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Lightning talk: Your Very Own Godbolt [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cIK-UEbHvtA
1•mattgodbolt•1m ago•0 comments

Registered voters flagged as "potential noncitizens" proved citizenship

https://www.votebeat.org/texas/2025/12/18/texas-voter-roll-citizens-investigation-save-database-t...
1•hn_acker•1m ago•1 comments

Cabin – Modern, Cargo-like package manager and build system for C++

https://cabinpkg.com/
1•whou•1m ago•0 comments

EU Commissioner Hoekstra defends scrapping 2035 ban on combustion engines

https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2025/12/17/exclusive-eu-commissioner-hoekstra-defends-scrappin...
1•teleforce•2m ago•0 comments

AI surpasses 2024 Bitcoin mining in energy usage

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intelligence/ai-surpasses-2024-bitcoin-mini...
2•speckx•2m ago•0 comments

Effectiveness of Orthokeratology in Myopia Control

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12886-025-04478-x
1•bilegeek•5m ago•0 comments

Gamifying the past: embodied LLMs in DIY archaeological video games

https://researchprofiles.ku.dk/en/publications/gamifying-the-past-embodied-llms-in-diy-archaeolog...
1•geox•5m ago•0 comments

How do you reliably prove when data existed?

1•timeproofs•5m ago•0 comments

Latest MLX Release Includes Jaccl RDMA Back End over TB5

https://twitter.com/awnihannun/status/2001667839539978580
1•geerlingguy•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: jax-js, an ML library and compiler for the web

https://ekzhang.substack.com/p/jax-js-an-ml-library-for-the-web
2•ekzhang•6m ago•0 comments

Hash tables in Go and advantage of self-hosted compilers

https://rushter.com/blog/go-and-hashmaps/
1•f311a•7m ago•0 comments

Jack Lance made a bunch of games

https://jacklance.github.io/games.html
1•nilstycho•9m ago•0 comments

How climate breakdown is putting the food in peril – in maps and charts

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/ng-interactive/2025/dec/18/how-climate-breakdown-is-putti...
1•n1b0m•9m ago•0 comments

Poll: Did you move off GitHub Actions this week?

1•spiffytech•10m ago•1 comments

An Opinionated Guide to ML Research

http://joschu.net/blog/opinionated-guide-ml-research.html
1•montyanderson•11m ago•0 comments

Toad: A unified experience for AI in your terminal

https://willmcgugan.github.io/toad-released/
6•NSPG911•12m ago•0 comments

Famous Disease

https://weblog.snats.xyz/posts/2025/12/12/
1•snats•13m ago•0 comments

Valve Is Running Apple's Playbook in Reverse

https://www.garbagecollected.dev/p/valve-the-reverse-apple
1•ee64a4a•14m ago•0 comments

What makes a voice AI product hold up on real phone calls

https://telnyx.com/resources/how-to-build-a-voice-ai-product-that-does-not-fall-apart-on-real-calls
2•abhi_telnyx•14m ago•1 comments

Europe's secret weapon against Trump: it could burst his AI bubble

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/dec/17/europe-donald-trump-ai-bubble-us-economy-eu
3•rbanffy•14m ago•0 comments

The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope

https://science.nasa.gov/mission/roman-space-telescope/
1•Betelbuddy•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Fine-tuning Qwen3 at home to respond to any prompt with a dad joke

https://nixiesearch.substack.com/p/fine-tuning-qwen3-at-home-to-respond
10•shutty•16m ago•0 comments

A Cheat-Sheet for Helix

https://github.com/stevenhoy/helix-cheat-sheet
1•beyondCritics•16m ago•2 comments

The Missing Datacenter OS

http://addxorrol.blogspot.com/2020/07/the-missing-os.html
1•fanf2•17m ago•1 comments

The Long Boom – when Capital leverage is greater than Labour leverage

https://m4ttl4w.substack.com/p/ai-the-pendulum-swings-capital-vs-labour-leverage
1•mattyboomboom•19m ago•1 comments

How Warren Buffett Did It

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2025/12/warren-buffett-retirement/685294/
1•CaptainZapp•19m ago•0 comments

Are Robots.txt Instructions Legally Binding?–Ziff Davis vs. OpenAI

https://blog.ericgoldman.org/archives/2025/12/are-robots-txt-instructions-legally-binding-ziff-da...
1•hn_acker•19m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a tool to make AI recommend you (and I'm conflicted about it)

https://www.firstclick.so/
2•mrayushsoni•20m ago•0 comments

The Year in Mathematics

https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-year-in-mathematics-20251218/
1•baruchel•20m ago•0 comments

Reverse-Engineering Workplace Friction

https://medium.com/@dmitriy.kirenkin/why-we-misunderstand-each-other-at-work-3f527feb2a9e
1•ideamod•20m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: ReJot – Database replication framework aimed at developers

https://github.com/rejot-dev/rejot
9•WilcoKruijer•7mo ago
Hi Hacker News! We're Jan & Wilco from ReJot (https://rejot.dev). With ReJot we're building a framework that turns the write-ahead log of your database into an asynchronous communication channel for your services. ReJot enables application developers to define how the database tables they own should be replicated to other databases. Something we wish we had at in our previous job at a large fintech.

There is a gap between building internal (REST) APIs and Kafka (event streaming) to share data between services.

Internal APIs start to break down when you have more than a couple services communicating. Their synchronous nature makes them brittle in a distributed system: failures cascade and latency adds up. Companies operating internal APIs at scale often face challenges like managing implicit schemas and versioning. They also need to write significant amounts of code to implement features like circuit breakers and internal load balancing.

Event streaming addresses these issues by using asynchronous communication, but it also introduces significant drawbacks. Kafka is known for its operational complexity and high cost. Engineers must manage outbox tables, outbox processors, and consumers, which makes the system more difficult to understand and maintain.

ReJot is the middle ground solution that re-uses a database system's write-ahead log as an asynchronous communication channel. The WAL is well-suited to double as an outbox, this has been proven by CDC systems like Debezium. ReJot is a lightweight addition to existing infrastructure, and even re-uses existing (relational) database systems to store messages (temporarily) before sending them to the destination/sink databases.

We're developer focused, as opposed to being infrastructure focused. Much like how developers define the database table schemas they use, we enable developers to say how their data should be published to others in the distributed system. This is done through something we call "Public Schemas", they consist of a schema and a (SQL) query. When an item in the underlying table changes, the query is executed to produce an object conforming to the schema. This data is then forwarded through ReJot, ready to be consumed by a different service using a "Consumer Schema". This is again a simple (SQL) query that contains an INSERT statement. All of this is defined from within the codebase of the application, much like how ORMs or query builders work.

In short, ReJot re-uses your database in two ways: by consuming the WAL, and also by using queries to encapsulate and integrate data. This makes ReJot a good middle-ground between the brittleness of synchronous communication and the complexity of event streaming.

Excited to hear what you think!

Comments

raoulritter•7mo ago
I'm thinking that now with all these agent to agent frameworks this could potentially work for that. If you send off one agent you want them to keep up to date and sync / talk to each-other. Could your solution work for something like A2A by google or similar to enhance the synchronization across the different agents doing their tasks and prevent them from landing in a loop or similar.
WilcoKruijer•7mo ago
I'm not too familiar with how people store the state of AI agents, but I do think there's some opportunity to use ReJot for this use case. Hooking up an agent to ReJot and giving them access to all available Public Schemas could be an interesting way of letting an agent explore and use the data in a distributed system.
jasonthorsness•7mo ago
If the consumers stall, doesn't the WAL have to grow in unbounded fashion? Does it place any backpressure on the writers?
WilcoKruijer•7mo ago
You're right. Since we don't want to put too much pressure on the source database, we do save the (transformed) WAL items in an intermediary database (we call this the event store), so the source can clear its WAL.

This does mean the intermediary database can grow in an unbounded fashion. The use case really determines if this is fine or not. Since our focus right now is on (micro)service communication, we think this is fine in most cases, as the throughput usually is not gigantic.

Since the event store is just a Postgres database, it's easy to set up partitions to only retain data for a certain amount of time. On the near-term roadmap we also have back-fill support which will make it easier to work with shorter retention windows.