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Hack Roblox

1•kxmekoeo•1m ago•1 comments

Startup Spotlight: Inside Pastmaps' Solo Climb to Six Figures

https://runtimewire.com/article/startup-spotlight-inside-pastmaps-solo-climb-to-six-figures
1•ryanmerket•3m ago•0 comments

Relocating 6M Singapore bees and counting, one nest at a time

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/relocating-6-million-singapore-bees-counting-one-nest-...
1•petethomas•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: WyrmRSS – a self-hosted RSS reader with inline YouTube

https://github.com/kryoseu/WyrmRSS
1•kryoseu•11m ago•0 comments

Trump Jr.'s 'Amazon of guns' could make millions under new proposed firearm rule

https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/trump-jrs-amazon-guns-could-make-millions-under-new-prop...
1•petethomas•11m ago•0 comments

Claude Code Settings That Made Me a Faster Software Architect

https://jsdev.space/claude-code-settings-software-architect/
1•javatuts•11m ago•0 comments

A Deterministic Replacement for LLM-as-Judge in Stateful Agent Evaluation

https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.22737
4•jflynt76•12m ago•0 comments

Raw footage to maximized-retention videos

https://www.autoeditor.app/
1•Quise•16m ago•0 comments

New legal right to speak to a human for finance consumers

https://www.rte.ie/news/2026/0702/1581517-finance-chatbots/
3•austinallegro•25m ago•0 comments

Deepagents

https://github.com/langchain-ai/deepagents
2•kristianpaul•30m ago•1 comments

AI dev platform that keeps project context across the whole codebase lifecycle

https://brunelly.com/
2•RihabAI•36m ago•0 comments

AskHN: Using 'claude -p' for running Mr.Jassy - AWS butler agent

2•anoop_kumar•38m ago•0 comments

Wasmer: Fast, secure, lightweight containers based on WebAssembly

https://wasmer.io/
9•handfuloflight•41m ago•1 comments

BYD Denza Z steer-by-wire

https://carnewschina.com/2026/07/01/byd-denza-z-steer-by-wire-fudi-chassis/
5•Alien1Being•44m ago•0 comments

Google used its Android phone network's accelerometers as mini-seismometers

https://substack.com/@jklundblad/note/c-285567479
2•initramfs•46m ago•0 comments

From Open Source Software to Open Source Strategy

https://p3institute.substack.com/p/from-open-source-software-to-open
3•cletusigwe•47m ago•0 comments

The Free Market Lie: Why Switzerland Has 25 Gbit Internet and America Doesn't

https://stefan.schueller.net/posts/the-free-market-lie/
126•talonx•47m ago•63 comments

How to avoid AI in as many places as possible

https://www.fastcompany.com/91566861/how-to-avoid-ai-in-as-many-places-as-possible
2•1vuio0pswjnm7•53m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Bedtimeforkids let kids learn while entertain

https://bedtimeforkids.vercel.app
2•dutay05•56m ago•0 comments

Ua-tracer: what does a user agent fetch, follow and run

https://uatracer.com/
2•twapi•57m ago•0 comments

Every AI Visibility Tool Is Lying to You

https://canonry.ai/blog/ai-visibility-tools-are-lying
2•arberx•58m ago•0 comments

Google loses fight against record €4.1B EU antitrust fine

https://www.reuters.com/world/eu-top-court-dismisses-google-fight-against-record-41-billion-eu-an...
3•1vuio0pswjnm7•59m ago•0 comments

What Would Mark Twain Think of America at 250?

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/07/mark-twain-america-anniversary-critique/687718/
3•paulpauper•1h ago•0 comments

Why Everyone Is Suddenly Talking About 'Universal Basic Capital'

https://www.theatlantic.com/economy/2026/07/universal-basic-capital-ai/687759/
5•paulpauper•1h ago•0 comments

Merlin: A computed tomography vision–language foundation model and dataset

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10181-8
2•bryanrasmussen•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a declarative layout engine for SVG, Canvas, WebGL

https://github.com/carnworkstudios/boxwood
3•bonzai2carn•1h ago•0 comments

Artificial and Fake Eggs: Dance of Death

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/281149909_Artificial_and_Fake_Eggs_Dance_of_Death
2•ms7892•1h ago•0 comments

The Programming Wars: How Microsoft Crushed Borland

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQiULz4Z4TQ
2•cable2600•1h ago•0 comments

14× faster embeddings: how we rebuilt the ONNX path in Manticore

https://manticoresearch.com/blog/onnx-embeddings-speedup/
4•snikolaev•1h ago•0 comments

DGX station and "frontier" models, my hunt for answers

https://www.atcyrus.com/stories/dgx-station-local-frontier-ai-memory
2•connorturland•1h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

A simple heuristic for agents: human-led vs. human-in-the-loop vs. agent-led

1•fletchervmiles•1y ago
tl;dr - the more agency your agent has, the simpler your use case needs to be

Most if not all successful production use cases today are either human-led or human-in-the-loop. Agent-led is possible but requires simplistic use cases.

---

Human-led:

An obvious example is ChatGPT. One input, one output. The model might suggest a follow-up or use a tool but ultimately, you're the master in command.

---

Human-in-the-loop:

The best example of this is Cursor (and other coding tools). Coding tools can do 99% of the coding for you, use dozens of tools, and are incredibly capable. But ultimately the human still gives the requirements, hits "accept" or "reject' AND gives feedback on each interaction turn.

The last point is important as it's a live recalibration.

This can sometimes not be enough though. An example of this is the rollout of Sonnect 3.7 in Cursor. The feedback loop vs model agency mix was off. Too much agency, not sufficient recalibration from the human. So users switched!

---

Agent-led:

This is where the agent leads the task, end-to-end. The user is just a participant. This is difficult because there's less recalibration so your probability of something going wrong increases on each turn… It's cumulative.

P(all good) = pⁿ

p = agent works correctly n = number of turns / interactions

Ok… I'm going to use my product as an example, not to promote, I'm just very familiar with how it works.

It's a chat agent that runs short customer interviews. My customers can configure it based on what they want to learn (i.e. why a customer churned) and send it to their customers.

It's agent-led because

→ as soon as the respondent opens the link, they're guided from there → at each turn the agent (not the human) is deciding what to do next

That means deciding the right thing to do over 10 to 30 conversation turns (depending on config). I.e. correctly decide:

→ whether to expand the conversation vs dive deeper → reflect on current progress + context → traverse a bunch of objectives and ask questions that draw out insight (per current objective)

Let's apply the above formula. Example:

Let's say:

→ n = 20 (i.e. number of conversation turns) → p = .99 (i.e. how often the agent does the right thing - 99% of the time)

That equals P(all good) = 0.99²⁰ ≈ 0.82

So if I ran 100 such 20‑turn conversations, I'd expect roughly 82 to complete as per instructions and about 18 to stumble at least once.

Let's change p to 95%...

→ n = 20 → p = .95

P(all good) = 0.95²⁰ ≈ 0.358

I.e. if I ran 100 such 20‑turn conversations, I’d expect roughly 36 to finish without a hitch and about 64 to go off‑track at least once.

My p score is high. I had to strip out a bunch of tools and simplify but I got there. And for my use case, a failure is just a slightly irrelevant response so it's manageable.

---

Conclusion:

Getting an agent to do the correct thing 99% is not trivial.

You basically can't have a super complicated workflow. Yes, you can mitigate this by introducing other agents to check the work but this then introduces latency.

There's always a tradeoff!

Know which category you're building in and if you're going for agent-led, narrow your use-case as much as possible.