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Here’s how technology transformed babymaking

Technology is changing the way we make babies. The pioneering work of the scientists who invented IVF led to the birth of the first “test tube baby” in 1978. We’ve come a long, long way since then. This week, I’ve been working on a piece about the cutting edge of IVF technologies and what’s coming next. Think AI and robots and, potentially, gene-edited embryos. My reporting has also made me think about just how much progress has been made in the last five decades. Clinicians have improved hormonal treatments. Embryologists have devised ways to culture embryos in the lab for longer. IVF clinics today offer multiple genetic tests for embryos. In recent years, we’ve had reports of babies born with DNA from three people, babies born following “IVF on wheels,” babies born from decades-old embryos, and even babies “conceived” with the aid of a sperm-injecting robot.
The technology has also had a huge social impact. It has allowed for changes in the structure of families and provided more reproductive choices for would-be parents. So this week, let’s consider the technologies that have transformed babymaking. Alan Penzias, a reproductive endocrinologist at Boston IVF, has been working in IVF since the early 1990s. In those days, his lab at Yale would collect a person’s eggs, fertilize them, and culture any resulting embryos for two days, until the embryos had two or four cells.
The embryos couldn’t survive any longer outside a body, so they’d be transferred to the uterus at that point. All of them. Even if there were, say, five embryos in total. Typical healthy patients could expect a live birth rate of 12% to 15%, he says. Then Penzias heard that other teams were managing to culture embryos for three days. “We thought, No, that’s not possible,” he recalls. He learned that scientists had achieved this by tinkering with the culture medium—the nutrient-rich fluid the embryos are grown in. Those three-day embryos, which had around six to 10 cells, seemed to have a better chance of resulting in a live birth. The teams culturing embryos for longer saw their success rates climb to 25% among similar patient groups, says Penzias. Again, he couldn’t believe it. “We thought they were making it up,” he says. In the years since, teams have made more improvements to culture medium. Today, most IVF embryos are cultured for five or six days—a point at which they have 80 to 100 cells. The culturing process can act a little like a stress test—the embryos that make it to day six are generally more likely to go all the way and develop into a healthy baby. Over the same period, advances in other technologies have opened up the options for what we can do with those embryos. Scientists learned they were able to freeze embryos and use them at a later date. A little over a decade ago, clinics shifted to a “vitrification” approach that rapidly cools the embryos to a glassy state. Vitrified embryos are more likely to survive freezing and thawing, so this approach quickly caught on. As a result, doctors no longer needed to transfer multiple embryos at once. This made it less likely that patients would have twins or triplets, which can increase the risk of pregnancy complications. Vitrification has also made IVF safer in other ways, including by affording patients a bit of time between fertility treatments. The hormonal treatments used in the first phase of IVF are designed to increase the production of mature eggs that can be collected. These treatments carry a small risk of a condition called ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), which in rare cases can be life-threatening. The ability to freeze all your embryos and use them at a later date is thought to give the body a chance to recover from hormonal treatment and reduces the risk of OHSS. And because clinics are now able to culture embryos for up to a week, they can take a few of the 100 or so cells and send them for genetic testing before freezing the embryos. People undergoing IVF can get genetic readouts of all the embryos before deciding which to implant. (It is worth noting, however, that these testing technologies are not perfect.)

“Those are really radical changes, and we take them for granted,” says Penzias. These technologies have also changed the function of IVF. What was once a treatment for infertility is now used to preserve fertility. People who want to delay parenthood can opt to freeze their eggs or embryos and use them later. They might opt to transfer one embryo in a year’s time and a second several years later. “We’ve been able to empower women to be able to have much more reproductive choice and get more reproductive mileage from a single IVF cycle,” says Penzias. People who are about to undergo cancer treatments that might damage the testes or ovaries can opt to store their eggs or sperm ahead of time, too. Scientists have even been able to preserve pieces of ovarian and testicular tissue and reimplant them later, enabling recipients to have healthy babies. Today, more people than ever have access to safe IVF options that offer multiple paths to parenthood. Those options look set to expand. But if you want to find out more about the AI and IVF robots, you’ll have to read this week’s story, here! 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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Gluware’s Titan rises to meet Mythos network vulnerability challenge

The consequence is that many CVEs go unremediated. CVEs (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures) are identified vulnerabilities that have been publicly disclosed. The CVE framework also does not account for vulnerabilities detected directly by AI models, which may never appear in any advisory or bulletin. “Every model is just going to get smarter. This is not a one-time thing. This is constant,” Gray said. “The only way to be able to respond and hope to be one step ahead, if that’s possible, is to be able to have the capability of a machine response.” How Titan Exposure Management works Titan Exposure Management is built on Gluware’s DIAL, which maintains a continuously updated model of network state across the entire fleet. Network intent, not configuration snapshots. DIAL performs continuous discovery of device configurations, operating states, and feature-level network intent across 56+ operating systems from 22 vendors, including legacy environments with years of pre-automation history. Feature-level CVE scoring. When a CVE or model-detected vulnerability is received, Titan Exposure Management maps it against vendor and OS-specific feature data to produce a per-device exposure score rather than a blanket OS-version match. External threat intelligence. The platform integrates EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System) and KEV (Known Exploited Vulnerabilities) data to weight scores against real-world exploitation activity, producing a ranked view of actual fleet exposure. Compensating controls. Where patching cannot happen immediately, Titan Exposure Management can deploy ACL changes or network segmentation to reduce the attack surface and buy time. Pre-checks and post-checks are applied through the same DIAL layer at every step. Coordinated patching. For high-availability environments, the platform understands HA topology and sequences patches so one device fails over while its peer is updated. “Patching is the answer, and just being able to do it according to what the business needs and in a safe

Read More »

AMD launches AI-targeted PCIe cards for current servers

Instinct MI350P PCIe cards are available in air-cooled systems with up to eight accelerator cards, which makes them ideal for small, medium, and large AI models for inference and RAG pipelines. It has 144GB of high bandwidth memory 3e (HBM3E) running at up to 4TB/s. Performance is estimated at 2,299 teraflops (TFLOPS) and up to 4,600 peak TFLOPS at MXFP4, which AMD says is the highest performance currently available in an enterprise PCIe card. It offers native support for lower-precision MXFP6 and MXFP4, which deliver high throughput as well as acceleration through sparsity support for most mainstream 8- and 16-bit precisions. The MI350P card supports technology called sparsity, where zero values in data sets and matrixes are ignored, thus reducing the processing time. Support for sparsity means higher precision formats, like INT8 and BF16, deliver efficient performance, according to AMD.

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AlphaEvolve: How our Gemini-powered coding agent is scaling impact across fields

Improving AI infrastructureAlphaEvolve has graduated from pilot testing to becoming a core component of our infrastructure. AlphaEvolve has been used as a regular tool to optimize the design of the next generation of TPUs. It also helped discover more efficient cache replacement policies, achieving in two days what previously required a concerted, human-intensive effort spanning months.“AlphaEvolve began optimizing the lowest levels of hardware powering our AI stacks. It proposed a circuit design so counterintuitive yet efficient that it was integrated directly into the silicon of our next-generation TPUs. This is the latest example of TPU brains helping design next-generation TPU bodies.” — Jeff Dean, Chief Scientist, Google DeepMind and Google ResearchAlphaEvolve improved the efficiency of Google Spanner by refining its Log-Structured Merge-tree compaction heuristics. This optimization reduced ‘write amplification’—the ratio of data written to storage versus the original request—by 20%. It also provided insights for new compiler optimization strategies that reduced the storage footprint of software by nearly 9%.Scaling commercial applicationsTogether with Google Cloud, we are now bringing the power of AlphaEvolve to a variety of commercial enterprises across industries.In financial services, Klarna used the system to optimize one of its largest transformer models — doubling its training speed whilst improving model quality.In semiconductor manufacturing, Substrate applied AlphaEvolve to its computational lithography framework, achieving a multi-fold increase in runtime speed, enabling them to run significantly larger simulations of advanced semiconductors.In logistics, FM Logistic used the technology to optimize complex routing challenges like the Traveling Salesman Problem, finding 10.4% improvement in routing efficiency over the previous heavily optimized solutions — saving over 15,000 kilometers of distance travelled annually.In advertising and marketing, WPP used AlphaEvolve to refine AI model components, navigating complex, high-dimensional campaign data and achieving 10% accuracy gains over their competitive manual model optimizations.In computational material and life sciences, Schrödinger applied AlphaEvolve to achieve a roughly 4x speedup in both Machine Learned Force Fields (MLFF) training and inference.“AlphaEvolve allows us to explore larger chemical spaces faster and more efficiently than ever before. Faster MLFF inference carries real business impact, shortening R&D cycles in drug discovery, catalyst design, and materials development, and enabling companies to screen molecular candidates in days rather than months.” — Gabriel Marques, Technical Lead of Machine Learning at Schrödinger.The future of AlphaEvolveThe past year shows how AlphaEvolve is rapidly becoming a versatile, general-purpose system. It is demonstrating that the next breakthroughs will be driven by algorithms that can learn, evolve and optimize themselves. As we look ahead, we are excited to expand these capabilities, and bring the power of this technology to an even broader set of external challenges.AcknowledgementsAlphaEvolve was developed by Matej Balog, Alexander Novikov, Ngân Vũ, Marvin Eisenberger, Emilien Dupont, Po-Sen Huang, Adam Zsolt Wagner, Sergey Shirobokov, Borislav Kozlovskii, Francisco J. R. Ruiz, Abbas Mehrabian, M. Pawan Kumar, Abigail See, Swarat Chaudhuri, George Holland, Alex Davies, Sebastian Nowozin, and Pushmeet Kohli. This research was developed as part of a broader initiative focused on using AI for algorithm discovery. Following the initial development, Alexey Cherepanov, Anindya Basu, Becky Evangelakos, Jamie Smith, and Mario Pinto joined the team to scale AlphaEvolve’s impact.Adam Connors, Alex Bäuerle, Anna Trostanetski, Fernanda Viegas, Gabi Cardoso, Jonathan Caton, Lucas Dixon, Mariana Felix, Martin Wattenberg, Matin Akhlaghinia, Richard Green, Yosuke Ushigome, and Yunhan Xu collaborated with our team to develop the AlphaEvolve UI, with support from many others.Anant Nawalgaria, Diego Ballesteros, Gemma Jennings, Jakob Oesinghaus, Kartik Sanu, Laurynas Tamulevičius, Nicolas Stroppa, Nishta Dhawan, Oliver Hilsenbeck, Reah Miyara, Skander Hannachi, Tom Beyer, and Vishal Agarwal collaborated with our team to develop the AlphaEvolve API and engage with Google Cloud customers, with support from many others.We gratefully acknowledge our collaborators for leading applications of AlphaEvolve on critical problems and contributing to this report: Aaron Wenger, Abhradeep Guha Thakurta, Akanksha Jain, Alex Vitvitskyi, Amir Yazdan Bakhsh, Andrew Carroll, Aranyak Mehta, Arthur Conmy, Ansh Nagda, Davide Paglieri, Eric Perim Martins, Hassler Thurston, Hongzheng Chen, Jack Mason, János Kramár, Jeremy Ratcliff, Jessica Sapick, Johannes Bausch, Jonathan Katz, Kevin Miller, Kim Stachenfeld, Mark Kurzeja, Mircea Trofin, Myriam Khan, Nero Geng, Pablo Samuel Castro, Petar Veličković, Pi-Chuan Chang, Prabhakar Raghavan, Raghav Gupta, Rohin Shah, Sasha Vezhnevets, Sébastien Lahaie, Sergio Guadarrama, Shravya Shetty, Shruthi Gorantala, Terence Tao, Todd Lipcon, Tom O’Brien, Vinod Nair, Ziyue Wang, Zun Li, among many other users of AlphaEvolve.Finally, we thank our leadership for their guidance and support: Amin Vahdat, Ankur Jain, Demis Hassabis, Jeff Dean, Parthasarathy Ranganathan, Pushmeet Kohli, Saurabh Tiwary, and Sundar Pichai. We also extend our gratitude to our partner teams across Google DeepMind, Google Cloud, Google Labs, Google Research, and other product areas for enabling the applications and products powered by AlphaEvolve.

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The Download: the tech reshaping IVF and the rise of balcony solar

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. What’s next for IVF IVF has brought millions of babies into the world over the last four decades. But the process can still be slow, painful, and expensive—and far from guaranteed to work. Now, a wave of new technologies aims to change that.  Researchers are using AI to identify promising sperm and embryos, developing robotic systems that could automate parts of the IVF process, and even exploring controversial genetic editing techniques designed to prevent inherited disease. The technologies could make IVF more effective and accessible. But they’re also raising difficult ethical questions about how far reproductive medicine should go.
Find out what’s next for IVF. —Jessica Hamzelou
This story is from MIT Technology Review’s What’s Next series, which looks across industries, trends, and technologies to give you a first look at the future. You can read the rest of them here. The balcony solar boom is coming to the US Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills. Proponents say the systems could make solar power more accessible, but some experts caution that there are safety concerns.  Read the full story on balcony solar’s potentially massive impact in the US. —Casey Crownhart This article is from The Spark, our weekly climate newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday. Resistance: 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now Resistance against AI’s proliferation is growing. People from all walks of life are speaking out against rising electricity bills from data centers, disappearing jobs, chatbots’ impact on teen mental health, the military’s use of AI, and copyright infringement—among other concerns.  People want to have a say in how the technology transforms their future. And they’re starting to create small cracks in AI labs’ vision for the future. Find out how.

—Michelle Kim Resistance is on our list of the 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now, MIT Technology Review’s guide to what’s really worth your attention in the buzzy world of AI.  The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 After years of insults, Anthropic and SpaceX have teamed upAnthropic will tap SpaceX’s GPUs to meet surging demand. (Axios)+ While SpaceX gets a marquee customer for its AI ambitions. (Wired $)+ Anthropic says the deal will double Claude Code’s rate limits. (Ars Technica)+It’s also exploring building compute capacity in space. (CNBC)+ Musk previously called Anthropic “evil” and “misanthropic.” (Gizmodo)2 Ex-OpenAI leaders say Sam Altman sowed “chaos” and distrustFormer CTO Mira Murati said she couldn’t trust his words. (The Verge)+ He also bypassed OpenAI’s safety board before a model release. (Gizmodo)+ And pitted leaders against one another. (Forbes)+ But Elon Musk still tried to recruit Altman to lead a Tesla AI lab. (FT $)+ Here’s why Musk and Altman are in court. (MIT Technology Review)3 China’s humanoid robots are fueling its next export boomMorgan Stanley says Beijing has taken an early lead in the sector. (Bloomberg $)+ Gig workers are training humanoids at home. (MIT Technology Review)4 SpaceX’s IPO plans will give Elon Musk “virtually unchecked” authorityAnd erode typical shareholder protections. (Reuters $)+ Activists and pension funds are pushing back against the IPO. (Wired $)+ While SpaceX is shifting focus from Falcon 9 to Starship. (Ars Technica)5 Google DeepMind will use the MMORPG Eve Online for AI model testingIt’s also bought a stake in the game’s maker. (Ars Technica)+ DeepMind also recently built a new video-game-playing agent. (MIT Technology Review)6 The US risks isolating its automakers by banning a Chinese EV standardIt’s prohibiting software that’s dominating global EV markets. (Rest of World)7 Elon Musk’s proposed Texas chip factory could cost $119 billionIt would manufacture chips for Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI. (CNBC)+ Future AI chips could be built on glass. (MIT Technology Review)8 Why the “attention-span crisis” is misunderstoodTechnology may be exhausting attention rather than shortening it. (Atlantic $)9 Scientists are getting closer to explaining what causes lightningNew tools are revealing unexpected physics inside thunderstorms. (Quanta)10 Kids have found an age verification loophole: fake mustachesResourceful children are foiling blocks on adult websites. (TechCrunch) Quote of the day “My concern was about Sam saying one thing to one person and completely the opposite to another person.” —Mira Murati, the former CTO of OpenAI, testifies ‌in court that CEO Sam Altman was deceptive, Reuters reports. One More Thing
A brief, weird history of brainwashing During the Cold War, the US prepared for a psychic war with the Soviet Union and China by spending millions of dollars on research into manipulating the human brain.  The science never exactly panned out, but residual beliefs fostered by this bizarre conflict continue to play a role in ideological and scientific debates to this day. And now, new technologies are altering how we think about mind control. 
This is how the race for mind control changed America forever. —Annalee Newitz

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The balcony solar boom is coming to the US

Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills. Balcony solar is already popular in Europe, and proponents say that the systems could make solar power more accessible for more people in the US, including renters. As popularity rises, though, some experts caution that there are safety concerns with how balcony solar would work with existing electrical equipment in homes. Let’s talk about what balcony solar is, why it’s unique, and how new testing requirements could affect our progress toward deploying the technology in the US. Plug-in solar systems are designed to be simple to install, often requiring no electrician or specialized worker at all. They’re small, and many can be plugged into existing outlets.
People across Germany have installed over a million balcony solar systems. They generally measure up to roughly two square meters or about 20 square feet, and can generate up to 800 watts—enough to power a standard microwave. Now the plug-in solar wave is coming to the US. Many Americans have already installed DIY balcony solar without the permission of their utilities—it’s something of a regulatory gray area. In late 2025, Utah became the first state to explicitly allow people to install and use balcony solar systems. Over two dozen other states are now considering similar legislation.
Generally, utilities require users to sign an interconnection agreement before they can plug in large arrays of solar panels that generate power for the grid. There can be fees and permits, and it all amounts to an expensive and lengthy process. Utah’s law ditched the interconnection requirement for panels that have a low power cap and that are certified by a national testing facility. (Legislation under consideration in other states, including New York, includes the same requirements.) The thinking is that since the panels produce very little power, which would be used to meet a home’s own energy demand and probably not get sent back to the grid, the same requirements shouldn’t apply.  As for that certification piece, in January the national testing and certification lab UL Solutions released UL 3700, a testing protocol to certify balcony solar systems and ensure that they’re safe.  There are three main safety considerations to address for these plug-in solar systems, says Joseph Bablo, manager of principal engineering, energy, and industrial automation at UL Solutions. First, there’s the possibility of overloading a circuit. Generally, electrical circuits have circuit breakers, which can trip and interrupt current if necessary. But if there’s a solar panel adding extra power to a circuit, a traditional breaker might not be able to respond to overload. Over time, overloaded circuits can damage equipment or even start a fire.  Second, these small systems are typically installed on the outside of homes, and outdoor power outlets generally have ground fault circuit interruption (GFCI). Basically, if an outlet or its surroundings are wet, it can shut down to prevent electric shock. Many GFCI systems may not work if there’s power going back into an outlet from a solar panel. Finally, there’s touch safety: If a plug gets disconnected from the wall, the blades of the plug may still have power running through them for a short time. If a panel is getting sunlight, those blades could be energized for longer than is typical. The new UL Solutions testing framework aims to address these concerns. One of the key recommendations is that plug-in solar panels should use a special outlet that’s designed specifically for them. The safety measures included in that connection, and within a panel, would ensure that the panels are safe. The need for a special outlet means that currently, people who want to plug in a solar panel array would probably need to have an electrician come and update their wiring in order to comply with the protocol, Bablo says. “I know they want to say ‘No electrician, no permits’—we’re not there.”

Today, anyone can buy products like solar panels and inverters, some of which carry their own component UL certifications, and string them together. (Inverters are covered under UL 1741, for example.) But the gold standard is to have an entire system that meets the safety requirements, and that means adhering to the new standard, Bablo says. As of early May, there aren’t any plug-in solar systems that have been fully certified by UL Solutions. And Bablo said he couldn’t share information about what, if any, are in the pipeline.   Even with the new certification requirements, Bablo still thinks plug-in solar still has the potential to help more people access the technology. “There’s a way for it to work, but we want it to work safely,” he says. 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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Here’s how technology transformed babymaking

Technology is changing the way we make babies. The pioneering work of the scientists who invented IVF led to the birth of the first “test tube baby” in 1978. We’ve come a long, long way since then. This week, I’ve been working on a piece about the cutting edge of IVF technologies and what’s coming next. Think AI and robots and, potentially, gene-edited embryos. My reporting has also made me think about just how much progress has been made in the last five decades. Clinicians have improved hormonal treatments. Embryologists have devised ways to culture embryos in the lab for longer. IVF clinics today offer multiple genetic tests for embryos. In recent years, we’ve had reports of babies born with DNA from three people, babies born following “IVF on wheels,” babies born from decades-old embryos, and even babies “conceived” with the aid of a sperm-injecting robot.
The technology has also had a huge social impact. It has allowed for changes in the structure of families and provided more reproductive choices for would-be parents. So this week, let’s consider the technologies that have transformed babymaking. Alan Penzias, a reproductive endocrinologist at Boston IVF, has been working in IVF since the early 1990s. In those days, his lab at Yale would collect a person’s eggs, fertilize them, and culture any resulting embryos for two days, until the embryos had two or four cells.
The embryos couldn’t survive any longer outside a body, so they’d be transferred to the uterus at that point. All of them. Even if there were, say, five embryos in total. Typical healthy patients could expect a live birth rate of 12% to 15%, he says. Then Penzias heard that other teams were managing to culture embryos for three days. “We thought, No, that’s not possible,” he recalls. He learned that scientists had achieved this by tinkering with the culture medium—the nutrient-rich fluid the embryos are grown in. Those three-day embryos, which had around six to 10 cells, seemed to have a better chance of resulting in a live birth. The teams culturing embryos for longer saw their success rates climb to 25% among similar patient groups, says Penzias. Again, he couldn’t believe it. “We thought they were making it up,” he says. In the years since, teams have made more improvements to culture medium. Today, most IVF embryos are cultured for five or six days—a point at which they have 80 to 100 cells. The culturing process can act a little like a stress test—the embryos that make it to day six are generally more likely to go all the way and develop into a healthy baby. Over the same period, advances in other technologies have opened up the options for what we can do with those embryos. Scientists learned they were able to freeze embryos and use them at a later date. A little over a decade ago, clinics shifted to a “vitrification” approach that rapidly cools the embryos to a glassy state. Vitrified embryos are more likely to survive freezing and thawing, so this approach quickly caught on. As a result, doctors no longer needed to transfer multiple embryos at once. This made it less likely that patients would have twins or triplets, which can increase the risk of pregnancy complications. Vitrification has also made IVF safer in other ways, including by affording patients a bit of time between fertility treatments. The hormonal treatments used in the first phase of IVF are designed to increase the production of mature eggs that can be collected. These treatments carry a small risk of a condition called ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), which in rare cases can be life-threatening. The ability to freeze all your embryos and use them at a later date is thought to give the body a chance to recover from hormonal treatment and reduces the risk of OHSS. And because clinics are now able to culture embryos for up to a week, they can take a few of the 100 or so cells and send them for genetic testing before freezing the embryos. People undergoing IVF can get genetic readouts of all the embryos before deciding which to implant. (It is worth noting, however, that these testing technologies are not perfect.)

“Those are really radical changes, and we take them for granted,” says Penzias. These technologies have also changed the function of IVF. What was once a treatment for infertility is now used to preserve fertility. People who want to delay parenthood can opt to freeze their eggs or embryos and use them later. They might opt to transfer one embryo in a year’s time and a second several years later. “We’ve been able to empower women to be able to have much more reproductive choice and get more reproductive mileage from a single IVF cycle,” says Penzias. People who are about to undergo cancer treatments that might damage the testes or ovaries can opt to store their eggs or sperm ahead of time, too. Scientists have even been able to preserve pieces of ovarian and testicular tissue and reimplant them later, enabling recipients to have healthy babies. Today, more people than ever have access to safe IVF options that offer multiple paths to parenthood. Those options look set to expand. But if you want to find out more about the AI and IVF robots, you’ll have to read this week’s story, here! 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.

Read More »

Gluware’s Titan rises to meet Mythos network vulnerability challenge

The consequence is that many CVEs go unremediated. CVEs (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures) are identified vulnerabilities that have been publicly disclosed. The CVE framework also does not account for vulnerabilities detected directly by AI models, which may never appear in any advisory or bulletin. “Every model is just going to get smarter. This is not a one-time thing. This is constant,” Gray said. “The only way to be able to respond and hope to be one step ahead, if that’s possible, is to be able to have the capability of a machine response.” How Titan Exposure Management works Titan Exposure Management is built on Gluware’s DIAL, which maintains a continuously updated model of network state across the entire fleet. Network intent, not configuration snapshots. DIAL performs continuous discovery of device configurations, operating states, and feature-level network intent across 56+ operating systems from 22 vendors, including legacy environments with years of pre-automation history. Feature-level CVE scoring. When a CVE or model-detected vulnerability is received, Titan Exposure Management maps it against vendor and OS-specific feature data to produce a per-device exposure score rather than a blanket OS-version match. External threat intelligence. The platform integrates EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System) and KEV (Known Exploited Vulnerabilities) data to weight scores against real-world exploitation activity, producing a ranked view of actual fleet exposure. Compensating controls. Where patching cannot happen immediately, Titan Exposure Management can deploy ACL changes or network segmentation to reduce the attack surface and buy time. Pre-checks and post-checks are applied through the same DIAL layer at every step. Coordinated patching. For high-availability environments, the platform understands HA topology and sequences patches so one device fails over while its peer is updated. “Patching is the answer, and just being able to do it according to what the business needs and in a safe

Read More »

AMD launches AI-targeted PCIe cards for current servers

Instinct MI350P PCIe cards are available in air-cooled systems with up to eight accelerator cards, which makes them ideal for small, medium, and large AI models for inference and RAG pipelines. It has 144GB of high bandwidth memory 3e (HBM3E) running at up to 4TB/s. Performance is estimated at 2,299 teraflops (TFLOPS) and up to 4,600 peak TFLOPS at MXFP4, which AMD says is the highest performance currently available in an enterprise PCIe card. It offers native support for lower-precision MXFP6 and MXFP4, which deliver high throughput as well as acceleration through sparsity support for most mainstream 8- and 16-bit precisions. The MI350P card supports technology called sparsity, where zero values in data sets and matrixes are ignored, thus reducing the processing time. Support for sparsity means higher precision formats, like INT8 and BF16, deliver efficient performance, according to AMD.

Read More »

AlphaEvolve: How our Gemini-powered coding agent is scaling impact across fields

Improving AI infrastructureAlphaEvolve has graduated from pilot testing to becoming a core component of our infrastructure. AlphaEvolve has been used as a regular tool to optimize the design of the next generation of TPUs. It also helped discover more efficient cache replacement policies, achieving in two days what previously required a concerted, human-intensive effort spanning months.“AlphaEvolve began optimizing the lowest levels of hardware powering our AI stacks. It proposed a circuit design so counterintuitive yet efficient that it was integrated directly into the silicon of our next-generation TPUs. This is the latest example of TPU brains helping design next-generation TPU bodies.” — Jeff Dean, Chief Scientist, Google DeepMind and Google ResearchAlphaEvolve improved the efficiency of Google Spanner by refining its Log-Structured Merge-tree compaction heuristics. This optimization reduced ‘write amplification’—the ratio of data written to storage versus the original request—by 20%. It also provided insights for new compiler optimization strategies that reduced the storage footprint of software by nearly 9%.Scaling commercial applicationsTogether with Google Cloud, we are now bringing the power of AlphaEvolve to a variety of commercial enterprises across industries.In financial services, Klarna used the system to optimize one of its largest transformer models — doubling its training speed whilst improving model quality.In semiconductor manufacturing, Substrate applied AlphaEvolve to its computational lithography framework, achieving a multi-fold increase in runtime speed, enabling them to run significantly larger simulations of advanced semiconductors.In logistics, FM Logistic used the technology to optimize complex routing challenges like the Traveling Salesman Problem, finding 10.4% improvement in routing efficiency over the previous heavily optimized solutions — saving over 15,000 kilometers of distance travelled annually.In advertising and marketing, WPP used AlphaEvolve to refine AI model components, navigating complex, high-dimensional campaign data and achieving 10% accuracy gains over their competitive manual model optimizations.In computational material and life sciences, Schrödinger applied AlphaEvolve to achieve a roughly 4x speedup in both Machine Learned Force Fields (MLFF) training and inference.“AlphaEvolve allows us to explore larger chemical spaces faster and more efficiently than ever before. Faster MLFF inference carries real business impact, shortening R&D cycles in drug discovery, catalyst design, and materials development, and enabling companies to screen molecular candidates in days rather than months.” — Gabriel Marques, Technical Lead of Machine Learning at Schrödinger.The future of AlphaEvolveThe past year shows how AlphaEvolve is rapidly becoming a versatile, general-purpose system. It is demonstrating that the next breakthroughs will be driven by algorithms that can learn, evolve and optimize themselves. As we look ahead, we are excited to expand these capabilities, and bring the power of this technology to an even broader set of external challenges.AcknowledgementsAlphaEvolve was developed by Matej Balog, Alexander Novikov, Ngân Vũ, Marvin Eisenberger, Emilien Dupont, Po-Sen Huang, Adam Zsolt Wagner, Sergey Shirobokov, Borislav Kozlovskii, Francisco J. R. Ruiz, Abbas Mehrabian, M. Pawan Kumar, Abigail See, Swarat Chaudhuri, George Holland, Alex Davies, Sebastian Nowozin, and Pushmeet Kohli. This research was developed as part of a broader initiative focused on using AI for algorithm discovery. Following the initial development, Alexey Cherepanov, Anindya Basu, Becky Evangelakos, Jamie Smith, and Mario Pinto joined the team to scale AlphaEvolve’s impact.Adam Connors, Alex Bäuerle, Anna Trostanetski, Fernanda Viegas, Gabi Cardoso, Jonathan Caton, Lucas Dixon, Mariana Felix, Martin Wattenberg, Matin Akhlaghinia, Richard Green, Yosuke Ushigome, and Yunhan Xu collaborated with our team to develop the AlphaEvolve UI, with support from many others.Anant Nawalgaria, Diego Ballesteros, Gemma Jennings, Jakob Oesinghaus, Kartik Sanu, Laurynas Tamulevičius, Nicolas Stroppa, Nishta Dhawan, Oliver Hilsenbeck, Reah Miyara, Skander Hannachi, Tom Beyer, and Vishal Agarwal collaborated with our team to develop the AlphaEvolve API and engage with Google Cloud customers, with support from many others.We gratefully acknowledge our collaborators for leading applications of AlphaEvolve on critical problems and contributing to this report: Aaron Wenger, Abhradeep Guha Thakurta, Akanksha Jain, Alex Vitvitskyi, Amir Yazdan Bakhsh, Andrew Carroll, Aranyak Mehta, Arthur Conmy, Ansh Nagda, Davide Paglieri, Eric Perim Martins, Hassler Thurston, Hongzheng Chen, Jack Mason, János Kramár, Jeremy Ratcliff, Jessica Sapick, Johannes Bausch, Jonathan Katz, Kevin Miller, Kim Stachenfeld, Mark Kurzeja, Mircea Trofin, Myriam Khan, Nero Geng, Pablo Samuel Castro, Petar Veličković, Pi-Chuan Chang, Prabhakar Raghavan, Raghav Gupta, Rohin Shah, Sasha Vezhnevets, Sébastien Lahaie, Sergio Guadarrama, Shravya Shetty, Shruthi Gorantala, Terence Tao, Todd Lipcon, Tom O’Brien, Vinod Nair, Ziyue Wang, Zun Li, among many other users of AlphaEvolve.Finally, we thank our leadership for their guidance and support: Amin Vahdat, Ankur Jain, Demis Hassabis, Jeff Dean, Parthasarathy Ranganathan, Pushmeet Kohli, Saurabh Tiwary, and Sundar Pichai. We also extend our gratitude to our partner teams across Google DeepMind, Google Cloud, Google Labs, Google Research, and other product areas for enabling the applications and products powered by AlphaEvolve.

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The Download: the tech reshaping IVF and the rise of balcony solar

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. What’s next for IVF IVF has brought millions of babies into the world over the last four decades. But the process can still be slow, painful, and expensive—and far from guaranteed to work. Now, a wave of new technologies aims to change that.  Researchers are using AI to identify promising sperm and embryos, developing robotic systems that could automate parts of the IVF process, and even exploring controversial genetic editing techniques designed to prevent inherited disease. The technologies could make IVF more effective and accessible. But they’re also raising difficult ethical questions about how far reproductive medicine should go.
Find out what’s next for IVF. —Jessica Hamzelou
This story is from MIT Technology Review’s What’s Next series, which looks across industries, trends, and technologies to give you a first look at the future. You can read the rest of them here. The balcony solar boom is coming to the US Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills. Proponents say the systems could make solar power more accessible, but some experts caution that there are safety concerns.  Read the full story on balcony solar’s potentially massive impact in the US. —Casey Crownhart This article is from The Spark, our weekly climate newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday. Resistance: 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now Resistance against AI’s proliferation is growing. People from all walks of life are speaking out against rising electricity bills from data centers, disappearing jobs, chatbots’ impact on teen mental health, the military’s use of AI, and copyright infringement—among other concerns.  People want to have a say in how the technology transforms their future. And they’re starting to create small cracks in AI labs’ vision for the future. Find out how.

—Michelle Kim Resistance is on our list of the 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now, MIT Technology Review’s guide to what’s really worth your attention in the buzzy world of AI.  The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 After years of insults, Anthropic and SpaceX have teamed upAnthropic will tap SpaceX’s GPUs to meet surging demand. (Axios)+ While SpaceX gets a marquee customer for its AI ambitions. (Wired $)+ Anthropic says the deal will double Claude Code’s rate limits. (Ars Technica)+It’s also exploring building compute capacity in space. (CNBC)+ Musk previously called Anthropic “evil” and “misanthropic.” (Gizmodo)2 Ex-OpenAI leaders say Sam Altman sowed “chaos” and distrustFormer CTO Mira Murati said she couldn’t trust his words. (The Verge)+ He also bypassed OpenAI’s safety board before a model release. (Gizmodo)+ And pitted leaders against one another. (Forbes)+ But Elon Musk still tried to recruit Altman to lead a Tesla AI lab. (FT $)+ Here’s why Musk and Altman are in court. (MIT Technology Review)3 China’s humanoid robots are fueling its next export boomMorgan Stanley says Beijing has taken an early lead in the sector. (Bloomberg $)+ Gig workers are training humanoids at home. (MIT Technology Review)4 SpaceX’s IPO plans will give Elon Musk “virtually unchecked” authorityAnd erode typical shareholder protections. (Reuters $)+ Activists and pension funds are pushing back against the IPO. (Wired $)+ While SpaceX is shifting focus from Falcon 9 to Starship. (Ars Technica)5 Google DeepMind will use the MMORPG Eve Online for AI model testingIt’s also bought a stake in the game’s maker. (Ars Technica)+ DeepMind also recently built a new video-game-playing agent. (MIT Technology Review)6 The US risks isolating its automakers by banning a Chinese EV standardIt’s prohibiting software that’s dominating global EV markets. (Rest of World)7 Elon Musk’s proposed Texas chip factory could cost $119 billionIt would manufacture chips for Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI. (CNBC)+ Future AI chips could be built on glass. (MIT Technology Review)8 Why the “attention-span crisis” is misunderstoodTechnology may be exhausting attention rather than shortening it. (Atlantic $)9 Scientists are getting closer to explaining what causes lightningNew tools are revealing unexpected physics inside thunderstorms. (Quanta)10 Kids have found an age verification loophole: fake mustachesResourceful children are foiling blocks on adult websites. (TechCrunch) Quote of the day “My concern was about Sam saying one thing to one person and completely the opposite to another person.” —Mira Murati, the former CTO of OpenAI, testifies ‌in court that CEO Sam Altman was deceptive, Reuters reports. One More Thing
A brief, weird history of brainwashing During the Cold War, the US prepared for a psychic war with the Soviet Union and China by spending millions of dollars on research into manipulating the human brain.  The science never exactly panned out, but residual beliefs fostered by this bizarre conflict continue to play a role in ideological and scientific debates to this day. And now, new technologies are altering how we think about mind control. 
This is how the race for mind control changed America forever. —Annalee Newitz

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The balcony solar boom is coming to the US

Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills. Balcony solar is already popular in Europe, and proponents say that the systems could make solar power more accessible for more people in the US, including renters. As popularity rises, though, some experts caution that there are safety concerns with how balcony solar would work with existing electrical equipment in homes. Let’s talk about what balcony solar is, why it’s unique, and how new testing requirements could affect our progress toward deploying the technology in the US. Plug-in solar systems are designed to be simple to install, often requiring no electrician or specialized worker at all. They’re small, and many can be plugged into existing outlets.
People across Germany have installed over a million balcony solar systems. They generally measure up to roughly two square meters or about 20 square feet, and can generate up to 800 watts—enough to power a standard microwave. Now the plug-in solar wave is coming to the US. Many Americans have already installed DIY balcony solar without the permission of their utilities—it’s something of a regulatory gray area. In late 2025, Utah became the first state to explicitly allow people to install and use balcony solar systems. Over two dozen other states are now considering similar legislation.
Generally, utilities require users to sign an interconnection agreement before they can plug in large arrays of solar panels that generate power for the grid. There can be fees and permits, and it all amounts to an expensive and lengthy process. Utah’s law ditched the interconnection requirement for panels that have a low power cap and that are certified by a national testing facility. (Legislation under consideration in other states, including New York, includes the same requirements.) The thinking is that since the panels produce very little power, which would be used to meet a home’s own energy demand and probably not get sent back to the grid, the same requirements shouldn’t apply.  As for that certification piece, in January the national testing and certification lab UL Solutions released UL 3700, a testing protocol to certify balcony solar systems and ensure that they’re safe.  There are three main safety considerations to address for these plug-in solar systems, says Joseph Bablo, manager of principal engineering, energy, and industrial automation at UL Solutions. First, there’s the possibility of overloading a circuit. Generally, electrical circuits have circuit breakers, which can trip and interrupt current if necessary. But if there’s a solar panel adding extra power to a circuit, a traditional breaker might not be able to respond to overload. Over time, overloaded circuits can damage equipment or even start a fire.  Second, these small systems are typically installed on the outside of homes, and outdoor power outlets generally have ground fault circuit interruption (GFCI). Basically, if an outlet or its surroundings are wet, it can shut down to prevent electric shock. Many GFCI systems may not work if there’s power going back into an outlet from a solar panel. Finally, there’s touch safety: If a plug gets disconnected from the wall, the blades of the plug may still have power running through them for a short time. If a panel is getting sunlight, those blades could be energized for longer than is typical. The new UL Solutions testing framework aims to address these concerns. One of the key recommendations is that plug-in solar panels should use a special outlet that’s designed specifically for them. The safety measures included in that connection, and within a panel, would ensure that the panels are safe. The need for a special outlet means that currently, people who want to plug in a solar panel array would probably need to have an electrician come and update their wiring in order to comply with the protocol, Bablo says. “I know they want to say ‘No electrician, no permits’—we’re not there.”

Today, anyone can buy products like solar panels and inverters, some of which carry their own component UL certifications, and string them together. (Inverters are covered under UL 1741, for example.) But the gold standard is to have an entire system that meets the safety requirements, and that means adhering to the new standard, Bablo says. As of early May, there aren’t any plug-in solar systems that have been fully certified by UL Solutions. And Bablo said he couldn’t share information about what, if any, are in the pipeline.   Even with the new certification requirements, Bablo still thinks plug-in solar still has the potential to help more people access the technology. “There’s a way for it to work, but we want it to work safely,” he says. 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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ConocoPhillips adds to Permian basin capex in 2026

ConocoPhillips’ capex in the first quarter was a little more than $2.9 billion, of which $1.5 billion went to activity in the Lower 48 and $949 million was allocated to Alaska, where teams are working on the Western North Slope and in the Greater Kuparuk Area. Spending last year was $12.6 billion. Lance called the incremental investments now on the books “no-brainers” that are “going to keep our efficient machine running.” Looking longer term, he added, the ConocoPhillips team thinks the Iran war will move the price of oil “up a little bit, at least relative to where we were before the conflict started.” That will inform executives’ 2027 planning process but is not a driver of this latest capex increase. Stay updated on oil price volatility, shipping disruptions, LNG market analysis, and production output at OGJ’s Iran war content hub. “Recall, we were pretty constructive over the last few years before this got started with some uncertainty around how the physical and paper markets were acting […] and this has just accelerated a lot of that,” Lance said. “The floor probably has to come up to account for the changes that have occurred over the last couple of months.” Shares of ConocoPhillips (Ticker: COP) slipped 2% to about $126 after the earnings report and conference call. Over the past 6 months, shares are still up more than 40%, a rise that has grown the operator’s market capitalization to more than $153 billion.

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Venezuela signs agreements with international operators under new hydrocarbon law

These international partnerships aim to unlock Venezuela’s vast hydrocarbon resources, including natural gas and heavy oil, with companies investing in exploration, production, and infrastructure projects, amid a changing legal landscape that favors joint ventures and direct management. May 1, 2026 2 min read Key Highlights Major oil and gas operators have signed deals with the Venezuelan government aimed at increasing exploration, production under reformed hydrocarbon law. bp, Eni, Repsol, Chevron, and Shell have all signed deals to expand exploration and production in the country.

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ExxonMobil CEO: Venezuela ‘a huge resource…opened up more freely to the world’

A few months later, ExxonMobil upstream president Dan Ammann told a conference audience in Houston that the company had an evaluation team on the ground. At the time, Ammann said the operator would be evaluating infrastructure readiness, fiscal terms, and stability to support long‑cycle upstream investment before any commitment to large‑scale redevelopment in the country. On the earnings call May 1, CEO Woods called Venezuela “a huge resource that’s now opened up more freely to the world.” He said work by the oil and gas industry, the Trump administration, and the government of Venezuela continues “to get the context of that opportunity shaped” to represent attractive investment opportunities. “The oil in Venezuela is very heavy and therefore requires a lot of effort to get the production up and get it onto the market,” Woods said, noting that the company’s continued technology advancements in Canada’s heavy-oil region “positions [ExxonMobil] uniquely in terms of low-cost production of the Venezuela resources…when the context is right and the investment and the returns look promising.” Wood said given the right set of circumstances, ExxonMobil could “apply that technology and produce those barrels at a much lower cost of supply than many of our competitors.”

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UAE’s TA’ZIZ inks offtake, feedstock deals to anchor chemicals buildout

Abu Dhabi Chemicals Derivatives Co. RSC Ltd. (TA’ZIZ)—a joint venture of Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (ADNOC) and Abu Dhabi Developmental Holding Co. PJSC (ADQ)—has signed $28.5 billion in long-term commercial agreements across its chemicals portfolio, advancing development of its integrated downstream industrial platform in the TA’ZIZ Industrial Chemicals Zone at Ruwais Industrial City in Abu Dhabi’s Al Dhafra region. The agreements cover offtake, feedstock supply, and product sales for key commodities including methanol, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), ethylene dichloride (EDC), vinyl chloride monomer (VCM), caustic soda, salt, and natural gas, with contract durations ranging from 5-25 years, ADNOC said on May 5. “These long-term agreements represent a defining milestone for TA’ZIZ and for the UAE’s industrial growth ambitions,” said Mashal Saoud Al-Kindi, TA’ZIZ’s chief executive officer. “By securing both global demand and reliable local feedstock, we are translating vision into delivery, anchoring [worldscale] chemicals production, strengthening domestic value chains, and creating enduring economic value, jobs, and supply chain resilience for the UAE,” Al-Kindi added. Securing long-term demand, feedstock TA’ZIZ—the UAE’s first downstream public-private partnership—said the May 5 agreements specifically aim to simultaneously secure global demand for its products and ensure reliable domestic feedstock supply. This dual structure underpins development of large-scale chemical production capacity within the UAE while reducing exposure to supply chain volatility, according to the operator. Key commercial arrangements include: Methanol sales agreements with ADNOC and Proman AG, a global leader in the methanol marketing industry. Caustic soda supply to Emirates Global Aluminium PJSC (EGA), totaling about 200,000 tonnes/year (tpy). As part of the EGA agreement—which represents a notable milestone in localization of chemical inputs—TA’ZIZ said it will become a domestic supplier of caustic soda to EGA’s Al Taweelah alumina refinery, reducing reliance on imports for a key industrial input. Sales agreements with Mitsubishi Corp. and Mitsui &

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OTC 2026: Clarkson forecasts 24% decline in offshore oil, gas capex

Clarkson Research Services Ltd. expects $85 billion in global capital expenditures (capex) on offshore oil and gas projects in 2026, down 24% from $111.9 billion in 2025 final investment decisions. About $34 billion have already been committed in 2026, according to Clarkson analysis released in advance of the 2026 Offshore Technology Conference in Houston. The forecast total would be the smallest offshore capex since 2020.  The subsea engineering, procurement, and construction backlog stands at a record high $52 billion, according to Clarkson, with North Sea subsea charter rates up 12% year-to-date (ytd) as availability tightens. The maritime research company sees the ongoing Iran war as having mixed impacts on the markets it covers, with operational difficulties in the Persian Gulf partially offset by increased activity in other parts of the world and a renewed focus on energy security in general. After a softer 2025, the Clarkson’s Offshore Rate Index (tracking day rates across drilling, support vessels, and subsea) is up 3% so far in 2026, to reach 111 points (11% above its 2014 high and double its 2018 low). Stay updated on oil price volatility, shipping disruptions, LNG market analysis, and production output at OGJ’s Iran war content hub. Global jack-up demand sits at 387 units (+13 units year-on-year) with utilization at 89%; premium jack-up rates are up 11% ytd, reaching about $103,000/day. Floater demand sits at 130 units (80% utilization); ultra-deepwater rates are up 5% so far this year (at $373,000/day) after softening 13% in 2025. Offshore support vessel markets have picked up, with West Africa platform support vessel rates up 5% ytd and North Sea rates up 6%.

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Chevron ‘steady as she goes’ in the Permian

Steady production, shareholder value “A shift to quickly turn to more production growth might dilute that focus,” Wirth added. “For now, I think it’s really steady as she goes.” Wirth’s comments about taking time before committing to major production plan changes struck the same tone as those of Ryan Lance, his peer at ConocoPhillips. Lance and his team said on Apr. 30 that they’re adding some capital to their 2026 Permian basin plans but were emphatic in saying they’re looking only to maintain their production pace into 2027 and not making a major call based on higher oil prices. Analysts at Macquarie said recently that capital discipline and shareholder returns are likely to the preferred path among publicly traded operators in the near future. Any supply increase, they wrote, is likely to remain gradual, particularly if prices stay about $70/bbl. Wirth said Chevron is taking a similarly cautious stance to its Venezuela assets, where it is still focused on generating cash to lighten its debts. He noted that “there are indicators of positive development in the country but there’s still questions” around taxes, royalties and dispute resolutions. Chevron’s production totaled nearly 3.86 MMboe/d in the first quarter, an increase from 3.35 million early last year (thanks in large part to the acquisition of the former Hess Corp.) but down nearly 5% from the fourth quarter, with downtime at the Tengizchevroil joint venture in Kazakhstan the main contributor. Total US production topped 2 MMboe/d for the third consecutive quarter. That output translated into net income of $2.2 billion on revenues of more than $48.6 billion compared with $3.5 billion and $47.6 billion, respectively, in early 2025. Increases in operating expenses and higher depreciation, depletion and amortization were the primary factors in the drop in profitability. Shares of Chevron (Ticker: CVX) were down

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LG rolls out new AI services to help consumers with daily tasks

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More LG kicked off the AI bandwagon today with a new set of AI services to help consumers in their daily tasks at home, in the car and in the office. The aim of LG’s CES 2025 press event was to show how AI will work in a day of someone’s life, with the goal of redefining the concept of space, said William Joowan Cho, CEO of LG Electronics at the event. The presentation showed LG is fully focused on bringing AI into just about all of its products and services. Cho referred to LG’s AI efforts as “affectionate intelligence,” and he said it stands out from other strategies with its human-centered focus. The strategy focuses on three things: connected devices, capable AI agents and integrated services. One of things the company announced was a strategic partnership with Microsoft on AI innovation, where the companies pledged to join forces to shape the future of AI-powered spaces. One of the outcomes is that Microsoft’s Xbox Ultimate Game Pass will appear via Xbox Cloud on LG’s TVs, helping LG catch up with Samsung in offering cloud gaming natively on its TVs. LG Electronics will bring the Xbox App to select LG smart TVs. That means players with LG Smart TVs will be able to explore the Gaming Portal for direct access to hundreds of games in the Game Pass Ultimate catalog, including popular titles such as Call of Duty: Black Ops 6, and upcoming releases like Avowed (launching February 18, 2025). Xbox Game Pass Ultimate members will be able to play games directly from the Xbox app on select LG Smart TVs through cloud gaming. With Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and a compatible Bluetooth-enabled

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Big tech must stop passing the cost of its spiking energy needs onto the public

Julianne Malveaux is an MIT-educated economist, author, educator and political commentator who has written extensively about the critical relationship between public policy, corporate accountability and social equity.  The rapid expansion of data centers across the U.S. is not only reshaping the digital economy but also threatening to overwhelm our energy infrastructure. These data centers aren’t just heavy on processing power — they’re heavy on our shared energy infrastructure. For Americans, this could mean serious sticker shock when it comes to their energy bills. Across the country, many households are already feeling the pinch as utilities ramp up investments in costly new infrastructure to power these data centers. With costs almost certain to rise as more data centers come online, state policymakers and energy companies must act now to protect consumers. We need new policies that ensure the cost of these projects is carried by the wealthy big tech companies that profit from them, not by regular energy consumers such as family households and small businesses. According to an analysis from consulting firm Bain & Co., data centers could require more than $2 trillion in new energy resources globally, with U.S. demand alone potentially outpacing supply in the next few years. This unprecedented growth is fueled by the expansion of generative AI, cloud computing and other tech innovations that require massive computing power. Bain’s analysis warns that, to meet this energy demand, U.S. utilities may need to boost annual generation capacity by as much as 26% by 2028 — a staggering jump compared to the 5% yearly increases of the past two decades. This poses a threat to energy affordability and reliability for millions of Americans. Bain’s research estimates that capital investments required to meet data center needs could incrementally raise consumer bills by 1% each year through 2032. That increase may

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Final 45V hydrogen tax credit guidance draws mixed response

Dive Brief: The final rule for the 45V clean hydrogen production tax credit, which the U.S. Treasury Department released Friday morning, drew mixed responses from industry leaders and environmentalists. Clean hydrogen development within the U.S. ground to a halt following the release of the initial guidance in December 2023, leading industry participants to call for revisions that would enable more projects to qualify for the tax credit. While the final rule makes “significant improvements” to Treasury’s initial proposal, the guidelines remain “extremely complex,” according to the Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Energy Association. FCHEA President and CEO Frank Wolak and other industry leaders said they look forward to working with the Trump administration to refine the rule. Dive Insight: Friday’s release closed what Wolak described as a “long chapter” for the hydrogen industry. But industry reaction to the final rule was decidedly mixed, and it remains to be seen whether the rule — which could be overturned as soon as Trump assumes office — will remain unchanged. “The final 45V rule falls short,” Marty Durbin, president of the U.S. Chamber’s Global Energy Institute, said in a statement. “While the rule provides some of the additional flexibility we sought, … we believe that it still will leave billions of dollars of announced projects in limbo. The incoming Administration will have an opportunity to improve the 45V rules to ensure the industry will attract the investments necessary to scale the hydrogen economy and help the U.S. lead the world in clean manufacturing.” But others in the industry felt the rule would be sufficient for ending hydrogen’s year-long malaise. “With this added clarity, many projects that have been delayed may move forward, which can help unlock billions of dollars in investments across the country,” Kim Hedegaard, CEO of Topsoe’s Power-to-X, said in a statement. Topsoe

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Texas, Utah, Last Energy challenge NRC’s ‘overburdensome’ microreactor regulations

Dive Brief: A 69-year-old Nuclear Regulatory Commission rule underpinning U.S. nuclear reactor licensing exceeds the agency’s statutory authority and creates an unreasonable burden for microreactor developers, the states of Texas and Utah and advanced nuclear technology company Last Energy said in a lawsuit filed Dec. 30 in federal court in Texas. The plaintiffs asked the Eastern District of Texas court to exempt Last Energy’s 20-MW reactor design and research reactors located in the plaintiff states from the NRC’s definition of nuclear “utilization facilities,” which subjects all U.S. commercial and research reactors to strict regulatory scrutiny, and order the NRC to develop a more flexible definition for use in future licensing proceedings. Regardless of its merits, the lawsuit underscores the need for “continued discussion around proportional regulatory requirements … that align with the hazards of the reactor and correspond to a safety case,” said Patrick White, research director at the Nuclear Innovation Alliance. Dive Insight: Only three commercial nuclear reactors have been built in the United States in the past 28 years, and none are presently under construction, according to a World Nuclear Association tracker cited in the lawsuit. “Building a new commercial reactor of any size in the United States has become virtually impossible,” the plaintiffs said. “The root cause is not lack of demand or technology — but rather the [NRC], which, despite its name, does not really regulate new nuclear reactor construction so much as ensure that it almost never happens.” More than a dozen advanced nuclear technology developers have engaged the NRC in pre-application activities, which the agency says help standardize the content of advanced reactor applications and expedite NRC review. Last Energy is not among them.  The pre-application process can itself stretch for years and must be followed by a formal application that can take two

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Qualcomm unveils AI chips for PCs, cars, smart homes and enterprises

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Qualcomm unveiled AI technologies and collaborations for PCs, cars, smart homes and enterprises at CES 2025. At the big tech trade show in Las Vegas, Qualcomm Technologies showed how it’s using AI capabilities in its chips to drive the transformation of user experiences across diverse device categories, including PCs, automobiles, smart homes and into enterprises. The company unveiled the Snapdragon X platform, the fourth platform in its high-performance PC portfolio, the Snapdragon X Series, bringing industry-leading performance, multi-day battery life, and AI leadership to more of the Windows ecosystem. Qualcomm has talked about how its processors are making headway grabbing share from the x86-based AMD and Intel rivals through better efficiency. Qualcomm’s neural processing unit gets about 45 TOPS, a key benchmark for AI PCs. The Snapdragon X family of AI PC processors. Additionally, Qualcomm Technologies showcased continued traction of the Snapdragon X Series, with over 60 designs in production or development and more than 100 expected by 2026. Snapdragon for vehicles Qualcomm demoed chips that are expanding its automotive collaborations. It is working with Alpine, Amazon, Leapmotor, Mobis, Royal Enfield, and Sony Honda Mobility, who look to Snapdragon Digital Chassis solutions to drive AI-powered in-cabin and advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS). Qualcomm also announced continued traction for its Snapdragon Elite-tier platforms for automotive, highlighting its work with Desay, Garmin, and Panasonic for Snapdragon Cockpit Elite. Throughout the show, Qualcomm will highlight its holistic approach to improving comfort and focusing on safety with demonstrations on the potential of the convergence of AI, multimodal contextual awareness, and cloudbased services. Attendees will also get a first glimpse of the new Snapdragon Ride Platform with integrated automated driving software stack and system definition jointly

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Oil, Gas Execs Reveal Where They Expect WTI Oil Price to Land in the Future

Executives from oil and gas firms have revealed where they expect the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil price to be at various points in the future as part of the fourth quarter Dallas Fed Energy Survey, which was released recently. The average response executives from 131 oil and gas firms gave when asked what they expect the WTI crude oil price to be at the end of 2025 was $71.13 per barrel, the survey showed. The low forecast came in at $53 per barrel, the high forecast was $100 per barrel, and the spot price during the survey was $70.66 per barrel, the survey pointed out. This question was not asked in the previous Dallas Fed Energy Survey, which was released in the third quarter. That survey asked participants what they expect the WTI crude oil price to be at the end of 2024. Executives from 134 oil and gas firms answered this question, offering an average response of $72.66 per barrel, that survey showed. The latest Dallas Fed Energy Survey also asked participants where they expect WTI prices to be in six months, one year, two years, and five years. Executives from 124 oil and gas firms answered this question and gave a mean response of $69 per barrel for the six month mark, $71 per barrel for the year mark, $74 per barrel for the two year mark, and $80 per barrel for the five year mark, the survey showed. Executives from 119 oil and gas firms answered this question in the third quarter Dallas Fed Energy Survey and gave a mean response of $73 per barrel for the six month mark, $76 per barrel for the year mark, $81 per barrel for the two year mark, and $87 per barrel for the five year mark, that

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The balcony solar boom is coming to the US

Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills. Balcony solar is already popular in Europe, and proponents say that the systems could make solar power more accessible for more people in the US, including renters. As popularity rises, though, some experts caution that there are safety concerns with how balcony solar would work with existing electrical equipment in homes. Let’s talk about what balcony solar is, why it’s unique, and how new testing requirements could affect our progress toward deploying the technology in the US. Plug-in solar systems are designed to be simple to install, often requiring no electrician or specialized worker at all. They’re small, and many can be plugged into existing outlets.
People across Germany have installed over a million balcony solar systems. They generally measure up to roughly two square meters or about 20 square feet, and can generate up to 800 watts—enough to power a standard microwave. Now the plug-in solar wave is coming to the US. Many Americans have already installed DIY balcony solar without the permission of their utilities—it’s something of a regulatory gray area. In late 2025, Utah became the first state to explicitly allow people to install and use balcony solar systems. Over two dozen other states are now considering similar legislation.
Generally, utilities require users to sign an interconnection agreement before they can plug in large arrays of solar panels that generate power for the grid. There can be fees and permits, and it all amounts to an expensive and lengthy process. Utah’s law ditched the interconnection requirement for panels that have a low power cap and that are certified by a national testing facility. (Legislation under consideration in other states, including New York, includes the same requirements.) The thinking is that since the panels produce very little power, which would be used to meet a home’s own energy demand and probably not get sent back to the grid, the same requirements shouldn’t apply.  As for that certification piece, in January the national testing and certification lab UL Solutions released UL 3700, a testing protocol to certify balcony solar systems and ensure that they’re safe.  There are three main safety considerations to address for these plug-in solar systems, says Joseph Bablo, manager of principal engineering, energy, and industrial automation at UL Solutions. First, there’s the possibility of overloading a circuit. Generally, electrical circuits have circuit breakers, which can trip and interrupt current if necessary. But if there’s a solar panel adding extra power to a circuit, a traditional breaker might not be able to respond to overload. Over time, overloaded circuits can damage equipment or even start a fire.  Second, these small systems are typically installed on the outside of homes, and outdoor power outlets generally have ground fault circuit interruption (GFCI). Basically, if an outlet or its surroundings are wet, it can shut down to prevent electric shock. Many GFCI systems may not work if there’s power going back into an outlet from a solar panel. Finally, there’s touch safety: If a plug gets disconnected from the wall, the blades of the plug may still have power running through them for a short time. If a panel is getting sunlight, those blades could be energized for longer than is typical. The new UL Solutions testing framework aims to address these concerns. One of the key recommendations is that plug-in solar panels should use a special outlet that’s designed specifically for them. The safety measures included in that connection, and within a panel, would ensure that the panels are safe. The need for a special outlet means that currently, people who want to plug in a solar panel array would probably need to have an electrician come and update their wiring in order to comply with the protocol, Bablo says. “I know they want to say ‘No electrician, no permits’—we’re not there.”

Today, anyone can buy products like solar panels and inverters, some of which carry their own component UL certifications, and string them together. (Inverters are covered under UL 1741, for example.) But the gold standard is to have an entire system that meets the safety requirements, and that means adhering to the new standard, Bablo says. As of early May, there aren’t any plug-in solar systems that have been fully certified by UL Solutions. And Bablo said he couldn’t share information about what, if any, are in the pipeline.   Even with the new certification requirements, Bablo still thinks plug-in solar still has the potential to help more people access the technology. “There’s a way for it to work, but we want it to work safely,” he says. 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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What’s next for IVF

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Forty-eight years ago this July, Louise Joy Brown became the world’s first person born with the help of in vitro fertilization. Millions more IVF babies have entered the world since then. And that’s partly thanks to advances in technology that have made IVF safer and more effective. But it’s still not perfect. The process can be slow, painful, and expensive—and that’s for the lucky people who are able to access it in the first place. And by at least one measure, IVF success rates have been declining in recent years. Reproduction is complex, and there’s a lot that embryologists and gynecologists still don’t know and can’t control. They don’t know why many healthy-looking embryos don’t “stick” in the uterus, for example. They don’t always have an explanation for why their patients can’t get pregnant. And they can’t always account for vast differences in IVF success rates between individuals and between fertility clinics. Scientists are working on all those questions and more. They’re wrestling with complex ethical questions about how new genetic tools will be used to analyze or even alter embryos. Meanwhile, technologies designed to standardize treatment, eliminate human error, boost success rates, and make IVF more accessible are already beginning to usher in a new era for assisted reproduction—one aided by AI and robots.
1. Helping embryos stick Some of those technologies are being developed at the Carlos Simon Foundation in Valencia, Spain. When I visited in March, researchers gave me a tour of the labs and showed me a device that had been used to keep a human uterus alive outside the body for the first time. While some members of the team dream of building artificial uteruses that might one day be able to carry a fetus to term, they first want to use such devices to learn more about implantation—the moment at which a fertilized egg makes contact with the lining of the uterus, burrows inside, and essentially “hatches,” triggering the start of a pregnancy.
Despite decades of advances in IVF, that process is still poorly understood. Even healthy-looking embryos stick no more than 40% to 60% of the time. In IVF techniques used today, clinics can create early-stage embryos and wait until the uterus is deemed most receptive, but once they insert the embryo into the uterus, it’s on its own. Xavier Santamaria, senior clinical scientist at the Carlos Simon Foundation, and his colleagues are trialing a different approach. They’ve developed a device that, at the press of a button, injects the embryo into the uterine lining. JESS HAMZELOU / MITTR In a demonstration I watched with a prototype, Santamaria picked up his speculum and turned to face the vaginal opening of his “patient,” which in this case was just a model of the real thing—a plastic bottom with labia, a vagina, a uterus, and ovaries, two short stumps representing what would normally be a pair of legs held in stirrups. He hunched over and peered inside. “Embryo,” he called. His colleague Maria Pardo, an embryologist, passed him a thin needle containing a mouse embryo she had recently collected from a petri dish. Santamaria’s device allows for the embryo-containing needle to be connected to a delivery tube. This tube also has a camera, a light, and a sensor that lets the doctor know when the needle reaches the uterine lining. Once it has been fed into the uterus, the gynecologist can see the inside of the organ and direct the tube to the lining. JESS HAMZELOU / MITTR “When everything is ready, you just press the button,” Santamaria said as he activated it using a foot pedal, allowing the embryo to be injected. “There it goes.” The team has just started a trial of the device; so far, fewer than 10 women have undergone the procedure, and none of those have become pregnant. But foundation director Carlos Simon is hopeful, noting that the inventors of IVF had to perform over 160 cycles before Louise Brown was born (between 1969 and 1978, that team performed 457 cycles in 250 people, resulting in only two live births). “The trial is ongoing,” he says. 2. Picking the “best” eggs, sperm, and embryos One long-running challenge of IVF has been selection. Say you manage to collect 10 eggs from one partner and a decent-looking semen sample from the other. How do you choose which cells to use? The same question comes up once the resulting embryos have been cultured in a dish for a few days: Which should you transfer to the uterus?

Traditionally, these judgments have been made by eye. Embryologists literally pick the ones that look the best in terms of their shape or, in the case of sperm, how they move. But scientists have been working on alternatives. And over the last decade or so, many have turned to genetic testing to hint at which embryos have the best chances of creating a healthy baby. The most commonly used test is called PGT-A, which stands for preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidy. Aneuploidy essentially means having an “incorrect” number of chromosomes, and it is thought that embryos with such characteristics are more likely to be lost through miscarriage or potentially develop into babies with genetic conditions. Once embryologists have created embryos in the lab, they can pinch off a few cells and test them for aneuploidies. The tests are especially beneficial for women over the age of 38, says Alan Penzias, a reproductive endocrinologist at Boston IVF. “You start to see an improvement: more babies and fewer miscarriages,” he says. The tests can shorten the time to pregnancy. This type of genetic testing is possible thanks to multiple advances in technology—not just in genomics, but also in the ability to keep embryos alive in a dish for five to six days and the technique of freezing embryos while the cells undergo testing and thawing them once the results are in. And it has become hugely popular—some clinics do PGT-A tests on all their embryos. But PGT-A won’t give you a perfect readout of a future baby’s genetics, says Sonia Gayete-Lafuente, a reproductive endocrinologist at the Center for Human Reproduction in New York City. And some of the abnormalities might be able to self-correct with time. Gayete-Lafuente and her colleagues have transferred some of those “abnormal” embryos into patients’ uteruses and seen them develop into perfectly healthy children, she says. Other forms of PGT are even more controversial. PGT-P tests are designed to predict an embryo’s chances of developing complex traits that rely on multiple genes, including medical disorders but also physical characteristics like height or cognitive factors like IQ. These tests are new, and they are illegal in some countries, including the UK. But they are gaining ground in the US. Nucleus Genomics—a company that invites customers to “have [their] best baby”—promises to predict traits running the gamut from eye color and intelligence to left-handedness and risk of Alzheimer’s. When I asked IVF practitioners how they might respond if a patient asked for this service, most dodged the question and told me there’s not enough evidence that any of these tests actually work. They also cautioned that selecting for one trait might inadvertently introduce new risks. None seemed especially keen on the idea of using genetic testing for anything other than preventing serious disease. 3. Speeding things up with AI Some seemed more excited about the potential for AI. After all, AI tools are generally good at recognizing patterns. Many researchers have attempted to train tools to spot healthy sperm, eggs, and embryos.
And they’ve had some success. A team at Columbia University Medical Center in New York has developed a device that uses AI to examine semen samples from men who have only tiny numbers of healthy sperm. An embryologist might struggle to find a single healthy sperm in such a sample. But the Sperm Tracking and Recovery (STAR) system can analyze over a million microscope images in an hour. It has already been used to create healthy embryos. The team behind the work announced the first pregnancy resulting from the treatment in November last year. Other teams are using AI tools to advance IVF in more dramatic ways. Around a decade ago, a reproductive endocrinologist named Alejandro Chavez-Badiola began developing an AI tool trained to rank embryos, another to rank eggs, and another to select sperm. He recalls being struck by a realization that these tools were “the brains that have the potential to drive robots in the future,” he says.
4. Using robots to standardize IVF In the early 2020s, Chavez-Badiola and his colleagues decided to combine technologies and develop an automated system for IVF. In theory, a robotic system loaded up with AI tools could undertake most of the steps required in the IVF process: selecting the eggs and sperm, fertilizing eggs to create embryos, culturing those embryos in a dish, and selecting the “best” one for transfer. Such a system could “do everything in a standard way” without ever getting tired, he says. Chavez-Badiola, who is now founder and chief medical officer at Conceivable, started building prototypes by motorizing regular IVF equipment and connecting it to computers. He and his colleagues started testing their system with animal cells before eventually moving on to human ones. “We were able to prove that integrating robots to automate different steps in IVF is doable,” he says. The device is now being used to prepare sperm and eggs and create embryos. At least 19 children have been born following the automated IVF. It is early days, but Chavez-Badiola is hoping that future iterations of the machine could each process thousands of IVF cycles in a year, potentially making the procedure more affordable and accessible. Many in the field are excited about the potential for automated devices like Conceivable’s. “This is all time saved for the embryologists,” says Laura Rienzi, a clinical embryologist and scientific director of the IVIRMA network of fertility centers in Italy. She also hopes it will help standardize IVF treatments. “Automation [will allow for] every patient to be treated in the same way in every single lab in the world,” she says. 5. Controversial edits are on the table There’s a catch, however: All these technologies rely on the availability of at least some healthy sperm, eggs, and embryos at the outset. Embryologists and IVF patients have to work with what they’ve got. And sometimes, what they’ve got won’t result in a healthy baby.  That’s why some scientists are proposing a controversial idea: using gene-editing technologies like CRISPR to tinker with the genome of an IVF embryo before it is implanted. The biophysicist He Jiankui infamously took this approach to create embryos that resulted in the births of three children in the late 2010s. He was widely condemned by the scientific community and ultimately spent three years in a Chinese prison. 
His former romantic partner Cathy Tie, who now leads startup Origin Genomics, is pursuing the technology as a potential way to prevent serious disease in children. At a recent event held at the Hastings Center for Bioethics, Tie made the case for using embryo editing to prevent diseases like cystic fibrosis, Huntington’s, and sickle-cell. It won’t be straightforward from a technical, legal, or ethical perspective. Diseases that are known to be caused by single-gene mutations are good first candidates, but as the Center for Human Reproduction’s Gayete-Lafuente points out, most diseases are much more complicated than that. “I wish we could understand the genetic basis of every disease to be able to prevent it,” she says. So far, we can’t. Besides, most diseases can be influenced by our diets, behaviors, and environments as well as our genes. As things stand, no one knows if editing a human embryo to eliminate the risk of one disease might increase a future child’s risk of some other disorder. And some scientists worry that such edits might be a slippery slope to genetic enhancement or eugenics. Rienzi hopes that the technology might be developed in a safe way with regulatory oversight, and only for a specific list of diseases. “It has to be within a legal context,” she says. “But to me, it’s a dream.” In the meantime, the field looks set to keep transforming with the development of new technologies that are already creating healthy babies. Watch this space. 

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Introducing ChatGPT Futures: Class of 2026

The class of 2026 is the first generation to start and finish college with ChatGPT.They arrived on campus in the fall of 2022 just as AI was beginning to reshape how people learn, create, and work. This generation was ChatGPT’s earliest adopters, sharing the tool with their parents and siblings, friends and teachers. Now, they’re graduating into a world where changes in technology are accelerating every day.Over the past few years, I’ve spent time visiting campuses, speaking with students and educators, and watching how young people are actually using AI in their daily lives. What I’ve seen has challenged many of the assumptions people make about this generation.Many students aren’t using AI to avoid work. They’re using it to attempt things they wouldn’t have thought possible before.I’ve met students who are building study tools for classmates. Translating mental health resources for underserved communities. Advancing scientific research. Designing accessibility tools for peers with disabilities. Turning side projects into real organizations with real impact.Again and again, I’ve met students who discovered something surprisingly powerful: they don’t have to wait. As Kyle Scenna, a 24 year-old ChatGPT Futures honoree and entrepreneur from the University of Waterloo told us: “I never thought the gap between noticing a problem and building something real could get this small.” He’s not alone in this feeling.This generation doesn’t have to wait to become experts before getting started.They don’t have to wait for funding before building.They don’t have to wait for permission before contributing.That realization—that you can turn an idea into something tangible faster than ever before—is what inspired ChatGPT Futures.Celebrating AI Creators, Explorers and Advocates in the Class of 2026These honorees represent over 20 universities and institutions from Vanderbilt and the University of Toronto to Oxford, Georgia Tech and many others.Each member of the inaugural class will receive a $10,000 grant to continue advancing their work and will receive access to our frontier models.What connects them is not a specific discipline or background. It’s a mindset. They saw new tools emerge, got curious, and decided to build. That may become the defining and critical characteristic of this generation.There are understandable questions about what AI might mean for learning, creativity, and jobs. I work on those questions every day with partners throughout the education ecosystem. But the students I’ve met have also given me a tangible view of what AI can unlock right now. It’s agency.AI doesn’t replace ambition. It amplifies it.For decades, the ability to build something—whether a product, a research project, a movement, or a company—often depended on access. Access to technical training, institutional support, networks, or funding. Those barriers haven’t disappeared, but they are beginning to shift. Michelle Lawson, a 20-year-old student at Smith College and a ChatGPT Futures honoree shared with us, “I’ve always believed that you can achieve everything that you can imagine, as long as you’re given the right support and resources. AI has made that happen not only for myself, but for hundreds of thousands of people.”Today, a student with curiosity and determination can prototype an idea faster, learn new skills independently, and contribute meaningfully in ways that once required far more resources.That doesn’t make human judgment, creativity, or hard work less important. If anything, it makes them more so.Because the students who will thrive in this next chapter won’t simply be the ones who know how AI works. They’ll be the ones who know how to use it thoughtfully: to learn continuously, identify meaningful problems, collaborate effectively, and create things that matter to other people.Agency Starts in ClassroomsEducation has a critical role to play in unlocking this sense of agency for all students. The goal is not simply to teach students how AI works or how to prompt effectively. Schools and universities must create space for students to build and create with AI, guided by teachers.The goal should not just be AI literacy. We need to help students become adaptable thinkers and builders—people who can navigate ambiguity, pursue ideas with curiosity, and turn learning into action.But more than anything, we hope this program shines a light on a broader truth: The future of AI will not be defined only by the capabilities of the technology itself.It will be defined by the people who choose to use it with curiosity, responsibility, creativity, and purpose. “The exciting thing is this is just the beginning,” Nolan Windham, a 23-year-old Head of AI at a prominent hedge fund and ChatGPT Futures honoree told me. “Many young people will recognize their place as teachers for a society looking to learn to use the technology of the future.”Congratulations to the inaugural ChatGPT Futures Class of 2026. We can’t wait to see the future you’ll build.

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The Download: seafloor science and military chatbots

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. Inexpensive seafloor-hopping submersibles could stoke deep-sea science—and mining Last week, two oblong neon submersibles started to descend nearly 6,000 meters into the Pacific Ocean. Throughout the rest of May, they will map the seafloor in search of critical mineral deposits.  If all goes well, the vehicles, built by Orpheus Ocean, could help scientists probe the vastly understudied deep sea—and the resources it holds—at a fraction of the cost of existing systems. But the same submersibles are also attracting deep-sea mining companies, raising concerns about environmental impacts. Find out why they’re drawing so much attention.
—Hannah Richter The new war room: 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now  A new kind of system has entered the war room: conversational AI tools that commanders turn to not just for analysis, but for advice. 
One US defense official told MIT Technology Review that personnel might give these advice engines a list of potential targets to help decide which to strike first. China is commissioning similar tools too. But as the systems gain traction, they’re also sparking concerns about AI-generated errors, a lack of transparency, and Big Tech gaining undue influence over what information gets seen.  Here’s how these AI advice engines could impact the battlefield. —James O’Donnell The new war room is one of the 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now, our list of the big ideas, trends, and advances in the field that are driving progress today—and will shape what’s possible tomorrow. MIT Technology Review Narrated: is fake grass a bad idea? The AstroTurf wars are far from over.  In 2001, Americans installed just over 7 million square meters of synthetic turf. By 2024, that number was 79 million square meters—enough to carpet all of Manhattan and then some. The increase worries folks who study microplastics and environmental pollution.   While the plastic-making industry insists that synthetic fields are safe if properly installed, lots of researchers think that isn’t so.  —Douglas Main 

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 Elon Musk pushed OpenAI to go commercial, its president has testifiedGreg Brockman said Musk tried to turn it into a for-profit company years ago. (NYT $)+ Musk allegedly wanted full control so he could raise $80 billion to colonize Mars. (Reuters $)+ The Tesla CEO claims he intended for OpenAI to remain a non-profit. (BBC)+ Here’s what happened in week one of Musk v. Altman. (MIT Technology Review) 2 Google and Meta are building AI agents to rival OpenClawGoogle’s Gemini agent will take actions on the users’ behalf. (Business Insider)+ Meta’s will be powered by its Muse Spark AI model. (FT $)+ Hustlers are cashing in on China’s OpenClaw AI craze. (MIT Technology Review) 3 Anthropic will spend $200 billion on Google’s cloud and chipsThe investment will be spread across five years. (The Information $)+ It’s part of a broader AI compute war. (Axios)  4 DeepSeek is nearing a $45 billion valuationA state-backed “Big Fund” will lead a new investment round in the company. (FT $)+ Beijing is pushing to build alternatives to Nvidia and OpenAI. (Bloomberg $)+ Here’s why DeepSeek’s new model matters. (MIT Technology Review) 5 Anthropic is launching AI agents for banks and financial firmsThe 10 tools cover a broad mix of financial services tasks. (WSJ $)+ They’re part of a push to win over Wall Street. (Bloomberg $)
6 Apple will pay $250 million to settle an AI lawsuitIt was accused of misleading iPhone buyers about Apple Intelligence. (BBC)+ Some iPhone owners are eligible to receive up to $95. (NYT $) 7 Cheap laptops and phones may be disappearing because of AI demand Competition for memory chips is driving up gadget prices worldwide. (The Guardian)
8 Google DeepMind workers in the UK have voted to unionizeAs a result of Google’s work with the Pentagon. (Wired $) 9 Pennsylvania is suing Character.AI over chatbots posing as doctorsInvestigators say the bots claimed to hold medical licenses. (NPR)+ How well do AI health tools work? (MIT Technology Review) 10 Scientists created a “living” plastic that destroys itself on commandIt could help to eliminate microplastics. (Gizmodo) Quote of the day “I want AI to benefit humanity, not to facilitate a genocide.”  —An anonymous Google DeepMind worker tells the Guardian that Google’s work with the Israel Defense Forces had motivated their vote to unionize. One More Thing
COURTESY OF BENEATH THE WAVES How tracking animal movement may save the planet For decades, wildlife researchers have dreamed of building an “Internet of Animals”—a big-data system that monitors and analyzes animal behavior to help us understand the planet. Advances in sensors, AI, and satellite technology are now bringing that vision to reality. Scientists want the system to track 100,000 sensor-tagged animals. They believe it could reveal how species respond to climate change and ecosystem loss—and even predict environmental disasters. Read the full story on how their idea could save our planet. —Matthew Ponsford 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.) + Master the art of fried chicken with this definitive chef’s guide.+ Find out why some birds hop and others walk in this breakdown of avian lifestyles.+ This vintage Hollywood map shows how California’s landscape stood in for everything from the Nile to the Alps.+ Here’s a fascinating look at the “Flatbed” airplane that was surprisingly efficient on paper but never left the hangar.

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GPT-5.5 Instant System Card

GPT‑5.5 Instant is our latest Instant model, and explained in our blog⁠. The comprehensive safety mitigation approach for this model is similar to previous models in this series, but this is the first Instant model that we are treating as High capability in our Cybersecurity and Biological & Chemical Preparedness categories, and implementing appropriate safeguards.In this card we also refer to GPT‑5.5 Instant as gpt-5.5-instant. Note that there is not a model named GPT‑5.4 Instant, and the main model to baseline against is GPT‑5.3 Instant. Additionally, we refer to GPT‑5.5⁠(opens in a new window) as GPT‑5.5 Thinking to avoid confusion with the instant model.

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The Download: inside the Musk v. Altman trial, and AI for democracy

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. Week one of the Musk v. Altman trial: what it was like in the room Two of the most powerful figures in AI—Sam Altman and Elon Musk—are in the middle of a landmark legal showdown, with Musk alleging he was misled about OpenAI becoming a for-profit company. Our reporter Michelle Kim, who also happens to be a lawyer, has been in court each day, and has broken down the first week’s key moments in her latest report. In a new Q&A, she also reveals what it was like in the room, the new details that have emerged about how Musk and OpenAI operate—and what we can expect from this week’s proceedings. Find out what she’s discovered so far, and if you want to keep up with MIT Technology Review’s ongoing coverage of the Musk v. Altman trial, follow @techreview or @michelletomkim on X.
—James O’Donnell This story is from The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter giving you the inside track on all things AI. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Monday. 
A blueprint for using AI to strengthen democracy —Andrew Sorota & Josh Hendler lead work on AI and democracy at the Office of Eric Schmidt. Faster than many realize, AI is becoming the primary interface through which we form beliefs and participate in democratic self-governance. This shift could further strain already fragile institutions, but it could also help address problems like polarization and declining civic engagement. What happens next depends on design choices that are already being made, whether we know it or not. Here’s how we can harness AI to strengthen democracy. Artificial scientists: 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now Large language models can already assist scientists in all sorts of ways, from writing code to searching through literature and drafting articles. But companies and labs have a much more ambitious vision. They want to build AI systems that can act as a full member of a scientific team—and even conduct entire research projects. These artificial scientists seem like a win for frontier labs and for society at large. But they could also narrow the scope of scientific inquiry. Read the full story on how artificial scientists could reshape the research process—and what might be lost along the way. —Grace Huckins Artificial scientists is an item on our list of the 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now, MIT Technology Review’s guide to what’s really worth your attention in the busy, buzzy world of AI. We’re unpacking one item from the list each day here in The Download, so stay tuned.

The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 The Pentagon has struck sweeping AI deals for classified workIt’s signed contracts with Microsoft, Nvidia, AWS, and Reflection AI. (NYT $)+ It wants the US military to be an “AI-first” force. (BBC)+ The announcement leaves Anthropic increasingly isolated. (WP $)+ Here’s how the firms could train on classified data. (MIT Technology Review) 2 Elon Musk has finally settled the SEC lawsuit over the Twitter purchaseHe’s agreed to pay a $1.5 million fine for waiting too long to disclose his initial stock purchases. (Guardian)+ But won’t lose any of the $150 million he allegedly saved. (The Verge)+ Musk allegedly illegally hid his growing Twitter stake. (CBS News) 3 A Chinese court has ruled that firms can’t lay off workers on AI groundsThey can’t terminate employees just to replace them with AI. (Bloomberg $)+ The court said a firm had illegally fired one of its workers. (NPR)+ Chinese tech workers are starting to train their AI doubles—and pushing back. (MIT Technology Review) 4 A gene therapy is helping deaf children hear againIn a trial, 80% of patients gained measurable hearing. (Vox) 5 The White House is vetting AI models before they’re releasedIt may create a new working group to oversee AI development. (NYT $)+ A war over AI regulation is coming to the US. (MIT Technology Review) 6 Nature has retracted a paper on ChatGPT’s educational benefitsOver “discrepancies” and a lack of confidence in the findings. (404 Media)+ The paper had already racked up hundreds of citations. (Ars Technica)+ AI giants want to take over the classroom. (MIT Technology Review)
7 GameStop made a $56 billion bid for eBayeBay said it was reviewing the offer. (Ars Technica)+ The bid has drawn skepticism from investors and analysts. (Reuters $) 8 AI systems are increasingly used to monitor workers’ emotionsNew tools claim to measure “agreeability” as well as productivity. (The Atlantic $)
9 Peter Thiel is backing wave-powered data centersHe’s leading a $140 million investment into a startup developing the tech. (FT $) 10 Ask Jeeves is shutting down after nearly 30 years onlineThe closure marks the end of one of the internet’s earliest search engines. (NYT $) Quote of the day “By the end of this week, you and Sam will be the most hated men in America.”  —Elon Musk texted a warning to OpenAI president Greg Brockman two days before their courtroom battle started, NBC News reports. One More Thing SIMON MITCHELL Meet the divers trying to figure out how deep humans can go Two hundred and thirty meters into one of the deepest underwater caves on Earth, a team of extreme divers tested a route to new depth records: breathing hydrogen.
They believe the gas could help the human body withstand underwater pressure significantly past its natural threshold. But the approach is highly experimental—and dangerous. Find out how far they’re willing to go. —Samantha Schuyler 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.)+ Wild horses are roaming in Spain for the first time in 10,000 years.+ Star Wars meets the Renaissance in this bardcore cover of the “Imperial March.”+ Improve your writing by avoiding these six common linguistic pitfalls shared by many Americans.+ From Stephen King’s IT changing the clown industry to Black Widow boosting hair dye sales, here are 12 times movies changed the real world.

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Here’s how technology transformed babymaking

Technology is changing the way we make babies. The pioneering work of the scientists who invented IVF led to the birth of the first “test tube baby” in 1978. We’ve come a long, long way since then. This week, I’ve been working on a piece about the cutting edge of IVF technologies and what’s coming next. Think AI and robots and, potentially, gene-edited embryos. My reporting has also made me think about just how much progress has been made in the last five decades. Clinicians have improved hormonal treatments. Embryologists have devised ways to culture embryos in the lab for longer. IVF clinics today offer multiple genetic tests for embryos. In recent years, we’ve had reports of babies born with DNA from three people, babies born following “IVF on wheels,” babies born from decades-old embryos, and even babies “conceived” with the aid of a sperm-injecting robot.
The technology has also had a huge social impact. It has allowed for changes in the structure of families and provided more reproductive choices for would-be parents. So this week, let’s consider the technologies that have transformed babymaking. Alan Penzias, a reproductive endocrinologist at Boston IVF, has been working in IVF since the early 1990s. In those days, his lab at Yale would collect a person’s eggs, fertilize them, and culture any resulting embryos for two days, until the embryos had two or four cells.
The embryos couldn’t survive any longer outside a body, so they’d be transferred to the uterus at that point. All of them. Even if there were, say, five embryos in total. Typical healthy patients could expect a live birth rate of 12% to 15%, he says. Then Penzias heard that other teams were managing to culture embryos for three days. “We thought, No, that’s not possible,” he recalls. He learned that scientists had achieved this by tinkering with the culture medium—the nutrient-rich fluid the embryos are grown in. Those three-day embryos, which had around six to 10 cells, seemed to have a better chance of resulting in a live birth. The teams culturing embryos for longer saw their success rates climb to 25% among similar patient groups, says Penzias. Again, he couldn’t believe it. “We thought they were making it up,” he says. In the years since, teams have made more improvements to culture medium. Today, most IVF embryos are cultured for five or six days—a point at which they have 80 to 100 cells. The culturing process can act a little like a stress test—the embryos that make it to day six are generally more likely to go all the way and develop into a healthy baby. Over the same period, advances in other technologies have opened up the options for what we can do with those embryos. Scientists learned they were able to freeze embryos and use them at a later date. A little over a decade ago, clinics shifted to a “vitrification” approach that rapidly cools the embryos to a glassy state. Vitrified embryos are more likely to survive freezing and thawing, so this approach quickly caught on. As a result, doctors no longer needed to transfer multiple embryos at once. This made it less likely that patients would have twins or triplets, which can increase the risk of pregnancy complications. Vitrification has also made IVF safer in other ways, including by affording patients a bit of time between fertility treatments. The hormonal treatments used in the first phase of IVF are designed to increase the production of mature eggs that can be collected. These treatments carry a small risk of a condition called ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), which in rare cases can be life-threatening. The ability to freeze all your embryos and use them at a later date is thought to give the body a chance to recover from hormonal treatment and reduces the risk of OHSS. And because clinics are now able to culture embryos for up to a week, they can take a few of the 100 or so cells and send them for genetic testing before freezing the embryos. People undergoing IVF can get genetic readouts of all the embryos before deciding which to implant. (It is worth noting, however, that these testing technologies are not perfect.)

“Those are really radical changes, and we take them for granted,” says Penzias. These technologies have also changed the function of IVF. What was once a treatment for infertility is now used to preserve fertility. People who want to delay parenthood can opt to freeze their eggs or embryos and use them later. They might opt to transfer one embryo in a year’s time and a second several years later. “We’ve been able to empower women to be able to have much more reproductive choice and get more reproductive mileage from a single IVF cycle,” says Penzias. People who are about to undergo cancer treatments that might damage the testes or ovaries can opt to store their eggs or sperm ahead of time, too. Scientists have even been able to preserve pieces of ovarian and testicular tissue and reimplant them later, enabling recipients to have healthy babies. Today, more people than ever have access to safe IVF options that offer multiple paths to parenthood. Those options look set to expand. But if you want to find out more about the AI and IVF robots, you’ll have to read this week’s story, here! 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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Gluware’s Titan rises to meet Mythos network vulnerability challenge

The consequence is that many CVEs go unremediated. CVEs (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures) are identified vulnerabilities that have been publicly disclosed. The CVE framework also does not account for vulnerabilities detected directly by AI models, which may never appear in any advisory or bulletin. “Every model is just going to get smarter. This is not a one-time thing. This is constant,” Gray said. “The only way to be able to respond and hope to be one step ahead, if that’s possible, is to be able to have the capability of a machine response.” How Titan Exposure Management works Titan Exposure Management is built on Gluware’s DIAL, which maintains a continuously updated model of network state across the entire fleet. Network intent, not configuration snapshots. DIAL performs continuous discovery of device configurations, operating states, and feature-level network intent across 56+ operating systems from 22 vendors, including legacy environments with years of pre-automation history. Feature-level CVE scoring. When a CVE or model-detected vulnerability is received, Titan Exposure Management maps it against vendor and OS-specific feature data to produce a per-device exposure score rather than a blanket OS-version match. External threat intelligence. The platform integrates EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System) and KEV (Known Exploited Vulnerabilities) data to weight scores against real-world exploitation activity, producing a ranked view of actual fleet exposure. Compensating controls. Where patching cannot happen immediately, Titan Exposure Management can deploy ACL changes or network segmentation to reduce the attack surface and buy time. Pre-checks and post-checks are applied through the same DIAL layer at every step. Coordinated patching. For high-availability environments, the platform understands HA topology and sequences patches so one device fails over while its peer is updated. “Patching is the answer, and just being able to do it according to what the business needs and in a safe

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AMD launches AI-targeted PCIe cards for current servers

Instinct MI350P PCIe cards are available in air-cooled systems with up to eight accelerator cards, which makes them ideal for small, medium, and large AI models for inference and RAG pipelines. It has 144GB of high bandwidth memory 3e (HBM3E) running at up to 4TB/s. Performance is estimated at 2,299 teraflops (TFLOPS) and up to 4,600 peak TFLOPS at MXFP4, which AMD says is the highest performance currently available in an enterprise PCIe card. It offers native support for lower-precision MXFP6 and MXFP4, which deliver high throughput as well as acceleration through sparsity support for most mainstream 8- and 16-bit precisions. The MI350P card supports technology called sparsity, where zero values in data sets and matrixes are ignored, thus reducing the processing time. Support for sparsity means higher precision formats, like INT8 and BF16, deliver efficient performance, according to AMD.

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AlphaEvolve: How our Gemini-powered coding agent is scaling impact across fields

Improving AI infrastructureAlphaEvolve has graduated from pilot testing to becoming a core component of our infrastructure. AlphaEvolve has been used as a regular tool to optimize the design of the next generation of TPUs. It also helped discover more efficient cache replacement policies, achieving in two days what previously required a concerted, human-intensive effort spanning months.“AlphaEvolve began optimizing the lowest levels of hardware powering our AI stacks. It proposed a circuit design so counterintuitive yet efficient that it was integrated directly into the silicon of our next-generation TPUs. This is the latest example of TPU brains helping design next-generation TPU bodies.” — Jeff Dean, Chief Scientist, Google DeepMind and Google ResearchAlphaEvolve improved the efficiency of Google Spanner by refining its Log-Structured Merge-tree compaction heuristics. This optimization reduced ‘write amplification’—the ratio of data written to storage versus the original request—by 20%. It also provided insights for new compiler optimization strategies that reduced the storage footprint of software by nearly 9%.Scaling commercial applicationsTogether with Google Cloud, we are now bringing the power of AlphaEvolve to a variety of commercial enterprises across industries.In financial services, Klarna used the system to optimize one of its largest transformer models — doubling its training speed whilst improving model quality.In semiconductor manufacturing, Substrate applied AlphaEvolve to its computational lithography framework, achieving a multi-fold increase in runtime speed, enabling them to run significantly larger simulations of advanced semiconductors.In logistics, FM Logistic used the technology to optimize complex routing challenges like the Traveling Salesman Problem, finding 10.4% improvement in routing efficiency over the previous heavily optimized solutions — saving over 15,000 kilometers of distance travelled annually.In advertising and marketing, WPP used AlphaEvolve to refine AI model components, navigating complex, high-dimensional campaign data and achieving 10% accuracy gains over their competitive manual model optimizations.In computational material and life sciences, Schrödinger applied AlphaEvolve to achieve a roughly 4x speedup in both Machine Learned Force Fields (MLFF) training and inference.“AlphaEvolve allows us to explore larger chemical spaces faster and more efficiently than ever before. Faster MLFF inference carries real business impact, shortening R&D cycles in drug discovery, catalyst design, and materials development, and enabling companies to screen molecular candidates in days rather than months.” — Gabriel Marques, Technical Lead of Machine Learning at Schrödinger.The future of AlphaEvolveThe past year shows how AlphaEvolve is rapidly becoming a versatile, general-purpose system. It is demonstrating that the next breakthroughs will be driven by algorithms that can learn, evolve and optimize themselves. As we look ahead, we are excited to expand these capabilities, and bring the power of this technology to an even broader set of external challenges.AcknowledgementsAlphaEvolve was developed by Matej Balog, Alexander Novikov, Ngân Vũ, Marvin Eisenberger, Emilien Dupont, Po-Sen Huang, Adam Zsolt Wagner, Sergey Shirobokov, Borislav Kozlovskii, Francisco J. R. Ruiz, Abbas Mehrabian, M. Pawan Kumar, Abigail See, Swarat Chaudhuri, George Holland, Alex Davies, Sebastian Nowozin, and Pushmeet Kohli. This research was developed as part of a broader initiative focused on using AI for algorithm discovery. Following the initial development, Alexey Cherepanov, Anindya Basu, Becky Evangelakos, Jamie Smith, and Mario Pinto joined the team to scale AlphaEvolve’s impact.Adam Connors, Alex Bäuerle, Anna Trostanetski, Fernanda Viegas, Gabi Cardoso, Jonathan Caton, Lucas Dixon, Mariana Felix, Martin Wattenberg, Matin Akhlaghinia, Richard Green, Yosuke Ushigome, and Yunhan Xu collaborated with our team to develop the AlphaEvolve UI, with support from many others.Anant Nawalgaria, Diego Ballesteros, Gemma Jennings, Jakob Oesinghaus, Kartik Sanu, Laurynas Tamulevičius, Nicolas Stroppa, Nishta Dhawan, Oliver Hilsenbeck, Reah Miyara, Skander Hannachi, Tom Beyer, and Vishal Agarwal collaborated with our team to develop the AlphaEvolve API and engage with Google Cloud customers, with support from many others.We gratefully acknowledge our collaborators for leading applications of AlphaEvolve on critical problems and contributing to this report: Aaron Wenger, Abhradeep Guha Thakurta, Akanksha Jain, Alex Vitvitskyi, Amir Yazdan Bakhsh, Andrew Carroll, Aranyak Mehta, Arthur Conmy, Ansh Nagda, Davide Paglieri, Eric Perim Martins, Hassler Thurston, Hongzheng Chen, Jack Mason, János Kramár, Jeremy Ratcliff, Jessica Sapick, Johannes Bausch, Jonathan Katz, Kevin Miller, Kim Stachenfeld, Mark Kurzeja, Mircea Trofin, Myriam Khan, Nero Geng, Pablo Samuel Castro, Petar Veličković, Pi-Chuan Chang, Prabhakar Raghavan, Raghav Gupta, Rohin Shah, Sasha Vezhnevets, Sébastien Lahaie, Sergio Guadarrama, Shravya Shetty, Shruthi Gorantala, Terence Tao, Todd Lipcon, Tom O’Brien, Vinod Nair, Ziyue Wang, Zun Li, among many other users of AlphaEvolve.Finally, we thank our leadership for their guidance and support: Amin Vahdat, Ankur Jain, Demis Hassabis, Jeff Dean, Parthasarathy Ranganathan, Pushmeet Kohli, Saurabh Tiwary, and Sundar Pichai. We also extend our gratitude to our partner teams across Google DeepMind, Google Cloud, Google Labs, Google Research, and other product areas for enabling the applications and products powered by AlphaEvolve.

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The Download: the tech reshaping IVF and the rise of balcony solar

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. What’s next for IVF IVF has brought millions of babies into the world over the last four decades. But the process can still be slow, painful, and expensive—and far from guaranteed to work. Now, a wave of new technologies aims to change that.  Researchers are using AI to identify promising sperm and embryos, developing robotic systems that could automate parts of the IVF process, and even exploring controversial genetic editing techniques designed to prevent inherited disease. The technologies could make IVF more effective and accessible. But they’re also raising difficult ethical questions about how far reproductive medicine should go.
Find out what’s next for IVF. —Jessica Hamzelou
This story is from MIT Technology Review’s What’s Next series, which looks across industries, trends, and technologies to give you a first look at the future. You can read the rest of them here. The balcony solar boom is coming to the US Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills. Proponents say the systems could make solar power more accessible, but some experts caution that there are safety concerns.  Read the full story on balcony solar’s potentially massive impact in the US. —Casey Crownhart This article is from The Spark, our weekly climate newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday. Resistance: 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now Resistance against AI’s proliferation is growing. People from all walks of life are speaking out against rising electricity bills from data centers, disappearing jobs, chatbots’ impact on teen mental health, the military’s use of AI, and copyright infringement—among other concerns.  People want to have a say in how the technology transforms their future. And they’re starting to create small cracks in AI labs’ vision for the future. Find out how.

—Michelle Kim Resistance is on our list of the 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now, MIT Technology Review’s guide to what’s really worth your attention in the buzzy world of AI.  The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 After years of insults, Anthropic and SpaceX have teamed upAnthropic will tap SpaceX’s GPUs to meet surging demand. (Axios)+ While SpaceX gets a marquee customer for its AI ambitions. (Wired $)+ Anthropic says the deal will double Claude Code’s rate limits. (Ars Technica)+It’s also exploring building compute capacity in space. (CNBC)+ Musk previously called Anthropic “evil” and “misanthropic.” (Gizmodo)2 Ex-OpenAI leaders say Sam Altman sowed “chaos” and distrustFormer CTO Mira Murati said she couldn’t trust his words. (The Verge)+ He also bypassed OpenAI’s safety board before a model release. (Gizmodo)+ And pitted leaders against one another. (Forbes)+ But Elon Musk still tried to recruit Altman to lead a Tesla AI lab. (FT $)+ Here’s why Musk and Altman are in court. (MIT Technology Review)3 China’s humanoid robots are fueling its next export boomMorgan Stanley says Beijing has taken an early lead in the sector. (Bloomberg $)+ Gig workers are training humanoids at home. (MIT Technology Review)4 SpaceX’s IPO plans will give Elon Musk “virtually unchecked” authorityAnd erode typical shareholder protections. (Reuters $)+ Activists and pension funds are pushing back against the IPO. (Wired $)+ While SpaceX is shifting focus from Falcon 9 to Starship. (Ars Technica)5 Google DeepMind will use the MMORPG Eve Online for AI model testingIt’s also bought a stake in the game’s maker. (Ars Technica)+ DeepMind also recently built a new video-game-playing agent. (MIT Technology Review)6 The US risks isolating its automakers by banning a Chinese EV standardIt’s prohibiting software that’s dominating global EV markets. (Rest of World)7 Elon Musk’s proposed Texas chip factory could cost $119 billionIt would manufacture chips for Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI. (CNBC)+ Future AI chips could be built on glass. (MIT Technology Review)8 Why the “attention-span crisis” is misunderstoodTechnology may be exhausting attention rather than shortening it. (Atlantic $)9 Scientists are getting closer to explaining what causes lightningNew tools are revealing unexpected physics inside thunderstorms. (Quanta)10 Kids have found an age verification loophole: fake mustachesResourceful children are foiling blocks on adult websites. (TechCrunch) Quote of the day “My concern was about Sam saying one thing to one person and completely the opposite to another person.” —Mira Murati, the former CTO of OpenAI, testifies ‌in court that CEO Sam Altman was deceptive, Reuters reports. One More Thing
A brief, weird history of brainwashing During the Cold War, the US prepared for a psychic war with the Soviet Union and China by spending millions of dollars on research into manipulating the human brain.  The science never exactly panned out, but residual beliefs fostered by this bizarre conflict continue to play a role in ideological and scientific debates to this day. And now, new technologies are altering how we think about mind control. 
This is how the race for mind control changed America forever. —Annalee Newitz

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The balcony solar boom is coming to the US

Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills. Balcony solar is already popular in Europe, and proponents say that the systems could make solar power more accessible for more people in the US, including renters. As popularity rises, though, some experts caution that there are safety concerns with how balcony solar would work with existing electrical equipment in homes. Let’s talk about what balcony solar is, why it’s unique, and how new testing requirements could affect our progress toward deploying the technology in the US. Plug-in solar systems are designed to be simple to install, often requiring no electrician or specialized worker at all. They’re small, and many can be plugged into existing outlets.
People across Germany have installed over a million balcony solar systems. They generally measure up to roughly two square meters or about 20 square feet, and can generate up to 800 watts—enough to power a standard microwave. Now the plug-in solar wave is coming to the US. Many Americans have already installed DIY balcony solar without the permission of their utilities—it’s something of a regulatory gray area. In late 2025, Utah became the first state to explicitly allow people to install and use balcony solar systems. Over two dozen other states are now considering similar legislation.
Generally, utilities require users to sign an interconnection agreement before they can plug in large arrays of solar panels that generate power for the grid. There can be fees and permits, and it all amounts to an expensive and lengthy process. Utah’s law ditched the interconnection requirement for panels that have a low power cap and that are certified by a national testing facility. (Legislation under consideration in other states, including New York, includes the same requirements.) The thinking is that since the panels produce very little power, which would be used to meet a home’s own energy demand and probably not get sent back to the grid, the same requirements shouldn’t apply.  As for that certification piece, in January the national testing and certification lab UL Solutions released UL 3700, a testing protocol to certify balcony solar systems and ensure that they’re safe.  There are three main safety considerations to address for these plug-in solar systems, says Joseph Bablo, manager of principal engineering, energy, and industrial automation at UL Solutions. First, there’s the possibility of overloading a circuit. Generally, electrical circuits have circuit breakers, which can trip and interrupt current if necessary. But if there’s a solar panel adding extra power to a circuit, a traditional breaker might not be able to respond to overload. Over time, overloaded circuits can damage equipment or even start a fire.  Second, these small systems are typically installed on the outside of homes, and outdoor power outlets generally have ground fault circuit interruption (GFCI). Basically, if an outlet or its surroundings are wet, it can shut down to prevent electric shock. Many GFCI systems may not work if there’s power going back into an outlet from a solar panel. Finally, there’s touch safety: If a plug gets disconnected from the wall, the blades of the plug may still have power running through them for a short time. If a panel is getting sunlight, those blades could be energized for longer than is typical. The new UL Solutions testing framework aims to address these concerns. One of the key recommendations is that plug-in solar panels should use a special outlet that’s designed specifically for them. The safety measures included in that connection, and within a panel, would ensure that the panels are safe. The need for a special outlet means that currently, people who want to plug in a solar panel array would probably need to have an electrician come and update their wiring in order to comply with the protocol, Bablo says. “I know they want to say ‘No electrician, no permits’—we’re not there.”

Today, anyone can buy products like solar panels and inverters, some of which carry their own component UL certifications, and string them together. (Inverters are covered under UL 1741, for example.) But the gold standard is to have an entire system that meets the safety requirements, and that means adhering to the new standard, Bablo says. As of early May, there aren’t any plug-in solar systems that have been fully certified by UL Solutions. And Bablo said he couldn’t share information about what, if any, are in the pipeline.   Even with the new certification requirements, Bablo still thinks plug-in solar still has the potential to help more people access the technology. “There’s a way for it to work, but we want it to work safely,” he says. 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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