Mornin. Big day in AI land, so grab your coffee. A few moves dropped overnight that actually matter if you write code for a living, plus a money number so big it stops meaning anything. Here are the three that caught my eye.
OpenAI Just Bought the uv and ruff People
OpenAI is buying Astral, the small crew behind uv and ruff, and folding them into Codex. If you write Python, you lean on these tools whether you think about it or not.
This matters because uv made pip feel like dial up, and ruff made every other linter look like it was running uphill. A whole lot of us reach for them every single day.
My take? I love these tools and I'm nervous as a cat. Astral kept them fast, free, and open. OpenAI has a coding agent to sell and shareholders to feed. I'd love to be wrong here, but I've seen how this story usually ends. I'm keeping my lockfiles close.
The Transformer Guy Walked Back to OpenAI
Noam Shazeer, one of the folks who wrote the original Transformer paper, just left Google for OpenAI. Google paid 2.7 billion dollars back in 2024 to pull him out of Character AI. He lasted less than two years.
That paper is the reason ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude all exist. When a name that heavy switches desks, the whole field leans in to watch.
My take? 2.7 billion dollars for under two years is the priciest way I've ever seen anybody prove that money doesn't buy loyalty in this business. The talent war isn't cooling off. It's getting dumber and a lot more expensive.
China Put 295 Billion on the Table
China rolled out a 295 billion dollar, five year plan to build out AI infrastructure. Around the same time, Z.ai shipped GLM-5.2, an open model that's trading punches with the big labs on the benchmarks.
The number is loud, but the model is the real story. The gap between what you can download and run yourself and what the closed labs are selling keeps shrinking.
My take? I don't lose sleep over the headline figure. Governments love a big round number. What gets my attention is GLM-5.2 being something I can actually pull down and run on my own hardware. That's the part that changes what I get to build without asking anybody's permission.
That's the roundup. Three moves, three reminders that this whole thing is still going way too fast to look away from. Catch you tomorrow.