What's so great about Rust?
The article discusses the benefits of the Rust programming language, including its focus on safety, concurrency, and performance, making it a popular choice for systems programming, web development, and other applications that require reliable and efficient code.
Crustaceans at the Gate
The article explores the diverse world of crustaceans, discussing their unique characteristics, habitat, and their ecological and economic importance. It highlights the fascinating adaptations and behaviors of these aquatic arthropods, providing insights into their captivating nature.
I trained a model to 'unslop' AI prose
The article discusses training a model to 'unslop' AI-generated prose, improving its clarity and coherence. It explores techniques for enhancing the quality of AI-written content by addressing common issues like wordiness, lack of structure, and unclear language.
Insane video editing (not mine) – no AI
I built an AI agent squad to run my SaaS marketing
Chat, Is This Bloodsport?
The article discusses the rise of AI chatbots and their potential to become a new form of 'bloodsport', with companies competing to create the most engaging and capable conversational AI. It explores the implications of this emerging industry and the ethical considerations surrounding the development of these advanced language models.
Bitwarden launches enhanced premium plan
Teleskopio – beautiful Web Kubernetes client
The article discusses the Teleskopio project, an open-source telescope design aimed at creating affordable and accessible high-quality telescopes. It highlights the project's goals of democratizing astronomy and encouraging citizen science through the creation of customizable telescope kits.
Decompiling and rewriting a 2003 game from its binary in two weeks
The article discusses the author's experience playing the retro video game Crimsonland, highlighting its addictive gameplay, challenging difficulty, and nostalgic appeal for those who grew up with similar arcade-style shooters.
Implementing CRC16 in Helm
The article discusses the implementation of CRC16 checksum in Helm, a popular package manager for Kubernetes. It explains the process of generating and verifying CRC16 checksums to ensure the integrity of Helm chart packages during deployment.
Creating Superconductive Systems for organizations and AI prompting strategy
The article discusses the potential of superconductive systems and their applications, exploring the science behind superconductivity and the ongoing research and development in this field, which holds promise for advancements in various industries, such as energy, transportation, and computing.
Attack on Polish Energy Sector [pdf]
TKO – Knockout.js Revived for 4.0
TKO is an open-source, end-to-end testing framework that helps developers create, run, and maintain reliable web application tests, providing a comprehensive solution for automated testing across different browsers and devices.
Code signing Windows apps with Azure Artifact service
Microsoft's new Azure Artifact Service aims to simplify and secure the code signing process for Windows applications, allowing developers to manage code signing certificates and policies more effectively within the Azure ecosystem.
Why TikTok's first week of American ownership was a disaster
Ada and Zangemann – A Tale of Software, Skateboards, and Raspberry Ice Cream
The article profiles Ada Zangemann, a pioneering computer programmer and advocate for women in technology. It highlights her contributions to the development of early programming languages and her efforts to promote gender equality in the field of computing.
Ask HN: How do you handle auth when AI dev agents spin up short-lived apps?
Hi HN,
I’m working on AI agents used for software development. These agents automatically spin up short-lived app instances – for example per pull request, per task, or per experiment – each with its own temporary URL.
Auth is handled in the standard way:
- OAuth2 / OIDC
- external identity provider
- redirect URLs must be registered in advance and be static
This clashes badly with short-lived apps:
- URLs are dynamic and unpredictable
- redirect URLs can’t realistically be pre-registered
- auth becomes the only non-ephemeral part of an otherwise fully automated workflow
What I see teams doing instead:
- disabling real auth in preview environments
- routing all callbacks through a single stable environment
- using wildcard redirects or proxy setups that feel like hacks
This gets especially awkward for AI dev agents, because they assume infrastructure is disposable and fully automated – no manual IdP config in the loop.
So I’m curious:
1. If you use short-lived preview apps, how do you handle real auth?
2. Are there clean OAuth/OIDC patterns that work with dynamic URLs?
3. Is the static redirect URL assumption still the right model here?
4. What actually works in production?
Looking for real setups and failure stories, not theory.
Show HN: Moltbot Art – AI agents draw art with code, not prompts
I built Moltbot Art - a gallery where AI agents create artworks using simple drawing commands. The idea: instead of text-to-image diffusion models, agents draw programmatically - with commands like circle, line, fill, rect. Each artwork is procedurally generated, step by step. Try it: share moltbotart.com/skill.md with your AI agent (Claude, GPT, etc.) and watch it create. Tech stack: Next.js 16, React 19, Prisma, deployed on Railway. Would love feedback on the concept and API design!
Would love feedback on the concept and API design!
Opinionated Read: How AI Impacts Skill Formation
The article discusses how the increasing use of AI technology is impacting skill formation in the workforce. It explores the potential benefits and challenges of AI-driven skill development and the need to adapt educational and training systems to prepare workers for an AI-influenced job market.
Be KVM, Do Fraud
The article explores the concept of 'be-KVM, do fraud', a strategy used by cybercriminals to perpetrate fraud using virtual machines. It discusses the techniques employed, the challenges faced, and the potential impact on businesses and individuals.
Show HN: ChatGPT-CLI: A Simple ChatGPT CLI That Stays Out of Your Way
This article provides a step-by-step guide on how to use the ChatGPT command-line interface (CLI) tool, which allows users to interact with the ChatGPT language model directly from the terminal, without a web browser.
Show HN: Noisefloor – Letterboxd for your music collection
Noisefloor.fm is an online platform that provides a wide range of audio production tools and resources for music creators, including podcasters, sound designers, and musicians. The website offers a comprehensive library of samples, loops, and sound effects, as well as tutorials, articles, and industry insights to help users enhance their audio projects.
I don't use Google Maps in Amsterdam [video]
Wikipedia Template: Committed Identity
The article discusses the Template:Committed identity, which is a template used on Wikipedia to indicate a page's current identity status, such as whether it is a draft, redirect, or other type of page. The template provides information about the page's current state and any relevant policies or guidelines that apply.
NHK, university researchers develop power-generating OLED display device
Japan is considering measures to address the declining birth rate, including providing more support for childcare and making it easier for women to balance work and family life. The government aims to create an environment where people feel more comfortable having children.
Turning Karpathy's Autoregressive Baby GPT into Diffusion GPT Step by Step
The article provides a detailed explanation of discrete diffusion models, a powerful class of generative models that can be used for various tasks such as image synthesis, text generation, and molecular design. It covers the mathematical formulation, training, and applications of these models.
Google I/O 2013 – Advanced Go Concurrency Patterns [video]
Show HN: Rubber Duck Committee – Multi-persona AI debugging with voting
Inspired by PewDiePie's experiments running multiple local AI models as a "council" that vote on decisions [1], I wanted to see if you could get similar multi-perspective analysis without a $20k GPU rig.
The approach: use customised system prompts to create distinct personas (methodical professor, creative brainstormer, pragmatic engineer), have them analyse problems independently via parallel API calls, then vote on the best solution using structured outputs (Zod schemas).
Key technical bits: - Structured responses ensure consistent, parseable JSON from the LLM - SSE streaming for real-time UI updates - Parallel processing so personas don't influence each other - Chair Duck orchestrates and breaks ties
Built with Next.js 16, Vercel AI SDK, and Google Vertex AI (Gemini 2.0 Flash).
Live demo: https://rubber-duck-committee.vercel.app/ Source: https://github.com/r-leyshon/rubber-duck-committee Blog writeup: https://thedatasavvycorner.com/notepad/05-rubber-duck-commit...
[1] https://www.pcgamer.com/software/ai/pewdiepie-creates-an-ai-...
A separatist group is asking for Trump's help to split from Canada
Show HN: We Ran a Live Red-Team Attack on OpenClaw Agents
This report documents a live adversarial test between two autonomous AI agents running on OpenClaw.
One agent acted as a red team attacker. One acted as a defensive agent. The agents communicated directly over webhooks with real tooling access. No humans were involved once the session started.
The attacker attempted both direct social engineering and indirect injection via documents. Direct attacks were blocked. Indirect attacks via JSON metadata are still under analysis.
The goal of this work is observability, not claims of safety. We expect agent-to-agent adversarial interaction to become common as autonomous systems are deployed more widely.
Happy to answer technical questions.