frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

Asus' Latest NUC Mini PC Is Exceptionally Powerful

https://www.howtogeek.com/asus-nuc-15-pro-plus-debut/
3•teleforce•6m ago•0 comments

Safer Intersection Legislation Signed into Law in Illinois

https://activetrans.org/blog/we-won-safer-intersections-for-illinois/
1•toomuchtodo•10m ago•1 comments

Inside the house that Asus built: New NUCs and powerful laptops

https://www.tomshardware.com/laptops/inside-the-house-that-asus-built-new-nucs-and-powerful-laptops
1•teleforce•12m ago•0 comments

Show HN: B2B Vibe Check – avoid pilots/customers who won't buy

https://b2bvibecheck.com/
1•BohoHacker•14m ago•0 comments

Kernel vs. User-Level Networking: Don't Throw Out the Stack with the Interrupts

https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3626780
1•teleforce•16m ago•0 comments

Zero-Knowledge Location Privacy via Accurate Floating-Point SNARKs

https://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings-article/sp/2025/223600a057/21B7R3HsGK4
1•gnabgib•17m ago•0 comments

How to acquire any language (2018) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=illApgaLgGA
2•Curiositry•18m ago•0 comments

Language Agents Mirror Human Causal Reasoning Biases. How Can We Help Them Think

https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.09614
1•badmonster•21m ago•0 comments

Feature-Sliced Design

https://feature-sliced.github.io/documentation/
1•burgerrito•22m ago•0 comments

Fake Audi Websites Are Scamming Used Car Buyers in Europe

https://www.thedrive.com/news/fake-audi-websites-are-scamming-used-car-buyers-in-europe
1•PaulHoule•23m ago•0 comments

Gary Sinise's pain: A lesson in genetics and responsibility

https://open.spotify.com/episode/1ENBsOsHFXK0dLbu2W4NIy
1•Haeuserschlucht•24m ago•0 comments

Symbolic Logic Based LLM

1•sandeeptshelvan•28m ago•0 comments

AI, I love you – a poem

1•Jun8•28m ago•0 comments

MCP: How to Supercharge LLMs with Real-World Data, Tools and Memory

https://guptadeepak.com/mcp-a-comprehensive-guide-to-extending-ai-capabilities/
1•guptadeepak•29m ago•1 comments

In the Dark? A Global Guide to Data-Breach Notifications and Self-Protection

https://guptadeepak.com/when-the-data-breach-alarm-fails-a-global-guide-to-who-should-tell-you-and-how-to-protect-yourself/
1•guptadeepak•30m ago•1 comments

Spotube is banned from using "Spotify API"

https://spotube.krtirtho.dev/
2•zekrioca•34m ago•1 comments

Forecasting Farmed Animal Numbers in 2033

https://rethinkpriorities.org/research-area/forecasting-farmed-animal-numbers-in-2033/
1•bikenaga•37m ago•0 comments

U.S. Unveils Sweeping A.I. Project in Abu Dhabi

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/15/us/politics/ai-us-abu-dhabi.html
4•eizaguir-lai•41m ago•1 comments

You Don't Have a Right to a Bank Account

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/15/business/trump-debanking-crypto.html
4•like_any_other•44m ago•4 comments

Why do LLMs attend to the first token?

https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.02732
2•adhi01•48m ago•0 comments

Lead Has Turned into Gold: Breakthrough At The Large Hadron Collider

https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/scientists-turn-lead-gold-1st-time-split/story
2•handfuloflight•51m ago•1 comments

Northeastern student demanded tuition refund after professor used ChatGPT

https://fortune.com/2025/05/15/chatgpt-openai-northeastern-college-student-tuition-fees-back-catching-professor/
4•bsoles•53m ago•0 comments

A Brief History of MySQL Replication

https://altmannmarcelo.medium.com/a-brief-history-of-mysql-replication-85f057922800
3•marceloaltmann•53m ago•1 comments

Etcd v3.6.0

https://etcd.io/blog/2025/announcing-etcd-3.6/
2•programd•1h ago•0 comments

Microagents accelerated their AI agent platform launch by embedding Pipedream's

https://pipedream.com/blog/microagents-accelerated-their-ai-agent-platform-launch-by-embedding-pipedreams-integrations/
1•todsacerdoti•1h ago•0 comments

Software engineer lost his $150K-a-year job to AI – living in a trailer

https://www.yahoo.com/news/software-engineer-lost-150k-job-090000839.html
4•msolujic•1h ago•1 comments

Echidna mothers change their pouch microbiome to protect tiny puggles

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/may/16/echidna-mothers-change-their-pouch-microbiome-to-protect-tiny-pink-jelly-bean-puggles-new-research-finds
1•anotherevan•1h ago•0 comments

Trump's sanctions on ICC prosecutor have halted tribunal's work

https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/trumps-sanctions-icc-prosecutor-halted-tribunals-work-121824057
9•oever•1h ago•2 comments

Show HN: Hyprsqrl – open-source revolut you can self-host (live iban/sepa/ACH)

https://github.com/different-ai/hyprsqrl
1•ben_talent•1h ago•0 comments

Can We Create Real Consciousness?

https://lopanpaol.substack.com/p/can-we-create-real-consciousness
1•lopanapol•1h ago•2 comments
Open in hackernews

Harvard Law paid $27 for a copy of Magna Carta. It's an original

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/15/world/europe/harvard-law-magna-carta-original.html
152•jgwil2•5h ago

Comments

toomuchtodo•5h ago
https://archive.today/DOZw1
perihelions•5h ago
It may be that Harvard students no longer habeant corpus, but they do habent a corpus of "habeas corpus" corpses.
spondylosaurus•4h ago
I haven't Latin'd in forever, but here's an attempt:

Harvardis alumnis corpus non habent sed quidem corpus de "habeas corpus" habent.

(Let's just say "Harvard" is a third declension noun because why not.)

kevin_thibedeau•4h ago
Pig Latin would be more fitting for the current climate.
fsckboy•3h ago
orcuspæ atinuslæ
tootie•4h ago
Veritas
skirmish•3h ago
Did you mean: Veritas socialis?
skissane•3h ago
> Let's just say "Harvard" is a third declension noun because why not.

Given Harvard maintains the tradition of Latin addresses (the Latin Salutatory), I’m sure they have an official position on what their name is in Latin. Wikipedia cites this article but not sure if it is online: Hammond, Mason (Summer 1987). "Official Terms in Latin and English for Harvard College or University". Harvard Library bulletin. Vol. XXXV, no. 3. Harvard University. pp. 294–310.

I spent a year as a student at the University of Sydney (Australia). I roughly remember how to say in Latin “University of Sydney Library”, because they stamped it on all their old library books (something like “Bibliotheca Universitatis Sidneiensis”)-I expect old books in Harvard’s library may be stamped in Latin too

fsckboy•3h ago
when it comes to latin, i must decline to decline for you, but there's this:

sigillum academiae harvardianae in nov ang

https://etc.usf.edu/clipart/55900/55996/55996_harvard_seal.h...

spondylosaurus•1h ago
First declension! Never would've guessed. Also smart to dig up a deal to look for Latin inscriptions :)
ChrisArchitect•4h ago
Magna Carta, approximately 1300. Manuscript. HLS MS 172, Harvard Law School Library https://iiif.lib.harvard.edu/manifests/view/drs:49364859$1i
anthk•4h ago
Magna Carta reminds me of the "Seven parts" from Alphonse X of Castille, nearly in the same era.

Also, for its day, it was kinda open-minded and progressive, and Alphonse X was a damn nerd as he ordered to compose a book of games like chess and more tabletop games like Nine Men Morris (Libro de los juegos/The Book of Games).

davikr•4h ago
$450 when corrected for inflation.
tim333•3h ago
In 1945 they had the gold standard at $35/oz so $27.50 would have been 0.7857 oz of gold currently worth $2540.
standeven•3h ago
Is this a reasonable metric though? No one was buying books in 1945 with gold.
koolba•3h ago
If I were selling books in Europe in 1945, I’d much prefer gold to Reichsmarks.
killingtime74•3h ago
It's a better metric than the estimate of the dollar inflation. Gold standard was in use until 1971
jonhohle•3h ago
Gold is considered to have relatively consistent value over time.

Median home price in 1940 Boston area was $3,600 or 180oz gold. Today the median home price is 215oz of gold in the same area (or $670,000). In terms of gold, house prices are up 20%. In terms of dollars, 18000%.

A new car still costs around 13oz of gold.

Real inflation of fiat is easy to obscure for political reasons. That’s much harder to do with the market value of gold.

Aurornis•3h ago
> Gold is considered to have relatively consistent value over time.

Not really. It has fluctuated a lot. You can pick starting and ending points a few years apart and come up with very different results relative to actual inflation.

> A new car still costs around 13oz of gold.

Now take this idea and average it across a large number of different items and you arrive at inflation statistics, which are better than using 1 commodity or 1 purchasable item as a benchmark.

thatcat•2h ago
Using core, required assets actually makes more sense considering recurring purchases tend to change over time.
boroboro4•2h ago
> Now take this idea and average it across a large number of different items and you arrive at inflation statistics

If only it was as simple: you will need to introduce weights between different items, and account to the change of those weights too. Also gold isn't just commodity, it's monetary commodity.

If you use official inflation dollars you get 1$ 1940 ~= 23$ 2025. You can see how magnitude wrong it is for housing or cars in the example above.

Here's food prices from 1940 diner: > A 25-cent platter, 5-cent hotdog, and 10-cent hamburger. Also doesn't really work with official inflation dollars either. And again works much better with gold prices.

kemotep•56m ago
Median household income in the 1940’s seems to be something like $2,600. Using your inflation figure that is ~$59800 in today’s dollars.

2024 there seems to be an estimated ~$75,000 median household income.

Housing and cars are also apples and oranges seeing that the average family size and sq footage for even 50’s homes is completely different than today. Today fewer people are living in significantly larger spaces than was normal back then.

ttoinou•2h ago
Gold was a standard for a reason
rat87•6m ago
Yeah people like shiny rocks. Luckily we switched to a more stable system after the great depression. Although with this major tarrifs war who knows maybe Trump will decide to really collapse us economy and switch to the gold syatem
scythe•54m ago
>Not really. It has fluctuated a lot. You can pick starting and ending points a few years apart and come up with very different results relative to actual inflation.

I think he's talking about really long periods of time. It's true that gold is an extremely volatile investment, whose price can seemingly quadruple or be cut in four at any time. But if you look over periods where the price of gold increased by more than 20x, this becomes a lot less important when you try to estimate things like the average rate of inflation. If you work with a ten-year moving average of the price of gold the problem is also reduced. Gold is the only metal whose sulfide is unstable under standard conditions (101.3/293.15).

In other fields, this is called a "low-pass filter".

cyberax•2h ago
> In terms of gold, house prices are up 20%

Except that the gold price fluctuated by 50% within the last 30 years: https://goldprice.org/gold-price-history.html

deeg•1h ago
> A new car still costs around 13oz of gold

But a new car today is vastly different from a 1940s car, so different that it's nonsensical to use it to compare purchasing power of gold.

ekianjo•43m ago
It's all about utility. So it does not really matter how better or worse cars are over time
kurthr•1h ago
Naw. Just look at the plots over the last hundred years. Lately, it's become just as financialized at bitcoin or any of the other "stores of value".

https://www.5yearcharts.com/historical-gold-price-chart-how-...

ajross•9m ago
> Gold is considered to have relatively consistent value over time.

Uh... Gold has doubled in the last two years. Fast forward past the trade war and it'll likely crash again. Gold is far, far more volatile than currencies. More even than securities, and frankly even most commodities are more stable.

rat87•8m ago
Median home prices have risen. Home prices have gotten out of control due to limits on supply that's one of the main factors of inflation. Cars today are very different then cars back then and come with more features. The dollar is what we use for currency and the measurement of inflation is well defined (even if there can be good faith argument of which inflation works better especially when comparing long term) meanwhile gold is just shiny rocks
AtlasBarfed•2h ago
desilvering of coins was in the 1965 coin act.

So if they paid in dimes/quarters/ half dollars /dollars, they were paying in silver

hilsdev•2h ago
All cash was convertible to gold at a fixed rate, so more or less they were
jltsiren•2h ago
In 1945, US GDP per capita was almost $1600. Using your conversion factors, that would be almost $150k today. The actual number is something like $85k. I don't think Americans are that much poorer today than they were 80 years ago.
hilsdev•2h ago
You’re starting to get into the theories of how they hide true inflation
rileytg•2h ago
i’m american, what’s the price in big macs?
qingcharles•1h ago
Four myocardial infarctions.
rat87•13m ago
Poe's law strikes again. Is this supposed to be a parody of goldbugs or do you seriously think Americans were that much richer in 1945? Without a wink we don't know
andrei_says_•1h ago
How is GDP per capita a useful measure in the presence of almost-trillionaires?

Depending on which city they sleep in, Bezos or Musk make all local citizens multimillionaires. Per capita. Statistically.

actionfromafar•1h ago
This is very true. One should look at some select percentiles instead, IMHO.
rat87•11m ago
Henry Ford had about 200Billiin adjusted for inflation around that time. Not quite as high as a couple of guys today but not that far off
ajross•11m ago
Gold is volatile. Two years ago it would have been half that.
dralley•4h ago
It's not an original so much as an official copy. The copies, dated 1300, were created 85 years after the signing of the original Magna Carta in 1215.

Although I suppose the argument is that if you re-affirm the same text several times, that each one is legitimate.

>First issued in 1215, it put into writing a set of concessions won by rebellious barons from a recalcitrant King John of England — or Bad King John, as he became known in folklore.

>He later revoked the charter, but his son, Henry III, issued amended versions, the last one in 1225, and Henry’s son, Edward I, in turn confirmed the 1225 version in 1297 and again in 1300.

But still, it would be weird to say that a copy of the Constitution produced during the Presidency of Abraham Lincoln and re-affirmed by the govt was "an original" even if it otherwise had pedigree.

jvanderbot•4h ago
"Original copy?"
dvh•4h ago
"genuine replica"
metalman•3h ago
whatever, umm, "sanctioned forgery" but exactly how is it a "copy", as the Magna Carta was hand written, with 4 signed copys still in existance today. the item under discussion was created 85 years after the magna carta, and presumably, everyone who was involved with the original, was dead so this thing is just old, but has no direct connection, it's even listed as an "amended version" of the actual original document, which means of course that some ancient controversy and disagreement, is lurking for our perusal and picking sides
hughdbrown•1h ago
Came here to understand exactly this point. It made no sense to me that a document created in 1215 would have a copy made in 1300 that was referred to as an original.
huijzer•4h ago
Yeah Harvard is doing good stuff. I also love listening to Stephen Kotkin. He uses the Socratic method a lot so he just goes a bit from here to there and lets you make up your own mind. Really great historian if you ask me. Very calming to listen to too IMO.
queuebert•4h ago
Copies of the Magna Carta are becoming unaffordable for working-class families.
varispeed•4h ago
Working-class families should work just a little bit harder and maybe cut down on avocados and Netflix.
vondur•4h ago
Look, we aren’t barbarians here.
dylan604•3h ago
The sad thing is, cutting down on the streamers does make an actual dent in outgo. Each platform is at least $9USD, and subscribing to them all at this point is easily $100/month. Obviously, some are higher than $9, but cutting the cord to save money tends to come out higher than the dreaded cable bill.

Avacodos be damned

PaulHoule•4h ago
Reminds me of that time I found a book at my Uni library that was in the rare books collection that I could only read in the reading room and then saw there were many copies on AMZN for 50 cents + shipping.
standeven•3h ago
Was the university exaggerating the value, or did you pick up some valuable books for cheap?
dleary•3h ago
If a work is older than 200 years and worth reading, then original editions are going to be valuable.

But it will also be out of copyright so the cost of getting a “new” copy is basically just the cost of printing.

asciimov•2h ago
Likely a different edition, or reproduction.
PaulHoule•1h ago
This was a 1970s paperback by someone who attracted attention for his work on spiritual matters and sold a lot of books but didn't leave an organization behind so you can find his books at used bookstores.

https://www.amazon.com/Discovering-Secrets-Happiness-Intimat...

Not rare at all but some people might say it has some prurient interest (talks about his sexual misadjustment) so maybe they think it has to be limited access or maybe people will steal it or something. (The same library kept Steal this book in a restricted area of the stacks but let me check it out.)

tomjakubowski•3h ago
When a librarian says a book is rare, they don't mean that the information inside is scarce. Rather, they mean that there are few surviving examples of that particular printing or edition of manufacture.
BizarroLand•2h ago
For instance, you can get a first edition copy of Trilby (which was basically the 1890's Twilight Saga) for a few hundred bucks or less as long as you're not picky about the condition.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trilby_(novel)

paxys•2h ago
Next you'll wonder why people make such a big deal about the Mona Lisa when you can buy your own version at the Louvre gift shop for $25.
sirmoveon•3h ago
Are we as a society have become that gullible? Seems more like someone's trying to find a somewhat credible excuse to launder the stolen goods.
llm_nerd•3h ago
>>Harvard Law School bought its version from a London legal book dealer, Sweet & Maxwell, which had in turn purchased the manuscript in December 1945 from Sotheby’s, the auctioneers.

>>In the 1945 auction catalog it was listed as a copy and with the wrong date (1327) and was sold for £42 — about a fifth of the average annual income in the United Kingdom at the time — on behalf of Forster Maynard, an Air Vice-Marshal who had served as a fighter pilot in World War I.

>>Air Vice-Marshal Maynard inherited it from the family of Thomas and John Clarkson, who were leading campaigners in Britain against the slave trade from the 1780s onward.

Pretty convoluted path to launder stolen goods.

alephnerd•3h ago
If you ever have the chance, you absolutely should visit the libraries and museums on campus. It's a treat.

I especially loved walking around Widener Library and marveling at the murals and that original Guteberg Bible

soperj•3h ago
I tried going in, but couldn't without a student id.
alephnerd•3h ago
Ah yea, security has gotten much tougher now. There are a couple open-access museums though like the Art Museum, the Near East Museum, the Scientific Instruments one in the Science Building, and a couple others.

All in all, loved the museums and history, but detested Harvard. I would have been a better fit at a more middle class college like Cal, Stanford, or MIT.

qingcharles•1h ago
Can a student take you in as a +1?
burnt-resistor•1h ago
If you're willing to brave the American customs gulag, Stanford's free Cantor museum has very historically and artistically significant bits. No ID needed there, of all places.
alephnerd•1h ago
> Cantor museum has very historically and artistically significant bits

Amen to that. Love Stanford. Cal has a ton of great stuff too.

> the American customs gulag

What does that mean? I've been to Cantor multiple times and nothing seemed out of the ordinary security wise.

rswail•21m ago
I think the poster meant for international travellers to get through the border.
jb1991•3h ago
Amazingly, the woman in one photo is not even using gloves to touch this ancient document.
dmbche•3h ago
Best practices today are clean hands and no gloves as it lessens chance of tearing paper as you have better dexterity if I recall correctly
syncsynchalt•2h ago
Not to mention that vellum isn't damaged by skin oils - it's already animal skin and contains its own oils.
pimlottc•2h ago
Modern practice recommends using clean, ungloved hands for documents in most circumstances. Gloves reduce dexterity, making tears more likely.

https://ask.loc.gov/preservation/faq/337286

https://blog.nationalarchives.gov.uk/handling-historic-colle...

https://info.gaylord.com/resources/for-the-glove-of-preserva...

qingcharles•1h ago
This. But anything glossy I would always switch to gloves, even though they are annoying, because otherwise oils get everywhere.
thih9•2h ago
This is the recommended way to handle old books.

> We're often led to believe that wearing gloves is essential when handling precious books. In fact, it poses a serious risk of damaging them.

https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/our-cause/history-heritage/...

heelix•2h ago
Saw some of the examples on holiday last month when we were in Salisbury. It was really neat to be that close to one of the ones sent out. Before that time, I'd never actually read the Magna Carta, which really was an interesting read.
burnt-resistor•1h ago
Ezra Klein would sneer at the red tape regulations imposed by a limited monarchy because they "know better" than us plebs how to wield absolute power properly. /s
willmeyers•45m ago
When I visited London a few years ago I went to the British Library and stumbled into their collection (and it was incredibly impressive). I had no idea they had two original Magna Cartas. If you have a chance to see the document at Harvard, you should! It's really something.
highfrequency•30m ago
The magic of compound interest: buying an original Magna Carta for $27 and selling it for $21 million 80 years later is equivalent to achieving 18.5% compound interest. Roughly the same rate and duration as Warren Buffett's investing career, with a smaller starting value.
syncsynchalt•26m ago
Unfortunately gains are only real if they're realized — and Harvard will never sell their copy.