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Are you safe? (Part 1)

1•security1011015•1m ago•0 comments

FOSS Android 16 on Apple Silicon / Darwin (+ QEMU)

https://github.com/jqssun/android-lineage-qemu
1•jqssun•3m ago•1 comments

Ron Conway Resigns Salesforce Foundation over Benioff's National Guard Comments

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/16/ron-conway-salesforce-san-francisco-00611579
3•rurp•4m ago•0 comments

Planet Unveils 'Owl' Satellite Fleet with 1M Class Imagery

https://aviationweek.com/
1•ggm•9m ago•1 comments

Forest soil properties influence arsenic mobility and toxicity in soil organisms

https://phys.org/news/2025-10-forest-soil-properties-arsenic-mobility.html
1•PaulHoule•10m ago•0 comments

Vulnerability scores, huh, what are they good for? Almost nothing

https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/16/cve_cvss_scores_not_useful/
1•rntn•10m ago•0 comments

I mapped AI Agent adoption across 217,000 GitHub repositories

https://alteredcraft.com/p/mapping-ai-agent-adoption-across
1•flowardnut•10m ago•1 comments

Nobody Cares How Hard You Work

https://alifeengineered.substack.com/p/nobody-cares-how-hard-you-work
2•mooreds•11m ago•0 comments

End of Windows 10 support is the perfect time for Windows 11 installer to fail

https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/13/windows_11_media_creation/
2•rolph•11m ago•0 comments

The quest to make babies with lab-grown eggs and sperm

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-03308-w
1•bookofjoe•12m ago•0 comments

Need Someone to Handle Support, Tech Debt, and Team Focus? Meet the Paladin

https://shiftmag.dev/need-someone-to-handle-support-tech-debt-and-team-focus-meet-the-paladin-6547/
1•anastasija2504•12m ago•1 comments

Hacker News – The Good Parts

https://smartmic.bearblog.dev/why-hacker-news/
3•smartmic•12m ago•0 comments

Teaching Clip, Whisper, and Gemini to Trust Nothing

https://mixpeek.com/blog/clip-whisper-gemini-fake-video-detection
1•Beefin•13m ago•0 comments

Little ML book club – reading Ultra-scale playbook

https://github.com/fxlrnrpt
1•aigoncharov•14m ago•0 comments

Congratulations, Publicly

https://www.workingtheorys.com/p/congratulations-publicly
1•jger15•15m ago•0 comments

EmuDevz Is a Software Game

https://hackaday.com/2025/10/16/emudevz-is-literally-a-software-game/
3•phreack•17m ago•0 comments

Cost-Effective, Low Latency Vector Search with Azure Cosmos DB [pdf]

https://www.vldb.org/pvldb/vol18/p5166-upreti.pdf
1•Foe•19m ago•0 comments

What the Anti-Sunscreen Movement Misses

https://undark.org/2025/10/13/anti-sunscreen-movement/
2•EA-3167•20m ago•0 comments

Silicon Valley's capture of our political institutions is all but complete

https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/silicon-valleys-capture-of-our-political
8•FromTheArchives•21m ago•2 comments

Cloudflare Sandbox SDK

https://sandbox.cloudflare.com/
14•bentaber•23m ago•4 comments

Object-Oriented Configuration: Why TOML Is the Only Choice

https://agent-ci.com/blog/2025/10/15/object-oriented-configuration-why-toml-is-the-only-choice
1•tcdent•26m ago•0 comments

Windows 11 update breaks localhost, prompting mass uninstall workaround

https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/16/windows_11_update_localhost/
4•baobun•26m ago•1 comments

StringZilla 4.2: Arm NEON+SHA and Goldmont support

https://github.com/ashvardanian/StringZilla/releases/tag/v4.2.1
1•klaussilveira•28m ago•0 comments

Viral GPT wrappers are now training their own LLMs

https://twitter.com/0xSamHogan/status/1978533352731779260
3•funfunfunction•31m ago•0 comments

Paneru: A sliding, tiling window manager for macOS

https://github.com/karinushka/paneru
1•fanf2•32m ago•0 comments

Being a freelancer and never dealing with unpaid invoices again – possible?

1•cesargstn•33m ago•0 comments

Google Coral NPU: ML accelerator core designed for energy-efficient edge AI

https://github.com/google-coral/coralnpu
1•transpute•34m ago•1 comments

YouTube Is Broken: GamersNexus Gets Hit with More Copyright Claims [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4YgqECQgXM
1•GiorgioG•36m ago•0 comments

Trump Says $16B Gateway Hudson Tunnel Project 'Terminated'

https://www.enr.com/articles/61634-trump-says-16b-gateway-hudson-tunnel-project-terminated
6•geox•39m ago•1 comments

Ovld – Fast multiple dispatch in Python, with many extra features

https://pypi.org/project/ovld/
1•gjvc•40m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

What if your QA engineer never slept?

1•GTCHO•5mo ago
I've worked in startups and big tech. The most common bottleneck? QA. One team I know ditched the traditional approach and runs an agent that acts like an engineer, 24/7. It's synthetic, learns from bug history, and can gate PRs. Wild idea, or future standard?

Comments

duxup•5mo ago
I think you knowing someone who does this thing might be able to clue us into how well it works.
turtleyacht•5mo ago
QA receives whatever gets merged and (what they decide gets) deployed (to test); they cannot block PRs. It would be nice though to make some checks block merge, i.e. Required workflows.

Learning from bugs is amazing. Connect to production support tickets to link code changes to real incidents. When done manually by on-call, there is no other historical context.

Automate estimation with "this story reminds me of stories A, B, C, which were estimated to be X points and took Y days." A link lets folks drill down to code metrics, artifact version, etc.

A QA agent would be remarkable in that it has a complete and total timeline for everything, and can be queried in chat.

GTCHO•5mo ago
Completely agree. Linking incidents back to code changes is one of the most valuable things a team can do but it's rarely done well. In this case, the agent actually learns from that full timeline production incidents, support tickets, commit diffs. It surfaces patterns you’d never catch manually, like an issue that only appears under high concurrency.

Also yes on chat querying. One of the most useful parts was letting PMs ask questions like “Has this bug happened since April?” and getting a full trace across releases. The idea of automating grooming using historical story similarity is spot on too. This could easily save teams hours per sprint.

jakedlu•5mo ago
I think it's an interesting idea, especially if it's just running on production or staging and constantly just trying new flows/testing edge cases. I would be curious about (1) the quality of testing compared to an actual human and (2) the cost involved. Obviously compared to a human salary the cost could get quite high before it became an impediment (also depending on quality). But running an agent 24/7 seems like costs could certainly pile up.
GTCHO•5mo ago
Really good points. On quality it’s not replacing human insight, but it is exceptional at pattern recognition and coverage at scale. It catches edge cases that tend to get missed and never forgets past regressions. The best results I’ve seen come from pairing the agent with human QA. The agent does ambient monitoring and flags suspicious behavior. Humans then dig deeper.

Cost-wise, it’s surprisingly reasonable. The version I saw ran in containers that spun up based on commit activity or deploy frequency. So if no one is pushing code, it's idle. But during launches or busy dev cycles, it ramps up. Much cheaper than staffing a full team to maintain 24/7 vigilance.

ThrowawayR2•5mo ago
If your QA staff are no better than an "AI" agent, dump them and hire better QA staff.
GTCHO•5mo ago
I hear you and to be clear, this isn’t about replacing talented QA teams. It’s about offloading the repetitive and pattern-based parts of QA so human testers can focus on more strategic, exploratory, and usability-driven work.

In the case I saw, the agent handled things like regression patterns, diff analysis, and known-risk detection across thousands of past issues. The QA team actually became more valuable because they weren’t stuck rerunning the same test plan for the fifth time that week. It was augmentation, not replacement.

That said, I totally agree if a team is just rubber-stamping PRs, the issue isn’t automation, it’s expectations and leadership.