AI is rapidly industrializing—specialized hardware (NVIDIA Vera), on‑device vs hyperscale strategies (Apple), agentic models, benchmarks, and vendor investments (Anthropic) intensify competition and capability. Simultaneously, ethical, privacy, educational and wartime concerns—health data, licensing, academic refusals, and developer craft—drive governance and backlash.
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NVIDIA: NVIDIA Launches Vera CPU, Purpose-Built for Agentic AI (Mar. 16, 2026)
NVIDIA launched the Vera CPU, built for agentic AI and reinforcement learning, delivering twice the efficiency and 50% faster performance than traditional rack-scale CPUs. -
WSJ: Apple’s Cheap AI Bet Could Pay Off Big (Mar. 15, 2026)
Hyperscalers pour hundreds of billions into AI infrastructure, while Apple spends little, using M5 chips, on-device models, and 2.5 billion devices to run powerful models locally. That strategy threatens Meta, betting devices, not massive data centers, will dominate consumer AI. -
Claude: Claude builds interactive visuals right in your conversation (Mar. 12, 2026)
Claude now builds inline charts, diagrams, and interactive visualizations during chat, in beta, which can be edited as conversations progress. -
Thoughtful: Introducing PostTrainBench (Mar. 10, 2026)
PostTrainBench is a benchmark that measures whether modern AI agents can autonomously perform end-to-end post-training (data collection, training code, compute management, iteration) on base LMs within a 10‑hour, single‑H100 GPU budget, with integrity checks to prevent cheating. -
The Washington Post: Anthropic’s fight with the Pentagon made Claude hugely popular (Mar. 6, 2026)
After the Pentagon labeled Anthropic a national security threat, downloads, paid subscriptions, and praise surged, as many defended the company. -
Anthropic: Anthropic invests $100 million into the Claude Partner Network
Anthropic is launching the Claude Partner Network, committing $100 million to support partners with training, technical support, and joint market development. -
NY Times: A.I. Goes to War + Is ‘A.I. Brain Fry’ Real? + How Grammarly Stole Casey’s Identity (Mar. 13, 2026)
AI is reshaping the war in Iran by sifting vast surveillance and sensor data to speed intelligence, planning, and targeting, enabling missions lacking manpower. -
NY Times: A.I. Chatbots Want Your Health Records. Tread Carefully. (Mar. 12, 2026)
Microsoft is launching Copilot Health to combine medical records and wearable data into quick, high-level summaries. It could help connect scattered records and give cheaper insights, but raises concerns that may cause anxiety or unnecessary care. -
Simon Willison: MALUS—Clean Room as a Service (Mar. 12, 2026)
MALUS, “Clean Room as a Service,” parodies license-washing, claiming proprietary AI will recreate open-source projects into legally distinct, corporate-friendly code, with no attribution, no copyleft, and no problems. -
Les Orchard: Grief and the AI Split (Mar. 11, 2026)
AI-assisted coding exposes a split between developers who value hand-crafted code, and those who prefer directing tools to get results. Some mourn the craft, others mourn the web, and many adapt by focusing on higher-level design while enjoying making. -
Inside Higher Ed: Writing Faculty Push for the Right to Refuse AI (Mar. 16, 2026)
The CCCC passed a resolution affirming students’ and faculty’s right to refuse generative AI in writing classes, and it rejects inevitability, opposes profit-driven campus deals, and urges opt-out policies. -
AP News: Did anybody do the reading? Colleges grapple with a generational shift in learning — plus AI (Mar. 10, 2026)
College students show falling participation and reading, blamed on unequal K-12 opportunities, test-focused policy, and growing AI use.