NVIDIA Research has released SpatialClaw, an open-source framework that rethinks how AI agents handle one of the hardest problems in computer vision: Determining where things are in physical space. The project, published by NVIDIA’s research labs and hosted on GitHub under the NVlabs account, targets a long-standing weakness in vision-language models, or VLMs. These models are good at describing what they see, but they tend to struggle with the geometry of a scene: How far apart two objects sit, which way something is facing, or how an object moves across multiple video frames. SpatialClaw doesn’t try to retrain a model to fix that. Instead, it changes the interface the agent uses to reason about space. Code as the Action, Not a Tool Call Most spatial reasoning agents today take one of two approaches. Some commit to a single pass of code execution before seeing any results, locking in a strategy upfront. Others rely on a fixed set of structured tool calls, which limits ho...
What Five Localization Pull Requests Revealed About Open Source Governance: A Field Report on Open Source’s i18n Infrastructure Gap
A bot recently approved one of my Pull Requests (PRs) with the cleanest possible verdict: “No Issues Found — Recommendation: Merge.” The story did not end there. Weeks later, a maintainer finally reviewed the contribution. By then, the parts of the repository targeted by the localization work had been removed as the project evolved. The PR was closed, not because the translation was incorrect, but because the review arrived after the underlying code structure had changed. That outcome highlights a broader challenge in open source internationalization (i18n). The problem is often not translation quality. It is the absence of processes that allows language contributions to be evaluated, routed, and integrated before project evolution overtakes them. Translation is Not the Hard Part When people hear “i18n,” many maintainers think it means “drop a JSON file in.” That is not what it involves. Internationalisation is a system: stable keys, defined fallback behaviour, plural rules...