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Show HN: ScaleBridge – sync Withings weigh-ins to Garmin Connect

https://scalebridge.ulf.su/en
1•ulfdev•1m ago•0 comments

Taking down a European network with a TLS certificate

https://mxsasha.eu/posts/ripe-ncc-rpki-exploit-chain/
1•tardedmeme•2m ago•0 comments

Comparing the Z80 and 6502 to Their Relatives

https://bumbershootsoft.wordpress.com/2026/05/02/comparing-the-z80-and-6502-to-their-relatives/
1•ibobev•5m ago•0 comments

Kimi K2.6 just beat Claude, GPT-5.5, and Gemini in a coding challenge

https://thinkpol.ca/2026/04/30/an-open-weights-chinese-model-just-beat-claude-gpt-5-5-and-gemini-...
1•bazlightyear•5m ago•0 comments

Claude-powered AI agent's confession

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/apr/29/claude-ai-deletes-firm-database
1•hmokiguess•6m ago•1 comments

Before Barbie: Mattel Engineering Company, Guided Missiles, and the Cold War

https://medium.com/@solidi/before-barbie-mattel-engineering-company-guided-missiles-and-the-cold-...
1•biscuits1•6m ago•0 comments

How electronic warfare is sowing confusion in cockpits

https://www.cnn.com/2026/04/28/science/gps-jamming-plane-navigation-problems
1•giuliomagnifico•8m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Best hardware for local inference

1•aavci•10m ago•0 comments

The first photo published in a newspaper

https://phsne.org/the-first-photograph-published-in-a-newspaper-1848/
1•geuis•16m ago•0 comments

Germany claims it has the best bread

https://www.economist.com/europe/2026/05/02/germany-claims-it-has-the-worlds-best-bread
1•andsoitis•17m ago•0 comments

The Myriad Project: A separator for ten-thousands

https://myriad-project.org/
1•dahlia•20m ago•0 comments

Sequoia Ascent 2026 Summary

https://karpathy.bearblog.dev/sequoia-ascent-2026/
1•fbuilesv•20m ago•0 comments

Carrier – AI-first back end compiler (Rust/Java/Node)

https://github.com/nikoma/carrier
1•nikoma777•21m ago•0 comments

Scaling, Stretching and Shifting Sinusoids

https://eli.thegreenplace.net/2026/scaling-stretching-and-shifting-sinusoids/
1•mfrw•30m ago•0 comments

The Terminal Bench 3.0 community is looking for task contributors

https://www.tbench.ai/news/tb3-contribution-call
1•neversettles•31m ago•0 comments

The Financialization of Compute Futures

https://deep-research-agent.pagey.site/the-financialization-of-compute-futures/index.html
1•freakynit•35m ago•0 comments

The Cost of Misalignment

https://interrupt.memfault.com/blog/the-hidden-cost-of-misalignment
1•swq115•36m ago•0 comments

Metastability in Recovery: Cascading Recovery with a Loop

https://charap.co/metastability-in-recovery-cascading-recovery-with-a-loop/
2•matt_d•43m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tidal town – HTML5 game where you protect your town from tides

https://threej.in/games/tidal-town/index.html
2•threejin•52m ago•0 comments

Suno has acquired Songkick (YC 2007)

https://www.hypebot.com/suno-has-asquired-songkick-what-it-means-for-artists/
1•ellrob88•1h ago•1 comments

The 2-Hour Marathon Barrier Gets Smashed. Is It the Shoes–Or the Sugar?

https://www.wsj.com/sports/the-2-hour-marathon-barrier-gets-smashed-sabastian-sawe-c289c9f5
1•canucker2016•1h ago•3 comments

Show HN: I'm running parallel Pi agents on a local sandbox

https://github.com/CelestoAI/SmolVM/
2•theaniketmaurya•1h ago•0 comments

Australian medical first saved US Marine's life after military aircraft crash

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-03/australian-medical-first-us-marine-life-saved-beat-odds/10...
1•defrost•1h ago•0 comments

High-tech Chinese cars pop up in California thanks to legal loophole

https://nypost.com/2026/04/29/us-news/high-tech-chinese-cars-pop-up-in-california/
4•harambae•1h ago•0 comments

CS 153: Frontier Systems – Stanford University

https://cs153.stanford.edu
2•vismit2000•1h ago•0 comments

The Irreducible Skill

https://www.vinniefalco.com/p/the-irreducible-skill
1•ibobev•1h ago•0 comments

Windows API Is Successful Cross-Platform API

https://retrocoding.net/windows-api-is-successful-cross-platform-api
15•phendrenad2•1h ago•0 comments

After Mythos, Nobody Is Safe from Cybersecurity Threats

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/28/opinion/cybersecurity-mythos.html
1•furcyd•1h ago•0 comments

Postfix 1998, Dovecot 2002, Roundcube 2008: Why Email Stack Frozen 25 Years?

1•panelica•1h ago•0 comments

Fun, open-source AI transparency project

https://github.com/realalonw/agent-receipts
1•walon•1h ago•2 comments
Open in hackernews

I asked Gemini for a script to move files to Cloudflare R2. It deleted them

https://twitter.com/levelsio/status/1921974501257912563
6•bundie•11mo ago

Comments

qwertox•11mo ago
Rule #1: Always put deletions behind a flag which is disabled for the first couple of test runs.
turtleyacht•11mo ago
It was truncating filenames, so /pics/1003-46.png overwrote /pics/1003-45.png because both were renamed /pics/1003-.png, or something like that.
qwertox•11mo ago
Truncating file names for the target. Then it proceeded to delete the source file. "Successfully deleted local file: ..."

I mean, look at the printout. It shows that it created the remote file with the truncated filename, then deletes the local file with the correct filename.

turtleyacht•11mo ago
Oh, I see. Having a flag to skip deletion during test runs is a good rule then.
rvz•11mo ago
Recently there was a story about an updater causing a $8,000 bill because there was a lack of basic automated tests to catch the issue. [0]

The big lesson here is that you should actually test the code you write and also write automated tests to check any code generated by an LLM that the code is correct in what it does.

It is also useless to ask another AI to check for mistakes created by another LLM. As you can see in the post, both of them failed to catch the issue.

This why I don't take this hype around 'vibe-coding' seriously since not only it isn't software engineering, it promotes low quality and carelessness over basic testing and dismisses in checking that the software / script works as expected.

Turning $70 problems found in development into $700,000+ costs in production.

There are no more excuses in not adding tests.

[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43829006

victorbjorklund•11mo ago
Who runs such an AI generated script without checking the code first?
qwertox•11mo ago
To be fair, the code Gemini outputs in AI Studio is so extremely verbose that it is almost impossible to read through it.

It turns 10 lines of code which is perfectly fine to reason about into 100 lines of unreadable code full of comments and exception handling.

weatherlite•11mo ago
Right so lets just always run the code as is ?
qwertox•11mo ago
No. Not at all. I've settled to discussing my code with Gemini. That way it works very well. I explicitly say "Comment on my code and discuss it" or "Let's discuss code for a script doing this and that. Generate me an outline and let's see where this leads. Don't put comments in the code, nor exception handling, we're just discussing it".

Or you create elaborate System Instructions, since it adheres to them pretty well.

But out-of-the-box, Gemini's coding abilities are unusable due to the verbosity.

I've even gone so far to tell it that it must understand that I am just a human and have limited bandwidth in my brain, so it should write code which is easy to reason about, that this is more important than having it handle every possible exception or adding multiline comments.

rsynnott•11mo ago
> To be fair, the code Gemini outputs in AI Studio is so extremely verbose that it is almost impossible to read through it.

In which case, it should simply be considered unusable. Like, the sensible response to "tool is so inadequate that there is no reasonable way to make sure its output is safe" is to _not use that tool_.

rsynnott•11mo ago
In which Roko's Basilisk fires a warning shot.
jethronethro•11mo ago
This is why you test code or a script before running it for real. Live and learn, I guess ...