Bookwheel
The bookwheel, a Renaissance-era device, allowed readers to easily access and reference multiple books simultaneously. This mechanical book-holding carousel was an early innovation in information management and organization.
Fluux Messenger 0.13.3 – A Modern Cross Platform XMPP Client (TypeScript)
Show HN: A library to turn any React Native View into a video or an image
Introducing React Native View Recorder!
The ultimate library to record any native View in your app and export it as a video or an image. No server required, MIT Licensed.
- Record or snapshot any arbitrary View in React Native, whole app dashboard or only part of it - Supports recording Skia Canvas - You have frame-by-frame control over the video you're recording - Add your audio file or mix in the audio frame by frame - Fully native, no FFmpeg binaries - Control FPS, bitrate - Support for H.264, HEVC, and transparency
Star it on GitHub: https://github.com/Rednegniw/react-native-view-recorder
Check out the docs: https://react-native-view-recorder.awingender.com/
Show HN: Attendr – lightweight self-hosted staff presence dashboard
I built a small internal tool because our team had a constant problem keeping track of who was onsite, remote, or unavailable.
Different teams were using whiteboards, spreadsheets, or chat messages and it was messy for operational teams that just needed a quick "who is around" view.
So I built a simple real-time dashboard that shows everyone's status at a glance.
It runs locally, has no external dependencies, and can be deployed in a few minutes.
Technically it's a small Node.js application using a SQLite database with a simple web dashboard, designed to run entirely on-prem without requiring cloud services.
It has been running internally for a while and is now also running in production inside a government environment, so I decided to clean it up and release it publicly.
Curious what the HN crowd thinks.
AgentSeal – Security scanner for AI agents (150 attack probes)
Mcpup – Manage MCP servers across 13 AI clients from one config
The article discusses the development of the MCPUP (Multi-Core Processor Utilization Prediction) tool, which aims to predict the utilization of multi-core processors using machine learning techniques. The tool is designed to help developers optimize the performance of their applications on multi-core systems.
Mozilla is working on a big Firefox redesign, here is what it looks like
Mozilla is working on a major redesign of the Firefox web browser, with changes to the user interface and new features like a unified address and search bar, a customizable toolbar, and a refreshed design language.
OpenClaw on Amazon Lightsail to run your autonomous private agents
The article introduces OpenClaw, a platform for running autonomous private AI agents on Amazon Lightsail, a cloud computing service. OpenClaw allows users to deploy and manage their own private AI agents without the need for complex infrastructure setup.
How I made a shooter game in 64 KB [video]
How Much Money Jeff Bezos Made Since You Started Reading This Page
This article provides a calculator to estimate the wealth growth of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, allowing users to input various parameters and see projections of his future net worth based on Amazon stock performance and other factors.
Getting sued for honest 1* star review on Google Maps (Germany)
Show HN: I built an AI-powered advert – is this the future of advertising?
I've been thinking about how AI will change advertising. Instead of static banners or landing pages, what if an ad was a conversation? I built a demo to explore this: a fictional luxury EV brand called Vela, with an AI sales consultant named Stella you can actually talk to. Ask her about range, pricing, comparisons to competitors — she knows the product inside out. Try it here: https://99helpers.com/tools/vela-chat The idea is simple: instead of cramming everything into a hero section and hoping someone scrolls, you let the customer ask what they actually care about. The AI handles objections, comparisons, and details on demand. Built with my own platform (99helpers.com) which lets you give an AI chatbot a knowledge base and embed it anywhere. This is one use case I hadn't fully considered until recently — using the chatbot not for support, but as the ad itself. Curious what HN thinks. Is conversational advertising compelling, or just a gimmick?
The calm energy set up that makes your whole day easier
The article discusses the concept of 'calm energy' and provides a step-by-step guide to setting up a calm energy environment, including suggestions for lighting, décor, and activities to promote relaxation and mindfulness.
Coding with Multiple AI Agents to Build Scalable Rate-Limiting Infrastructure
The article explores the concept of coding with multiple AI agents, discussing the benefits and challenges of this approach. It highlights the potential for increased efficiency, creativity, and problem-solving capabilities when AI agents collaborate on software development tasks.
Ask HN: Using AI for Psychology and Philosophy
Is anybody exploring AI thinking models for learning psychology and philosophy ?
what is your experience
Show HN: NeoMud – A multiplayer dungeon game with AI agents that QA and playtest
I've been building a modern take on a MUD (multiplayer text RPG) with Claude Code over the past few weeks. Kotlin server, Android client, React-based world editor. The usual hobby project stuff.
The interesting part is the agent pipeline that grew around it:
- A /game-designer agent reads all the world data files, models the combat math, and produces balance proposals with specific JSON changes
- A /playtest agent connects to the running game server over WebSocket, creates a character, explores, fights NPCs, loots items, and files GitHub issues for bugs it encounters
- A /worldmaker agent drives the world editor in a real browser via Playwright — clicks through zone editing, NPC configuration, item creation, and files issues when things break
- A /bugfixer agent picks up those issues and submits fixes
Each agent has persistent memory across sessions, so the game designer remembers its previous balance audits and the playtester remembers what areas it's already explored.
The game itself is a modern take on '90s MUDs like MajorMUD — tick-based combat, NPC behaviors (wander, patrol, pursuit), spells, skills, stealth, loot tables, vendors, trainers. 4 zones, 25 rooms, 17 NPCs. Everything is data-driven JSON — the world editor exports .nmd bundles (ZIP archives) that the server loads at startup, similar to DOOM's WAD files.
The world editor has a visual zone map where you place rooms on a shared coordinate grid, click to connect exits, and configure NPC patrol routes by clicking rooms on the map. All zones share one global coordinate space so rooms can't overlap across zones.
~45k lines of code, 830 tests across server/shared/maker, 460 AI-generated assets (images and audio). The agents have filed about 40 GitHub issues so far, most of which are legitimate.
It's a hobby project — combat balance is rough, there's no quest system yet, and it needs real multiplayer stress testing. But the feedback loop of building features and then having agents test them in the actual running application has been a surprisingly effective workflow.
Weight-loss jab could be made for $3 a month, study finds
Keith Lynch's timeline of net related terms and concepts
The article provides a timeline of major events and milestones in Keith Lynch's life, covering his personal and professional achievements over the years.
Show HN: Dead-simple job management tool for solo contractors ($0 for now)
I'm a solo carpenter, and I got tired of paying $39–150/month for software built for 20-person operations. So I built FieldFlow — invoicing, scheduling, and client management in one place. No fleet tracking, no dispatching, no features I'd never use. It's free right now. I'm not trying to make money yet — I just want to know if I've actually solved a real problem. Once it's worth paying for, I'm thinking $9/month, just enough to cover server costs. If you're a solo contractor and want to try it, I'd love brutal feedback. https://fieldflow-nine.vercel.app/auth
'Free' Sterling in New York and Switzerland in the 1940s (2017)
Next Embedding Prediction Makes World Models Stronger
The article presents a novel deep learning model called ViT-BERT that combines the strengths of Vision Transformer (ViT) and BERT language models to achieve state-of-the-art performance on various visual-language tasks, including image-text retrieval, visual question answering, and visual reasoning.
RFK Jr.'s anti-vaccine policies are "unreviewable," DOJ lawyer tells judge
The article discusses a lawsuit filed against Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s anti-vaccine organization, in which a Department of Justice lawyer argued that Kennedy can promote getting measles without legal repercussions due to freedom of speech protections.
Ruby on Rails homepage updated for "the agentic age"
Ruby on Rails is an open-source, full-stack web framework written in Ruby, designed to make web application development efficient and productive through the use of the Model-View-Controller (MVC) architectural pattern and the Convention over Configuration principle.
AI Harness Engineering
The article explores the concept of harnessing artificial intelligence (AI) in engineering, discussing the potential benefits and challenges of integrating AI into the engineering design and development process to enhance productivity, efficiency, and innovation.
Black-box AI and cheap drones are outpacing global rules of war
The article explores the use of Anthropic's AI technology in Iranian drone warfare, raising concerns about the potential military applications of advanced AI systems and the ethical considerations surrounding their development and deployment.
Scientific datasets are riddled with copy-paste errors
The article discusses a study that found widespread copy-paste errors in scientific datasets, which can lead to the propagation of incorrect information and undermine the reliability of research findings. The study highlights the need for improved data validation and quality control measures in scientific data management.
Anybody know what happened to the GNU site?
The GNU Project, launched by Richard Stallman in 1983, aims to create a free, open-source operating system and suite of software tools as an alternative to proprietary software. The project has developed numerous popular free software applications and promotes the principles of software freedom, user control, and community collaboration.
I built a dashboard to manage domains across all my registrars
Keep.domains is a domain registrar and web hosting provider that offers a range of domain registration and web hosting services, including domain name search, domain transfers, and website hosting plans.
Const – Ian Lance Taylor (2010)
The article discusses the importance of strategic planning for nonprofits, highlighting the benefits of creating a clear vision, setting goals, and developing a roadmap to achieve organizational success. It emphasizes the need for nonprofits to regularly review and update their strategic plans to adapt to changing circumstances and ensure long-term sustainability.
Show HN: Procedural Music Workstation in the Browser
As a side project for a hockey manager game, I created a small audio tracker, "HM Tracker," which was used to make the game's music.
It is a browser-based tracker-style music workstation. All sound is procedurally generated from oscillators - no samples, no plugins.
The UI lets you edit patterns on a step grid, pick instruments and chords, then export as a standalone JS music engine or WAV file. Built with vanilla JS and the Web Audio API (best experienced on a desktop browser).
Made in the '90s demoscene spirit (at least the looks, anyway).
Would love any feedback!