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China's push to commercialize research: match 680k innovators with companies

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01202-7
1•manvel_hn•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: See you speaker's output on a piano

https://github.com/ecstrema/overchords
1•ecstrema•3m ago•0 comments

PrePrompt – MCP server that rewrites vague prompts before they reach the LLM

https://preprompt.org/
1•yashdeeptehlan•5m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Waiting for LLMs Suck – Give your user a game

https://github.com/ftaip/waiting-game
1•dalemhurley•8m ago•0 comments

Watching TV with the Second-Party

https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.06203
1•philipnee•10m ago•2 comments

Open Weights Kill the Moat

https://www.warman.life/blog/2026-04-27-the-moat-or-the-commons/
2•shaunistyping•10m ago•0 comments

The hard part of million-stop routing was not the route optimizer

https://github.com/vizzito/last-mile-optimizer-paper
1•pantherolive•16m ago•3 comments

The New York Times Makes the Case for "Microlooting" to Murder

https://jonathanturley.org/2026/04/27/the-monsters-among-us-the-new-york-times-makes-that-case-fo...
1•ytNumbers•16m ago•2 comments

Tiny Looking to Sell Letterboxd

https://www.semafor.com/article/04/26/2026/whats-next-for-letterboxd
1•bjhess•17m ago•0 comments

The AI-X Scale for Written Content

https://docs.zeropolis.net/doku.php/tech:ai-text-categorization
1•unethical_ban•17m ago•0 comments

Tell HN: Claude flags ordinary biology / biotech questions

1•areoform•22m ago•0 comments

Product Evals in Three Simple Steps

https://eugeneyan.com/writing/product-evals/
1•eigenBasis•24m ago•0 comments

You were training AI while catching Pokemon [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vk95ZO-WAvY
1•omani•24m ago•0 comments

Apple integrates Claude and Codex into Xcode 26.3 for 'agentic coding'

https://venturebeat.com/technology/apple-integrates-anthropics-claude-and-openais-codex-into-xcod...
1•gurjeet•27m ago•0 comments

MySpace Co-Founder Misses "Serendipity" of Social Media as Documentary Premieres

https://deadline.com/2026/04/myspace-chris-dewolfe-serendipity-social-media-documentary-1236873630/
1•ChrisArchitect•27m ago•0 comments

Show HN: New readme badge builder (need feedback)

https://www.shieldcn.dev/showcase
1•justinlevine•29m ago•0 comments

We Audited 43 Product Hunt Launches for Accessibility. 1 Passed

https://overlayqa.com/blog/product-hunt-accessibility-study/
1•emveras•31m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Novel crazy ideas on reducing RAM usage

2•sudo_cowsay•36m ago•4 comments

Show HN: Enve – Tiny server that stores per-project environment variables

https://github.com/skorotkiewicz/envd
1•modinfo•38m ago•0 comments

Show HN: rqlite – the fault-tolerant DB built on SQLite – v10.0 released

https://github.com/rqlite/rqlite/releases/tag/v10.0.0
1•otoolep•41m ago•0 comments

Who Owns Tindie?

https://hackaday.social/@tindie/116459166849350034
1•codezero•41m ago•0 comments

The remarkable Renaissance of high-frequency traders

https://www.ft.com/content/83b2a4b3-bdc6-4eb0-a87c-293c383b5994
2•simonpure•46m ago•1 comments

Colorful Nuclide Chart

https://people.physics.anu.edu.au/~ecs103/chart/
1•Eridanus2•50m ago•0 comments

An AI First World (2016)

https://avc.com/2016/04/an-ai-first-world/
2•capitalatrisk•55m ago•0 comments

Time, Money and Health

https://todaypurpose.com/posts/time-money-health/
1•eric_khun•1h ago•0 comments

How AI Will Reshape Computer Systems by 2035

https://cra.org/industry/2026/04/27/how-ai-will-reshape-computer-systems-by-2035-a-jeffersonian-d...
2•hasheddan•1h ago•0 comments

The physics slop that YouTube wants me to make [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cd5EHfRerGI
1•JumpCrisscross•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Lightport – open-source AI gateway

https://www.npmjs.com/package/lightport
1•statements•1h ago•0 comments

Body Soul and Spirit

https://www.skool.com/body-soul-and-spirit-9368/about
1•anthonychip•1h ago•0 comments

When robots.txt blocks the crawl, noindex never applies

https://netguard24-7.com/blog/a-field-note-on-claudeai-share-url-discoverability
1•cybrdude•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.