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1•feastingonslop•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Codex-mem, 90% fewer tokens for Codex

https://github.com/StartripAI/codex-mem
1•alfredray•4m ago•0 comments

FastLangML: FastLangML:Context‑aware lang detector for short conversational text

https://github.com/pnrajan/fastlangml
1•sachuin23•8m ago•1 comments

LineageOS 23.2

https://lineageos.org/Changelog-31/
1•pentagrama•11m ago•0 comments

Crypto Deposit Frauds

1•wwdesouza•12m ago•0 comments

Substack makes money from hosting Nazi newsletters

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/feb/07/revealed-how-substack-makes-money-from-hosting-nazi...
1•lostlogin•12m ago•0 comments

Framing an LLM as a safety researcher changes its language, not its judgement

https://lab.fukami.eu/LLMAAJ
1•dogacel•15m ago•0 comments

Are there anyone interested about a creator economy startup

1•Nejana•16m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Skill Lab – CLI tool for testing and quality scoring agent skills

https://github.com/8ddieHu0314/Skill-Lab
1•qu4rk5314•16m ago•0 comments

2003: What is Google's Ultimate Goal? [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqdi1xjtys4
1•1659447091•16m ago•0 comments

Roger Ebert Reviews "The Shawshank Redemption"

https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-the-shawshank-redemption-1994
1•monero-xmr•18m ago•0 comments

Busy Months in KDE Linux

https://pointieststick.com/2026/02/06/busy-months-in-kde-linux/
1•todsacerdoti•19m ago•0 comments

Zram as Swap

https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Zram#Usage_as_swap
1•seansh•32m ago•0 comments

Green’s Dictionary of Slang - Five hundred years of the vulgar tongue

https://greensdictofslang.com/
1•mxfh•33m ago•0 comments

Nvidia CEO Says AI Capital Spending Is Appropriate, Sustainable

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-02-06/nvidia-ceo-says-ai-capital-spending-is-appropr...
1•virgildotcodes•36m ago•2 comments

Show HN: StyloShare – privacy-first anonymous file sharing with zero sign-up

https://www.styloshare.com
1•stylofront•37m ago•0 comments

Part 1 the Persistent Vault Issue: Your Encryption Strategy Has a Shelf Life

1•PhantomKey•41m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Teleop_xr – Modular WebXR solution for bimanual robot teleoperation

https://github.com/qrafty-ai/teleop_xr
1•playercc7•44m ago•1 comments

The Highest Exam: How the Gaokao Shapes China

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v48/n02/iza-ding/studying-is-harmful
2•mitchbob•48m ago•1 comments

Open-source framework for tracking prediction accuracy

https://github.com/Creneinc/signal-tracker
1•creneinc•50m ago•0 comments

India's Sarvan AI LLM launches Indic-language focused models

https://x.com/SarvamAI
2•Osiris30•51m ago•0 comments

Show HN: CryptoClaw – open-source AI agent with built-in wallet and DeFi skills

https://github.com/TermiX-official/cryptoclaw
1•cryptoclaw•54m ago•0 comments

ShowHN: Make OpenClaw respond in Scarlett Johansson’s AI Voice from the Film Her

https://twitter.com/sathish316/status/2020116849065971815
1•sathish316•56m ago•2 comments

CReact Version 0.3.0 Released

https://github.com/creact-labs/creact
1•_dcoutinho96•58m ago•0 comments

Show HN: CReact – AI Powered AWS Website Generator

https://github.com/creact-labs/ai-powered-aws-website-generator
1•_dcoutinho96•59m ago•0 comments

The rocky 1960s origins of online dating (2025)

https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20250206-the-rocky-1960s-origins-of-online-dating
1•1659447091•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Agent-fetch – Sandboxed HTTP client with SSRF protection for AI agents

https://github.com/Parassharmaa/agent-fetch
1•paraaz•1h ago•0 comments

Why there is no official statement from Substack about the data leak

https://techcrunch.com/2026/02/05/substack-confirms-data-breach-affecting-email-addresses-and-pho...
13•witnessme•1h ago•4 comments

Effects of Zepbound on Stool Quality

https://twitter.com/ScottHickle/status/2020150085296775300
2•aloukissas•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: Seedance 2.0 – The Most Powerful AI Video Generator

https://seedance.ai/
2•bigbromaker•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Gorilla study reveals complex pros and cons of friendship

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/05/250505170816.htm
54•lentoutcry•9mo ago

Comments

apt-apt-apt-apt•9mo ago
"For example, our study found that strong and stable social bonds are generally linked to less illness in female gorillas -- but more illness in males. ... the stress of this may reduce their immune function.""

Ah, this must explain why I have rarely been sick these days.

N2yhWNXQN3k9•9mo ago
> Ah, this must explain why I have rarely been sick these days.

Because you are a gorilla?

TechDebtDevin•9mo ago
This doesn't answer the question we're all wondering..
bee_rider•9mo ago
This time the gorillas have friends. 100 gorillas could definitely kill an unarmed dude.

Actually one Dunbar number of gorillas vs one Dunbar number of humans could be a good spin on this meme.

thrownblown•9mo ago
100 gorillas could definitely kill the most well armed dude
thaumasiotes•9mo ago
Armaments have a pretty high top end. If I'm armed with a missile-launching submarine, I'm confident that 100 gorillas will never be able to touch me.
BobaFloutist•9mo ago
I think they were probably limiting armaments to things you could carry in your arms.

Which would make it a lot harder.

bee_rider•9mo ago
I could carry a bicycle, a backpack of bullets, and some kind of rifle… I think it really depends on the specifics of the scenario (how far apart do we start and is it flat ground?)
bee_rider•9mo ago
We’d have to set some bounds here. I think one guy would have trouble operating a submarine.

Tanks are typically crewed of course… but in theory, a guy could patiently go around and man every station… I wonder if 100 sufficiently motivated gorillas could damage a tank from the outside.

thaumasiotes•9mo ago
If you want to consider armaments that are routinely crewed by one guy, a bomber will have the same property of being easily capable of killing all 100 gorillas at the same time that they lack the ability to even try to attack it.
bee_rider•9mo ago
Yah. My main answer is a man on a bicycle with a rifle and a backpack full of bullets. Somehow having a powered vehicle seems against the spirit of the thing, although really is it just a fundamentally silly topic anyway!
chasil•9mo ago
Life really answers that question for you.

If you are successful and established, friendship often means obligation. Money, skill, resources and effort are requested, sometimes politely, sometimes not.

If you are not successful and established, finding someone to engage in this relationship can provide significant advantage.

Some might say "a real friend would not ask such things, what you speak of are fairweather friends."

I would reply, "have you ever found your perfect equal in a friendship?"

I haven't.

https://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/fair-weather_friend

thrownblown•9mo ago
A real friend will help me fight a gorilla whether there are 100 of us or not
bluefirebrand•9mo ago
When you say "I could fight that Gorilla on my own no problem", a real friend would say "yeah you definitely could, but I got your back"
TechDebtDevin•9mo ago
The only one who got it lmao.
N2yhWNXQN3k9•9mo ago
> have you ever found your perfect equal in a friendship

In my experience, if you somehow keep some of your close friends that you had early in life, some of them end up eerily similar to you late in life.

chasil•9mo ago
I am working towards being an expatriate in my retirement, so that really isn't an option.
N2yhWNXQN3k9•8mo ago
If you abandon that which cultivated you for other pastures, you probably have more pressing needs or desires than friendship, and I wish you the best of luck.
anal_reactor•9mo ago
One of my biggest problems is that I'm very good at managing my life on my own, yet my primitive brain keeps screaming "you're alone! this means you might die any moment and nobody will help you!".

> I would reply, "have you ever found your perfect equal in a friendship?"

I guess the point of friendships is to find people with whom the exchange is fair. As in, I have something they want, they have something I want, we exchange this.

N2yhWNXQN3k9•9mo ago
> I have something they want, they have something I want, we exchange this.

https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/friendship/

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37750030

galaxyLogic•9mo ago
Yes but what we exchange is "friendship" and "love". We want to feel loved. I assume that has a biological basis.

The transactional relationship is a different thing, it is a business relationship. You don't have to be a friend with someone you exchange things with.

jajko•9mo ago
And with good friend the necessary part to exchange are good times shared together.
mettamage•9mo ago
For me it’s more about vibes. If I find what you say fun, then let’s be friends.
The28thDuck•9mo ago
I don’t think it’s about being equal. To think about it selfishly, then we would have nothing to gain from it. Friendship, like many relationships, is about the unique equilibrium struck that makes you both feel and be better, more than if you had just been an individual. It’s about strengthening each others weaknesses. Rising tide lifts all boats
chasil•9mo ago
No, it is not about that.

All of our behaviors were ruthlessly selected by evolution in the 60k years since we emerged as a species.

The behaviors were never about the individual. We kept them because they reproduced.

thomquaid•9mo ago
I think it is about that. Many of the social behaviors didnt evolve individually, and the social behaviors that end up selected for produced tribes. The group can be more fit than the sum of its parts, and both sides benefit from friendship because two people are about three times as strong working together vs the twice as strong you would expect.
mock-possum•9mo ago
Honestly man I’m sorry to hear that - and I hope you haven’t given up looking.
TechDebtDevin•9mo ago
Guys the question I was referring to, is who would win in a fight. 100 men or one Gorilla......
wonderwonder•9mo ago
100 men win. But some of them aren't going to make it
klank•9mo ago
The stories of Maggie, Titus, and Cantsbee were poignant and I found worth reading to reflect on our own humanity. I recommend reading for that reason alone.
standardUser•9mo ago
> Cantsbee, also a silverback, led his group for 22 years -- the longest dominance tenure ever recorded -- and fathered at least 28 offspring. He was known for his authoritative but peaceful nature, rarely initiating or entering fights, but was quick to protect others and resolve conflicts in the group. He had a particularly close relationship with his son Gicurasi, whose mother left when he was young, and who eventually took over leadership of the group in Cantsbee's final years. When Cantsbee later became ill, he chose to leave the group, spending his final months alone, except for one brief visit to the group shortly before his death.

This last paragraph is almost hidden by the ads, but worth reading.

bee_rider•9mo ago
Goddamn, if we’re the ones with the enormous brains, how come that gorilla figured out life so much better?
_jab•9mo ago
Is fathering 28 offspring your idea of a better life?
tough•9mo ago
at least that gorilla seemed more caring of his 28 offspring and his community than say some billionaire's obsessed with having children...
bee_rider•9mo ago
I dunno. I’m not sure how to calibrate that to human standards—I’m sure gorilla parenting is not quite as involved as human parenting.
dyauspitr•9mo ago
Yes, I would have as many children as I could afford to comfortably raise.
sandworm101•9mo ago
Assuming a stable population, if some males are fathering dozens of offspring, the bulk of males are probably fathering zero. Are those males still part of society or are then shunned/killed? What does the life of a not-dominant male look like? One who isn't the king's favorite?
colechristensen•9mo ago
Most people's obituaries sound like that.

It reads in exactly the same tone as you'd get for an obit of a small town mayor, CEO, or really any leader.

jajko•9mo ago
Yes but those would be often omitting some proper personal shit from their lives. We don't (need to) do such things for gorilla pack leader.

If you properly look around and sometimes go deeper than pleasant very few people are uncritically good people from various angles.

selbyk•9mo ago
Nor are animals.
colechristensen•9mo ago
>We don't (need to) do such things for gorilla pack leader.

Need to? Maybe not. But I can imagine the folks who studied these animals feeling a similar sort of attachment and desire to portray positivity in writing a gorilla obituary.

55555•9mo ago
“Can’t we move past that and be friends again?”

“Dude you ate my newborn baby.”