Home

Ford F-150 Lightning outsold the Cybertruck and was then canceled for poor sales
MBCook about 5 hours ago

Ford F-150 Lightning outsold the Cybertruck and was then canceled for poor sales

The article reports that the Ford F-150 Lightning electric pickup outsold the Tesla Cybertruck, which has been cancelled due to not selling enough units. The article highlights the growing popularity of electric trucks and the competition in the market.

electrek.co
306 392
Summary
So, you’ve hit an age gate. What now?
hn_acker about 5 hours ago

So, you’ve hit an age gate. What now?

The article discusses the privacy implications of age gates on websites, highlighting the need for effective age verification methods that respect user privacy and avoid excessive data collection.

eff.org
263 216
Summary
Government drops plans for mandatory digital ID to work in UK
FridayoLeary about 7 hours ago

Government drops plans for mandatory digital ID to work in UK

The article discusses the recent launch of the James Webb Space Telescope, the most powerful and advanced space observatory ever built, which is designed to provide unprecedented insights into the early universe and the formation of stars and galaxies.

bbc.com
147 68
Summary
Show HN: Tiny FOSS Compass and Navigation App (<2MB)
nativeforks about 11 hours ago

Show HN: Tiny FOSS Compass and Navigation App (<2MB)

The MBCompass project is an open-source geomagnetic compass application designed for Android devices. It provides accurate compass functionality, allowing users to orient themselves using the Earth's magnetic field.

github.com
115 36
Summary
Why NUKEMAP isn't on Google Maps anymore (2019)
fanf2 about 10 hours ago

Why NUKEMAP isn't on Google Maps anymore (2019)

The article discusses the reasons why the popular NUKEMAP nuclear detonation simulation tool is no longer available on Google Maps, including concerns over the potential misuse of the tool and Google's policy changes around displaying sensitive content.

blog.nuclearsecrecy.com
104 15
Summary
Edge of Emulation: Game Boy Sewing Machines (2020)
mosura about 8 hours ago

Edge of Emulation: Game Boy Sewing Machines (2020)

This article explores the history and evolution of the Game Boy's hardware, focusing on the technical innovations and design choices that made it a groundbreaking and iconic handheld gaming device. It delves into the engineering challenges faced by the development team and how they overcame them to create a system that left a lasting impact on the gaming industry.

shonumi.github.io
100 6
Summary
Wind power slashed 4.6B euros off electricity bills in Spain last year
mooreds about 2 hours ago

Wind power slashed 4.6B euros off electricity bills in Spain last year

The article discusses how wind power generation has saved billions of euros on electricity bills in Spain. It highlights the significant impact of renewable energy sources in reducing the costs of electricity for consumers.

surinenglish.com
94 31
Summary
4k tons of potatoes to be given away for free in Berlin
mrzool about 6 hours ago

4k tons of potatoes to be given away for free in Berlin

A surplus of 4,000 tons of potatoes in Germany will be given away for free to the public in Berlin. The potatoes, which would otherwise go to waste, are being distributed to help reduce food waste and provide free, fresh produce to local residents.

the-berliner.com
94 76
Summary
Never-before-seen Linux malware is "more advanced than typical"
Brajeshwar about 8 hours ago

Never-before-seen Linux malware is "more advanced than typical"

Researchers have discovered a new, highly advanced Linux malware that has not been seen before. The malware is designed to evade detection and provides attackers with sophisticated capabilities, including the ability to steal data and maintain persistent access to infected systems.

arstechnica.com
84 20
Summary
Every country should set 16 as the minimum age for social media accounts
paulpauper about 3 hours ago

Every country should set 16 as the minimum age for social media accounts

The article discusses the benefits of setting a minimum age of 16 for social media use, arguing that it can help protect young people's mental health and development. It explores the potential impact on youth and the need for policymakers to consider this approach.

afterbabel.com
68 91
Summary
Show HN: A 10KiB kernel for cloud apps
ianseyler about 7 hours ago

Show HN: A 10KiB kernel for cloud apps

BareMetal Cloud is an open-source, bare-metal cloud computing platform that allows users to deploy and manage their own cloud infrastructure without the need for virtualization. The project aims to provide a simple and efficient way for individuals and organizations to build and operate their own cloud services.

github.com
55 8
Summary
Show HN: Webctl – Browser automation for agents based on CLI instead of MCP
cosinusalpha about 8 hours ago

Show HN: Webctl – Browser automation for agents based on CLI instead of MCP

Hi HN, I built webctl because I was frustrated by the gap between curl and full browser automation frameworks like Playwright.

I initially built this to solve a personal headache: I wanted an AI agent to handle project management tasks on my company’s intranet. I needed it to persist cookies across sessions (to handle SSO) and then scrape a Kanban board.

Existing AI browser tools (like current MCP implementations) often force unsolicited data into the context window—dumping the full accessibility tree, console logs, and network errors whether you asked for them or not.

webctl is an attempt to solve this with a Unix-style CLI:

- Filter before context: You pipe the output to standard tools. webctl snapshot --interactive-only | head -n 20 means the LLM only sees exactly what I want it to see.

- Daemon Architecture: It runs a persistent background process. The goal is to keep the browser state (cookies/session) alive while you run discrete, stateless CLI commands.

- Semantic targeting: It uses ARIA roles (e.g., role=button name~="Submit") rather than fragile CSS selectors.

Disclaimer: The daemon logic for state persistence is still a bit experimental, but the architecture feels like the right direction for building local, token-efficient agents.

It’s basically "Playwright for the terminal."

github.com
39 6
Summary
The string theory hype machine will never die
headalgorithm about 3 hours ago

The string theory hype machine will never die

The article discusses the potential impact of large language models like GPT-3 on the field of theoretical physics, highlighting both the opportunities and challenges posed by these AI systems in advancing scientific understanding and making new discoveries.

math.columbia.edu
38 35
Summary
Denmark sends military reinforcements to Greenland
mooreds about 7 hours ago

Denmark sends military reinforcements to Greenland

Denmark has started sending military reinforcements to Greenland following pressure from the United States. The move comes amid increasing geopolitical interest in the Arctic region.

dr.dk
26 16
Summary
Show HN: Nori CLI, a better interface for Claude Code (no flicker)
csressel about 8 hours ago

Show HN: Nori CLI, a better interface for Claude Code (no flicker)

Hi HN, my name's Clifford and I'm one of the creators of Nori. I’ve been using Claude Code heavily since last summer, and after understanding some of the tradeoffs with their TUI implementation, I knew I couldn't see myself living for years with this interface as one of my daily-driver tools.

It is not a hard problem to make monospace text output performant, so why does Claude Code suffer from flicker and strobing in the terminal (https://github.com/anthropics/claude-code/issues/1913)? Even after they've released multiple improvements for this, I still see the issue in terminal splits with fewer rows, or in less performant emulators, and even within a virtual TTY (the absolute simplest environment to run an interactive program in). After digging in throughout the past half year, the issue is mostly inevitable because Claude reprints full terminal history without using alt screen mode and uses a React-based framework (Ink) to render and style their text. That's great for JS+CSS being "on distribution" for LLMs in order to vibecode the continued development of Claude Code, but it doesn't deliver the experience I'd like. The frameworks they've chosen also have limitations around [terminal input parsing (i.e. the shift enter issues from last year: https://github.com/anomalyco/opencode/issues/1505#issuecomme...). Great terminal interfaces I've lived with for years (neovim, btop, helix, Cataclysm DDA, etc) don't sacrifice user experience as a tradeoff for development convenience. They build resilient terminal interfaces on languages more appropriate for this problem, like C or C++ or Rust.

Finally, while I'm definitely rooting for Anthropic to continue improving their products, I can't see myself coupling a commandline tool I use often with a single LLM provider. It would be insane if pushing my code to GitHub required me to edit it in VSCode — I want my tooling to do one thing well, and that's display the read-eval-tool-loop from talking to an agent. Opus 4.5 has been stellar, but it's nonnegotiable to me that I can try out varied providers with the same tools I plan to use everyday. Claude Code will not be working long term on how best to interface with multiple agents, from varying providers, in one terminal pane, and that makes perfect sense for their business. However based on our other experiences building out profiles and skillsets for agents, deeper customizations of agent instructions and subagents, and parallel worktrees for local agents, we have a lot of vision for how to handle local agentic work. And with the current design to integrate at the agent-level, we don't plan on working around the OAuth flows or spoofing the system prompt outside of the Claude Code SDK (like with the OpenCode situation), and risk the tools coming into conflict with the providers.

These were the main considerations that went into designing Nori CLI. It's a very thin and very fast TUI wrapper around multiple agent providers. It integrates with providers at the agent level, instead of the model level. Not only does that provide better performance in our experience, but that is also *compliant with current ToS for subscription based usage.* This is a very early version, but given the timing this week it might give you a flicker-free way to code with Claude Code!

The project is open source, and built on the stellar work by folks at Zed (on the abstraction over varied coding agents), and the folks working on Codex CLI (who have put together one of the nicest proprietary terminal experiences).

I'm very curious: What are the Claude Code features you couldn't give up, to make the switch to a tool like this? What are the Claude Code features that work as intended, but you can't stand?

github.com
21 4
Summary
Show HN: A fast CLI and MCP server for managing Lambda cloud GPU instances
odedfalik about 3 hours ago

Show HN: A fast CLI and MCP server for managing Lambda cloud GPU instances

I built an unofficial CLI and MCP server for Lambda cloud GPU instances.

The main idea: your AI agents can now spin up and manage Lambda GPUs for you.

The MCP server exposes tools to find, launch, and terminate instances. Add it to Claude Code, Cursor, or any agent with one command and you can say things like "launch an H100, ssh in, and run big_job.py"

  Other features:
  - Notifications via Slack, Discord, or Telegram when instances are SSH-ready
  - 1Password support for API keys
  - Also includes a standalone CLI with the same functionality
Written in Rust. MIT licensed.

Note: This is an unofficial community project, not affiliated with Lambda.

github.com
15 2
Summary
Junior Developers in the Age of AI
zdw about 7 hours ago

Junior Developers in the Age of AI

This article discusses the impact of AI on the role of junior developers, highlighting the potential for AI to automate certain tasks and the need for junior developers to adapt by developing complementary skills that leverage the strengths of both human and AI capabilities.

thoughtfuleng.substack.com
11 5
Summary
Whistleblower drops 'largest ever' ICE leak to unmask agents
GeorgeWoff25 about 9 hours ago

Whistleblower drops 'largest ever' ICE leak to unmask agents

A whistleblower has allegedly released the largest-ever leak of information about U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, exposing personal details and identities in an effort to unmask the individuals involved in controversial immigration policies and enforcement practices.

vechron.com
11 1
Summary
Show HN: YASP – Open-source, modern status page with full CMS control
soaringmonchi about 7 hours ago

Show HN: YASP – Open-source, modern status page with full CMS control

Hi HN

We built YASP because the existing free/open-source status pages were either dated, ugly, or too restrictive (no custom Twilio/SMTP, rigid notifications, limited customization).

YASP is a modern, self-hosted status page built with Next.js + Payload CMS, and it’s fully open source (MIT).

What makes it different:

- Full CMS flexibility via Payload – customize almost everything without touching code

- Review & edit every notification (SMS/email) before it’s sent

- Bring your own Twilio and SMTP accounts

- OAuth2 / OIDC capable

- Beautiful dark & light themes out of the box

- Incident updates, maintenance windows, service groups, subscriber management

- One-click deploy on Vercel, or self-host anywhere

Tech stack: Next.js, TypeScript, Tailwind, Payload CMS Open source & free forever

Would love feedback from folks who’ve run status pages in production.

yasp.io
9 0
Summary
Show HN: Skillshare – Sync skills across AI CLI tools
runkids about 8 hours ago

Show HN: Skillshare – Sync skills across AI CLI tools

Skillshare is an online learning platform that offers thousands of classes on a wide range of topics, from creative skills to business and technology. The platform allows users to learn from experienced instructors and collaborate with a community of fellow learners.

github.com
8 0
Summary