The Old Divinity School at night

And to think that St John’s once received a proposal for converting it into a ‘boutique hotel’!
Quote of the Day
”I wish to thank my parents for making it all possible? and I wish to thank my children for making it necessary.”
- Viktor Borge
Musical alternative to the morning’s radio news
Paul Simon | Hearts and Bones
Long Read of the Day
The Price of initiative just collapsed
Every so often a piece about ‘AI’ that is both topical and wise emerges from the seething chaos of current discourse about the technology. This blog post by Martha Lane Fox is one of those. It’s good all the way through, and at the end it’s full of horse-sense about what the UK should be doing with the technology now.
It starts from an encounter she had with an edition of the original Gutenberg Bible that she had in the J.P Morgan library in New York.
Even if you could get your hands on a printed Bible, you still needed literacy — and not literacy as we know it: with public schools, clear fonts, and the assumption that the words were for you. You needed the language, the time, and the permission to learn. The technology was astonishing. The interface, for most people, was not.
The future had arrived — and then it queued.
It’s that queue that followed me out of the building. Gutenberg printed his Bible around 1455. England did not even begin legislating for a national system of elementary education until 1870 — four centuries later, after long arguments over who should learn and what they should be allowed to read. The machine was fast. Everything else — institutions, access, the will to distribute — was slow. Those who could read surged ahead; those who could not were quietly kept in place.
Time is the thread I keep returning to, because it’s what makes today harder. We do not have four centuries to close the gap between technology and society. We may not even have four years. New releases from Anthropic, OpenAI and newcomer Openclaw have blown apart what’s possible in the last 3 weeks…
Keep reading. It’s worth it.
Books, etc.
What you can get away with: Updike Reconsidered
Nice review essay by James Wolcott in the LRB.
Maybe it’s just me , but the publication of John Updike’s selected letters, masterfully assembled and presented by James Schiff, doesn’t appear to have been the parade event that might have been expected. The reviews have been largely laudatory, marbled with tribute to Updike’s impeccable filigree, effortless versatility, unfaltering application and sleek plumage, but I don’t get the sense that the accolades have resonated beyond the baby boomer contingent of Updikeans who matured with the Rabbit Angstrom novels and counted on the continuing nourishment of his presence in the New Yorker. Perhaps Updike’s gifts and graces were too easy to take for granted, bannered for so long while he was alive. Whatever the explanation, betwixt and between is a strange place for any major writer to be more than a decade and a half after their death, and Updike’s standing in the literary hereafter remains profoundly iffy. It’s one thing to fall out of fashion, another to fall out of favour, and Updike seems to have fallen out of both while still being suspended mid-air, cushioned by the thermals while posterity figures out what to do with him…
One of the things I noticed in Updike’s ‘Rabbit’ novels was how acutely he tracked the sociology of the times. Rabbit Angstrom was a Toyota dealer just at the time when the Japanese car industry began to undermine its US counterpart. Another theme in the novels included American decline. Rabbit, a former high-school basketball star and symbol of postwar American confidence, for example now profits from foreign imports. I have a vague memory that an American sociology students once wrote a PhD about this.
Chart of the Day

Linkblog
The Epstein Class
From Robert Reich:
Not just the people who cavorted with Jeffrey Epstein or the subset who abused young girls. It’s an interconnected world of hugely rich, prominent, entitled, smug, powerful, self-important (mostly) men. Trump is honorary chairman.
Trump appears 1,433 times in the Epstein files so far. His billionaire backers are also members. Elon Musk appears 1,122 times. Howard Lutnick is a member. So is Trump-backer Peter Thiel (2,710 times), and Leslie Wexner (565 times). As is Steven Witkoff, now Trump’s envoy to the Middle East, and Steve Bannon, Trump’s consigliere (1,855 times).
The Epstein Class isn’t limited to Trump donors. Bill Clinton is a member (1,192 times), as is Larry Summers (5,621 times). So are LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman (3,769 times), Prince Andrew (1,821 times), Bill Gates (6,385 times), and Steve Tisch, co-owner of the New York Giants (429 times).
The so-called masters of the universe.
This Blog is also available as an email three days a week. If you think that might suit you better, why not subscribe? One email on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays delivered to your inbox at 5am UK time. It’s free, and you can always unsubscribe if you conclude your inbox is full enough already!


















