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Notes Toward a New Romanticism

https://www.honest-broker.com/p/notes-toward-a-new-romanticism
1•plastic-enjoyer•38s ago•0 comments

Learning from experience instead of curated datasets

https://oaklab.ai/posts/learning-from-experience-instead-of-curated-datasets
1•whalee•1m ago•0 comments

Choice Notes on History from Notes and Queries (1858)

https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/choice-notes-from-notes-and-queries/
1•pepys•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a site to see what politicians are beating S&P 500

https://politicianstocktracker.com/
1•wbemaker•5m ago•0 comments

Debian Bookworm v12.15 Released

https://www.debian.org/News/2026/2026071102
1•saikatsg•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: ClaudeThings – your AI engineering and marketing team in one command

https://www.claudethings.com/
1•mohitvaswani•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Free color tools that run entirely in the browser (no sign-up)

https://colorpicker.cx
1•djerek•11m ago•0 comments

MicroVM sandbox on Win, Mac, Linux, with policy engine

https://docs.docker.com/ai/sandboxes
1•pploug•13m ago•0 comments

OpenAI Added 1M Users in a Day. Fable Is Still in Limbo

https://www.vincentschmalbach.com/codex-million-users-fable-limbo/
2•vincent_s•14m ago•0 comments

Slay the Spire 2 Is Choosing "Shit" Art over Generative AI

https://www.gamespot.com/articles/slay-the-spire-2-is-choosing-shit-art-over-generative-ai/
2•jalev•19m ago•1 comments

Autoresearch doubled GLM-5.2 throughput. Production traffic broke it

https://fparisio.substack.com/p/an-ai-agent-cold-tuned-our-glm-52
2•Leonerd•19m ago•0 comments

Trump admin and industry groups discuss streamlining releases of US open models

https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-intelligence/ai-tech-brief/2026/07/13/ai-tech-brief-exclusive-a...
1•thoughtpeddler•20m ago•1 comments

Hermes Agent maker Nous Research in talks for new funding at $1.5B valuation

https://techcrunch.com/2026/07/13/hermes-agent-maker-nous-research-in-talks-for-new-funding-at-1-...
1•thoughtpeddler•22m ago•0 comments

Starship's Thirteenth Flight Test

https://www.spacex.com/launches/starship-flight-13
1•pantalaimon•26m ago•0 comments

Jurassic Park computers in excruciating detail

https://fabiensanglard.net/jurrasic_park_computers/index.html
1•rcarmo•26m ago•0 comments

I auto-configure my reverse proxy and uptime monitoring using DNS-DS

https://rogena.me/posts/2026-07-12-running-my-home-lab-using-dns-sd/
1•jasonrogena•31m ago•0 comments

Show HN: ZenStack – access control at the ORM layer, built for coding agents

https://zenstack.framer.website/
1•carlual•34m ago•0 comments

The Anatomy of an Instruction Pipeline Hazard

https://hiraditya.github.io/posts/hardware-hazards-b200/
2•somnial•35m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Why has Wikipedia become evil?

4•roschdal•36m ago•3 comments

What Anthropic's latest AI discovery does–and doesn't–show

https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/07/13/1140343/what-anthropics-latest-ai-discovery-does-and-...
1•joozio•40m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A FPV Lego car, controlled in Rust

https://dystroy.org/blog/picamobile/
1•dystroy•44m ago•1 comments

Patent for Electric Motor Platform Without Rare-Earth Minerals

https://auto.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/auto-technology/
1•0xkistu•45m ago•1 comments

Helicone allows users to write SQL directly to a shared ClickHouse

https://www.justintorre.com/blogs/clickhouse-rls-query-parameters
1•justintorre75•51m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Benchmark your eng team's AI agent maturity in 5 minutes

https://agent-benchmarks.com/software-factory/
2•adamgold7•53m ago•0 comments

The Lies They're Telling Towns and Tribes About the Benefits of AI Data Centers

https://karlbode.com/the-lies-theyre-telling-towns-and-tribes-about-the-benefits-of-ai-data-centers/
1•HotGarbage•53m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a small transcription tool for non-English videos

https://transcrevervideo.com
1•Yummiy•54m ago•1 comments

Indian scientists produce most detailed 3D atlas of the human brainstem

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cg53l737v1qo
2•BaudouinVH•59m ago•0 comments

Why frontier labs are scaling-pilled

https://invertedpassion.substack.com/p/why-frontier-labs-are-scaling-pilled
1•paraschopra•59m ago•0 comments

There's an Ancient Solution to Our Modern Crisis of Attention

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/12/opinion/attention-crisis-seneca.html
1•thelastgallon•1h ago•0 comments

Netflix accidentally shipped a Claude.md file

https://www.reddit.com/r/AgentsOfAI/s/GYaEDTim0U
2•Ozzie_osman•1h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

CheerpJ 4.0: WebAssembly JVM for the browser, now with Java 11 and JNI support

https://labs.leaningtech.com/blog/cheerpj-4.0
9•apignotti•1y ago

Comments

palata•1y ago
That's technically pretty cool, but it makes me wonder:

In order to run a Java Desktop app, I need to install a JVM first (or the Desktop app can embed it, I guess that's what IntelliJ does, right?).

Now if I run CheerpJ, it means that I essentially download a JVM when I load the page (every time), and run code in that JVM. But at this point, why not downloading a Desktop app?

It feels like we are going around, shipping simple web pages together with full browsers and calling that "desktop apps" (e.g. ElectronJS), then shipping complete JVMs as web pages and calling that a "web page"... why don't we just ship simple webpages through browsers and complex desktop apps through package managers?

apignotti•1y ago
With CheerpJ you are downloading the subset of the JVM that you need, and actually only once thanks to the standard browser cache.

There are many reasons why shipping via the browser is a better choice compared to shipping desktop apps. The main 3 in my opinion are:

1. Distribution: Give your user a link and the app will start 2. Isolation: The user can have confidence the app won't read his personal files. 3. Cross-platform: Every OS and every device, for real this time

yuri91•1y ago
For reference, when loading https://browsercraft.cheerpj.com for the first time (up to loading a world), my browser downloaded ~32MB.

The second time almost nothing.

jeffreportmill1•1y ago
And here's an entire Java IDE with CheerpJ that downloads less than 15mb:

https://reportmill.com/SnapCode

palata•1y ago
> With CheerpJ you are downloading the subset of the JVM that you need

That's interesting! May I ask how it works? Does that also happen with e.g. IntelliJ?

> Every OS and every device, for real this time

Doesn't the JVM run everywhere in 2025?

apignotti•1y ago
> That's interesting! May I ask how it works? Does that also happen with e.g. IntelliJ?

Byte ranges request do most of the heavy lifting, data is loading exclusively on-demand.

> Doesn't the JVM run everywhere in 2025?

What about iOS? Android has Java, but can't run desktop Java apps. Chromebooks also have limits.

palata•1y ago
> Byte ranges request do most of the heavy lifting, data is loading exclusively on-demand.

I don't understand what that means. The JVM is supposed to interpret and sometimes compile bytecode, right? How can it be done with only a fraction of the JVM?

Or are you saying that it is constantly communicating with a server that does the work?

apignotti•1y ago
The VM itself is very small, it's the OpenJDK runtime that is quite sizeable. Byte ranges are used to only download the parts of the runtime (in terms of bytecode) that are required.

There is no server-side computation. CheerpJ runs code exclusively client-side.

palata•1y ago
But you said before that you only download a subset of the JVM, right? Or did you mean a subset of the JDK, including the JVM and... I guess other stuff?
apignotti•1y ago
I meant the JVM in an extended sense: the combination of the bytecode parsing, JIT compiler and OpenJDK runtime. You are right, I should have been more precise and refer to only the runtime part, which is by far the most significant.
palata•1y ago
I was not trying to prove you wrong, I'm just genuinely interested :-). I don't see a lot of articles about the JVM these days.