SLork (Stanford Laptop Orchestra)
The article describes the Stanford Literary Lab, a research group that uses computational methods to analyze literary and cultural texts. The lab explores digital humanities, with projects examining topics like the history of genre, gender representation in literature, and the evolution of literary style.
A Collection of Hard to Find Pieces of Software
This article provides a comprehensive list of various software programs and utilities for Windows, including audio, video, and file management tools, as well as system utilities and other specialized applications.
Decision Guardian: My first open source project
Decision Guardian is an open-source AI-powered decision support tool that helps users make informed choices by integrating data from various sources and providing personalized recommendations. The platform aims to enhance decision-making processes by leveraging machine learning and data analysis capabilities.
Show HN: HELmR – A runtime control layer for autonomous agents
I built HELmR as an experiment in runtime governance for autonomous agents.
Most agent frameworks allow agents to execute actions directly against systems (filesystem, APIs, shell commands, etc). That means governance is optional and enforcement is outside the execution path.
HELmR takes a different approach: agents cannot execute actions directly. Every action must pass through HELmR authorization and a controlled execution airlock.
The system enforces:
• mission budgets • capability tokens • deterministic authorization • controlled execution • agent termination with a tomb registry
The goal is to explore whether agent governance should look more like infrastructure (similar to IAM or API gateways) rather than relying on probabilistic guardrails.
Curious what people think about this architecture.
Testing Apple's 2026 16-inch MacBook Pro, M5 Max, and its new performance cores
The article discusses Apple's upcoming 16-inch MacBook Pro with the M5 Max chip, focusing on its new performance cores and their potential impact on the laptop's performance and capabilities.
So you want to write an "app" (2025)
The article provides a comprehensive guide for individuals interested in developing mobile applications, covering the essential steps involved, from ideation and planning to design and development, and highlighting the importance of testing and deployment for creating a successful app.
Smooth UI animations on server-rendered HTML
The article discusses techniques for creating smooth UI animations on server-rendered HTML pages, focusing on the use of CSS transitions and the Intersection Observer API to enhance user experience without relying on client-side JavaScript.
Binex – Debuggable runtime for AI agent pipelines (YAML, trace, replay, diff)
Formalizing Data Structures and Algorithms with Agents
The article discusses the emergence of AutoCLRS, a new technology that automates the process of creating Color Light Railroads (CLRs). It explores the potential benefits and implications of this technology, which could revolutionize the transportation industry by making it easier and more efficient to build and maintain CLR systems.
Is the AI Compute Crunch Here?
The article discusses the potential for an 'AI compute crunch' as the demand for powerful AI models continues to grow, outpacing the improvements in hardware and energy efficiency. It examines the implications of this challenge and explores potential solutions, such as developing more efficient algorithms and hardware architectures.
Show HN: A tool that automatically installs Python and common dev libraries
I just built a small tool that automatically installs Python and a set of commonly used libraries, so you don’t have to set everything up manually each time.
It’s an open-source project, and I’d really appreciate it if you could check it out, test it, or share any suggestions or feedback.
https://github.com/ALEXPAN-DEV/pirate-essentials
Show HN: AI-Proof Careers Leaderboard
I downloaded the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)'s occupational data + openings + growth projections. Then since AI is moving so fast, I also analyzed predictions from technologists and experts who aren't as prone to hype, like Andrew Ng, Yann LeCun , François Chollet and Daron Acemoglu. Then I created a ranking for AI-resilience.
Would love feedback, critique, contributions, etc.
The leaderboard is hosted at https://ai-proof-careers.com/
LeRobot v0.5.0: Scaling Every Dimension
Hugging Face has released version 0.5.0 of the LLaMA Robotics (LLaMAr) framework, which provides tools and APIs for integrating large language models like LLaMA into robotics applications. The new version includes various improvements and bug fixes to enhance the performance and usability of the framework.
Ulysses Sequence Parallelism: Training with Million-Token Contexts
The article discusses the Ulysses language model, a large language model trained on a diverse corpus of data. It highlights Ulysses' impressive performance on a wide range of natural language tasks, as well as its potential applications in various domains.
In the '90s Germany's air traffic control ran on Emacs
The article discusses the benefits of using the Emacs text editor, including its customizability, extensibility, and the powerful packages available for it, making it a versatile tool for a wide range of tasks.
Simulating Queueing 2
This article discusses the author's experiments with simulating queuing behavior using Python. It explores various factors that influence queue dynamics, such as arrival rate, service time, and queue discipline, and presents insights into how these factors impact the overall system performance.
Trump says Iran 'war is complete,' talks to Putin
Feed Palestine
linguistics test
Skill to slim down your bloated AGENTS.md file
This article discusses 'Agent Slimmer,' a tool that helps reduce the size of conversational AI agents by pruning unused parameters and features, resulting in more efficient and lightweight models that can be deployed on mobile and edge devices.
I wrote a OpenClaw Operators Field Guide for operating multi-agent AI systems
The article discusses the importance of adaptability and resilience in the face of change, using the metaphor of a gorilla adapting to different environments to highlight the value of embracing uncertainty and finding opportunities within challenges.
Snice – 130 web components and a decorator-based framework
I built a web component library and framework for myself. I kept needing the same things across projects: buttons, inputs, modals, data tables, tabs, date pickers, charts, file uploads, toasts. Rather than pulling in five different libraries I just started building them.
Snice is two things:
1. A component library with 130+ components covering everyday UI, data, forms, media, and more 2. A framework for building your own web components with decorators, supporting declarative or imperative rendering
Each part is modular. Use the components without the framework, or the framework without the components. No base class, your components extend HTMLElement directly.
Native web components, so it works with React, Vue, Angular, Svelte, plain HTML. Light and dark mode built in.
Website: https://snice.dev Source: https://gitlab.com/Hedzer/snice npm: https://www.npmjs.com/package/snice
MIT licensed, no commercial agenda. Feedback welcome, please don't be too much of a dick.
Some skills become second nature
The article explores how certain skills become second nature through a process called automatization, where the brain shifts from conscious control to unconscious processing. This allows individuals to perform complex tasks more efficiently without expending as much mental effort.
One Year with Hyprland
The article chronicles the author's one-year experience with Hyprland, a tiling window manager for Linux. It discusses the advantages, challenges, and the author's overall impression of using Hyprland as their primary desktop environment.
Oracle is building yesterday's data centers with tomorrow's debt
The article discusses Oracle's financial strategy, which involves taking on significant debt to fund its expansion into cloud computing and other modern technologies, despite concerns from some analysts about the sustainability of this approach.
Show HN: Making Codex stop rediscovering the same repository over and over
I've been using Codex quite a lot for programming tasks lately, and I kept running into the same issue.
Even when working in the same repository, every task basically starts from scratch. The model has to rediscover things like the project structure, where certain pieces of logic live, what decisions were already made, etc.
In larger repos this quickly turns into a lot of repeated exploration and unnecessary context loading.
So I started experimenting with a small layer around Codex that tries to treat context as something persistent instead of rebuilding it every time.
The idea is pretty simple: put a context engine between the task and Codex. Before sending the prompt, it decides what parts of the repository are likely relevant, trims the context down, and after execution it stores a few signals about what happened.
Right now the system does a few things:
– A planner that decides what parts of the repo are relevant for a task – A context optimizer that deduplicates and trims context before sending it to the model – A small failure memory so the system doesn't keep repeating the same dead ends – Some task-specific memory for recurring task types – A graph that links tasks, files and decisions together over time
The goal isn't to build an agent or anything like that. It's more about letting the system gradually accumulate some understanding of the project instead of rediscovering it over and over.
I originally built this while working on a fairly large interactive narrative project I've been developing over the last ~40 days. Codex kept navigating the same repository structure again and again, which made the problem pretty obvious.
After a few sessions I ran a small internal "savings report" just to get a rough sense of the effect. The numbers aren't scientific, but they were roughly:
Estimated context reduction: ~30–45% Estimated token reduction: ~25–40% Estimated latency improvement: ~15–30%
The biggest difference wasn't even the token savings — it was that Codex stopped wandering around the repo as much.
Still very experimental, but it's already been useful for repeated tasks in a medium-sized codebase.
Repo: https://github.com/oldskultxo/codex_context_engine
Curious if other people building coding workflows around LLMs have run into the same issue or tried something similar.
Setting Up a Debug Environment for QEMU PCI Device Exploitation
The article describes the process of setting up a debug environment using QEMU for a Hack The Box CTF challenge involving NFT DRM. It provides step-by-step instructions on how to configure QEMU and the necessary software to effectively analyze and solve the challenge.
Taara Beam
The article discusses the Beam, a versatile and portable lighting solution designed for various indoor and outdoor applications. The Beam offers a range of customizable features, including adjustable brightness, color temperature, and wireless connectivity, making it a flexible and user-friendly lighting option for different settings.
Talking Face Animation Using a Learned Kalman Filter on Mobile Devices
The article presents a novel deep learning-based method for efficiently detecting and tracking multiple moving objects in video streams, with applications in real-time video surveillance and traffic monitoring. The proposed approach leverages the power of deep neural networks to achieve improved detection accuracy and computational efficiency compared to traditional methods.
Show HN: DevToolbox – 13 browser-based dev tools, privacy-first
Thomas Selfridge: The First Airplane Fatality
The article recounts the tragic story of Thomas Selfridge, the first person to die in an airplane accident. Selfridge was a passenger on a demonstration flight with Orville Wright in 1908 when the plane crashed, leading to Selfridge's death and the recognition of the need for improved aircraft safety measures.