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Google lets you ditch that embarrassing old Gmail username

https://www.androidauthority.com/change-google-account-gmail-username-usa-rollout-3653478/
2•speckx•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Lazy-tool: reducing prompt bloat in MCP-based agent workflows

https://github.com/rpgeeganage/lazy-tool
4•like-to-code1•1m ago•0 comments

Fast sandboxed code execution with pre-warmed gVisor pools

https://github.com/shayonj/gvisord
2•shayonj•2m ago•0 comments

From "Show Me" to "Do It": How OdooClaw Takes Action in Your Odoo

https://www.odooclaw.ai/blog/how-odooclaw-takes-action-in-your-odoo
2•oktra_dev•3m ago•0 comments

Show HW: How This Graybeard Built the Fastest and Freest Postgres BM25 Search

https://github.com/timescale/pg_textsearch
2•tjgreen•4m ago•1 comments

Show HN: LeetChess – Solve Chess Puzzles on New Tab Pages

https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/leetchess/hogbcffpfhmcagfjbpiofabechljdflk
3•0xmattf•5m ago•0 comments

Cohere Transcribe: Speech Recognition

https://cohere.com/blog/transcribe
3•gmays•7m ago•0 comments

Sigil CMS – headless CMS with native multi-tenancy, 22 plugins, GraphQL and CLI

https://github.com/Netrun-Systems/sigil-cms
2•DanielGarza•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: PhAIL – Real-robot benchmark for AI models. The gap to humans is 20x

https://phail.ai
1•vertix•8m ago•1 comments

Why some American accents have endured – while others have faded away

https://www.vox.com/explain-it-to-me/483964/american-accent-history-identity-southern-new-england...
1•speckx•8m ago•0 comments

AI agent that writes and hot-reloads its own Python modules at runtime

https://github.com/asieltechlab/asiel-core
1•asieltechlab•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Wageslave – I quit my soul sucking job to make a game about it

https://cauldron.itch.io/wageslave
3•stonecauldron•12m ago•0 comments

Forth VM and compiler written in C++ and Scryer Prolog

https://github.com/no382001/forth-vm
1•triska•12m ago•0 comments

The Last Fingerprint: How Markdown Training Shapes LLM Prose

https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.27006
1•Er-c•13m ago•0 comments

Interaction Nets

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interaction_nets
1•tosh•13m ago•0 comments

Build with Veo 3.1 Lite, our most cost-effective video generation model

https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/technology/ai/veo-3-1-lite/
2•meetpateltech•15m ago•0 comments

Analyzing Geekbench 6 Under Intel's Binary Optimization Tool (Bot)

https://www.geekbench.com/blog/2026/03/analyzing-geekbench-6-under-intels-bot/
1•gloxkiqcza•16m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: What are you building with AI coding agents / tooling?

2•giancarlostoro•16m ago•0 comments

The Overvaluation Trap (2015)

https://hbr.org/2015/12/the-overvaluation-trap
1•toomuchtodo•17m ago•0 comments

I made a 3D Browser to review my HN upvotes [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1MiMlorMMJM
2•ppqqrr•19m ago•0 comments

Building a Powerful SIEM with ClickHouse and Clickdetect – Wazuh – SQL Detection

https://medium.com/@me_15345/building-a-powerful-siem-with-clickhouse-and-clickdetect-ae68a4495a76
2•souzo•20m ago•0 comments

How Congress Plans to Take on the Housing Crisis

https://www.wsj.com/economy/housing/how-congress-plans-to-take-on-the-housing-crisis-76bf027c
3•paulpauper•20m ago•2 comments

DuckLineage Extension for DuckDB

https://github.com/ilum-cloud/duck_lineage/
3•tanelpoder•20m ago•0 comments

Are New York's Environmental Concerns Worsening a Housing Shortage?

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/28/nyregion/hochul-housing-seqra-environment.html
2•paulpauper•20m ago•0 comments

Create Issues from Slack with Copilot

https://github.blog/changelog/2026-03-30-create-issues-from-slack-with-copilot/
2•mooreds•20m ago•0 comments

What Maxxing Reveals About Life Online

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/03/maxxing-tiktok-internet-clavicular/686616/
2•paulpauper•21m ago•0 comments

Scotty: A beautiful SSH task runner

https://freek.dev/3064-scotty-a-beautiful-ssh-task-runner
2•speckx•21m ago•0 comments

The story of Britain's oldest sweet, the Pontefract Cake (2019)

https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20190710-the-strange-story-of-britains-oldest-sweet
2•thomassmith65•22m ago•0 comments

Claude Code has two cache bugs that can silently 10-20x your API costs

https://old.reddit.com/r/ClaudeAI/comments/1s7mkn3/psa_claude_code_has_two_cache_bugs_that_can/
2•aleph_minus_one•23m ago•0 comments

The Push to Bring DC Power to Data Centers

https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/energy-power-supply/inside-the-push-to-bring-dc-power-to-data...
3•oopsiremembered•23m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

New Tool: lsds – List All Linux Block Devices and Settings in One Place

https://tanelpoder.com/posts/lsds-list-linux-block-devices-and-their-config/
101•mfiguiere•10mo ago

Comments

DonHopkins•10mo ago
I always wanted the /dev/zero character device driver, which you can map into memory to clear it, or use as an infinite source of nulls, to use the minor node number as the value that got mapped into memory or produced, so you could make an infinite source of beeps with:

mknod /dev/seven c 1 7

I wonder what would happen if you made a /dev/seven device in your http servers public_html directory? Would it dutifully serve it up?

Better yet, support for utf-8 unicode, so you can make an infinite source of poo emojis.

The "Everything Is A File" philosophy should be taken to its logical conclusion.

dlt713705•10mo ago
Awesome! That actually inspired me to code this: https://codeberg.org/mco-system/pooper
don-code•10mo ago
I challenge anyone to find another place on the Internet where one person's joke is another person's kernel module.
tanelpoder•10mo ago
Astute observation, but also CrowdStrike would like a word :-)
xerxes901•10mo ago
Question: what actually reads /etc/pooper to configure the character? I can’t work out how that file’s contents ends up as module parameters and I’d love to know!
dlt713705•10mo ago
You are absolutely right, the /etc/pooper file was never loaded.

The code has been updated and now you can change the pooped char on the fly with something like :

`echo "<WHATEVER UTF-8 CHAR>" | sudo tee /sys/module/pooper/parameters/char_utf8`

/etc/pooper file and module unload/reload are no more needed :)

xerxes901•10mo ago
Thanks for clarifying, and implementing this essential feature!
DonHopkins•10mo ago
Finally somebody who gives a shit! Thank you for dropping that generous contribution.

Now I can use that device as an RSS feed! That puts the log into blog.

I haven't seen that much shit emerge from a wormhole since the Ed the Happy Clown episode of Yummy Fur comics:

https://everything2.com/node/1485685?bookmark_site=twitter&o...

>We now skip back in time a little, where we find Ronald Reagan before his mysterious transformation. He presides over an America that has no concept of toilets, and piles of feces on every street corner are becoming a serious problem. Fortunately, science can help; a farmer has stumbled across a small portal to another dimension. The solution is clear; push America's mounting shit through the portal via a huge funnel. The exit point for the portal is in fact the anus of the gentleman who couldn't stop shitting back in the prison in Ed's world; so there is at least a good scientific explanation for that little episode.

>During the official opening of the shit disposer, Reagan tragically falls into the giant collection of pending waste. His body blocks the funnel, but not before his head has gone through the portal; a headless president is recovered. A scientist heads though the portal on a rescue mission.

>(Now, I know what you're thinking, and I've no idea how Reagan's head became attached to the end of Ed's penis. It makes no sense, even within the logic of Ed's universe, and it's not explained. If you have any notions, please let me know - but for now, we'll just have to accept that somehow, it happened...)

The Chester Brown Interview:

https://www.tcj.com/the-chester-brown-interview/3/

Best NSFW Ronald Reagan Quote Ever:

https://the-comics-journal.sfo3.digitaloceanspaces.com/wp-co...

Support Indie Comics!

anonymousiam•10mo ago
Easy to get an infinite stream of bell codes with: yes ^V^G
bitbang•10mo ago
Very nice, needs option for json/jsonl output.
tanelpoder•10mo ago
Thanks! Yep I was thinking of doing that next, will be very easy as under the hood the data is stored in Python dictionaries.
appleaday1•10mo ago
can we package this for Arch? Arch Defense Taskforce where you at?
tanelpoder•10mo ago
I just added a little comment/errata regarding the NVME_QDEPTH column to the post (search for errata). I should probably rename that column to emphasize that (for now) it’s the Linux nvme module level max QD and not the hardware one (it’s complicated…)
nerflad•10mo ago
If you came to represent... https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Creating_packages

Maintaining an AUR package can be great fun and an instructive glimpse into what FLOSS maintainers go through.

jayofdoom•10mo ago
I'll note, lsblk can return a heck of a lot more data than it does by default (and nvme drives show up there). lsblk -H will list for your system, and you can specify columns. You can also adjust output.

I guess with this in mind, I'm curious how this is different?

tanelpoder•10mo ago
Hi, yep lsblk targets a wider area of functionality, like showing mountpoints, device UUIDs, while lsds focuses only on block device settings.

Maybe the latest Linux versions have lsblk versions that support these columns, but in RHEL9 at least I don't see equivalents to lsds'es WBT_LAT, QDEPTH (not the same as lsblk's RQ-SIZE), WCACHE, FUA and some others. But these 4 are which I regularly need (especially when troubleshooting a yet another slow fsync() issue etc). I did and do use lsblk all the time too, but still end up catting and grepping various additional files and correlating the results, sometimes on systems with 100+ multipath block devices.

The other reason was that I wanted a tool that shows me where it gets these values too (for myself and sometimes for explaining stuff to others).

Edit: That being said, it shouldn't be hard at all to add the said extra fields to lsblk too.

strunz•10mo ago
Would be worth adding this as an FAQ on the page. Great job btw.

EDIT: Would also be really cool to define what each field means, if you're gonna reimplement everything anyways, why not make it as user friendly as possible.

tanelpoder•10mo ago
Thanks. Yep I have to revamp the whole 0x.tools webpage, right now it's a mix of older tools & prototypes and the "final stuff" and it's confusing what's what.

The lsds verbose option shows where in the Linux /sys fs each individual field comes from (lsds -lpv) so that's the ultimate source of what each field means. But I could pull each sysfs file's description from docs into a table on the webpage (I'm probably too lazy to create a manpage for now - help is appreciated)

Edit: Since there are not that many fields, it would be possible to add a -d option in addition to -v to get a human readable description for each field too. One of the main sources of confusion is the "queue_depth" vs. "nr_requests" fields. My ideal (which I usually don't reach) is to make these tools "explainable", so that they tell you from where they got their input data (and what basic math was applied).

jayofdoom•10mo ago
Thank you for the detailed response, even if I'm reading it late! This is exactly what I was trying to learn; what this tool exposed that lsblk is missing.
trillic•10mo ago
Rewrote most of the functionality in C as an exercise

https://gist.github.com/grahameger/2507019334f07036f84080a87...