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Why did I create my own PaaS as indie hacker and made it open-source?

https://github.com/sumon-ohid/better-paas
1•sumonoahid•5m ago•1 comments

Making a Metasearch Engine (2024)

https://matdoes.dev/metasearch
1•ethanhawksley•7m ago•0 comments

The History of How School Buses Became Yellow

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/history-how-school-buses-became-yellow-180973041/
1•thunderbong•8m ago•0 comments

Pure-Dart I2P: decentralized file sharing

https://github.com/geograms/i2p-dart
1•nunobrito•13m ago•0 comments

Greed Is Learned: Visible Incentives as Reward-Hacking Triggers

https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.16914
1•Timofeibu•15m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Kitchen Rush, Overcooked inspired LLM tool calling benchmark

https://github.com/bassimeledath/kitchen-rush
1•bombastic311•16m ago•0 comments

Movebound: The Art of Zugzwang

https://www.thearticle.com/movebound-the-art-of-zugzwang
1•Pamar•16m ago•0 comments

Discovery debt: The debt that doesn't slow you down

https://www.leadinginproduct.com/p/discovery-debt
1•benkan•16m ago•0 comments

The US government's Anthropic models ban was never about an AI jailbreak

https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/15/the-us-governments-anthropic-models-ban-was-never-about-an-ai-j...
2•SilverElfin•16m ago•0 comments

Why do South Koreans love AI so much?

https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/06/15/1138983/why-do-south-koreans-love-ai-so-much/
1•joozio•22m ago•0 comments

Cross-Language Data Types

https://ekxide.io/blog/cross-language-data-types/
1•birdculture•23m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A spreadsheet where your code never reads B7

https://github.com/logisky/LogiSheets/discussions/415
1•JeremyHe•25m ago•0 comments

Show HN: GitHits Public Beta 0.9

https://githits.com/
1•skvark•26m ago•0 comments

Correlated LLM Name Priors and Their Haunting of the Web and Academic Publishing

https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.02184
1•wise_blood•28m ago•0 comments

Adobe's record year couldn't save its stock

https://www.artificialstudio.ai/blog/adobe-record-year-couldnt-save-its-stock
1•artificialstudi•28m ago•0 comments

OpenAI spending hit $34B last year ahead of planned IPO

https://www.ft.com/content/e15b0d7e-ff6b-4f16-ba7a-4068feddb828
1•merksittich•29m ago•1 comments

Vulnerability Forecast Update: Navigating the AI Epoch

https://www.first.org/blog/20260615-vulnerability-forecast-update
1•jruohonen•29m ago•1 comments

Mythos/Fable-5 is a greedy Depth First Search system

https://ankitmaloo.com/fable/
2•ankit219•33m ago•0 comments

Show HN: DocShrink – An offline image and PDF optimizer in your Chrome sidebar

https://github.com/Aditya5556/Shrinkk
1•Aditya_5556•36m ago•1 comments

Shoehorning Flying Toasters into a ESP32-S3

https://taoofmac.com/space/blog/2026/06/14/1400
2•adunk•38m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tracore – We turned our resume parser into a document-to-JSON API

https://tracore.io/en/
1•imalov•39m ago•0 comments

CATL: Solid-state batteries are in years away from mass market

https://carnewschina.com/2026/06/15/catl-boss-drops-solid-state-battery-reality-check-years-away-...
1•phront•40m ago•0 comments

Know When to Stop, Pivot, or Double Down

https://julienreszka.com/blog/know-when-to-stop-pivot-or-double-down/
2•julienreszka•41m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Claude renamed my VM from the inside?

2•twooclock•52m ago•0 comments

How to bring down cheap, low-flying drones

https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/06/01/how-to-bring-down-cheap-low-flying-dr...
2•austinallegro•52m ago•2 comments

Colossal Squid Are Everywhere. We've Been Looking Wrong [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-W1Mwd0BWT4
2•mpweiher•55m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Topaz – A small Unicode-first language that compiles to Rust

https://github.com/studiohaze/topaz
1•yo_tafo•56m ago•1 comments

Do call yourself a programmer, and other career advice (2013)

https://yosefk.com/blog/do-call-yourself-a-programmer-and-other-career-advice.html
1•downbad_•58m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Ensure actionable Google Forms responses using automatic feedback

https://workspace.google.com/marketplace/app/ai_response_feedback_for_forms/1081979139028
1•komlan•1h ago•0 comments

DeepSeek raises $7B at $50B valuation

https://digg.com/tech/lxwv71a1?rank=6
3•ilreb•1h ago•3 comments
Open in hackernews

Ask HN: How is Julia for data analysis coming along?

1•juujian•1y ago
For a hot minute, Julia revived a lot of attention. Haven't heard anything in a while. I have my computing needs covered by R and Julia, and last time I tried Julia (two years ago? Three?) it didn't take me long to find something that would be non-trivial to do/wasn't implemented. Now I'm having some need for faster for larger datasets, and I like the idea of a typed language. What's the status?

Comments

poobear22•1y ago
I had about 14 yrs of R exposure and really liked it, but it was time to try something new. I cut over to Julia with my "retirement" and I've had no issues at all with it. With LLMs, it is different, as I needed to learn R from the ground up, "the hard way" and with LLMs, I find myself working at a more elevated level, knowing Julia less than I know R, but getting things accomplished in a quicker manner. It does seem the ecosystem of libraries is a more limited, but from my experience, its just been a little more work on my part and I have resolved what I needed to. When I look at my finished code, I fine it more readable and supportable than my historical R code. Again, my experiences are different with the LLM support offered today. A side note: I really wanted to avoid Python, it just never resonated with me. But, when I compare my Julia code with what I'd have in Python, Julia wins for me hands down. So, for me, over all, I have no complaints and have no reason not to be with this language for a long time.
MScholar•1y ago
I have been loving using Julia for data munging and Exploratory Data Analysis. It's performant and fun to use. Here are my observations:

Some parts of the JuliaData ecosystem are uber cool, like DataFrames, TidierData, DuckDB, etc. However, they lack robust support for parquet, iceberg, accessing data in ADLS, etc. There are workarounds like using DuckDB for accessing parquet files, but that's not always ideal.

For visualization, there are tons of great libraries like Makie (complex and powerful), VegaLite (very easy to use), and PlotlyLight.

One aspect which is seriously lacking is the ability to create nice web applications. There is GenieFramework (somehow I have always encountered issues with it), then there is Pluto (also a great idea but not a great experience). For static reports, QuartoNotebooks are awesome.

Once you start going deeper into statistical analysis, my experience is hit-or-miss depending upon what I am trying to do. The TimeSeries analysis ecosystem, for example, is fragmented and not as mature.

But with the advent of LLMs, I can easily and quickly write code and create custom functions for just the task I am working on, which I believe would be great for Julia. You can quickly create a custom, performant, pure Julia implementation for the task at hand.

For interacting with LLMs, PromptingTools.jl is awesome.

TheWiggles•1y ago
If you need a web application you could also use Oxygen.jl.
MScholar•1y ago
Oxygen.jl is nice. But what I really need for simple analysis is something like Gradio or Streamlit. Or even something like IPyWidgets for Jupyter would be good.