Algolia Hacker News Search GitHub Project Archived
The article discusses Algolia's open-source Hacker News search, which allows users to search and browse Hacker News data. It provides details on the project's features, including full-text search, ranking, and data ingestion.
MetaFilter Shifting to Volunteer Moderation
Microsoft AI boss issues 18-month warning to all white-collar workers
Microsoft's AI chief warns that AI systems could become 'misaligned' with human values, posing significant risks if not developed responsibly. The article emphasizes the importance of addressing potential pitfalls and ensuring AI remains beneficial to humanity.
CSLib: The Lean Computer Science Library
The article proposes a novel deep learning-based approach for generating realistic high-resolution images from low-resolution inputs, with potential applications in image processing and computer vision.
The Proof – Andrew Wiles' Quest to Prove Fermat's Last Theorem
The article explores the scientific evidence for the Big Bang theory, including observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation and the expansion of the universe, providing a comprehensive overview of the proof for the origin of the universe.
Guardrail Coding – Fuzzycomputer.com
The article discusses the concept of 'guardrail coding,' which involves establishing clear boundaries and rules to guide software development. It emphasizes the importance of setting parameters and constraints to ensure the codebase remains organized, maintainable, and secure over time.
Dan Gelbart – Solving Impossible Problems for Fun and Profit
Show HN: Baseline – enforce team decisions ESLint can't express
The article discusses the development of a baseline neural network model, called Baseline, that can be used as a starting point for various machine learning tasks. The model aims to provide a simple and effective foundation for further model building and optimization.
Ask HN: Reliable security best practices for Clawbot and Claude Code
What are some security best practices for using AI tools that have so much access to data on your computer or inside your network, if you use a separate computer?
Data Released on All Pre-Games Anti-Doping Tests
The article discusses the release of data on all pre-Games anti-doping tests conducted for the 2022 Beijing Olympics, revealing that 2,857 tests were carried out prior to the games with no positive results reported.
The Coming Age of Genetic Doping in Olympic Sport
The article discusses the potential rise of genetic doping in Olympic sports, exploring the science behind gene editing and the ethical and regulatory challenges it poses for future competitions.
Show HN: Building a Low-Power Cognitive Architecture That Learns Without LLMs
I've been obsessively tinkering for weeks on Daimon, my pet little non-LLM AI realtime cognitive machine. Still trying to figure out what it can actually achieve besides be a massively fun time sink for me.
~32,500 lines of Zig written with me at the helm of Claude Code.
More research than I can even fathom across computer science, cognitive science, neuroscience, and more. As the post points out - I've lost the ability to actually reason about what is going with its internals. I'm just the high-level architect making suggestions at this point.
What Not Reading Does to Your Writing
The article discusses how not reading can negatively impact one's writing skills, including reduced vocabulary, lack of exposure to diverse writing styles, and a limited understanding of narrative structure and literary devices. It emphasizes the importance of reading widely to develop as a writer.
Show HN: VS Code extension for dotenv-diff
I recently published a VS Code extension for dotenv-diff, this is quite simpler than the dotenv-diff npm package.
The problem: you don't always want to install a dependency.
The solution: a VS Code extension so you don't have to install a dependency — it just works out of the box.
This version of dotenv-diff is simpler, it simply does:
- Warn when you have an environment variable that is used in the code but not defined in .env - Warn when you have a .env variable that is not used anywhere in the code
Feedback or suggestions are very welcome!
Show HN: mkpw.dev – client-side password generator (no deps, no tracking)
Built the “happy path” I was missing too often: short URL I can type from memory + 1 click → fresh password in my clipboard. Won't replace your password manager, just handy in certain cases, like borrowed/shared device, fresh install/new profile, helping someone else (“open this link”), VM/SSH/terminal (just need randomness), etc.
100% client-side (Web Crypto / crypto.getRandomValues). No backend. No analytics/telemetry. Source: https://github.com/goforrusty/mkpw.dev
P.S.: newpw.dev also works (redirects to mkpw.dev).
Show HN: 5 live AI voice agents you can call right now (real phone numbers)
Txted.ai is an AI-powered text editor that offers advanced features for writing, editing, and collaborating on documents. The platform integrates with popular services and provides tools to streamline the content creation process.
Who Benefits from War?
The article discusses the potential profitability of war, noting that while war can be economically beneficial for some industries and regions, it also incurs significant costs and long-term consequences that make it a complex and nuanced topic.
Naked Man Festival 2027
The Hadaka Matsuri, or 'Naked Man Festival', is an annual festival held in Okayama, Japan, where participants wear only loincloths and compete to catch sacred sticks thrown by priests, believed to bring good luck and prosperity.
Dental Disease May Undermine Elite Athletic Performance
The article discusses the potential impact of dental disease on job performance, highlighting the importance of maintaining good oral health for professional success. It examines the relationship between dental issues and factors such as missed work, productivity, and career advancement.
Open-source is the new moat
i work in AI security at Meta. OpenClaw is building an open-source AI video project for me and autonomously drove 100+ signups in 5 days. meta and other big tech let you do this as long as your OSS project doesn't *directly* conflict with your work.
not helping me build it - building it. autonomously writing the pipeline, finding cost optimizations, building tooling i didnt ask for. i mostly just review PRs now.
heres why Im doing this: around 250k tech jobs were cut last year. ~70k directly because of AI. Amazon cut like 30k roles while growing. Microsoft dropped around 15k while posting record revenue. Salesforce replaced half its support org with AI agents. software engineers were among the top roles eliminated.
If you're in big tech and think you're safe because you're technical, an AI agent is literally building production software on people's laptops/mac minis right now with minimal oversight. that's your future coworker or your replacement.
IMO the move now is open-source: the biggest AI success stories right now are disproportionately OSS: ComfyUI, OpenClaw, AutoGPT, MCP. none are VC-backed SaaS - theyre repos with READMEs. There's a structural reason for this: AI moves too fast for closed products, every month there's a new model that obsoletes the last. closed platforms cant swap components fast enough, open-source with modular architecture just lets you plug in whatever's best.
and now that anyone can vibe-code a competing tool in a weekend, the barrier isnt code anymore - its trust. companies charging $50-100/mo for API wrappers are one good README away from losing their users.
You dont need to write most of the code yourself anymore. point an agent at a problem, review what it builds, open-source it.
build reputation, community, something that's yours. worst case your job is fine and you have a cool project- best case you have a lifeboat when the music stops.
Claude Code Templates
The article provides code templates for the Claude AI assistant, including examples for various use cases such as language generation, text summarization, and question answering. The templates are designed to help developers quickly get started with building applications using the Claude API.
Show HN: Glupe, An open-source CLI that turns COBOL to Python/Rust via Intent
I built Glupe because I was frustrated that code "rot."
We have Docker to freeze environments, but nothing to freeze logic. If you wrote a sorting algorithm in C++ 10 years ago, that code is "legacy" today. I wanted a way to deal with software rot.
Glupe is a "Reverse engineering engine" for logic. Normally it is intent -> code, I went the other way aroound code -> intent.
It works in two steps:
Refine: It "melts" source code into a high-level Intent file (.glp). This file is pure logic, stripped of syntax. Build: It re-compiles that Intent into any target language (C++, Python, Rust, Go).
I tested it on a legacy COBOL file. It successfully transpiled it to modern Python, correctly handling the PIC 9(5)V99 decimal logic that usually breaks other tools.
Example (COBOL -> Intent -> Python): https://github.com/alonsovm44/glupe/tree/master/experiments/...
Key Features:
Self-Healing: It has a built-in compilation loop. If the generated code fails (e.g., syntax error), Glupe feeds the error back to the AI and fixes it automatically.
Spaghetti Detection: If Glupe detects messy code (global variables, god loops), it attempts to refactor it into clean, modular intent before saving.
Language Agnostic: You can write logic once and deploy to C++ (high performance) and Python (prototyping). It's written in ~3k lines of C++ and runs locally with Ollama or cloud via API.
Repo: https://github.com/alonsovm44/glupe
I'd love feedback on the architecture or the "Intent" paradigm. Do you think this solves the legacy code crisis, or is it just a fancy transpiler?
Living in the Inflection Point
The article explores the concept of an 'inflection point' in personal and societal growth, where individuals and communities are positioned to make significant changes or transitions. It encourages embracing the uncertainty and opportunities presented during these pivotal moments.
Show HN: I tracked 800 Reddit URLs on Google – 56% die within 48h
I've been experimenting with parasite SEO (ranking Reddit/Quora threads on Google) and noticed my traffic kept dying after a few days.
To see if this was systemic, I built a custom scraper and tracked 800 unique UGC URLs across high-competition commercial keywords for a month.
The data showed a massive "churn" rate: Out of the 611 threads that dropped out of the Top 10, 56.1% were completely rotated out of the SERPs within 48 hours. Only a tiny fraction survived more than 2 weeks.
I published the raw CSV data from the study here if anyone wants to run the URLs through Ahrefs and look for backlink patterns: https://contentrankr.com/ugc-churn-data
Standard rank trackers check weekly, so you don't even realize a thread is dead until days later. I also embedded a tiny free tool on that page using the Serper API where you can paste a Reddit URL and instantly check if Google has dropped it from the index.
Curious if anyone else has looked into the "half-life" of Google's new UGC rankings?
Show HN: I made repos self-aware for AI coding agents
Yggdrasil is a decentralized blockchain platform that aims to provide a secure and scalable infrastructure for building and deploying decentralized applications. The project focuses on developing a novel consensus mechanism, smart contract language, and cross-chain interoperability features.
I built Delta Neutral, a self-hosted concentrated liquidity hedge rebalancer
The article discusses the benefits of using open-source software, including the ability to customize and improve the software, the potential for cost savings, and the strong community support. It also addresses common concerns about security and reliability associated with open-source software.
Show HN: I Built a Free Keyword Research Tool
This article provides a comprehensive guide to keyword research, covering the importance of keyword analysis, various techniques for keyword discovery, and strategies for incorporating keywords effectively into content and marketing campaigns.
Discovered a malicious Chrome extension targeting Apple App Store developers
The article discusses the BoostKey, a keyboard enhancement tool that uses machine learning to predict the next word a user is likely to type, improving typing efficiency and reducing repetitive strain. The BoostKey aims to provide a seamless and customizable typing experience for users.
We installed a single turnstile to feel secure
The article discusses the installation of a single turnstile as a security measure, describing it as 'security theater' - a visible but largely ineffective security measure that creates an illusion of safety. The author reflects on the limitations and potential ineffectiveness of such security measures.