FT: “What does it take to qualify as a great power? [Brendan] Simms, professor of the history of international relations at the University of Cambridge, argues that four crucial qualities are needed. Does the country have the necessary resources — military, economic and human? Does it have reach beyond the country’s own region and a sphere of influence of its own? Is it seen by its own population and by other countries as a great power — in other words does it have the necessary reputation? And does it have the resilience to absorb losses and to rebound after defeats? Simms uses this framework to explain, in a series of neat potted histories, why second-tier powers don’t make the cut. Japan and Germany, held back by their past and lacking military resources; India, not yet able to project power and a junior player to China in Asia; France, bursting with aspiration but its reach is narrowing and it is too prone to domestic turbulence. Africa and Latin America have regional powers but none qualify as “great”.”
NYTimes: “India is in the throes of Shivaji fever. Across the country, hundreds of statues of the king — usually on horseback, brandishing a sword — have begun studding the broader landscape, popping up in the country’s port cities and along its disputed borders with China and Pakistan. Such tributes to the king, a staple of school history textbooks, had previously been mostly found in Maharashtra, the Indian state dominated by the Maratha community — a broad grouping of Hindus that Shivaji was born into, and that includes farmers and warriors, some of whom are considered lower caste.”
Sam Altman: “I think that was the single biggest driver at what people, of what people realized was, the coding models have so transformed how companies are doing their work and the efficiency and the speed of which they’re able to build products. The coding models got really good late last year, early this year, and then another step forward in recent months. So I think you’re right that that’s the single biggest driver. But we are now seeing scientists really use these models and a much broader application of knowledge work beyond coding. But, yes, I think it’s fair to say that coding is the magic right now.”
FT: “The world’s top AI companies are devoting growing resources to a question many still regard as science fiction: what happens if AI becomes conscious? Google DeepMind, Anthropic and Meta have hired experts in psychology, ethics and philosophy in recent months as they expand research into machine consciousness and AI welfare, according to several people familiar with the matter. The efforts reflect a broader shift inside leading AI labs, where rapid advances in increasingly autonomous systems have revived questions about whether machines could one day possess subjective experience — and what obligations humans might have towards them if they do.”


