Will CoreWeave's Heavy Debt Load Disrupt Its Growth Momentum?
The article discusses the financial challenges faced by Coreweave, a cloud computing company, due to its heavy debt load. It explores how Coreweave's debt could potentially disrupt its operations and growth plans in the future.
X blew up its own platform with a new location feature
The article discusses the potential impact of AI-powered social media accounts, known as 'X', on the future of online discourse. It explores the ethical and practical implications of these advanced AI entities interacting with humans in social media spaces.
Founder's unlikely path to Silicon Valley could become an edge
This article explores the journey of a founder who took an unconventional path to Silicon Valley, and how this background could provide an edge in the industrial tech industry. It highlights the value of diverse experiences and perspectives in driving innovation.
FBI concludes Trump's would-be assassin acted alone during rally shooting
The FBI has closed its investigation into the shooting that took place at a Trump rally in 2025, concluding that the shooter acted alone and was not part of a broader conspiracy. The report finds that the shooter had a history of mental health issues and acted on his own motivations, without any evidence of coordination with other groups or individuals.
Is OpenAI putting the 'AI' in too big to fail?
How to Sell to Engineers
The article provides insights on effectively selling to engineers, emphasizing the importance of understanding their technical mindset, addressing their specific concerns, and tailoring the sales approach to their preferences and decision-making process.
Bernie sanders vs. Hinton: Worst fears and best promises of AI
Claude Opus 4.5, and why evaluating new LLMs is increasingly difficult
The article discusses Anthropic's Claude, an advanced AI language model that can engage in open-ended conversations, answer follow-up questions, and perform a variety of tasks. It highlights Claude's capabilities, including its ability to learn and adapt over time, and its potential impact on the future of AI-powered interactions.
Tell HN: Google increased existing finetuned model latency by 5x
Since 5 days ago, the latency of our Finetuned 2.5 Flash models has suddenly jumped by 5x. For those less familiar, such finetuned models are often used to get close to the performance of a big model at one specific task with much less latency and cost. This means they're usually used for realtime, production use cases that see a lot of use and where you want to respond to the user quickly. Otherwise, finetuning generally isn't worth it. Many spend a few thousand dollars (at a minimum) on finetuning a model for one such task.
Five days ago, Google released Nano Banana Pro (Gemini 3.0 Image Preview) to the world. And since five days ago, the latency of our existing finetuned models has suddenly quintupled. We've talked with other startups who also make use of finetuned 2.5 Flash models, and they're seeing the exact same, even those in different regions. Obviously this has a big impact on all of our products.
From Google's side, nothing but silence, and this is talking about paid support. The reply to the initial support ticket is a request for basic information that has already been provided in that ticket or is trivially obvious. Since then, it's been more than 48 hours of nothingness.
Of course the timing could be a pure coincidence - though we've never seen any such latency instability before - but we can all see what's most likely here; Nano Banana Pro and Gemini 3 Preview consuming a huge amount of compute, and they're simply sacrificing finetuned model output for those. It's impossible to take them seriously for business use after this, who knows what they'll do next time. For all their faults, OpenAI have been a bastion of stability, despite being the most B2C-focused of all the frontier model providers. Google with Vertex claims to be all about enterprise and then breaks product of their business customers to get consumers their Ghibli images 1% faster. They've surely gotten plenty of tickets about this, and given Google's engineering, they must have automated monitoring that catches such a huge latency increase immediately. Temporary outages are understandable and happen everywhere, see AWS and Cloudflare recently, but 5+ days - if they even fix it - of 5x latency is effectively a 5+ day outage of a service.
I'm posting this mostly as a warning to other startups here to not rely on Google Vertex for user-facing model needs going forward.
Nvidia has acquired Canadian AI startup CentML
Nvidia is in advanced talks to acquire Canadian AI research company Ceta-ML, a move that would bolster Nvidia's artificial intelligence capabilities and expand its presence in Canada's tech ecosystem.
Campbell's Boss Taped Saying Soup Is 'Bioengineered,' Lawsuit Claims
A lawsuit alleges that a Campbell Soup executive belittled low-income customers and made racist comments about Indian employees, creating a hostile work environment. The lawsuit seeks damages and the executive's termination.
An Adaptive Gripper for On-Orbit Grasping with Rapid Capture and Force Sensing
The article investigates the use of natural language processing (NLP) techniques to analyze political speeches and identify their ideological leanings. It presents a framework for extracting and classifying the ideological content of political discourse using machine learning models.
I built Jelly: an SSH-only social space (no passwords, no emails)
Hey everyone. I’ve been building a small experiment and wanted to share it.
Jelly is a social space you join entirely through SSH. No web, no app, no login flow. Your SSH public key is your identity.
I wanted something that felt like early internet communities. Simple, no algorithms, no rage-bait, no scraping, no AI content. Just people talking in real time from the terminal.
What it currently does
Join with: ssh jellyssh.xyz
If you don't have a key: ssh-keygen -t ed25519
Public keys auto-create accounts
Global feed with real-time updates
Hashtags become channels (top 5 active topics)
ASCII profile pictures + profile themes
Guestbooks / Top 8 (MySpace nostalgia)
TUI built with Bubble Tea
SSH server powered by Wish
sqlite backend, no tracking or analytics
No passwords, emails, or personal data stored
It’s very early and rough around the edges, but stable enough to try. Still tightening up input handling, rate limiting, and crash-proofing.
If you check it out, I'd love your thoughts/feedback. It’s just me building this and I’m figuring it out as I go.
ssh jellyssh.xyz
Thanks for reading.
Show HN: Radius.today – Local-first personal CRM
Radius.Today is a news platform that covers a variety of topics, including technology, business, and lifestyle. The website provides readers with in-depth articles and analysis on current events and emerging trends.
Stereo Images of Giant Galaxies
The article explores how astrophysicist and Queen guitarist Sir Brian May's stereo vision of galaxies has provided new insights into the structure and evolution of the universe, using his novel technique of combining images from different telescopes to create three-dimensional views of celestial objects.
Hayli Gubbi Volcano
This article explores the work of volcanologist Hayli Gubbi, who studies the Piton de la Fournaise volcano on the island of Réunion. Gubbi's research aims to better understand volcanic activity and improve eruption forecasting to protect local communities.
Show HN: Free client-side image compressor (privacy-first, no uploads)
Hi HN,
I built this because I was tired of uploading my personal photos to third-party servers just to compress them. I wanted a tool that respects privacy by doing everything 100% on the client side.
It runs entirely in your browser (no data leaves your device), so there are no file size limits or upload wait times. It currently supports bulk compression for JPG, PNG, and WebP.
The larger suite of tools I'm building at ToolboxNest. I'd love to hear your feedback on the compression quality and the UI!
Energy Department Launches 'Genesis Mission'
The U.S. Department of Energy has launched the GENESIS mission, a new initiative aimed at transforming American science and innovation by advancing clean energy technologies, strengthening the national research and development ecosystem, and fostering collaboration between government, industry, and academia.
RoaringBitmap Extension for PostgreSQL
The article describes a PostgreSQL extension called 'pg_roaringbitmap' that implements Roaring Bitmaps, a compressed data structure for efficiently storing and querying sets of integers. The extension provides a set of functions for creating, manipulating, and querying Roaring Bitmaps within PostgreSQL databases.
Faceted query acceleration for PostgreSQL using roaring bitmaps
The article introduces pgfaceting, an open-source PostgreSQL extension that enables faceted search capabilities within PostgreSQL databases. The extension provides a flexible and efficient way to implement faceted search functionality, allowing users to easily navigate and filter large datasets.
Microsoft doesn't understand the dislike for Windows' new direction
The article discusses Microsoft's perceived lack of understanding towards user dislike of the new direction taken with Windows, highlighting the company's dismissive attitude towards user feedback and its failure to address the concerns of its customer base.
Symbol of LA Modernism, the Stahl House Hits Market for First Time, Asking $25M
The Stahl House, a renowned mid-century modern architectural masterpiece in Los Angeles, is listed for sale at $25 million. The iconic glass-and-steel home, designed by architect Pierre Koenig in 1960, has been featured in numerous films and publications and is considered a landmark of modern architecture.
Energy Snap: Quick Workouts for Entrepreneurs and Solopreneurs
EnergySnap is a web-based platform that helps users track and manage their energy consumption data, providing insights and recommendations to improve energy efficiency and reduce costs.
How to get Pandoc to respect custom table styles in Word templates
The article discusses how to create custom tables with Pandoc, a document conversion tool. It explains the process of creating Markdown tables with custom alignment and formatting, and then converting them to various output formats using Pandoc.
Is AI Eating the World?
The article explores the growing impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on various industries, examining the claims that 'AI is eating the world' and discussing the potential benefits and challenges of AI adoption across different sectors.
Age of the Captain
The article discusses the concept of the 'age of the captain' in the history of seafaring, where captains wielded significant power and autonomy in commanding their vessels. It explores how this dynamic evolved over time as maritime technology and organizational structures changed.
Science, Optics and Youline – Prehistory to 999 Ad
This article provides a comprehensive timeline of major developments in optics and optical technology before the year 1000 AD, covering advancements in lenses, mirrors, and the study of light and vision from ancient civilizations to the medieval period.
De Bruijn Graph
The De Bruijn graph is a graph data structure used in bioinformatics, computer science, and other fields to represent the relationships between sequences of elements, such as DNA or computer code. It has applications in areas like genome assembly, text compression, and cryptography.
Code Wiki: Accelerating your code understanding
The article introduces Code Wiki, a new tool from Google that uses natural language processing to accelerate the understanding of code by providing concise summaries and insights for developers.
Meta and Google Discuss Deploying TPUs in Meta Datacenters Starting 2027
Meta and Google are reportedly in talks about a potential deal for Meta to use Google's Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) chips, which are designed for machine learning tasks. The agreement could help Meta improve the efficiency and performance of its AI models while reducing costs.