Insights sea urchin mass mortality suggest a worldwide Diadematid pandemic
Open Source LLM Development Landscape 2.0: 2025 Revisited
This article provides an overview of the current open-source large language model (LLM) development landscape, highlighting key players, trends, and predictions for the future of this rapidly evolving field through 2025.
SVG Fullstack Website
The article provides a step-by-step guide for creating a basic website using SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) technology, which allows for responsive and interactive web designs that scale well across different devices and screen sizes.
Iberian peninsula is rotating clockwise
The Iberian Peninsula has been rotating clockwise over the past 35 million years, according to a new study. This geodynamic process is driven by the convergence of the African and Eurasian plates, which has led to the uplift of the Pyrenees and the formation of the Alboran Sea in the western Mediterranean.
Show HN: Termrex – Chrome dino game for terminal
Hi HN,
I built Termrex, a terminal-based endless runner game inspired by the Chrome Dino offline game. It runs in Linux/macOS terminals(POSIX).
I’m looking for feedback on: - Gameplay feel - Input handling across different terminals - Any bugs or quirks you notice
Slides: Terminal based Markdown presentation tool
Slides is an open-source, browser-based presentation tool that allows users to create and share presentations directly from the GitHub platform. It offers a minimalist and customizable design, enabling developers to focus on the content while leveraging the power of version control and collaboration features provided by GitHub.
Australia's social media ban in chaos as youths flock to Chinese alternatives
The Australian government is considering a ban on social media use for under-16s, citing concerns over the mental health and wellbeing of young people. The proposed legislation would require social media companies to verify the ages of their users and restrict access for minors.
Show HN: Track prices and stock on products across 9 major retailers
The Dark and Predatory World of Crypto Casinos
The article explores the rise of crypto casinos and their growing influence, particularly among online gaming streamers who promote these platforms to their audiences. It examines the regulatory challenges and concerns surrounding this emerging industry.
Show HN: Create multi-voice podcasts with VibeVoice
The article discusses the creation of the Vibevoice podcast, which focuses on exploring the intersection of music, technology, and culture. It provides insights into the podcast's inception, its mission, and the diverse range of topics and guests it features.
Why Some AI SaaS Ideas Reach $100M
When people think about AI startup ideas, they usually imagine something novel, technical, or impressive on a demo.
But when you look at AI SaaS companies that quietly reach meaningful scale, the pattern is much less exciting — and much more repeatable.
They don’t invent new behaviour. They replace old, manual workflows that people already complain about. Reporting. Ops. Support. Compliance. Sales admin. Boring work that happens every day and costs real money.
AI changes the economics. Tasks that once required teams, process, and time can now be handled by small systems built by very few people. That’s where many of the real opportunities live, not in “breakthrough intelligence,” but in obvious pain that finally became cheap enough to solve.
What surprised me while researching this was how often the same problems showed up across different communities and industries.
Different words, same frustration. That research eventually turned into startupideasdb,com a way to spot AI-friendly SaaS opportunities grounded in repeated, public pain rather than trend-driven ideas.
Curious how others here approach this. When you think about AI SaaS, do you start with the tech, or with the most boring problem you can find?
Show HN: Rankiwiki – voting-based rankings for small groups
A small site I built to turn “one person, one vote” into a ranked list. Designed for small groups where the ranking is a starting point for discussion, not a final verdict. Feedback welcome.
Fop – Filter Orderer and Preener (Rust Edition) for Adblock
The article discusses the Fop-rs project, which is a Rust implementation of the Apache FOP (Formatting Objects Processor) library. Fop-rs aims to provide a lightweight and efficient alternative for rendering XML/XSL-FO documents to various output formats, such as PDF, SVG, and more.
Read Something Wonderful
The Hardest Part of Starting a Startup Isn't Code, It Is This
Over the last few months, I kept running into the same kind of founder.
Smart. Capable. Motivated.
And completely stuck at step zero.
Not because they couldn’t build. But because they couldn’t decide what was worth building.
We’re told starting a startup has never been easier, better tools, cheaper infra, AI everywhere.
But that abundance creates a quieter problem: decision paralysis. Everyone has ideas. Very few feel confident enough in one to commit months of their life.
What I noticed was that most people don’t fail because of execution. They stop because the idea never felt solid. Not real enough. Not painful enough.
That pushed me to start collecting actual problems people complain about online, Reddit threads, forums, Indie Hacker posts, boring workflows breaking in public.
Over time, that became startupideasdb,com: a way to reduce the blank-page anxiety by grounding ideas in real, repeated pain.
It’s not about telling anyone what to build. It’s about helping builders decide what’s worth building.
Curious how others here make that call. What signals do you trust before you start?
Why Self-Driving Cars Still Don't Exist
The article discusses the current state of full self-driving car technology, highlighting the challenges and progress made by major companies and researchers in this field. It explores the ethical and regulatory considerations surrounding the deployment of autonomous vehicles on public roads.
The Whole App is a Blob
The article discusses the concept of the 'blob' in software development, where the entire application is treated as a single, monolithic unit. It explores the potential drawbacks of this approach and suggests alternative architectural patterns that may offer more flexibility and scalability.
Vibe Coding as 2025 word of the year in Collins dictionary
The article discusses the concept of 'Word of the Year', an annual selection of a word or expression that captures the mood or preoccupations of the year. It examines the selection process and the significance of these words in reflecting cultural and linguistic trends.
Why Florida Crocs Are Thriving Outside a Nuclear Power Plant
Broadcom reveals its mystery $10B customer is Anthropic
Broadcom has revealed that its mystery $10 billion customer is Anthropic, an artificial intelligence research company. The partnership aims to accelerate the development and deployment of Anthropic's large language models and AI technology.
Show HN: PicPick – AI-powered photo curator using CLIP and face recognition
Hey HN! I built this after my wedding left me with 5,000 photos to sort through.
The key insight: most photo sorting time is spent reviewing near-duplicates. Professional photographers shoot in bursts, so you get 10+ shots of the same moment.
PicPick uses CLIP embeddings to cluster visually similar photos, then adds face recognition to keep groups coherent (so you don't mix up "bride with parents" and "bride with friends" just because they look similar).
Tech stack: - CLIP for semantic similarity (not just perceptual hashing) - face_recognition (dlib) for person detection - DBSCAN clustering on combined features - FastAPI + vanilla JS for the UI - SQLite for everything
It reduced my review set from 5,000 → ~1,000 clusters, which I then filtered down to 300 for the album in a few hours instead of days.
The clustering parameters are tunable - tighter for professional shoots with many duplicates, looser for casual photos.
Open to feedback! Especially around: 1. Better clustering algorithms (currently DBSCAN on CLIP embeddings + timestamps + face vectors) 2. UI improvements for rapid reviewing 3. Handling photos without faces (landscapes, food, etc.)
Works entirely offline, no cloud uploads needed.
Arborium: Tree-sitter code highlighting with Native and WASM targets
Show HN: A systems language with runtime reflection and no GC
Hi HN,
I’ve been working on an experimental programming language called XXML. The project started from a frustration I kept running into across systems languages:
Languages with strong ownership tend to avoid runtime reflection.
Languages with rich reflection usually rely on GC or give up memory guarantees.
Compile-time code generation often requires a separate macro language.
I wanted to explore whether those tradeoffs are truly necessary.
What XXML is trying to do
XXML is a statically-typed, native language that:
Uses explicit ownership and borrowing (no garbage collector)
Supports runtime reflection while respecting ownership rules
Allows compile-time code generation using normal language constructs, not macros
Compiles to LLVM IR and produces native binaries
Reflection APIs are constrained so unsafe ownership operations are rejected at compile time. The goal isn’t “dynamic at all costs,” but introspection without losing safety.
What it’s useful for (so far)
Some concrete use cases I’m exploring:
Safe plugin/mod systems for native applications
Auto-generated serialization (e.g., JSON/RPC) without macros
Debugging and inspection tools that can reason about user types
Declarative domains (UI/layout/asset graphs) that benefit from structured syntax
What it’s not
This is early-stage and definitely not production-ready:
The ecosystem is minimal
The language is still evolving
Documentation and tooling are incomplete
I’m mostly interested in feedback from people who’ve worked on:
compilers
language runtimes
systems with heavy serialization or plugin boundaries
Code
GitHub repo: https://github.com/ThatSoulyGuy/XXMLCompiler or https://xxml-language.com
I’d especially appreciate criticism around:
the ownership model
reflection safety boundaries
where this design is fundamentally flawed
Thanks for reading — happy to answer questions.
Unscii
The article discusses the Unscii font, a high-quality monospace font designed for pixel art and retro gaming. It explores the font's creation, its unique features, and its applications in various digital mediums.
Electric vehicle owners face new pay-per-mile tax. What about the environmental?
The article discusses the potential implementation of a pay-per-mile tax for electric vehicle owners as a means to replace the loss in gas tax revenue due to the increasing adoption of electric vehicles. It explores the debate around this proposal and the considerations policymakers must weigh in developing a fair and effective system.
Director Rob Reiner dead at 78
The Generative AI Industry Is Fraudulent, Immoral and Dangerous
This article explores the potential negative impacts of AI technology, including concerns about job displacement, privacy violations, and algorithmic bias. The author argues that while AI offers many benefits, it also poses significant risks that must be carefully considered and addressed.
The Synchronization Tax
The article discusses the 'synchronization tax' - the hidden cost and time spent on maintaining software synchronization across multiple systems and devices. It explores the challenges companies face in ensuring data consistency and the impact on productivity, efficiency, and overall business operations.
Niantic Spatial, Inc
Niantic Spatial, a division of Niantic, Inc., is a pioneer in developing advanced location-based technologies and experiences. The company focuses on creating innovative augmented reality and mapping solutions for both consumer and enterprise applications.
How the lives of India's poorest improved in the last 10 years
The article examines how the lives of India's poorest have improved over the last decade, with a focus on increased access to education, healthcare, and financial inclusion through government initiatives and economic growth.