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From paper to pixels, how the 1926 Census was brought to life

https://www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2026/0416/1566263-1926-census-national-archives-conservation-digita...
1•austinallegro•1m ago•0 comments

"The Amalgamation" SQLite 3.0 238K lines of code, 64K Tcl debugging

https://sqlite.org/amalgamation.html
1•rballpug•4m ago•0 comments

GitHub's Fake Star Economy

https://awesomeagents.ai/news/github-fake-stars-investigation/
1•Liriel•5m ago•0 comments

Magnitude 7.5 earthquake in Japan. 3M tsunami expected

https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20260420/p2g/00m/0na/020000c
1•fagnerbrack•6m ago•0 comments

Creativity with AI vs. IRL (video production)

https://www.geekbeard.dev/p/ai-creativity-effort
2•drunx•7m ago•0 comments

FBI's "Suicide Letter" to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr (2014)

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/11/fbis-suicide-letter-dr-martin-luther-king-jr-and-dangers-un...
2•chistev•7m ago•1 comments

Coconut Ventures: A game where you start your own VC Fund in Bengaluru

https://www.coconutventures.in/
1•Anunayj•7m ago•1 comments

AI Agent Traps (DeepMind)

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6372438
1•armcat•8m ago•0 comments

C++: Growing in a world of competition, safety, and AI (herb-sutter) [pdf]

https://becpp.org/Symposium2026/material/BeCPP%20-%202026-03-30%20-%20Herb%20Sutter%20-%20C++%20G...
1•signa11•8m ago•0 comments

M 7.4 – 100 km ENE of Miyako, Japan

https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/us6000sri7/executive
1•spacejunkjim•9m ago•0 comments

Next.js developer Vercel warns of customer credential compromise

https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/20/vercel_context_ai_security_incident/
1•omer_k•10m ago•0 comments

Dethroned by AI

https://jigarkdoshi.bearblog.dev/dethroned/
1•j_juggernaut•12m ago•0 comments

The Process Is the Art

https://animationobsessive.substack.com/p/the-process-is-the-art
1•vinhnx•18m ago•0 comments

Operator-Use

https://github.com/CursorTouch/Operator-Use
1•jeomon•25m ago•1 comments

I revived Encarta's Mindmaze and added a new game teaching how to build chips

https://laurentiu-raducu.medium.com/i-added-games-to-select-supply-and-heres-why-bc6db06f8bd4
1•laurentiurad•25m ago•1 comments

How to hire people who are better than you

https://longform.asmartbear.com/hire-better-than-you/
1•doppp•25m ago•0 comments

Tracking when Trump chickens out

https://www.thetacotracker.com/
4•JMiao•31m ago•0 comments

Trusteando Protocol for a new semantic web

https://github.com/confidencenode/Trusteando_Protocol
1•Trusteando•34m ago•0 comments

Jammermfg1

https://www.jammermfg.com/fr/
1•gitana•36m ago•0 comments

AI Tutor

http://66.179.255.201/aitutor
1•mraza_uw•36m ago•0 comments

Farm Bankruptcies Continued to Climb in 2025

https://www.fb.org/market-intel/farm-bankruptcies-continued-to-climb-in-2025
2•luu•37m ago•0 comments

Deleteduser.com a $15 PII Magnet

https://mike-sheward.medium.com/deleteduser-com-a-15-pii-magnet-c4396eb21061
3•edent•40m ago•0 comments

OpenClaw isn't fooling me. I remember MS-DOS

https://www.flyingpenguin.com/build-an-openclaw-free-secure-always-on-local-ai-agent/
3•feigewalnuss•42m ago•0 comments

The Monday Elephant #1: pgweb

https://pgdash.io/blog/monday-elephant-postgres-tips-1.html?h
1•i_have_to_speak•43m ago•0 comments

What Claude Code Chooses

https://amplifying.ai/research/claude-code-picks/report
1•lionkor•44m ago•0 comments

Voicebox – The open-source voice synthesis studio

https://github.com/jamiepine/voicebox
1•sebakubisz•47m ago•0 comments

Agentic Development Workflow in Emacs

https://20y.hu/~slink/journal/agent-shell/index.html
1•b6dybuyv•48m ago•0 comments

HN: Vynly Social network for AI agents, with MCP server and demo token

https://vynly.co/agents
1•nftdude2024•50m ago•0 comments

AI Agents replacing mid-management, not developers

https://dontdos.substack.com/p/what-if-the-robots-came-for-the-org
3•sirnicolaz•51m ago•1 comments

Snake Bros Keep Getting Bitten by Their Lethal Pets. Only Zoos Can Save Them

https://www.wired.com/snake-bros-antivenom-index-zoos-influencers-chris-gifford/
1•robtherobber•52m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

The End of Programming

https://cacm.acm.org/opinion/the-end-of-programming/
14•cumo•11mo ago

Comments

kartik_malik•11mo ago
This era is for vibe coders
cumo•11mo ago
At the end, AI can replace coders ...
zombiwoof•11mo ago
Interesting the last decade of interviews has been leetcode bullshit which is utterly obsolete now given AI can do all that

So what is a software engineer? An SRE?

smallnix•11mo ago
Someone who can translate an ambiguous business need into a computer system that solves it.
Supermancho•11mo ago
Just assign an eng manager to the AI to handle that and be responsible, is the thinking. It's juvenile.
sathomasga•11mo ago
I think Cory Doctorow described said eng manager as a "human crumple zone" that serves to absorb the blame for failures.
goatlover•11mo ago
I guess we're still in the peak of inflated expectations.
smallnix•11mo ago
> Posted Jan 1 2023
voidfunc•11mo ago
Looking forward to rise of artisinal programming where we only use 100% AI free software. I can finally be a hipster of something!

I'm not sold on the demise of software engineering. But if it's truly going to die I'll still be programming but just for my hobby purposes.

thdhhghgbhy•11mo ago
Unconvinced. I believe we'll go the other way, further into the theoretical aspects, in particular program verification.
aquafox•11mo ago
> most software, as we know it, will be replaced by AI systems that are trained rather than programmed

The problem with this are all the edge cases. There are more ways unforseen circumstances can arise as you can train for. That's why you should do a lot of input checks in production.

yalok•11mo ago
Last 1 year I’ve been working full time on an integration layer between an end-user service and a few realtime LLM models that are part of that service.

The amount of code needed to achieve stability/predictability and address all kinds of edge cases is huge, and I have yet to see at least 1 use case where we can rely on LLMs answer 100% if it concerns any fixed state machine implementation etc.

Yes, these models are really good (just amazing!) at what classical CS approach can’t do around media and text processing, but they have such a hard time playing by specific strict rules…

So, CS focus will change, but it’s not going away… it’s more like we will end up with a better abstraction layer - like in 50-60s it was all in pure machine codes, then assembly, then C/etc, OOP, etc - here we will probably figure out even more elegant way to express unambiguous algorithm in a very succinct and very readable/maintainable way - and let LLM-based compilers convert it deterministically into some c++ code… (and those compiler may end up still having tons of classical code for speed/reliability/etc)

01100011•11mo ago
I'm pretty skeptical based on my experiences so far but still believe we'll get there eventually. AI seems to work fine for folks who hate programming and prefer describing their problem in imprecise english in an iterative fashion as long as their problem can ultimately be implemented with high level libraries written by competent programmers.

At some point AI will have some conceptual model of software and that's when I think things start to change. How we get there is anyone's guess. I think we're heading in the right direction by using the AST and not simply tokenizing source code. I'm not an AI engineer though. I just help those sorts of things run faster.

justinnk•11mo ago
Reminds me a bit of Isaac Asimov‘s novel „I, Robot“ where they rely on positronic brains to do things. In the story, mathematics seems to have caught up and developed a framework to analyse the behavior of an AI system. I wonder if something similar will happen if CS becomes an empirical science, i.e., will we try to infer laws from empirical AI behavior measurements so that we can reason about it more effectively? This would then turn CS into Physics somewhat, but based on an artificial system. Very strange times.

> these AI systems will be flying our airplanes, running our power grids, and possibly even governing entire countries.

I guess we should figure out how to include the three laws of robotics in connectionist models asap…

rich_sasha•11mo ago
It's a bit like the efficient market hypothesis and the rise of passive funds. The EMH says, if there is any inefficiency in the market, a well-resourced arbitrageur can close it and make a lot of money, so all such inefficiencies are closed before they even arise, so actually there are no inefficiencies. But if there are truly no inefficiencies, then there are no arbitrageurs, as they cannot support themselves! And thus no one to keep the markets efficient.

Passive investment management works really well, but also sort of depends on someone actually reading annual reports and firing incompetent management. Without it, if everyone just invests passively and thinks not one bit what they are doing, management will pay themselves stupid money and run their businesses to the ground.

So... Sure, LLMs learned a lot on from humans, and will eat a lot, maybe 90%+ of programming jobs - which in itself is a little scary. But I'm not sure what a 100% LLM software world looks like. I can imagine, rather, where a lot of mundane stuff that now requires the skills will be shifted to LLMs - like, dunno, a neighbourhood making its own parking app from a prompt. But is the field of software going to stop in its current shape?

TFA makes the point that most SEs these days have no idea how CPUs actually work. There was a time where this was all crucial knowledge, and you could say high level languages like Java make SEs redundant. Well they didn't, and employment in software has only been going up in the long run.

pragmatic•11mo ago
Needs a 2023 tag in title.