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Pros and Cons of Solo Development

https://johnjeffers.com/pros-and-cons-of-solo-development/
3•johnj-hn•3m ago•0 comments

Companies hire more after AI adoption

https://ramp.com/data/heavy-ai-adopters-hire-more
2•mooreds•3m ago•0 comments

Google pulls the plug on Tenor API, killing GIF pickers around the web

https://9to5google.com/2026/06/30/google-tenor-api-gif-updates/
2•mooreds•3m ago•0 comments

Adding SEO fields to your Filament resources in 5 minutes

2•umun•3m ago•0 comments

The only volume stabilizer with a human touch

https://sites.google.com/view/adbuster-winapp
2•Bo_Amigo_910•3m ago•1 comments

What Is Partiful Selling?

https://www.theverge.com/report/960635/partiful-app-event-planning-data-palantir
3•aarvin_roshin•4m ago•0 comments

OpenWrt One – Open Hardware Router

https://openwrt.org/toh/openwrt/one
3•peter_d_sherman•4m ago•0 comments

Germany suspends Cispa cybersecurity director over China technology transfer

https://www.upday.com/uk/germany-suspends-cispa-cybersecurity-director-over-china-technology-tran...
2•titaniumrain•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Skeights – Serialize sklearn models to safetensors and JSON, no pickle

https://github.com/carbon-re/skeights
2•alxhslm•9m ago•0 comments

Claude has the worst pricing – but people want it

2•amukbils•11m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Boilerroom: dialer, call recording, and managed follow-up

https://boilerroom.ai
2•sadidrahimi•12m ago•0 comments

Quiet, My Exoself

https://kevinkelly.substack.com/p/quiet-my-exoself
2•thm•12m ago•0 comments

Beyond Prediction: Tail-Aware Scheduling for LLM Inference

https://yl3469.github.io/uniboost-icml26/
2•matt_d•13m ago•0 comments

Speedcube.de forum archive using wget and squashfs

https://github.com/SpeedcubeDE/speedcube.de-forum-archive
2•Felk•14m ago•1 comments

S3 is a better abstraction than NFS / networked block storage

https://kerkour.com/s3-vs-nfs
2•speckx•14m ago•0 comments

ShareClean: Clean sensitive data from logs before you paste them

https://github.com/OmarH-creator/ShareClean
3•OmarH-creator•15m ago•0 comments

ThinkingCap-Qwen3.6-27B: Qwen3.6 capabilities with 50% fewer thinking tokens

https://huggingface.co/bottlecapai/ThinkingCap-Qwen3.6-27B
2•victormustar•15m ago•0 comments

Graph-guard, a knowledge graph behind RAG for multi-hop retrieval

https://github.com/Jott2121/graph-guard
2•jott2121•16m ago•0 comments

Man sues DHS after agents tracked him down for sending a scathing email to ICE

https://www.npr.org/2026/07/06/nx-s1-5883784/dhs-ice-critic-lawsuit-free-speech
5•HotGarbage•17m ago•1 comments

Ripple Calculator: Complete Guide to XRP Profit and Conversion

2•blockyyr•18m ago•0 comments

Reasons to Stay Long

https://www.downtownjoshbrown.com/p/reasons-to-stay-long
2•mooreds•21m ago•0 comments

GitHub Has Restricted Access to Star Data

https://www.star-history.com/blog/github-stargazer-api-restriction/
3•tianzhou•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: The ocean in Final Fantasy IX is made of Wang tiles

https://jawnston.com/wang/
2•jawnston•21m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Give your files an undo button

https://useundo.co/
2•dantelex•23m ago•0 comments

The Midwestern Exodus Is Finally Ending

https://www.wsj.com/us-news/akron-ohio-midwest-population-growth-5680accb
2•mooreds•24m ago•0 comments

All Star Wars Games Ever Made – Released, Cancelled and Mod Archive

https://swtorstrategies.com/2026/03/star-wars-games-complete-list.html
3•speckx•24m ago•0 comments

Despite political headwinds, CO tribe brings utility scale solar project online

https://text.npr.org/nx-s1-5779756
2•mooreds•25m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Venetianblinds.js – evenly spaced windows into text files

https://liveclip.substack.com/p/venetianblinds-js-text-sampler
2•firasd•29m ago•1 comments

I had Fable build several projects for me. I'm disturbed by what I saw [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vS-gfLhxYDg
3•Bender•31m ago•0 comments

NYT profiles voters using chatbots

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/04/us/politics/voters-ai-chatbots-elections.html
3•zerolatitude•33m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Algebraic Effects: Another mistake carried through to perfection?

https://kjosib.github.io/Counterpoint/effects.html
29•todsacerdoti•1y ago

Comments

smitty1e•1y ago
> sweet careers are made of this, so who am I to disagree? Compile the world; Java Python C. Everybody’s looking for some bug. Some of them want to maintain you. Some of them want to be maintained.

For those missing the reference:

https://youtu.be/qeMFqkcPYcg?si=at-YtggekbPdv7sN

voxl•1y ago
The desire of the HN community to pull a random person's uninformed opinion about a topic that they, justifiably, wrote for their own interests and amusement and then pontificate about how either stupid or amazing it is will never ceise to confuse me.

Effects on their own are a very active area of research and I would laugh behind a PL researchers back if they claimed it was a solved issue. Between Monads, call-by-push-value, and algebraic effects there is really no clear "how do people actually use this" answer.

But that's not the job of a PL researcher anyway, or a random software engineer for that matter. Sorry to say, the software engineer knows next to nothing about "the right way" to design language features that people want to use or enjoy using. If anything this should be an HCI person with a penchant for PL or vice versa.

eli_gottlieb•1y ago
>Effects on their own are a very active area of research and I would laugh behind a PL researchers back if they claimed it was a solved issue. Between Monads, call-by-push-value, and algebraic effects there is really no clear "how do people actually use this" answer.

I can actually say that I used algebraic effects in my thesis for the section on semantics of a basic probabilistic programming language. It avoided talking about monads for my committee member who cared and honestly made for an easier implementation.

rednafi•1y ago
> Sorry to say, the software engineer knows next to nothing about "the right way" to design language features that people want to use or enjoy using.

Sorry to say that many PL researchers live in their ivory tower and know next to nothing about things that people care about. One could say that it's not their job, their job is to write papers and get tenure. The number of FP enthusiasts versus the number of large, useful systems written in those languages is all the proof you need.

My statement is a vast generalization and is equally incorrect as the original one.

voxl•1y ago
Anyone who uses words like "ivory tower" I know suffers more from jealousy and anti-intellectualiam than anything else. There is a reason Rust is the most loved programming language of modern times and it's not because they ignored the "ivory tower"
chownie•1y ago
I had to stop and re-read this comment chain because I was sure this was satire
agentultra•1y ago
There’s a certain amount of hubris to say, “I don’t know anything about this and you’re making a mistake.” It’s off putting and kills the whole rant.

I’ve heard opinions from smart people with lots of experience who say algebraic effects are not worth the squeeze. I’ve also heard some say that we should all be pushing the boundaries: they are the future.

So the matter doesn’t seem to be decided. Now isn’t the time for maxims.

gitroom•1y ago
Every time I read stuff like this it just makes me laugh, I honestly never know who to listen to in these debates.
rednafi•1y ago
Research doesn't work like that. I like the idea of separating contract and implementation in algebraic effects. It might pave the way to bring back some sanity to imperative languages and help us write better code, since it's pretty clear that the "real world" doesn't care much about pure functional languages no matter what they bring to the table. Or algebraic effects could be like monads, many like to talk about them while people building real stuff have no clue about it, nor do they care. But we'll never know unless we explore.
lambdas•1y ago
To which implementation is the author referring, I wonder?

I can’t say I recognise any of these issues from freer, polysemy, nor bluefin.

chriswarbo•1y ago
The author says the approach they advocate (just using function parameters) is similar to "dependency injection". It looks like in FP/objects-are-a-poor-man's-closures terminology they're talking about Continuation Passing Style (CPS).