Top stories

Meta’s AI smart glasses and data privacy concerns
sandbach about 12 hours ago

Meta’s AI smart glasses and data privacy concerns

The article explores the privacy concerns raised by Meta's (formerly Facebook) new AI-powered smart glasses, which can potentially monitor workers' activities and conversations without their explicit consent. Employees express concerns about the lack of transparency and the implications for their privacy and autonomy in the workplace.

svd.se
1,099 629
Summary
Arm's Cortex X925: Reaching Desktop Performance
ingve about 3 hours ago

Arm's Cortex X925: Reaching Desktop Performance

The article discusses ARM's new Cortex-X925 processor, which is designed to challenge Intel and AMD's desktop CPUs. It highlights the Cortex-X925's potential performance improvements and its implications for the desktop computing market.

chipsandcheese.com
75 22
Summary
British Columbia is permanently adopting daylight time
ireflect about 14 hours ago

British Columbia is permanently adopting daylight time

The Government of British Columbia has announced that the province will be adopting year-round daylight saving time, eliminating the biannual clock changes effective November 2023. This decision aims to provide consistency and reduce the disruption caused by the twice-yearly time shifts.

cbc.ca
826 413
Summary
We Built a Video Rendering Engine by Lying to the Browser About What Time It Is
darshkpatel 2 days ago

We Built a Video Rendering Engine by Lying to the Browser About What Time It Is

The article discusses how browsers, such as Google Chrome, are increasingly limiting the ability of websites to access users' cameras and microphones without explicit permission. This is part of a broader trend towards increased privacy and security measures in web browsers.

blog.replit.com
37 9
Summary
Ars Technica fires reporter after AI controversy involving fabricated quotes
danso about 10 hours ago

Ars Technica fires reporter after AI controversy involving fabricated quotes

Ars Technica, a popular technology news website, has terminated the employment of a reporter after it was discovered that they had been using AI-generated quotes in their articles without properly disclosing this to readers. The incident has sparked discussion about the ethical use of AI in journalism and the importance of transparency.

futurism.com
300 178
Summary
jk_tech 3 days ago

Simple screw counter

This article describes a DIY project to build a simple screw counter device using an Arduino and a push button. The project tracks the number of screws driven and displays the count on an OLED display, providing a useful tool for DIY and construction tasks.

mitxela.com
140 37
Summary
Show HN: I built a sub-500ms latency voice agent from scratch
nicktikhonov about 13 hours ago

Show HN: I built a sub-500ms latency voice agent from scratch

I built a voice agent from scratch that averages ~400ms end-to-end latency (phone stop → first syllable). That’s with full STT → LLM → TTS in the loop, clean barge-ins, and no precomputed responses.

What moved the needle:

Voice is a turn-taking problem, not a transcription problem. VAD alone fails; you need semantic end-of-turn detection.

The system reduces to one loop: speaking vs listening. The two transitions - cancel instantly on barge-in, respond instantly on end-of-turn - define the experience.

STT → LLM → TTS must stream. Sequential pipelines are dead on arrival for natural conversation.

TTFT dominates everything. In voice, the first token is the critical path. Groq’s ~80ms TTFT was the single biggest win.

Geography matters more than prompts. Colocate everything or you lose before you start.

GitHub Repo: https://github.com/NickTikhonov/shuo

Follow whatever I next tinker with: https://x.com/nick_tikhonov

ntik.me
413 121
Summary
ingve about 4 hours ago

I built a pint-sized Macintosh

The article discusses the creation of a 'Pico Micro Mac', a miniature Macintosh computer built using a Raspberry Pi Pico microcontroller. The author highlights the technical details and challenges involved in designing and building this compact, retro-inspired computer.

jeffgeerling.com
33 8
Summary
Buckle Up for Bumpier Skies
littlexsparkee about 5 hours ago

Buckle Up for Bumpier Skies

newyorker.com
38 10
ingve 3 days ago

DOS Memory Management

The article discusses the memory management strategies used in the early days of personal computing, focusing on how DOS (Disk Operating System) handled memory allocation and addressed the limitations of the 8086/8088 processors. It explains the concepts of conventional, extended, and expanded memory, and how they were utilized to maximize the available system resources.

os2museum.com
46 6
Summary
tzury about 11 hours ago

Physicists developing a quantum computer that’s entirely open source

The article explores the detection of quantum entanglement in large mechanical objects, a significant milestone in the field of quantum physics. It discusses the experimental methods used and the implications of this achievement for the study of the quantum-classical boundary.

physics.aps.org
116 22
Summary
First in-utero stem cell therapy for fetal spina bifida repair is safe: study
gmays about 20 hours ago

First in-utero stem cell therapy for fetal spina bifida repair is safe: study

A study finds that the first-ever in utero stem cell therapy for fetal spina bifida repair is safe, paving the way for potential new treatments for this congenital condition.

health.ucdavis.edu
304 54
Summary
New iPad Air, powered by M4
Garbage about 21 hours ago

New iPad Air, powered by M4

Apple has introduced the new iPad Air powered by the M4 chip, offering improved performance and efficiency compared to previous models. The device features a sleek design, enhanced display, and expanded connectivity options.

apple.com
401 625
Summary
azhenley 1 day ago

Guido van Rossum Interviews Thomas Wouters (Python Core Dev)

The article provides an insightful interview with Thomas Wouters, a core developer of the Python programming language, discussing his contributions, the language's development, and the challenges of managing a large open-source project.

gvanrossum.github.io
45 3
Summary
Guilty Displeasures
aregue 2 days ago

Guilty Displeasures

This article explores the concept of 'guilty displeasures' - things we secretly enjoy despite feeling ashamed or guilty about them. It encourages readers to embrace their unconventional tastes and not feel pressured to conform to societal norms.

hopefulmons.com
75 74
Summary
rohxnsxngh about 18 hours ago

Launch HN: OctaPulse (YC W26) – Robotics and computer vision for fish farming

Hi HN! My name is Rohan and, together with Paul, I’m the co-founder of OctaPulse (https://www.tryoctapulse.com/). We’re building a robotics layer for seafood production, starting with automated fish inspection. We are currently deployed at our first production site with the largest trout producer in North America.

You might be wondering how the heck we got into this with no background in aquaculture or the ocean industry. We are both from coastal communities. I am from Goa, India and Paul is from Malta and Puerto Rico. Seafood is deeply tied to both our cultures and communities. We saw firsthand the damage being done to our oceans and how wild fish stocks are being fished to near extinction. We also learned that fish is the main protein source for almost 55% of the world's population. Despite it not being huge consumption in America it is massive globally. And then we found out that America imports 90% of its seafood. What? That felt absurd. That was the initial motivation for starting this company.

Paul and I met at an entrepreneurship happy hour at CMU. We met to talk about ocean tech. It went on for three hours. I was drawn to building in the ocean because it is one of the hardest engineering domains out there. Paul had been researching aquaculture for months and kept finding the same thing: a $350B global industry with less data visibility than a warehouse. After that conversation we knew we wanted to work on this together.

Hatcheries, the early stage on-land part of production, are full of labor intensive workflows that are perfect candidates for automation. Farmers need to measure their stock for feeding, breeding, and harvest decisions but fish are underwater and get stressed when handled. Most farms still sample manually. They net a few dozen fish, anesthetize them, place them on a table to measure one by one, and extrapolate to populations of hundreds of thousands. It takes about 5 minutes per fish and the data is sparse.

When we saw this process we were baffled. There had to be a better way. This was the starting point that really kicked us off.

Here is the thing though. Most robots are not built to handle humid and wet environments. Salt water is the enemy of anything mechanical. Corrosion is such a pain to deal with. Don't get me started on underwater computer vision which has to parse through water turbidity and particles. Fish move unpredictably and deform while swimming. Occlusion is constant. Calibration is tricky in uncontrolled setups. Handling live fish with robotics is another challenge that hasn't really been solved before. Fish are slippery, fragile, and stress easily. All of this is coupled with the requirement that all materials must be food safe.

On the vision side we are using Luxonis OAK cameras which give us depth plus RGB in a compact form factor. The onboard Myriad X VPU lets us run lightweight inference directly on the camera for things like detection and tracking without needing to send raw frames over USB constantly. For heavier workloads like segmentation and keypoint extraction we bump up to Nvidia Jetsons. We have tested on the Orin Nano and Orin NX depending on power and thermal constraints at different sites.

The models themselves are CNN and transformer based architectures. We are running YOLO variants for detection, custom segmentation heads for body outlines, and keypoint models for anatomical landmarks. The tricky part is getting these to run fast enough on edge hardware. We are using a mix of TensorRT, OpenVINO, and ONNX Runtime depending on the deployment target. Quantization has been a whole journey. INT8 quantization on TensorRT gives us the speed we need but you have to be careful about accuracy degradation especially on the segmentation outputs where boundary precision matters. We spent a lot of time building calibration datasets that actually represent the variance we see on farms. Lighting changes throughout the day, water clarity shifts, fish density varies. Your calibration set needs to capture all of that or your quantized model falls apart in production.

There is no wifi at most of these farms so we are using Starlink for connectivity in remote or offshore locations. Everything runs locally first and syncs when connection is available. We are not streaming video to the cloud. All inference happens on device.

Behind the scenes we have been building our own internal tooling for labeling, task assignment, and model management. Early on we tried existing labeling platforms but they did not fit our workflow. We needed tight integration between labeling, training pipelines, and deployment. So we built our own system where we can assign labeling tasks to annotators, track progress, version datasets, and push models to edge devices with a single command. It is not fancy but it keeps everything under our control and makes iteration fast. When you are trying to close the loop between data collection on farm, labeling, training, quantization, and deployment you cannot afford to have fragmented tooling. We needed one system that handles all of it.

On the robotics side we are building custom enclosures around off the shelf components and modifying delta robots with soft robotics grippers for handling. Vacuum and typical gripper actuation will not work in this environment so we are using compliant grippers that can safely handle fish without damaging them. We started with the Delta X S as our test platform and are evaluating whether to move to industrial delta robots or build our own from scratch once we validate the kinematics and payload requirements in wet and humid environments. The end effector design is still evolving. Fish come in different sizes and body shapes depending on species and life stage so we need grippers that can adapt.

Right now we are focused on operations outside the water. Hatchery phenotyping, sorting, quality inspection. These are more accessible than full underwater deployment and cheaper to start with. The idea is that if we can combine genetics data, environmental data, and phenotypic imagery we can help farms identify which fish to breed and which to cull. This is where selective breeding starts.

Something that surprised us early on: only a tiny fraction of farmed fish species have been through genetic improvement programs. Chickens grow 4x faster than they did in 1950 because of decades of selective breeding. But most farmed fish are essentially wild genetics. The opportunity to improve aquaculture genetics is massive but it is completely bottlenecked on measurement. You cannot improve what you cannot measure, and farms can barely measure anything at scale so far.

The industry moves on trust though. We are dealing with live animals and farms are cautious about who they let near their stock. Coming from outside aquaculture, that trust had to be earned. Paul was already a Future Leader with the Coalition for Sustainable Aquaculture but the real turning point was attending World Aquaculture Society, the largest conference in the US. Through a connection of a connection he met the incoming lead geneticist at what became our first customer. That relationship turned into a paid pilot with the largest trout producer in North America.

I previously worked at ASML, Nvidia, Tesla, and Toyota. Paul worked at Bloomberg. We met at CMU and immediately knew that we wanted to tackle this problem and put our life's work into this.

We would love feedback from any of you who have worked on computer vision in harsh or unpredictable environments, edge deployment on constrained hardware, or gentle and appropriate handling of live animals with robotics. If you are running inference on Jetsons or OAK cameras and have opinions on quantization workflows we would love to hear what has worked for you. If you have aquaculture experience we are curious what problems we should be thinking about that we haven't encountered yet.

Dang told us you’re all used to demo videos but unfortunately we can’t share them due to NDAs. But here’s a photo of us building our initial dataset for phenotyping and morphometric analysis: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1z3oSlB8ed9hanrybzP24XTfjDJE....

This is a weird industry to be building in and we are learning something new every week. If you have experience with edge deployment, robotics in wet environments, or aquaculture itself we would love to hear your perspective. And if you just have questions about fish or the tech we are happy to go deep in the comments. Excited to hear what this community thinks.

101 34
Motorola announces a partnership with GrapheneOS
km 1 day ago

Motorola announces a partnership with GrapheneOS

Motorola Solutions introduced three new B2B solutions at MWC 2026, including a private wireless network, a cloud-based dispatch system, and an edge computing platform for mission-critical applications.

motorolanews.com
2,201 805
Summary
haunter about 12 hours ago

Seed of Might Color Correction Process (2023) [pdf]

The article outlines the daily process of a Support on Mobility (SoM) employee, highlighting their responsibilities in providing IT support and ensuring the smooth operation of the company's mobile devices and services. It describes the typical tasks, communication, and problem-solving activities that occur throughout the workday.

andrewvanner.github.io
91 23
Summary
iPhone 17e
meetpateltech about 21 hours ago

iPhone 17e

https://www.apple.com/iphone-17e/

apple.com
277 405
joebig 2 days ago

The Cathode Ray Tube site

The article discusses the educational and instructional applications of cathode ray tube (CRT) technology, highlighting its role in the development of early computer displays and its continued use in certain specialized fields despite the rise of newer display technologies.

crtsite.com
51 9
Summary
dhorthy 2 days ago

Plugtest

The article discusses Plugtest, an event organized by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) to test the interoperability of different communication technologies and devices. Plugtest events allow developers and manufacturers to assess the compliance of their products with relevant standards and identify any compatibility issues.

en.wikipedia.org
11 2
Summary
Elevated Errors in Claude.ai
LostMyLogin about 7 hours ago

Elevated Errors in Claude.ai

The article discusses a service incident affecting the status.claude.com website, which was experiencing technical difficulties leading to degraded performance. The outage was identified and steps were being taken to restore normal operations.

status.claude.com
150 126
Summary
Inside the M4 Apple Neural Engine, Part 1: Reverse Engineering
zdw 1 day ago

Inside the M4 Apple Neural Engine, Part 1: Reverse Engineering

The article delves into the architecture and capabilities of the M4 Neural Engine, Apple's dedicated AI processing unit found in its latest mobile devices. It explores the chip's design, performance improvements, and how it enhances on-device machine learning tasks.

maderix.substack.com
341 96
Summary
foxfoxx about 18 hours ago

Show HN: Govbase – Follow a bill from source text to news bias to social posts

Govbase tracks every bill, executive order, and federal regulation from official sources (Congress.gov, Federal Register, White House). An AI pipeline breaks each one down into plain-language summaries and shows who it impacts by demographic group.

It also ties each policy directly to bias-rated news coverage and politician social posts on X, Bluesky, and Truth Social. You can follow a single bill from the official text to how media frames it to what your representatives are saying about it.

Free on web, iOS, and Android.

https://govbase.com

I'd love feedback from the community, especially on the data pipeline or what policy areas/features you feel are missing.

govbase.com
192 76
Summary
whoishiring about 19 hours ago

Ask HN: Who is hiring? (March 2026)

Please state the location and include REMOTE for remote work, REMOTE (US) or similar if the country is restricted, and ONSITE when remote work is not an option.

Please only post if you personally are part of the hiring company—no recruiting firms or job boards. One post per company. If it isn't a household name, explain what your company does.

Please only post if you are actively filling a position and are committed to replying to applicants.

Commenters: please don't reply to job posts to complain about something. It's off topic here.

Readers: please only email if you are personally interested in the job.

Searchers: try http://nchelluri.github.io/hnjobs/, https://hnjobs.emilburzo.com, or this (unofficial) Chrome extension: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/hn-hiring-pro/mpfal....

Don't miss this other fine thread: Who wants to be hired? https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47219667

215 260
Programmable Cryptography (2024)
fi-le 3 days ago

Programmable Cryptography (2024)

The article explores the concept of programmable cryptography, where cryptographic primitives can be customized and combined to create new security solutions. It discusses the potential benefits and challenges of this approach, and how it could lead to more flexible and powerful cryptographic systems.

0xparc.org
74 40
Summary
surprisetalk 2 days ago

Against Query Based Compilers

The article argues against the use of query-based compilers, which rely on complex queries to generate code, in favor of more declarative approaches that provide better transparency and maintainability. It highlights the drawbacks of query-based compilers and suggests alternative techniques for building compiler infrastructure.

matklad.github.io
67 36
Summary
RCade: Building a Community Arcade Cabinet
evakhoury 5 days ago

RCade: Building a Community Arcade Cabinet

The article discusses the creation of a personal arcade cabinet, detailing the design process, hardware selection, and assembly steps involved in building a custom retro gaming machine for home entertainment.

frankchiarulli.com
83 14
Summary
“Microslop” filtered in the official Microsoft Copilot Discord server
robtherobber 1 day ago

“Microslop” filtered in the official Microsoft Copilot Discord server

Microsoft bans the use of the word 'Microslop' on its Discord server, leading to a backlash from users. The company then locks the server after the incident, highlighting the sensitivity around the use of controversial terms.

windowslatest.com
1,101 492
Summary
whoishiring about 19 hours ago

Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (March 2026)

Share your information if you are looking for work. Please use this format:

  Location:
  Remote:
  Willing to relocate:
  Technologies:
  Résumé/CV:
  Email:
Please only post if you are personally looking for work. Agencies, recruiters, job boards, and so on, are off topic here.

Readers: please only email these addresses to discuss work opportunities.

There's a site for searching these posts at https://www.wantstobehired.com.

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