to train its entire military as “drone warriors”It wants to train all 500,000 personnel. (Reuters $)+ And produce 110,000 drones by 2029. (Ars Technica) 5 Google has limited Meta’s use of its Gemini AI modelsMeta wanted more compute than Google could provide. (FT $)+ The cap has disrupted and delayed some Meta AI projects. (Bloomberg $)6 Zuckerberg wants Meta to work with Polymarket and KalshiMeta wants its own prediction market, but without real-money bets. (NYT $)+ The partnerships could hedge risks and accelerate development. (Reuters $) 7 Extreme heat is putting already hot data centers under pressureSevere weather is now the leading cause of loss for data centers. (CNBC)+ Heat waves also mess with your brain. (MIT Technology Review)8 Android phones alerted millions moments before Venezuela’s earthquakesThey gave users between seconds and up to two minutes’ notice. (NYT $)9 Scientists think Uranus and Neptune may not be the icy giants we imaginedThey may have a magma ocean brewing on the inside. (Gizmodo)10 Too much sleep may be as harmful as too littleA new study suggests 6.4–7.8 hours is the sweet spot. (Economist $)

Quote of the day “This kind of powerful weapon that can alter the landscape of cyberwarfare can’t remain solely in American hands.”  —360 Security CEO Zhou Hongyi tells a cybersecurity conference in Beijing why Chinese AI firms need to match the capabilities of their rivals in the US, The Wall Street Journal reports. One More Thing Why Generation Z falls for online misinformation Research shows that young people are more likely to believe and pass on misinformation if they feel a sense of common identity with the person who shared it in the first place.  Offline, teenagers are likely to draw on the context that their communities provide. Social media, however, promotes credibility based on identity rather than community. And when trust is built on identity, authority shifts to influencers. As young people participate in more political discussions online, those who have successfully cultivated identity-based credibility could become de facto community leaders, attracting like-minded people and steering the conversation. While that has the potential to empower marginalized groups, it also exacerbates the threat of misinformation. Find out what we can all learn about how young people evaluate truth online. —Jennifer Neda John
We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun, and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line.) + The Euclid space telescope has captured the most detailed image yet of the Milky Way.+ Here’s a lovely, lilting medieval bardcore cover of Daft Punk’s electronic classic Veridis Quo.+ A toilet plunger becomes an unlikely engineering breakthrough in this quest to build a better blowgun.

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The Download: brain-melting heatwaves and unprecedented OpenAI restrictions

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Heat waves mess with your brain. Scientists are trying to figure out why. —Jessica Hamzelou It’s been hot in London this week. Really hot. A dangerous heat wave has hit Western Europe. On Wednesday, the UK recorded its highest ever June temperature at 36.1 °C (about 97 °F). But as the weather app on my phone confirmed, it felt like 39 °C. Much of Western Europe is suffering, bringing awful consequences for agriculture, infrastructure, and the health system. But heat can also affect the brain.
Studies have confirmed that as temperatures rise, people seem to get more irritable and more violent. And they have shown that firefighters find it harder to focus immediately after heat exposure. Rising temperatures can also have particularly disastrous outcomes for children and people with mental health disorders. Research on lab animals suggests that excessive heat can alter the function of chemical signals in our brains. But we still need a better understanding of the mechanisms behind these effects.
Here’s what scientists are learning about extreme heat’s impact on the brain. This story is from The Checkup, our weekly biotech newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Thursday. For more on Europe’s heat wave, read our stories on why soaring temperatures are shutting down power plants and what they mean for the grid. The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 The Trump administration has asked OpenAI to limit its next model releaseIt wants to vet the first GPT 5.6 users before a wider launch. (Bloomberg $)+ OpenAI said each of the initial partners will be government-approved. (FT $)+ It’s the first US firm to be told to restrict an AI model before release. (Axios)+ Anthropic is also still feuding with Washington. (MIT Technology Review)2 Apple and Xbox have hiked prices, blaming AI-driven chip costsSome MacBooks, iPads, and Xboxes are going up in price by over 20%. (BBC)+ Apple’s shares plummeted after the announcement. (NBC)+ AI data center demand has pushed up memory and storage prices. (WSJ $)+ The shortages have been dubbed “RAMaggedon.” (The Verge) 3 Colossal and the US are building an endangered species “biovault”It aims to cryptopreserve over 2,300 plant and animal samples. (Wired $)+ It comes amid growing threats to endangered species protections. (NYT $)+ Colossal is also growing chickens in artificial eggshells. (MIT Technology Review) 4 The US has banned Polestar from selling its EVs due to anti-China rulesThe Sweden-based company is majority-owned by China’s Geely. (CNN)+ The ban is because its connected-vehicle tech is linked to China. (Reuters $)+ What happened to China’s overseas EV factory boom? (Rest of World) 5 China is betting on humanoids to beat its demographic declineIt wants the robots to narrow the labour gap. (FT $)+ Gig workers are training humanoids at home. (MIT Technology Review) 6 The “fingerprints” of a black hole’s event horizon have been detectedThe discovery was made by studying ripples in space-time. (AFP) 7 OpenAI is now expected to delay its IPO until next yearIt’s been spooked by choppy global markets and SpaceX’s slump. (NYT $) 8 Data centers have moved to the forefront of environmental lawsuits The litigation is linked to energy sources, water consumption, and air pollution. (Guardian)9 A master gene that turns on human development has been uncoveredIt results in cells forming a human body. (New Scientist $)10 Grok’s most popular feature? SmutIt accounts for “well over half” of the chatbot’s traffic. (The Information $) Quote of the day “The most advanced AI is built by a handful of American companies, on American soil, under American law, and what the rest of us are permitted to do with it can change on a Friday afternoon.” —Nathan Benaich, AI investor at London-based venture firm Air Street Capital, tells the Financial Times about the geopolitical reality of US AI dominance.

One More Thing MAX-O-MATIC How technology helped archaeologists dig deeper In 1991, construction workers in Manhattan unearthed hundreds of coffins. Further investigation revealed that the remains were between 200 and 300 years old, and they were all African and African American. This discovery came at an inflection point in scientific history. Breakthroughs in chemical and genetic analysis allowed researchers to figure out where many of these people were born, the physical challenges they faced, and even the routes they took from Africa to North America. Today, archaeologists are using techniques they could only dream of then: lasers, 3D photography, lidar, satellite imagery, and more. These tools are revealing where people came from, how ancient cities were built, and the lives of those who built them.

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Heat waves mess with your brain. Scientists are trying to figure out why.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY It’s been hot in London this week. Really hot. A dangerous heat wave has hit Western Europe. Yesterday, the UK recorded its highest ever June temperature at 36.1 °C (about 97 °F). But as the weather app on my phone confirmed, it felt like 39 °C. It’s frightening that we are seeing such temperatures in the UK in June. According to the Met Office, the country’s national weather and climate service, June temperatures peaked at an average 19 °C (66 °F) in England between 1991 and 2020. Across Europe, the heat wave is likely to cause thousands of deaths. There will be other awful consequences for agriculture, infrastructure, and the health system. But this week I want to look at what the heat does to our minds and brains. Personally, I’ve found it almost impossible to think straight. The heat is distracting and my mind is foggy. I dread to think about the conditions of people who work outdoors, in even hotter regions. It’s not just exhaustion and confusion. The effects of heat on the brain can be deadly. And researchers are still trying to figure out why.
Studies have confirmed that as temperatures rise, people seem to get more irritable and more violent. Most of these studies are based on associations, though. It’s difficult to directly study how a heat wave might affect our thinking, says Catherine Thompson, a cognitive psychologist at Liverpool Hope University.  She has been studying the effects of extreme heat on firefighters instead. It’s easier to measure people’s cognitive skills before and after they undergo scheduled training that involves entering a burning building.  
It’s early days, but the team found that firefighters found it harder to focus and control their attention immediately after heat exposure—something people in heat waves can empathize with, I’m sure.  The firefighters’ skills returned to normal after 20 minutes or so of cooling down. But they’d experienced just 15 minutes of intense heat exposure. Thompson doesn’t know what the effects of living through a days-long heat wave might be—or how long they’ll last. Figuring that out might involve shipping cognitive test kits to thousands of people during the few days’ notice of an impending heat wave. “My guess [is] that no one’s done it because it’s just so difficult to do,” says Thompson.  Still, researchers can learn about some of the impacts of heat waves through studies after the fact. And those studies suggest that the heat seems to have more disastrous outcomes for people with mental-health disorders.  Those outcomes become apparent when temperatures rise above what is considered typical for a given region. “There seems to be a correlation where the hotter it gets, especially during the hottest times of the year, the worse the mental-health outcomes,” says Joshua Wortzel, who directs the Heat-Mind Lab at Hartford HealthCare in Connecticut. In a study published in 2023, Emma Lawrence at the University of Oxford, who studies the effect of climate change on mental health, and her colleagues reviewed the evidence linking mental-health outcomes to ambient outdoor temperatures. They found that during heat waves, there was a 9.7% increase in the rate of hospital admissions for people with such conditions.  “People who live with mental-health conditions are among the most susceptible to the physical impacts of heat,” says Lawrence. People with schizophrenia were found to have been three times more likely to die during the record-breaking heat wave that affected Canada in 2021, for example. In order to protect people, we need a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying these effects. After all, a lot of things change when it’s very, very hot. Some people may end up stuck indoors, avoiding outdoor play and exercise, and it can be difficult to get a good night of sleep, for example. Sleep, socializing, and exercise are all really important for our mental health.  But whether unusual heat does something specific to our brains is, as Wortzel puts it, “the million-dollar question.”

Research in lab animals suggests that excessive heat can alter the way chemical signals work in our brain. The levels of neurotransmitters like serotonin, for example, seem to increase when rats and mice are exposed to high temperatures, according to multiple studies. The heat may also interfere with the way networks in our brains communicate with each other. It might affect the way oxygen reaches our brain cells. “There are so many biological reasons why brains may be negatively affected by heat,” says Wortzel. Emerging research suggests that for whatever reason, children and young people are among the most vulnerable. In research published earlier this week, Wortzel and his colleagues saw a 2.97% increase in the suicide rate among people in the US aged 15 to 24 for every 1 °C increase in average monthly temperature. That’s more than double the increase seen in people over the age of 24 (which is concerning in its own right). Other work hints that heat exposure might have long-term consequences for children’s brain development. Babies who were exposed to either extreme heat or cold appeared to have altered white matter by the time they were nine to 12 years old—although it’s not clear how these impacts might affect an individual child. “It seems that extreme temperature exposure for very young children may affect their brain development,” says Lawrence, who spoke to me from Oxford. She was meant to be in London for Climate Action Week, but her event, which focused on extreme heat, ended up being canceled … owing to the extreme heat. We are living through the effects of climate change. And that brings a new urgency to the question of how heat affects our brains. Children born in 2020 are predicted to experience around seven times the number of heat waves their grandparents did, says Lawrance. “[We] need to be serious about adapting to a warming world.” This article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first, sign up here.

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Repositioning retail for the AI era

In partnership withInfosysArtificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping retail, but not in the ways consumers might immediately notice. The biggest transformation may not be flashy virtual try-ons or chatbot shopping assistants, but in how decisions are made behind the scenes: how products surface in search results, how inventory moves through supply chains, how engineers ship code faster, and how retailers respond to customer behavior in real time. As legacy retailers navigate a fragmented and hyper-competitive landscape, AI is becoming an operating philosophy. [embedded content] At Macy’s, that philosophy is more often defined by what senior director of engineering Murali Murugan describes as an “AI-first” approach. “AI first isn’t about adding intelligence on top,” Murugan says. “It’s about redesigning how decisions happen so the business moves faster and every experience feels more relevant by default.” Rather than layering AI onto existing workflows, Macy’s is embedding intelligence directly into systems that include personalization, search, operational planning, and software development itself.The company’s strategy is reflective of a larger shift taking place across retail: moving from isolated AI pilots toward integrated systems designed to compress, as Murugan puts it, “the gap between the signal and the action.” Early efforts focused on narrow, high-impact use cases like search recommendations and customer engagement, where measurable gains in conversion and reduced friction quickly built internal momentum. “Once we established the quick wins, scaling was a business decision, not a technology debate anymore,” he says.That momentum is now extending into conversational commerce through tools like Ask Macy’s, an AI-powered shopping assistant designed to act more like a personal stylist than a traditional search bar. Whether for a prom, a vacation, or a last-minute event, customers can describe what they need conversationally and receive curated recommendations informed by past purchases, preferences, and context.Still, the company sees AI as more of an invisible layer augmenting human judgment than a replacement for it. The long-term vision is retail that feels increasingly seamless, adaptive, and personalized, powered by systems customers may never even notice are there.”The real transformation in this all comes from continuous improvement,” Murugan says. “It’s about learning from the mistakes, quickly adapting to the newer technology standards that are coming into play, timing, and execution which compound into a meaningfully better customer experience.” This webcast is produced in partnership with Infosys. This content was produced by Insights, the custom content arm of MIT Technology Review. It was not written by MIT Technology Review’s editorial staff. It was researched, designed, and written by human writers, editors, analysts, and illustrators. This includes the writing of surveys and collection of data for surveys. AI tools that may have been used were limited to secondary production processes that passed thorough human review.

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The Download: Europe’s heat wave hits the grid, and IBM’s chip targets Moore’s Law

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Europe’s extreme heat is shutting down power plants Europe is in the middle of a record-breaking heat wave, and the grid is being pushed to its limits as people turn to fans and air-conditioning to try to stay cool. But some power plants won’t be online to help handle the load. The main source of stress is increased demand, largely driven by cooling. And the challenges are only expected to worsen as climate change brings more frequent and intense heat waves. Find out how rising temperatures are stretching power supplies—and how utilities can adapt.
—Casey Crownhart What Europe’s heat wave means for the power grid Grid planning in the age of climate change generally means that we need a lot more supply, and quickly. But one interesting facet to this challenge is that in some places, seasonal patterns are shifting, compounding the difficulty of meeting demand. 
Europe has historically seen its grid peak in the winter when electric heating is widespread. So some planned outages happen in the spring and into the summer, which is affecting the supply right now. But a growing need for air-conditioning will alter the balance. Read the full story on how climate change is reshaping electricity demand. —Casey Crownhart This story is from The Spark, our weekly newsletter giving you the inside track on all things climate. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday. IBM unveils chip technology that could help extend Moore’s Law another decade IBM has built a new prototype chip with around 100 billion transistors on an area the size of a fingernail. That’s twice the density of the company’s previous state-of-the-art technology announced in 2021. And the design could pave the way for faster and more energy-efficient computers for years to come. In the last fifteen years, transistors have been shrunk close to their limits. They can’t get smaller without their function deteriorating. IBM’s new chip resolves this with an approach familiar to urban planners: building up. Here’s how the strategy is bringing new hope to the technology industry.  —Sophia Chen

The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Anthropic says Alibaba “illicitly” extracted Claude’s capabilities It claims the Chinese firm ran a “brazen” campaign to access the model. (BBC)+ It says it’s the “largest known distillation attack” on the company. (CNBC)+ The technique trains a weaker model on a stronger one’s outputs. (FT $)+ Anthropic previously accused other Chinese rivals of using it. (CNN)+ But it’s still feuding with the White House. (MIT Technology Review) 2 NASA has detected possible chemical signatures of ancient life on MarsThe Perseverance rover spotted complex carbon on rocks. (New Scientist $)+ The molecules are typically associated with dead organisms. (Guardian)+ The US has lost its lead in the hunt for alien life. (MIT Technology Review) 3 The EU has joined a US pact to stop relying on Chinese AIMuch of the rest of the world seems to still be a battleground for control. (FT $)+ China is expanding its AI push in the Global South to counter the US. (The Wire China)+ Chinese AI experts are freaking out about the AI arms race. (Wired $) 4 OpenAI and Broadcom have unveiled their first jointly designed AI chipJalapeño is built to power large-scale AI systems like ChatGPT. (NYT $)+ It’s part of OpenAI’s push to “build the full stack.” (CNBC) 5 A new report shows ICE has built a vast hi-tech surveillance systemIt includes facial recognition, drones, and data scraping.(Guardian)+ Is the Pentagon allowed to surveil citizens with AI? (MIT Technology Review) 6 Electronics can now be printed onto living tissueWhich could enable smart implants and ingestible diagnostics. (The Economist $)
7 The data center boom is sparking a third wave of inflation Demand for memory chips is pushing prices higher.(WSJ $) 8 Companies are scrambling to curb spending on AI token “chewing”Accenture data shows non-technical staff are draining budgets. (404 Media)
9 Claude Design is creating a bland wave of website uniformityThe AI tool is homogenizing the internet’s aesthetic. (The New Yorker $) 10 Elon Musk has lost his trillionaire statusThanks to SpaceX stock coming back to Earth. (Business Insider) Quote of the day “Tom Brown is not being a weirdo like Dario and can actually engage.”  —A person directly familiar with calls between the Trump administration and Anthropic tells Wired that they’ve improved since cofounder Tom Brown replaced CEO Dario Amodei in the talks. One More Thing TONY LUONG The quest to learn if our brain’s mutations affect mental health For years, scientists searching for the roots of conditions like schizophrenia, autism, and Alzheimer’s have focused on single genes. But the real source may lie in a more complex genetic puzzle inside the brain.
Mike McConnell has spent decades exploring the idea that neurons do not all share identical DNA, and that these differences could help explain psychiatric disease. His work has contributed to evidence that brain cells can form a “genetic mosaic,” with mutations that vary across the brain. Discover how this could reshape our understanding of mental illness. —Roxanne Khamsi We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun, and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line.) + This classical reimagining of the Super Mario soundtrack is exquisite.+ At long last, we can calculate the fuel efficiency of launching our enemies into the Sun.+ Before CGI, explosions were an art form. This compilation of classic practical effects is pure action-movie nostalgia.+ Cambridge botanists lovingly recreated a 336-year-old garden to honor the “father of natural history.” (Big thanks to reader Peter Ryan for the find!) 

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What Europe’s heat wave means for the power grid

It’s been hard to look away from headlines about the European heat wave this week. Temperatures are breaking records across the continent, and the weather is threatening lives, shutting down schools, and in one particularly ironic case, forcing the cancellation of a London Climate Action Week event about extreme heat.  As the summer ramps up and we see this kind of weather sweep around the Northern Hemisphere, I’m always keeping my eye on the power grid. And one notable update that caught my attention this week was news that a nuclear power plant in the south of France had to close down because of the heat.  Climate change is squeezing the grid from all sides, affecting both supply and demand. Heat can affect power availability, from generation to transmission infrastructure, as I covered in my latest story. But climate change is also helping push electricity use higher—and countries in Europe and around the world will need to adapt.  In the US, nearly 90% of homes have air-conditioning. That means many grids see their highest demand in the summer months, and the risk of brownouts and blackouts is at its worst. 
People are often quick to cast air-conditioning as a villain, and it’s true that the technology will account for a major chunk of the globe’s rising energy demand in the future. But the reality is that heat waves can be incredibly dangerous, and as climate change pushes temperatures higher, that risk is becoming more real in parts of the world that haven’t historically had to worry quite so much about heat.  In Europe, air-conditioning is historically much less common, with about 20% of homes across the continent using it. Some countries, including those getting hit by this heat wave, have even lower rates—the UK comes in at about 5%, and Germany is around 3%. 
But those numbers are starting to tick up as people adapt to increasingly brutal summers. As they do, we should expect higher electricity demand, and stress for the grid—just as in the US. And utilities often have to look across borders to buy more power, driving prices up for everyone.  “The main pressure comes from a triple squeeze: Cooling demand rises sharply, while power plants and grids become less efficient, and some thermal and nuclear plants must cut output because cooling water is too warm or scarce,” says Simone Tagliapietra, senior fellow at Bruegel, an economic and policy think tank, via email.  Grid planning in the age of climate change generally means that we need a lot more supply, and quickly. But one interesting facet to this challenge is that in some places, seasonal patterns are shifting, compounding the difficulty of meeting demand.  Generally, grid operators plan maintenance and outages at power plants around expected  peaks in demand. Take nuclear power, for example. In the US, planned outages for maintenance and refueling tend to come in the spring and fall when demand falls below the summer and slightly smaller winter peaks.  Europe, however, has historically seen its grid peak in the winter, because electric heating is more common than air-conditioning. So some planned outages happen in the spring and into the summer, which is affecting the supply right now.  At the Golfech power plant near Toulouse in France, for example, unit two had to shut down this week because of the water temperatures in the nearby river, which is used to cool the reactor. But unit one was already offline because of planned maintenance and refueling, according to EDF, the plant’s operator.  We’re going to continue to see record-high temperatures around the world because of climate change. Communities are adapting, and utilities will have to follow. And if you thought this summer was hot, just wait until next year. With the El Niño weather pattern, 2027 could very well blow these heat waves out of the water.  This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here.

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LLMs are stuck in a groupthink groove. This startup is trying to get them out.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Let’s start with a game. Open up your chatbot of choice—Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini—and type “Give me a random number between 1 and 10.” You’re going to get 7. Almost always. Now type “Another” and you’ll get 3 or 4. Type “Another” again and you’ll get 8 or 9. That won’t work every time—but if it did for you, you may wonder if I have superpowers. I don’t. The truth is that most large language models are stuck in a rut. They are far more predictable and far less creative in their responses than you might expect. That’s fine for tasks like coding or research, but groupthink is a problem when you’re brainstorming or planning your next vacation. The Australian startup Springboards has a solution. It built an LLM called Flint, which has been trained to come up with a wider variety of responses than mainstream LLMs to open-ended questions such as “Where should I go in Europe?”
“Most language models are fighting hallucinations,” says Springboards cofounder and CEO Pip Bingemann. “We welcome them.” Bingemann introduced me to the random number game when he first showed me his company’s new model. It felt like watching an illusionist with a deck of cards. “This is our sales trick, and it works every single time,” he says.
After ChatGPT and Claude both gave their 7s, Bingemann turned to Flint. It too came back with 7: “Aha, of course that was going to happen, but it’s okay—7 is a legitimate answer.” He restarted the session and prompted again: ChatGPT gave 7, Claude gave 7, Flint gave 3.7916. Run your way It’s not just numbers. When Bingemann asked ChatGPT and Claude to name a type of car, he predicted that it would be a Toyota or a Honda—and he was right. Flint came up with a Ford F-150. “There’s all this lost information that doesn’t get served up in these models,” he says. “They’re just as capable of saying a Buick or a Tesla. They just don’t—they’re biased.” Bingemann sent one last prompt to each of the three models: “Give me a tagline for a campaign for New Balance running shoes. Just the tagline.” Claude: “Run your way.” ChatGPT: “Run your way.” Flint: “Built to last, run to win.” It won’t win any awards, but at least it’s different. This weird limitation of LLMs is starting to get more attention. In November a team of researchers put out a paper, titled “Artificial Hivemind: The Open-Ended Homogeneity of Language Models (and Beyond),” that exposed a remarkable degree of repetition not only in the answers from individual LLMs but between them as well. They found that different LLMs converged on very similar answers when prompted with open-ended questions. It’s not clear exactly why this happens, but the researchers speculate it’s because most LLMs today are trained in similar ways on similar data to do similar tasks. The team won the best paper award at NeurIPS, a major AI conference. When the researchers asked 25 different LLMs (including models from the top US firms as well as open-source models from China and elsewhere) 50 times each to write a metaphor about time, most of the 1,250 responses were a version of “Time is a river” or “Time is a weaver.” (I asked some of my colleagues the same question and six people gave me six different answers. My highlight: “Time is a favorite sweatshirt, shaped by a lifetime of wear.”) When you look for it, you see repetition everywhere, says Kieran Browne, cofounder and CTO at Springboards. “The way that most chat interfaces are designed, it makes it feel like you’re having a personal conversation,” he says. “I think most people don’t really realize the extent to which they are getting the same stuff as everybody else.”

Take another example: “What should I name my band?” Most models will say something involving “glass,” “neon,” “velvet,” or “static,” says Browne.   When I tried it, ChatGPT spat out a list of 56 band names. At the top was “Glass Harbor.” Skimming through, I found “Static Empire,” “Neon Hearts,” and “Velvet Echo.” I asked Gemini; it gave me 15 suggestions, including “Static Horizon.” Some of the suggestions looked pretty cool, though. ChatGPT’s “Sofa Astronauts” caught my eye, so I googled it—and found that a band called Sofa Astronauts already exists.  (OpenAI says that training models to give reliable and coherent answers can lead them to converge around familiar, high-probability responses and that pushing harder for novelty can lead to weaker or less reliable responses. It also notes that the “Artificial Hivemind” paper studied models from 2024 that have since been updated.) Creative catapult Springboards has developed a tool backed by a selection of LLMs, including ChatGPT and Claude, that creative professionals in advertising or marketing can use to brainstorm ideas. The tool lets you drag around text produced by different models, picking the bits that you like and combining them into something new—in theory. Springboards is pitching Flint as an alternative model that users of its tool can select when looking for more variety. Zoe Scaman, founder of the business strategy startup Bodacious and chief strategy officer at 77X, a direct-to-fan marketing platform set up by Luka Dončić of the LA Lakers, has been trying it out. “I find it really useful for throwing me in completely different directions,” she says. “I use it if I want to catapult myself all over the place.” In one test, Scaman pitted Flint against Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT by giving each of the models a classic MBA case study: How would you reinvent a finance company for today’s youth? The three mainstream models all went down the same path, she says: “You know, we need to teach financial literacy in a fun and funky way—well, that’s nothing new.” But Flint came up with something different, suggesting that the whole concept of wealth accumulation should get a rebrand. “That was really interesting,” says Scaman.
She notes that Flint is still a prototype and doesn’t work all the time. “It sometimes falls over when you start pushing it too far,” she says. “But I think that the premise behind it is really powerful.” Taking the temperature Springboards built Flint on top of Qwen 3, an open-source model from the Chinese tech giant Alibaba. “We’re a small team,” says Browne. “Training a foundation model is not on the table for us. It’s just too expensive.”
Most LLMs have settings that let you adjust the level of randomness in their output. The most common is called temperature. “Obviously, that was one of the first things we explored, because that’s what people tell you: If you want more creativity, you turn up the temperature,” says Browne. But changing those settings can also make models incoherent. Dialing up the temperature on one of OpenAI’s models to its maximum setting made it produce responses that switched from English into code halfway through a sentence, says Browne. Springboards realized that parameters were blunt instruments for what it wanted to do. It does not make sense to dial up the randomness across the board; you only want to boost it at specific points in its output, he says. For example, when you ask a chatbot “Where should I go in Europe?” the model only needs to tweak the randomness just before it names a destination, not for every word in its response. To make Flint do this, Springboards trained its version of Qwen 3 to identify the points in its output where more variety was possible and fill those spots with words or phrases that were a little more random. “Flint’s programmed to throw an oddball in. It’s more of an invitation to think wider,” says Maximilian Weigl, cofounder and chief strategy officer at Uncommon, a marketing firm. “That’s super interesting.”
Weigl’s team uses Flint alongside ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. “You can’t really create something boundary-breaking with tools that pull you back to the average,” he says.  And yet Weigl notes that nine times out of 10 the average is fine. You don’t always need to reach for extremes with something like Flint, he says: “Most people are fine with good enough. They want to see mass-market familiar things.” Weigl also cautions against using any LLM too much. “I have a big problem when people rely on the output from any AI, including Flint,” he says. “If I saw people on my team copy-pasting something from AI, I’d be like, ‘That’s not your job! Think, talk to other people, use your own voice.’” For now, Flint is aimed at advertisers and marketers because those are Springboards’s customers. But Bingemann and Browne insist that a lack of variety is a problem for anyone using chatbots. The idea is to give people the choice and leave it to them to decide if the result is good or not, says Bingemann. “Variety is great when you’re trying to spark ideas,” he says. “Let’s go down this route instead of letting the machines do it all and ending up in a gray, boring world.”

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The Download: Anthropic launches Claude Science, and California’s carbon manure math

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Claude Science is Anthropic’s newest flagship product At an event for pharmaceutical executives, biotech founders, and researchers yesterday, Anthropic announced Claude Science, a major new product intended to support scientific research like Claude Code supports software engineering.Like Claude Code, Claude Science can autonomously carry out meaningful work from concise, high-level instructions, with tools for computational biology and drug development. The launch signals that Anthropic is doubling down on AI for science, and the company will also use the product in its own research into drugs for rare, neglected diseases.Discover why Anthropic is betting big on AI for scientific research. —Grace Huckins Why California’s carbon manure math doesn’t add up Something stinks in California’s climate policies. 
Years ago, the state set up a system that pays cattle farmers to turn the methane emitted from cattle manure into natural gas. It’s become wildly popular because the subsidies are extremely lucrative. But research suggests the program exposes the shortcomings of carbon offsetting and trading schemes. Instead of forcing industries to directly cut their pollution or pay for it as a cost of doing business, legislators have opted for incentives that swap climate responsibilities between parties and regions. The system could ultimately lock in more warming.
Read the full story on California’s dubious carbon calculations. —James Temple This story is from The Spark, our weekly climate tech newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday. Watch now: longevity’s next frontier—“reprogramming” your body Billions of dollars are pouring into efforts to reverse aging as scientists investigate ways to return cells to a younger state. But how close are these experimental treatments? And are they likely to work?  At a recent virtual Roundtables event, MIT Technology Review explored the answers with science editor Mary Beth Griggs and senior biotechnology reporter Jessica Hamzelou. Subscribers can now watch the full recording of the fascinating discussion. MIT Technology Review Narrated: the search for dark matter has been blown wide open For decades, physicists have hunted for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs), a leading candidate for dark matter. But their search has run into a new problem: neutrinos.  These tiny particles from the sun and other stars can create a “neutrino fog” that drowns out any signal of dark matter. Hitting the neutrino fog does not, however, mean an end to the search. Researchers just have to shift the focus of their hunt. They’re now casting a much wider net. New proposals include quantum sensors, liquid-helium detectors, and even searches in Jupiter’s atmosphere.

—Dan Garisto This is our latest story to be turned into an MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we publish each week on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Just navigate to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either platform, and follow us to get all our new content as it’s released. The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 The US has lifted restrictions on Anthropic’s Mythos and Fable modelsAnthropic said it would begin restoring access today. (NYT $)+ The US had imposed controls over security concerns. (Bloomberg $)+ It lifted the restrictions after lengthy talks with Anthropic. (BBC)+ But the crackdown has already opened doors for Chinese AI rivals. (CNBC)2 The most detailed survey of the universe ever is now underwayIt’s using the largest digital camera on Earth. (New Scientist $) + The project is based at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile. (NYT $)+ It aims to transform our view of the cosmos. (MIT Technology Review) 3 Tech talent is fleeing the US due to H1-B visa chaosThey’re eyeing relocation to Canada, the UK, or the Gulf. (Rest of World)+ While China is poaching AI talent from the US. (CNBC)+ Visa rules are also affecting young scientists. (MIT Technology Review) 4 Trump raked in more than $1 billion from crypto businesses in 2025He reported $635 million in royalties from a Trump meme coin. (BBC)+ The rest largely came from his World Liberty Financial venture. (The Hill) 5 The UN warns that the rapid spread of AI may worsen global inequalityIt’s proposed a shared framework for responsible AI development. (Guardian)6 Companies are making LLMs talk like a caveman to curb AI spendingA senior OpenAI employee contributed to the “caveman” project. (404 Media) 7 Babies are born with the neural foundations for mathBrain recordings have identified the mechanisms. (New Scientist $)8 An independent studio has bought the OpenAI movie Amazon droppedNeon has purchased “Artificial,” which focuses on Sam Altman. (NYT $)+ Amazon had dumped it after investing in OpenAI. (Gizmodo)+ The depiction of Altman is reportedly unsympathetic. (Variety)9 AI has re-created Gene Wilder’s voice for a new “Willy Wonka” seriesWilder’s wife said his estate is “delighted” with the new show. (NBC News)+ Netflix partnered with AI company ElevenLabs on the project. (The Verge)10 NASA aims to send a spare Mars rover—and soccer ball—to the moonThe nuclear-powered “Promise” may help establish a lunar base. (NYT $) Quote of the day “Caveman save you token, save you money.”  —The GitHub repository for the “caveman” plugin explains how the project curbs AI spending by turning verbose LLM outputs into concise text. One More Thing
SELMAN DESIGN AI is dreaming up drugs that no one has ever seen. Now we’ve got to see if they work. On average, it takes more than 10 years and billions of dollars to develop a new drug. A growing number of startups are betting that AI can make the process faster and cheaper.  By predicting how potential drugs might behave in the body and discarding dead-end compounds before they leave the computer, machine-learning models can cut down on the need for painstaking lab work. 
Yet it is still early days for AI drug discovery. A lot of AI companies are making claims they can’t back up—and the technology is not a panacea. But the technology is beginning to move from promise to practice. Find out how AI is speeding up drug discovery.

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Energy Secretary Secures Mid-Atlantic Grid Ahead of Period of Hot Weather

WASHINGTON—The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today issued two emergency orders to mitigate blackout risks in the Mid-Atlantic ahead of the region’s predicted record-breaking peak loads brought on by the forecasted hot weather conditions. The first order directs PJM Interconnection, LLC (PJM) to dispatch specified units and to order their operation as needed to maintain reliability. The second order authorizes PJM, in collaboration with its Transmission Owners and Electric Distribution Companies, to direct backup generation resources to operate as a last resort before declaring an Energy Emergency Alert (EEA) 3 or during an EEA 3. The orders were issued pursuant to applications from PJM submitted on June 27 and 29, 2026. “Maintaining affordable, reliable, and secure power in the PJM service territory is non-negotiable,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright. “The previous administration’s energy subtraction policies weakened the grid, leaving Americans more vulnerable during events like this. Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, we are reversing those failures and using every available tool ensuring Americans in the Mid-Atlantic have continued access to affordable, reliable, and secure energy to power and cool their homes.” DOE estimates more than 35 GW of unused backup generation remains available nationwide. On day one, President Trump declared a national energy emergency after the Biden administration’s energy subtraction agenda left behind a grid increasingly vulnerable to blackouts. According to the North American Electric Reliability Corporation’s (NERC) 2026 Summer Reliability Assessment, the peak electricity demand in PJM occurs during the summer season. It further notes that “if extreme high temperatures are experienced, PJM anticipates the need for demand-response resources to help reduce load.” Power outages cost the American people $44 billion per year, according to data from DOE’s National Laboratories. These orders will mitigate the possibility of power outages in the Mid-Atlantic and highlight the commonsense policies of the Trump Administration to ensure Americans have access to

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Emergence Water and Nimbus: Water Joins Power as AI Infrastructure’s Next Critical Constraint

For much of the past decade, the conversation surrounding AI infrastructure has been dominated by one resource above all others: power. Utilities have become strategic partners. Natural gas generation, small modular reactors, microgrids and behind-the-meter power have become central themes across virtually every major data center conference. Developers increasingly speak about securing megawatts years before they discuss servers. But another infrastructure constraint is quietly following the same trajectory: Water. According to executives from Emergence Water and Nimbus Advanced Process Cooling Systems, water is rapidly evolving beyond its traditional role as a sustainability metric and becoming one of the primary determinants of where AI campuses can be built, how they are cooled, and how efficiently they will operate over the coming decade. Speaking with Data Center Frontier Editor in Chief Matt Vincent on the latest DCF Show podcast, Emergence Water Chief Product Officer Leif Percifield and Nimbus Technical Director Vamsi Mokkapati described an industry where water has effectively joined power and fiber as foundational infrastructure for AI development. “From a community perspective, water is absolutely the number one priority about where and why a data center gets built,” Percifield said. “From the developer, it’s pretty binary. They either have water available to them—or they don’t.” Water Is Becoming a Site Selection Constraint The shift reflects the changing realities of AI infrastructure. Traditional enterprise data centers often viewed water primarily through sustainability reporting or Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) discussions. AI facilities operating at unprecedented rack densities have fundamentally altered that equation. Liquid cooling, hybrid cooling architectures and increasingly sophisticated thermal management strategies all place new emphasis on reliable long-term water availability. Equally important, communities are beginning to scrutinize water usage with the same intensity previously reserved for electrical demand. Percifield says those conversations are increasingly determining whether projects move forward at all.

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Q2 Executive Roundtable Recap

Matt Vincent is Editor in Chief of Data Center Frontier, where he leads editorial strategy and coverage focused on the infrastructure powering cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and the digital economy. A veteran B2B technology journalist with more than two decades of experience, Vincent specializes in the intersection of data centers, power, cooling, and emerging AI-era infrastructure. Since assuming the EIC role in 2023, he has helped guide Data Center Frontier’s coverage of the industry’s transition into the gigawatt-scale AI era, with a focus on hyperscale development, behind-the-meter power strategies, liquid cooling architectures, and the evolving energy demands of high-density compute, while working closely with the Digital Infrastructure Group at Endeavor Business Media to expand the brand’s analytical and multimedia footprint. Vincent also hosts The Data Center Frontier Show podcast, where he interviews industry leaders across hyperscale, colocation, utilities, and the data center supply chain to examine the technologies and business models reshaping digital infrastructure. Since its inception he serves as Head of Content for the Data Center Frontier Trends Summit. Before becoming Editor in Chief, he served in multiple senior editorial roles across Endeavor Business Media’s digital infrastructure portfolio, with coverage spanning data centers and hyperscale infrastructure, structured cabling and networking, telecom and datacom, IP physical security, and wireless and Pro AV markets. He began his career in 2005 within PennWell’s Advanced Technology Division and later held senior editorial positions supporting brands such as Cabling Installation & Maintenance, Lightwave Online, Broadband Technology Report, and Smart Buildings Technology. Vincent is a frequent moderator, interviewer, and keynote speaker at industry events including the HPC Forum, where he delivers forward-looking analysis on how AI and high-performance computing are reshaping digital infrastructure. He graduated with honors from Indiana University Bloomington with a B.A. in English Literature and Creative Writing and lives in southern New Hampshire with

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Executive Roundtable: Scaling Beyond the Prototype Phase

Steve Altizer, Compu Dynamics: The defining challenge is keeping pace with the rate of change in the IT environment. It takes time to design, permit, build, and commission a data center. AI hardware operates on a completely different timeline. New GPU families are being introduced every 12 to 18 months, and from one generation to the next, rack power densities can double or even triple. At prototype scale, you can design around a single cluster or a specific density profile. At production scale, that approach becomes a real liability. The facility has to support today’s deployment while remaining adaptable for the next compute profile. We are not just talking about adding more power. We are preparing for major architectural shifts, including the move toward DC power delivery or cooling systems that may rely on two-phase liquid to remove heat at scale. That is what becomes materially harder. You are no longer solving for a single, static deployment. You are solving for a moving target inside a live operating environment. This is where strategic modularity proves its value. It helps decouple the lifecycle of the building from the lifecycle of the IT hardware. Instead of treating the data center as one monolithic design, modularity creates a more agile framework that can absorb new power and cooling architectures without requiring a full facility retrofit every time the IT roadmap shifts. At Compu Dynamics Modular, we are seeing this play out in real time. The value of a turnkey modular approach is not simply speed. It is the agility owners need to keep pace with ever-evolving rack densities, power delivery requirements, and cooling architectures.

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