The Download: a nuclear landmark, and China eyes Nvidia chips
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.
Four nuclear reactors hit a big milestone in the US
—Casey Crownhart
I was really looking forward to July 4, and not just because I love a poolside barbecue. This year the American holiday also marked a big symbolic deadline for US nuclear power.
Last year the Trump administration set a goal to see three new microreactors achieve criticality, a technical milestone establishing that a reactor can sustain a chain reaction, by the nation’s 250th birthday. And just in time, not just three, but four reactors did so.
It’s a positive sign for nuclear technologies at a time of increasing need for electricity and emissions-free energy sources. But achieving criticality doesn’t mean a reactor is ready to provide electricity for the grid (or at all, for that matter).
Here’s what the milestone could mean for nuclear power in the US—and where the four companies might go next.
This story is from The Spark, our weekly climate tech newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday.
The must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 China plans to let its top AI firms buy Nvidia H200 chipsAlibaba, ByteDance, and DeepSeek are set to get permission. (Information $)+ China had previously withheld approval despite US authorization. (Reuters $)2 NATO is building a network to stop Russian attackers in their tracksIt will use sensors, drones, satellites, and AI to detect them. (Business Insider)+ Troops are donning odd camouflage to elude drones. (Economist $)+ The US wants cheaper drones as Iran's wrecking its Reapers. (Ars Technica)3 Researchers have a new idea to fight future El Niños: dimming the sunDeflecting solar energy could cool the ocean and mitigate the risks. (Wired $)+ But there could be unexpected consequences. (New Scientist $)+ And geoengineering as a field is getting a reality check. (MIT Technology Review) 4 Meta is patenting an AI device that records users to analyse emotionsIt ostensibly aims to tailor workout plans to the user’s mood. (404 Media)+ AI memory is privacy’s next frontier. (MIT Technology Review)5 Chipmakers are going vertical as Moore’s Law slowsThey’re stacking transistors to keep chips advancing. (Economist $)+ IBM is betting on the technique. (MIT Technology Review) 6 Ivy League students suspected of AI cheating saw scores fall in personFrom 96% all the way down to 48%. (Ars Technica)+ AI giants want to take over the classroom. (MIT Technology Review) 7 A new study says parents’ phone addictions damage bonds with kidsIt can exacerbate “insecure attachment” for life. (Bloomberg $)+ And make children more anxious and avoidant. (Gizmodo)8 A judge approved Musk’s $1.5 million Twitter settlement with the SECDespite what she called “serious misgivings” and “red flags.” (Reuters $)+ Musk was accused of skirting stock disclosure rules. (Fortune) 9 Shoebox-sized “detector satellites” could find nuclear bombs in spaceCubesats carrying the detector could sense a bomb’s radiation. (Space)+ Russia is suspected of developing space-based nukes. (Reuters $)10 A World Cup match drove Google Search traffic to a new recordThe milestone came after Argentina’s comeback against Egypt. (CNBC)
Quote of the day
“I talk about it on Tic Tac.”
—President Donald Trump tells the public where to find his insights on the dangers of communism, Gizmodo reports.
One More Thing
Robots are bringing new life to extinct species
Paleontologists aren’t easily deterred by evolutionary dead ends or a sparse fossil record. And in the last few years, they’ve developed a new trick for turning back time and studying prehistoric animals: building experimental robotic models of them.
In the absence of a living specimen, an ambling, flying, swimming, or slithering automaton is the next best thing for studying the behavior of extinct organisms. Learning more about how they moved can in turn shed light on their lives, such as their historic ranges and feeding habits. Scientists can simply sit back and observe their behavior in different environments.
Read the full story on the rise of paleo-inspired robots—and four examples that are shedding light on creatures of yore.
—Shi En Kim
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.)
- Georgia Hill’s monochrome artworks are filled with visual harmony.+ AI has salvaged text from a papyrus scroll burned to a crisp when Mount Vesuvius erupted 2,000 years ago.+ Rare images taken by a Japanese space probe show a near-Earth asteroid resembling a cuddly snowman.+ “Another One Bites the Bee Gees” smoothly merges two classic tracks with a 4/4 time signature into the perfect song for applying CPR.
Deep Dive
The Download
The Download: the future of chipmaking and Anthropic’s government clash
Plus: Meta is pausing an AI training program that tracks workers’ keystrokes.
By Thomas Macaulayarchive page
The Download: AI hacking beyond Mythos, and chatbots’ impact on our brains
Plus: Anthropic has called for a global slowdown in AI development.
By Thomas Macaulayarchive page
The Download: keeping up with AI, and the future of IVF
Plus: NASA unveiled plans for three uncrewed missions to the Moon this year.
By Thomas Macaulayarchive page
The Download: a reality check for geoengineering and the science of interoception
Plus: SpaceX is now valued higher than Amazon.
By Thomas Macaulayarchive page
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Illustration by Rose Wong
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