
The mathematician Paul Erdős posed many fascinating problems for his peers – and now OpenAI has solved an important one. CC-licensed photo by Erik on Flickr.
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A selection of 9 links for you. Plane to see. I’m @charlesarthur on Twitter. On Threads: charles_arthur. On Mastodon: https://newsie.social/@charlesarthur. On Bluesky: @charlesarthur.bsky.social. Observations and links welcome.
Google Search as you know it is over • TechCrunch
Sarah Perez:
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The era of the “ten blue links” is officially over.
At its Google I/O conference on Tuesday, Google unveiled an AI-powered overhaul of Search centred around a reimagined “intelligent search box” — what the company describes as the biggest change to this entry point to the web since the search box debuted more than 25 years ago.
Instead of returning a simple list of links, Google Search will drop users into AI-powered interactive experiences at times. Google is also introducing tools that can dispatch “information agents” to gather information on a user’s behalf, along with tools that let users build personalized mini apps tailored to their needs.
The resulting experience will no longer look much like how people envision Google Search, which has long been defined by ranked links to websites that have the information you need.With the revamped Search experience, the new search box simply expands to accommodate longer, more conversational queries, rather than making you decide what type of search experience or mode you want to choose at the start of your query. It will also have a new AI-powered query suggestion system that goes beyond autocomplete to help people craft more complex and nuanced queries, Google says.
Google’s AI Overviews will also allow users to ask follow-up questions in AI Mode, beginning Tuesday, the company noted.
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Flashback: “Artificial intelligence would be the ultimate version of Google. So we have the ultimate search engine that would understand everything on the Web. It would understand exactly what you wanted, and it would give you the right thing. That’s obviously artificial intelligence, to be able to answer any question, basically, because almost everything is on the Web, right?” That was Larry Page, in October 2000.
The problem is that if Google doesn’t send any search traffic to websites, why should those websites exist – or, more importantly, why anyone should update them if they don’t get visitors. Except there will always be a need to update sites. Is Google proposing to effectively become the web? That might be biting off too much to chew ever.
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Former Samsung boss predicts the memory crisis could be over in the second half of 2027 • PC Gamer
Jeremy Laird:
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the former president of Samsung Electronics’ semiconductor division says that memory prices could fall starting in the second half of next year thanks to a “surge” in manufacturing capacity in China.
Speaking at the National Academy of Engineering in Seoul, South Korea, Kyung-Hyeon Kye said, “Chinese companies are aggressively expanding their production capacity.” The result will be a “surge” in memory supply in the second half of 2027 or early 2028.
What’s more, he warned that not only will memory supply increase, but demand could decline after 2028. “If the return on investment for Big Tech decreases relative to capital investment, there is a possibility of reduced investment,” Kyung-Hyeon Kye said. Korea must therefore prepare for the “post-super boom.”
His argument seems to be that demand for memory chips could tail off if the AI industry doesn’t start making money rather than just spending it. Ironically, this raises the prospect of the memory crisis being followed by the mother of all memory gluts.
As we’ve reported before, the major players in memory manufacturing outside of China are in the midst of increasing manufacturing capacity. China, by this account, is set to add dramatically to that capacity.
If the AI bubble goes pop and the huge added demand for memory chips suddenly goes with it, there will be an awful lot of memory capacity looking for customers.
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The spike/decline timeline for demand sounds reasonable, though the possibility of the AI bubble popping seems far more likely. And that will leave a great deal of RAM looking for buyers.
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Vibe coding is coming to your phone • The Verge
Allison Johnson:
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For starters, Google is making it easier to just straight up vibe-code a whole Android app. At I/O the company announced an update to its AI Studio vibe-coding tool, allowing you to create a native Android app and export it to a phone in a matter of minutes. The feature is limited to “personal utility” apps to start with, and the rules for putting an app on the Play Store remain the same. But if you’re the kind of person looking for a particular feature from a habit tracking app that none of them seem to offer, you might just be able to build it yourself.
If a whole app feels too ambitious, then maybe a widget is more your speed. At last week’s Android Show, Google announced an upcoming feature to create your own widgets with a prompt — Google’s examples include widgets that highlight certain weather metrics or suggest new recipes to try.
…Google calls the AI-generated widgets a first step toward something called a “generative UI,” where your phone creates an interface and apps on the fly based on what you need in the moment. Sounds great in theory! But it also sounds like it could get messy fast. Android president Sameer Samat acknowledges that there’s a pretty obvious way to take the concept too far. “While I don’t think we want to wake up every morning and have our devices have different UI, I do think there’s a level of personalization and customization to the user that could be delightful,” he tells me.
It seems like Apple might be taking steps toward a more personal iPhone, too. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports that the company is working on a way to create Shortcuts based on prompts. Shortcuts are automations you can program within the dedicated Shortcuts app, either by putting them together from preassembled bits or figuring it out on your own. They seem simple in theory but get complicated fast, which has deterred me from ever seriously getting into Shortcuts. But the prospect of prompting my way into a Shortcut that opens the transit app when I get to the bus stop, or sets a particular Focus mode when I connect to my home Wi-Fi, is pretty appealing.
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The oil shock is coming for America • Financial Times
Amos Hochstein was a senior adviser to Joe Biden in June 2022, when petrol prices hit $5.02 per gallon for the first time ever:
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The national average gasoline price has now surpassed $4.50 per gallon. Two simultaneous crises are compounding in ways we did not experience four years ago.
The first is physical disruption. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has removed more than 12m barrels per day from the global supply. The IEA has called this the greatest global energy security challenge in history. This is not hyperbole.
The second is the refinery conundrum. Jet fuel crack spreads — the difference in price between jet fuel and crude oil — have reached a record $80 per barrel, well above the $60 peak in 2022. Because a barrel of crude oil yields only three to four gallons of jet fuel versus 19 to 20 gallons of gasoline, that extraordinary margin is pulling refinery capacity towards aviation fuel. The result defies normal market logic: gasoline production has declined by approximately 340,000 barrels per day compared with a year ago, even as prices rise and refineries run near full capacity.
According to the Energy Information Administration, US motor gasoline stocks have been drawn at approximately 4mn barrels per week in recent weeks, with the deficit to the five-year average now nearly 11mn barrels. The all-time record low, not seen since the EIA began tracking in 1990, could be reached as early as mid to late June.
The tools that worked in 2022 have already been deployed. The US committed to releasing 172m barrels from the reserve as part of the International Energy Agency’s co-ordinated response. It has already released approximately 80m barrels, leaving stocks at approximately 374m barrels. With refineries skewed towards jet fuel, additional crude releases will not translate into more gasoline with the same efficiency they once did. The reserve is not just smaller. It is a blunter instrument.
The production response has also already occurred. US crude and petroleum product exports reached a record 12.9m barrels per day in late April, with daily oil product exports hitting an all-time high of 8.2m barrels in May. There is no incremental surge waiting. That lever has been pulled.
Last week’s inflation numbers signal that consumer energy prices are running hotter and longer than the Federal Reserve had assumed. What they do not capture is what comes next. Energy prices feed into the core consumer price index with a lag of several weeks. The pump pain of May will translate into inflation figures in July and August. The 30-year Treasury yield has risen to the highest level since the financial crisis and the 10-year Treasury yield is already rising. Mortgage costs, corporate borrowing rates and the cost of financing national debt all move with it.
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We still can’t figure out what sort of havoc, or semi-havoc, we’re going to see.
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An OpenAI model has disproved a central conjecture in discrete geometry • OpenAI
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For nearly 80 years, mathematicians have studied a deceptively simple question: if you place n points in the plane, how many pairs of points can be exactly distance 1 apart?
This is the planar unit distance problem, first posed by Paul Erdős in 1946. It is one of the best-known questions in combinatorial geometry, easy to state and remarkably difficult to resolve. The 2005 book Research Problems in Discrete Geometry, by Brass, Moser, and Pach, calls it “possibly the best known (and simplest to explain) problem in combinatorial geometry.” Noga Alon, a leading combinatorialist at Princeton, describes it as “one of Erdős’ favorite problems.” Erdős even offered a monetary prize for resolving this problem.
Today, we share a breakthrough on the unit distance problem. Since Erdős’s original work, the prevailing belief has been that the “square grid” constructions depicted further below were essentially optimal for maximizing the number of unit-distance pairs. An internal OpenAI model has disproved this longstanding conjecture, providing an infinite family of examples that yield a polynomial improvement. The proof has been checked by a group of external mathematicians. They have also written a companion paper explaining the argument and providing further background and context for the significance of the result.
The result is also notable for how it was found. The proof came from a new general-purpose reasoning model, rather than from a system trained specifically for mathematics, scaffolded to search through proof strategies, or targeted at the unit distance problem in particular.
…This result marks an important moment in the interaction between AI and mathematics: an AI system has autonomously resolved a longstanding open problem at the center of an active field. It also offers an early glimpse of a new kind of collaboration between AI and human mathematicians. In this case, the companion work by external mathematicians paints a substantially richer picture than the original solution alone.
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This is starting to get interesting. The problem (and solution) means nothing to me, or probably you, but mathematicians have a talent for finding applications for their discoveries to the real world.
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Nobody asked for this Washington Post podcast • The New Republic
Parker Molloy:
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Traffic to the Post’s website was down 24% year over year in March, per TheRighting. The New York Times was down 0.6% over the same period. CNN was up 3%. The Post is in its own category.
The Post has shed paying subscribers in waves. About 250,000 canceled after Bezos killed the [Kamala] Harris endorsement in October 2024, per NPR. More than 75,000 followed in February 2025, after Bezos announced the section would run on “personal liberties and free markets.” More cancelled in the weeks after February’s mass layoffs.
What’s in the opinion section instead: op-eds about the mayor of New York. The editorial board has published more than 10 of them this year alone, per Status. Recent entries: “Mamdani meets economic reality,” “Mamdani shows how to sidestep a $5.4 billion deficit,” and “Zohran Mamdani’s ‘creepy and weird’ attack on success.” One current Post staffer told Status: “There’s this bizarre obsession with Mamdani. We’re not even local.”
Regular readers know I’ve written before about how Bezos has gutted the newsroom his opinion section is now embarrassing. I’m not going to repeat that here.
The Post’s own newsroom is reporting on this. On May 9, the news side published a long piece by Drew Harwell about the Daily Wire’s collapse. Same trend Bezos’s opinion section is part of. Same owner paying for both the autopsy and the corpse.
Daily Wire’s YouTube subscriber count has gone backward or sideways in 15 of the past 16 months, per Social Blade data cited by Harwell. Web traffic to the site fell to half its prior-year level in March 2026. Ben Shapiro’s own YouTube views are down nearly 70% since December 2024. The company has cut 13% of its staff since the start of this year. Shapiro himself confirmed to Harwell that revenue fell from 2024 levels.
The Daily Wire reportedly spent $3m per episode on a seven-episode fantasy series called The Pendragon Cycle, per Harwell. Its dedicated YouTube channel has fewer than 1,000 subscribers. In November, the Daily Wire put Shapiro’s face on Times Square billboards to campaign for a Golden Globe podcast award. He wasn’t nominated.
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Things are bad all over, but they’re especially bad for right-wing outlets – which in some ways the Washington Post has become.
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Europe EV sales leap as Iran war pushes up petrol pump prices • Reuters
Christina Amann, Marie Mannes and Nick Carey:
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Demand for electric vehicles in Europe has surged as high fuel prices linked to the Iran war propel sales of new and second-hand EVs, data exclusively shared with Reuters shows, providing a much-needed boost to the auto industry.
Although sales of fully electric cars grew 30% across Europe in 2025, EV adoption on the continent has lagged industry expectations. Carmakers from Volkswagen to Fiat-owner Stellantis (STLAM.MI), opens new tab, which had invested heavily in expectation of much higher EV demand, have over the last year booked multi-billion-dollar charges to cover asset writedowns.
Buyers’ calculations have been transformed by an upsurge in international oil prices to well above $100 a barrel since U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iran at the end of February unleashed a wider conflict and led to unprecedented energy supply disruption.
“This isn’t a blip, it’s an inflection point,” said Gurjeet Grewal, CEO of UK-based Octopus Electric Vehicles, which registered a 95% year-on-year increase in demand for new EVs and 160% rise for used EVs in April.
As a net importer of energy, Britain has been particularly exposed to increases in inflation and food prices.
Across Europe, data provided to Reuters by research group New Automotive and industry group E-Mobility Europe, showed registrations of new EVs rose 34%, year-on-year, in April.
The data covers 16 markets that account for more than 80% of European Union and European Free Trade Association car sales.
It showed strong EV growth in Denmark and the Netherlands, where electric cars are already popular, but also in markets such as Italy, where EVs have been slow to take off.
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Once the feature articles about these new EV buyers start coming in, it’ll be illuminating to see how many switched away from perhaps buying fuelled cars, or whether they just jumped at an opportunity when they weren’t going to buy a car otherwise.
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UK Treasury pushes supermarkets to cap food prices • Financial Times
Ashley Armstrong:
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The UK Treasury is pushing large supermarkets to introduce voluntary price caps on key groceries in return for lifting some regulations, according to people familiar with the situation.
Supermarkets have reacted furiously to the proposals, under which grocers would agree to identify and cap the prices of essential goods such as eggs, bread and milk.
In return, the government has said it would offer “incentives” to the supermarkets, which the people briefed on the matter said could include easing packaging policies and potentially delaying costly changes to rules around healthy food. Some of these measures, such as the packaging regulations, generate revenue for the Treasury.
The Treasury has suggested to the supermarkets that they reinvest the savings to freeze grocery prices. One person close to the situation said that officials were working with retailers to keep prices down.
The proposals come as Sir Keir Starmer’s government is battling to address public concern over the cost of living.
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UK inflation actually fell in May, by 0.5 percentage points, but the government can see that the Iran war is going to have big whiplash effects in the near future. It also postponed a fuel tax rise, because that’s going to hit pretty soon as well. And meanwhile, there’s no sign of Trump figuring out how to extricate the US from its absurd Chinese finger trap in the Middle East.
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BBC boss tells staff he will use data to build “satnav around bias” • Deadline
Jake Kanter:
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The BBC‘s new director general has revealed that he plans to use data to improve impartiality, and has warned that iPlayer is not doing a good enough job of showcasing the corporation’s content.
In his first address to staff on his second day in office, former Google executive Matt Brittin said that he wanted to use data to build a “satnav around bias,” according to audio from the all-hands meeting obtained by Deadline.
He said the BBC could deploy technology to analyse its news and content to establish patterns in output. Brittin said this could mean assessing how often the BBC uses certain words, or analysing the types of contributors appearing across its programming.
He did not expand on how the technology would be built, but it will likely lead to speculation that the BBC could use AI to achieve his aim of mining data. Brittin is a vocal proponent of artificial intelligence, and his experience at Google was attractive to the BBC’s board when recruiting for Tim Davie’s successor.
“Stories and data together are the way to understand the world,” Brittin said. “[This is] not to audit people, but as a kind of satnav around bias or sat nav around these topics … So that’s where I think I’d try to complement our brilliant expert teams.”
The comments are interesting because Brittin has not put impartiality at the forefront of his agenda after being unveiled as director general. He did not explicitly reference impartiality in his three priorities for the BBC, which was a break from his predecessor Davie, who put the issue front and centre in his first days in the job.
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“How often the BBC uses certain words” is an absolute tell for someone who has no idea about what news involves (back in the day, Google realised that excluding “the” from search would speed up its index enormously, which had the side effect of rendering the music outfit The The effectively invisible).
While he’s dead right about iPlayer, which is woefully bad at surfacing stuff you might like from the gigantic archives, the idea of a “satnav around bias” just sounds bonkers. He’s clearly feeling his way in the dark around a giant house.
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| • Why do social networks drive us a little mad? • Why does angry content seem to dominate what we see? • How much of a role do algorithms play in affecting what we see and do online? • What can we do about it? • Did Facebook have any inkling of what was coming in Myanmar in 2016? Read Social Warming, my latest book, and find answers – and more. |
Errata, corrigenda and ai no corrida: none notified








