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Show HN: Mermaid Formatter – CLI and library to auto-format Mermaid diagrams

https://github.com/chenyanchen/mermaid-formatter
1•astm•10m ago•0 comments

RFCs vs. READMEs: The Evolution of Protocols

https://h3manth.com/scribe/rfcs-vs-readmes/
2•init0•17m ago•1 comments

Kanchipuram Saris and Thinking Machines

https://altermag.com/articles/kanchipuram-saris-and-thinking-machines
1•trojanalert•17m ago•0 comments

Chinese chemical supplier causes global baby formula recall

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/nestle-widens-french-infant-formula-r...
1•fkdk•20m ago•0 comments

I've used AI to write 100% of my code for a year as an engineer

https://old.reddit.com/r/ClaudeCode/comments/1qxvobt/ive_used_ai_to_write_100_of_my_code_for_1_ye...
1•ukuina•22m ago•1 comments

Looking for 4 Autistic Co-Founders for AI Startup (Equity-Based)

1•au-ai-aisl•32m ago•1 comments

AI-native capabilities, a new API Catalog, and updated plans and pricing

https://blog.postman.com/new-capabilities-march-2026/
1•thunderbong•33m ago•0 comments

What changed in tech from 2010 to 2020?

https://www.tedsanders.com/what-changed-in-tech-from-2010-to-2020/
2•endorphine•38m ago•0 comments

From Human Ergonomics to Agent Ergonomics

https://wesmckinney.com/blog/agent-ergonomics/
1•Anon84•41m ago•0 comments

Advanced Inertial Reference Sphere

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Inertial_Reference_Sphere
1•cyanf•43m ago•0 comments

Toyota Developing a Console-Grade, Open-Source Game Engine with Flutter and Dart

https://www.phoronix.com/news/Fluorite-Toyota-Game-Engine
1•computer23•45m ago•0 comments

Typing for Love or Money: The Hidden Labor Behind Modern Literary Masterpieces

https://publicdomainreview.org/essay/typing-for-love-or-money/
1•prismatic•46m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A longitudinal health record built from fragmented medical data

https://myaether.live
1•takmak007•48m ago•0 comments

CoreWeave's $30B Bet on GPU Market Infrastructure

https://davefriedman.substack.com/p/coreweaves-30-billion-bet-on-gpu
1•gmays•1h ago•0 comments

Creating and Hosting a Static Website on Cloudflare for Free

https://benjaminsmallwood.com/blog/creating-and-hosting-a-static-website-on-cloudflare-for-free/
1•bensmallwood•1h ago•1 comments

"The Stanford scam proves America is becoming a nation of grifters"

https://www.thetimes.com/us/news-today/article/students-stanford-grifters-ivy-league-w2g5z768z
3•cwwc•1h ago•0 comments

Elon Musk on Space GPUs, AI, Optimus, and His Manufacturing Method

https://cheekypint.substack.com/p/elon-musk-on-space-gpus-ai-optimus
2•simonebrunozzi•1h ago•0 comments

X (Twitter) is back with a new X API Pay-Per-Use model

https://developer.x.com/
3•eeko_systems•1h ago•0 comments

Zlob.h 100% POSIX and glibc compatible globbing lib that is faste and better

https://github.com/dmtrKovalenko/zlob
3•neogoose•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: Deterministic signal triangulation using a fixed .72% variance constant

https://github.com/mabrucker85-prog/Project_Lance_Core
2•mav5431•1h ago•1 comments

Scientists Discover Levitating Time Crystals You Can Hold, Defy Newton’s 3rd Law

https://phys.org/news/2026-02-scientists-levitating-crystals.html
3•sizzle•1h ago•0 comments

When Michelangelo Met Titian

https://www.wsj.com/arts-culture/books/michelangelo-titian-review-the-renaissances-odd-couple-e34...
1•keiferski•1h ago•0 comments

Solving NYT Pips with DLX

https://github.com/DonoG/NYTPips4Processing
1•impossiblecode•1h ago•1 comments

Baldur's Gate to be turned into TV series – without the game's developers

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c24g457y534o
3•vunderba•1h ago•0 comments

Interview with 'Just use a VPS' bro (OpenClaw version) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40SnEd1RWUU
2•dangtony98•1h ago•0 comments

EchoJEPA: Latent Predictive Foundation Model for Echocardiography

https://github.com/bowang-lab/EchoJEPA
1•euvin•1h ago•0 comments

Disablling Go Telemetry

https://go.dev/doc/telemetry
1•1vuio0pswjnm7•1h ago•0 comments

Effective Nihilism

https://www.effectivenihilism.org/
1•abetusk•1h ago•1 comments

The UK government didn't want you to see this report on ecosystem collapse

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jan/27/uk-government-report-ecosystem-collapse-foi...
5•pabs3•1h ago•0 comments

No 10 blocks report on impact of rainforest collapse on food prices

https://www.thetimes.com/uk/environment/article/no-10-blocks-report-on-impact-of-rainforest-colla...
3•pabs3•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Cross-Account and Cross-Region Backups with AWS Backup (and Friends)

https://tylerrussell.dev/2025/06/20/cross-account-and-region-backups-with-aws-backup-and-friends/
39•terussell85•7mo ago

Comments

sgarland•7mo ago
Cross-region backup has never made sense to me. If an entire region goes away - not a temporary outage, but GONE - then the country is probably under attack, and absolutely no one will give a shit that your SaaS product is dead.
tatersolid•7mo ago
Wildfires, hurricanes, tornadoes, blizzards and ice storms, earthquakes… many regional disasters are temporary but it can take very long to bring everything back online. AWS can also always lose a whole region for an extended period due to software and control plane bugs.

Even if all your apps and data stores are active-active multi-region you can be in a world of risk with no DR for a long time if your DR region fails. If your data size is small that vulnerability window might be small but if you’ve got petabytes you’ll be without lifeboat for a days or weeks until you can take another “full” DR copy.

jdreaver•7mo ago
There are plausible scenarios where a region can go down for days or more at a time, like natural disasters. I'm not terribly worried about a region going away _forever_, but during a regional outage long enough to start losing business, having data in multiple regions is important so you can restore in another region (if you aren't able to fail over quickly).
deepsun•7mo ago
The most common cause of the outages right now is configuration errors. Even when procedurally they must be limited to AZ only, there is always some region-shared infrastructure that can bring down the whole region altogether.
deathanatos•7mo ago
"Configuration errors" — I'm going to include "bugs" in that —, IME, tend to be global outages more often than regional. If I recount the outages >AZ that I've seen, I think the most recent ones were:

  GCP, IAM (global; just like a week and a half ago!)
  GCP, VMs etc. (regional!¹)
  Azure, application GW (global)
  Cloudflare (global)
  Azure, IAM (global)
  Azure, IAM (global)
You can tell IAM is a point of weakness. (As it kinda must be.)

¹though I wasn't affected by this one, as it was in Europe.

everfrustrated•7mo ago
Notable you don't have AWS on that list.

AWS's definitions for AZ & Regions are by far the strongest in the industry.

GCP has AZ in the same physical complex. Azure Regions would be AZ's under AWS's definition.

timewizard•7mo ago
AWS had a console login issue a while back due to the default region being us-east-1. There are a handful of other services that are exclusively available in that region as well.
deathanatos•7mo ago
I haven't worked with them in quite some time. (That's changing, so uh … looking forward to my next AWS outage?) This was more to show regional vs. global than any specific cloud provider. AWS is skating by here on account of not being sampled¹.

If I go waaaaay back (like mid 2010s), we did have an S3 outage. It was regional, even!

> GCP has AZ in the same physical complex.

I can't say if that's correct or not; GCP says,

> Zones should be considered a single failure domain within a region. To deploy fault-tolerant applications with high availability and help protect against unexpected failures, deploy your applications across multiple zones in a region.

That's an AZ, to me. (Or, alternatively & synonymously, a failure domain.)

¹IME over my career, though, AWS is fairly stable. GCP is too. AWS has its foibles, though. When last I worked with RDS (circa 2019), there were bugs.

deepsun•7mo ago
I mostly remember AWS S3 outages, usually limited to a region, but the one in 2017 was supposed to be a regional update (US-EAST-1 region), brought down like a half of AWS, because they depended on S3 in US-EAST-1 [1]

Note that even the intended configuration change was designed to be Regional, not just limited to one AZ.

https://aws.amazon.com/message/41926/

Spooky23•7mo ago
Telecom infrastructure can and does go out. And degraded performance can impact business significantly.

There’s also benefits for many apps to be closer to the customer. If you’re building out infrastructure in a remote region for that purpose, the marginal cost of getting more out of it may be compelling.

jcims•7mo ago
Cross-region backup isn't here to solve for meteor strikes and nuclear war. Most of the major AWS disruptions have been contained within a region. If you're unlucky enough to depend on one, your service is down and you don't know when it will be back up.

If you document and drill an cross-region recovery, in *most* (not all) cases you will be able to more confidently predict when things are going to be running, you'll know what information is there and what isn't and can build processes to communicate expectations to customers and/or regulators.

jasonthorsness•7mo ago
In practice I’ve seen multiple companies benefit from having a hot standby in west us and east us. The threat is not destruction the threat is the cloud provider screwing up the platform and they typically do rolling updates so only one region would be impacted at a time.
Aurornis•7mo ago
There are more failure modes for a region than “working perfectly” and “irreversibly destroyed”. Having cross-region backup leaves open the possibility of restoration of service or at least key data during an extended outage.

> then the country is probably under attack, and absolutely no one will give a shit that your SaaS product is dead.

Or there’s a severe natural disaster, or a flooded data center due to unforeseen conditions, or any number of things.

If your country is attacked, all business does not immediately halt. War is not an instantaneous phenomenon where an entire country becomes destroyed overnight. People continue living their lives as best they can because they still need to put food on the table and life must go on. I have a number of friends and past coworkers in Ukraine who can attest to how you continue doing your best and pick up the pieces and continue moving back toward normalcy.

nodesocket•7mo ago
What’s the benefits of using AWS Backup? If your infrastructure is already defined using Terraform then RDS, EBS snapshots, ElastiCache, S3 already have backup configuration options.
wiether•7mo ago
As the article shows how to do it, with AWS Backup you can do things like cross-account and cross-region backups.

Moreover, AWS Backup is the _Terraform_ of backup in AWS. You can control all your backups through a single interface, with various policies (scheduling, retention, access...)

For instance, by default, you are limited to 100 Manual RDS Snapshots per account. With AWS Backup, you can do what you want. You can define dozens of different rules for the same services/resources.

So you can let teams manage their resources as they want, and have a backup team manage backuping everything from AWS Backup without having to interact with the services/resources themselves.

time0ut•7mo ago
Nice write up. I did something similar at a company recently. The ransomware use case was the primary driver. AWS Backup felt kind of half baked. It also took a lot of work to ensure we could bring the apps up in the recovery account smoothly. Trying to retrofit this into existing stacks was kind of a pain.

There is a YC company called Arpio [0] that does this sort of thing as a service. It can replicate a ton of stuff beyond what Backup does (it also uses Backup for certain things from what I remember). It works as advertised and for most companies is probably worth it vs doing this yourself. I am not affiliated, just worked with it at a customer.

[0] https://arpio.io/

tgmatt•7mo ago
Be aware that AWS Backup is _very_ expensive. We recently stopped using it and switched to AWS DataSync, which is an order of magnitude cheaper. If you want to go even cheaper, S3 replication (not delete markers) will do it for even less.

Backup to S3, use the above to copy it elsewhere.