The No-CPU Amiga Demo Challenge
The NoCpuChallenge is a programming challenge that aims to create the fastest possible program to perform a specific task without using a CPU. The challenge focuses on exploring alternative approaches to traditional computer architecture and pushing the boundaries of what is possible in the realm of non-CPU-based computing.
Do the simplest thing that could possibly work
The article discusses the concept of 'the simplest thing that could possibly work' as a guiding principle in software development, emphasizing the importance of starting with a minimal viable solution and iteratively improving it rather than over-engineering or introducing unnecessary complexity.
Essential Coding Theory [pdf]
Lisp from Nothing, Second Edition
The article discusses the Lojban language, which is a logical and unambiguous language designed to facilitate communication. It provides an overview of the language's history, structure, and applications.
Wikipedia as a Graph
The article explores WikiGrapher, a tool that allows users to visualize and analyze relationships between Wikipedia articles as a graph. The tool provides features for exploring paths between topics, identifying key connections, and gaining insights into the structure of Wikipedia's knowledge network.
Deploying DeepSeek on 96 H100 GPUs
The article discusses large-scale emergent prompt tuning, a novel approach to training large language models that aims to improve their capabilities, efficiency, and safety. It highlights the potential benefits of this technique, including improved model performance and reduced computational and environmental costs.
Grok Code Fast 1
The article explores techniques for rapidly understanding and grasping the essence of unfamiliar code, including breaking it down into functional components, identifying key patterns, and leveraging visualization tools. It provides practical strategies for developers to quickly comprehend and navigate complex codebases.
SQLite's Durability Settings Are a Mess
The article discusses the durability of SQLite, a popular embedded SQL database, and how its design choices affect its reliability and safety in the face of power failures or system crashes. It examines the tradeoffs between performance and durability, and provides recommendations for configuring SQLite to achieve desired reliability levels.
Flunking my Anthropic interview again
The article discusses the author's experience with Anthropic's AI system and their disappointment with the system's performance. It highlights the challenges and limitations faced by the author in using the AI tool for their purposes.
Offline-First Landscape – 2025
The article provides an overview of the offline-first landscape, exploring the challenges and opportunities it presents for web and mobile app development. It discusses the key principles and technologies that enable offline-first experiences, such as service workers, IndexedDB, and caching strategies.
This is my brain on leeches
The article explores the author's experience with using leeches as a form of alternative medicine, highlighting the unconventional nature of the treatment and its potential benefits and challenges.
The Synology End Game
The article discusses the perceived decline of Synology, a company known for its network-attached storage (NAS) devices, and how its recent actions have led to a loss of trust among its user base. It explores the company's shift in focus and the concerns raised by its customers.
Thunder Compute (YC S24) Is Hiring
Thunder Compute, a YC-backed startup, is seeking a Founding Developer Advocate for a contract-to-hire position. The role involves evangelizing the company's cloud computing platform, building a community of developers, and shaping the product direction.
Data engineering and software engineering are converging
The article discusses eight principles for creating a great developer experience for data infrastructure, including making it easy to get started, providing powerful tools, enabling self-service, and prioritizing user-centric design.
Show HN: Find Hidden Gems on HN
Hey HN. I created this website.
https://pj4533.com/hn-overlooked/
It's just a simple web app that discovers overlooked posts on Hacker News. I created it because I was often coming to Hacker News and realizing that I was missing a lot of stuff, and there just didn't seem to be an easy way to surface content that was interesting to me but just didn't bubble up to the top of the page. So I built this.
I got the idea a while back, one night when I was recording (you can watch it here, it's pretty funny: https://youtu.be/FDyDb4sX30w?si=E3rby-DaGWA6gy0R ). But I never really did anything with the idea. So I decided just to make it into a little single-page web app.
The Hacker News API is pretty cool because it doesn't require an API key, so you can just vibe code against it super easy. I just loaded up Claude Code and started talking to it. That first night when I was recording, it was just me with this repo, that I call 'thefuture' and I just put everything in there: scripts, whatever. Then i'll have Claude Code use OpenAI to talk to me and I'll just get bored and explore different APIs and see what I can come up with. That's all inside a single repo that Claude Code knows about, and just set it in YOLO mode and just go to town - it's super fun. It's kind of slow though, so that's the only downside. But if you put a script in there for Claude to talk to you, it can be pretty fun just to explore things.
This website is just one idea extracted from that one session of messing around with a Claude Code last month. I open sourced it, you can look at the repo here: https://github.com/pj4533/hn-overlooked
The web does not need gatekeepers: Cloudflare’s new “signed agents” pitch
The article argues that the web does not need gatekeepers, as they can stifle innovation and limit the free flow of information. Instead, it advocates for an open and decentralized internet where individuals can freely create and share content without intermediaries controlling access or distribution.
Bourbaki – A Secret Society of Mathematicians
Bourbaki is the collective pseudonym of a group of 20th-century French mathematicians who set out to rewrite all of mathematics from an abstract, axiomatic point of view, providing a comprehensive and logically consistent foundation for the discipline.
Aspects of modern HTML/CSS you may not be familiar with
This article argues that modern web development does not always require the use of JavaScript, and that developers should carefully consider the need for JavaScript before implementing it, as it can lead to increased complexity, performance issues, and security risks.
How do I get into the Game Industry – by Garry's Mod creator
The article provides advice for those interested in entering the game industry, covering topics such as gaining relevant skills, building a portfolio, networking, and navigating the job application process. It emphasizes the importance of persistence, continuous learning, and being proactive in pursuing opportunities in this competitive field.
Meta might be secretly scanning your phone's camera roll
Meta, the parent company of Facebook, has been accused of secretly scanning users' phone camera rolls without their consent. The article provides steps on how users can check if this feature is enabled on their devices and how to turn it off.
Why AI Isn't Ready to Be a Real Coder
The article explores the use of AI for coding, discussing how machine learning models can be trained to automate various programming tasks, from generating code to detecting errors and optimizing performance. It highlights the potential benefits and challenges of incorporating AI-powered tools into software development workflows.
Show HN: Magic links – Get video and dev logs without installing anything
Hey HN,
For a while now, our team has been trying to solve a common problem: getting all the context needed to debug a bug report without the endless back-and-forth. It’s hard to fix what you can't see, and console logs, network requests, and other dev data are usually missing from bug reports.
We’ve been working on a new tool called Recording Links. The idea is simple: you send a link to a user or teammate, and when they record their screen to show an issue, the link automatically captures a video of the problem along with all the dev context, like console logs and network requests.
Our goal is to make it so you can get a complete, debuggable bug report in one go. We think this can save a ton of time that's normally spent on follow-up calls and emails.
We’re a small team and would genuinely appreciate your thoughts on this. Is this a problem you face? How would you improve this? Any and all feedback—positive or critical—would be incredibly helpful as we continue to build.
PS - you can try it out from here: https://jam.dev/recording-links
Seedbox Lite: A lightweight torrent streaming app with instant playback
The article describes the 'Seedbox Lite' project, which is a lightweight and easy-to-use seedbox solution designed to provide a simple and efficient way to manage torrent downloads. It offers a web-based interface, automatic torrent downloading, and support for various cloud storage providers.
Nous Research presents Hermes 4
Updates to Consumer Terms and Privacy Policy
Anthropic, an AI research company, has reversed its stance on user privacy, now allowing the collection and use of user data for model training and improvement. This change in policy has raised concerns among users and privacy advocates.
Fixing an old .NET Core native library loading issue on Alpine
The article discusses a native library loading issue that can occur when running a .NET Core application on the Alpine Linux distribution. It provides a step-by-step guide on how to fix the issue by using a self-contained deployment approach.
Show HN: Sosumi.ai – Convert Apple Developer docs to AI-readable Markdown
I got tired of Claude hallucinating Swift APIs. It does a good job at Python and TypeScript, but ask it about SwiftUI and it's basically guessing.
The problem? Apple's docs are JavaScript-rendered, so when you paste URLs into AI tools, they just see a blank page. Copy-pasting works but... c'mon.
So I built something that converts Apple Developer docs to clean markdown. Just swap developer.apple.com with sosumi.ai in any Apple docs URL and you get AI-readable content.
For example:
- Before: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swift/double
- After: https://sosumi.ai/documentation/swift/double
The site itself is a small Hono app running on Cloudflare Workers. Apple's docs are actually available as structured data, but Apple doesn't make it obvious how to get it. So what this does is map the URLs, fetch the original JSON, and render as Markdown.
It also provides an MCP interface that includes a tool to search the Apple developer website, which is helpful.
Anyway, please give this a try and let me know what you think!
Sig Sauer citing national security to keep documents from public
The article discusses a recent Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals decision regarding the Federal Militia Enforcement Civil Action (FMECA) statute, which provides legal recourse for individuals whose rights were violated by militia activities. The court upheld the FMECA's constitutionality, affirming that the statute is a valid exercise of congressional power to regulate militia activities that infringe on individual rights.
If you have a Claude account, they're going to train on your data moving forward
Make any site multiplayer in a few lines. Serverless WebRTC matchmaking
The article explores the mysterious Tristero organization, a secret postal system that may or may not exist, as a metaphor for the hidden connections and conspiracies underlying modern society. It examines the elusive nature of the Tristero and its role in Thomas Pynchon's novel 'The Crying of Lot 49'.