The Guardian

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Raúl Jiménez seals Mexico’s win against nine-man South Africa in World Cup opener

Was that it, then? Was Sphephelo Sithole being caught in possession nine minutes into the opening game, Julián Quiñones running on to lash the ball through Ronwen Williams’s legs, was that when the football took over, the moment when concerns over the aggression of the major co-host faded away and the world got on with celebrating the great festival of humanity the World Cup ought to be?

It seems unlikely. Donald Trump’s war with Iran goes on, as do the outrages of his immigration police. But it’s not just that. Gianni Infantino has opted to run this tournament, uniquely in the modern age, without a local organising committee. That may not explain the shambolic organisation at the Azteca – the chaotic traffic, the non-existent signage, the absence of WiFi, the general lack of order – but it does make it harder to fix.

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World Cup 2026: Mexico’s opening ceremony and El Tri’s winning start – in pictures

The best images from Mexico City Stadium as the 2026 World Cup got under way, with Shakira and Burna Boy starring in the first of the tournament’s three opening ceremonies before El Tri made easy work of their opener against Bafana Bafana

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Iran’s World Cup camp in Tijuana unfolds under armed guard and political shadow

An improvised base in Mexico has become Team Melli’s unlikely World Cup home as security fears, visa disputes and political divisions shape their tournament

Open-top trucks patrolled the surrounding roads outside the Estadio Caliente today, mounted by men in helmets and masks and wielding machine guns. They pass by the main entrance every few hours, guarding the massive city block, otherwise chocked with cars and smog, that the Iran national team has made its temporary, and largely improvised, home for this World Cup.

This has become business as usual here in northwest Mexico, at an arena that most teams in the domestic league hate to visit thanks to its distance from the country’s other footballing hubs and its brutal artificial turf playing surface.

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Gastland Mexico wint met 2-0 van Zuid-Afrika in eerste wedstrijd van WK

De openingswedstrijd van het WK voetbal is gewonnen door Mexico. In het Estadio Azteca in Mexico-Stad wist de ploeg van bondscoach Javier Aguirre te winnen van Zuid-Afrika.

kottke.org

Jason Kottke's weblog, home of fine hypertext products

Ian’s Shoelace Site Is Still The Best Site For...

Ian’s Shoelace Site Is Still The Best Site For Tying Your Shoes. However: “What is the point of adding value to the internet if it is only going to rob you? Why do research, make diagrams, and develop new knots?”

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Mexico veel te sterk voor Zuid-Afrika in openingsduel met drie rode kaarten (2-0)

Formula 1 News

Formula 1® - The Official F1® Website

Norris seeking ‘reassurances and confidence’ in Barcelona

Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri have outlined their objectives for this weekend’s Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix.

Verstappen coy on Red Bull's Barcelona chances

Red Bull duo Max Verstappen and Isack Hadjar believe "there are still so many unknowns for us" ahead of this weekend's Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix, despite a recent improvement in performance.

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Everyone hates frontier AI labs, says Palantir boss

Palantir CEO Alex Karp doesn’t think frontier AI labs prepping for IPOs really understand what their customers need, and that ignorance is making Palantir a success. Karp had a wide-ranging, often rambling and self-interrupting sit-down (coherent compared to some of his other interviews, to be fair) with CNBC’s Sara Eisen on Wednesday in which he said that every single enterprise customer Palantir has is unhappy with frontier AI labs like Anthropic and OpenAI. Those companies, says Karp, are operating on a “hyper religion of hyper optimism” that doesn’t reflect the experiences of their customers. “They believe all problems present, past, and future, including the ones they create but don’t acknowledge, are going to be solved by them,” Karp opined. “Enterprises are fed up because they know this doesn’t actually work this way, and isn’t working.” That frustration, Karp said, is driving businesses to Palantir’s Foundry systems, which act as AI-agnostic data integration platforms for unifying disparate data sources and cognizing them with whatever LLMs a customer chooses to deploy. Pitch to prospects or not, Karp is on to something. AI projects are largely loss makers for the companies that deploy them, and have been for some time. Only 28 percent of AI use cases fully meet ROI expectations, according to a recent Gartner estimate, and most fail to ever get out of the pilot stage. Despite that, business leaders keep shoveling coal into the AI furnace to try to extract value, which, if you ask Karp, simply isn’t there unless you’re pairing those models with some decent infrastructure. Infrastructure Palantir can provide, natch. “It’s not just the man and woman on the street who are unhappy with the frontier labs,” Karp said, pointing to “every single enterprise we deal with” being frustrated with the likes of Anthropic and OpenAI’s ability to provide value for their businesses. Karp said that Palantir leadership has been debating whether they should pay potential customers to go talk to frontier labs themselves before signing a contract with his outfit. “People come out of there screaming, saying 'this could never work for me, they don’t understand the enterprise, they don’t care about my enterprise,'” he said of customers. Frontier labs, Karp opined, just want customers to "tokenmax” – that is, to view token consumption as a measure of productivity and usefulness. The charge isn’t out of left field. Google CEO Sundar Pichai even nodded to the phenomenon at I/O last month. Burning more and more tokens is getting to be expensive for companies, and OpenAI is reportedly considering reducing its per-token charge to attract more customers in its growing war with Anthropic, which Karp called the “leading frontier firm” in his interview. Karp wouldn’t give a straight answer when asked whether OpenAI, Anthropic, and other frontier labs could do what Palantir is doing, but he did imply some doubt. Sure, they have some good engineers on staff, he said, but that doesn’t matter a lick if they “don’t talk to the enterprises or understand the technical challenges” their customers are facing in deploying their models. “When you go to San Francisco and talk to them, their basic vibe is ‘we don’t have to solve your problem today because tomorrow you’re going to go away and all your problems are going to be solved,’” Karp charged. “It’s largely religious.” Karp also called out OpenAI’s recent agreement to acquire UK-based AI consulting firm Tomoro, which will form part of the newly launched OpenAI Deployment Company aimed at helping customers generate returns from their ChatGPT investments, as an attempt to replicate Palantir's success. “It’s a complete farce,” Karp said. “They don’t understand how unlikeable they are.” By that, Karp said, it’s not that AI lab leadership isn't friendly – he said he's buddies with some of them and that they’re great to chat with – but “the product doesn’t actually work and it’s very expensive.” To that end, he added, most of the things that Anthropic brags about in public, for example, are successful because they’re “running on Palantir,” Karp charged. “It is not that LLMs aren’t crucial for the world, it’s just that the implementation is where the value is, certainly in the next 7 years,” Karp explained. In essence, what the Palantir boss seems to believe is that simply tossing an LLM at business problems isn't an actual solution. What Karp had to say on CNBC was, in his usual way, boisterous, confrontational, and self-aggrandizing, but look at the rate of AI returns in the enterprise right now and you have to admit he's got at least a partial point. ®

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

OpenAI Mulls Slashing Prices As It Competes With Anthropic For Users

OpenAI is reportedly considering sharp price cuts for paid access to its AI models as competition with Anthropic intensifies and both companies race for users ahead of potential IPOs. "The company is weighing significant cuts to what it charges for tokens, the unit of measurement artificial-intelligence firms use to bill for their products," the Wall Street Journal said, adding that it was "in anticipation of similar cuts the company expects at Anthropic." CNBC reports: The ChatGPT producer, which did not immediately respond to CNBC's requests for comment, currently charges consumers in tiered subscriptions of $8, $20 and $100 and above each month for access to its flagship GPT-5.5 models. Anthropic conversely charges users $17 each month with an annual subscription to Claude Pro, and $100 and above monthly for a subscription to Claude Max. OpenAI confidentially filed for an IPO on Monday, just a week after Anthropic made its own filing.

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