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Neutron Scans Reveal Hidden Water in Martian Meteorite

https://www.universetoday.com/articles/neutron-scans-reveal-hidden-water-in-famous-martian-meteorite
1•geox•38s ago•0 comments

Deepfaking Orson Welles's Mangled Masterpiece

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2026/02/09/deepfaking-orson-welless-mangled-masterpiece
1•fortran77•2m ago•1 comments

France's homegrown open source online office suite

https://github.com/suitenumerique
1•nar001•4m ago•1 comments

SpaceX Delays Mars Plans to Focus on Moon

https://www.wsj.com/science/space-astronomy/spacex-delays-mars-plans-to-focus-on-moon-66d5c542
1•BostonFern•4m ago•0 comments

Jeremy Wade's Mighty Rivers

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLyOro6vMGsP_xkW6FXxsaeHUkD5e-9AUa
1•saikatsg•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: MCP App to play backgammon with your LLM

https://github.com/sam-mfb/backgammon-mcp
1•sam256•7m ago•0 comments

AI Command and Staff–Operational Evidence and Insights from Wargaming

https://www.militarystrategymagazine.com/article/ai-command-and-staff-operational-evidence-and-in...
1•tomwphillips•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: CCBot – Control Claude Code from Telegram via tmux

https://github.com/six-ddc/ccbot
1•sixddc•8m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Is the CoCo 3 the best 8 bit computer ever made?

1•amichail•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Convert your articles into videos in one click

https://vidinie.com/
1•kositheastro•13m ago•0 comments

Red Queen's Race

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Queen%27s_race
2•rzk•13m ago•0 comments

The Anthropic Hive Mind

https://steve-yegge.medium.com/the-anthropic-hive-mind-d01f768f3d7b
2•gozzoo•16m ago•0 comments

A Horrible Conclusion

https://addisoncrump.info/research/a-horrible-conclusion/
1•todsacerdoti•16m ago•0 comments

I spent $10k to automate my research at OpenAI with Codex

https://twitter.com/KarelDoostrlnck/status/2019477361557926281
2•tosh•17m ago•1 comments

From Zero to Hero: A Spring Boot Deep Dive

https://jcob-sikorski.github.io/me/
1•jjcob_sikorski•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Solving NP-Complete Structures via Information Noise Subtraction (P=NP)

https://zenodo.org/records/18395618
1•alemonti06•22m ago•1 comments

Cook New Emojis

https://emoji.supply/kitchen/
1•vasanthv•25m ago•0 comments

Show HN: LoKey Typer – A calm typing practice app with ambient soundscapes

https://mcp-tool-shop-org.github.io/LoKey-Typer/
1•mikeyfrilot•28m ago•0 comments

Long-Sought Proof Tames Some of Math's Unruliest Equations

https://www.quantamagazine.org/long-sought-proof-tames-some-of-maths-unruliest-equations-20260206/
1•asplake•29m ago•0 comments

Hacking the last Z80 computer – FOSDEM 2026 [video]

https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/FEHLHY-hacking_the_last_z80_computer_ever_made/
2•michalpleban•29m ago•0 comments

Browser-use for Node.js v0.2.0: TS AI browser automation parity with PY v0.5.11

https://github.com/webllm/browser-use
1•unadlib•30m ago•0 comments

Michael Pollan Says Humanity Is About to Undergo a Revolutionary Change

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/07/magazine/michael-pollan-interview.html
2•mitchbob•30m ago•1 comments

Software Engineering Is Back

https://blog.alaindichiappari.dev/p/software-engineering-is-back
2•alainrk•31m ago•1 comments

Storyship: Turn Screen Recordings into Professional Demos

https://storyship.app/
1•JohnsonZou6523•32m ago•0 comments

Reputation Scores for GitHub Accounts

https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/02/reputation-scores-for-github-accounts/
2•edent•35m ago•0 comments

A BSOD for All Seasons – Send Bad News via a Kernel Panic

https://bsod-fas.pages.dev/
1•keepamovin•38m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I got tired of copy-pasting between Claude windows, so I built Orcha

https://orcha.nl
1•buildingwdavid•39m ago•0 comments

Omarchy First Impressions

https://brianlovin.com/writing/omarchy-first-impressions-CEEstJk
2•tosh•44m ago•1 comments

Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback

https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.12501
7•onurkanbkrc•45m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Versor – The "Unbending" Paradigm for Geometric Deep Learning

https://github.com/Concode0/Versor
1•concode0•45m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

HathiTrust Digital Library

https://www.hathitrust.org/
67•djoldman•6mo ago

Comments

pyuser583•6mo ago
This is an excellent resource! It should be more popular!
JdeBP•6mo ago
It is. It's used on a fairly regular basis nowadays in Wikipedia, for example. A decade ago one would have seen just the Internet Archive or the dreaded Google Books hyperlinks.
dilawar•6mo ago
Haathi means elephant in Hindi. I first thought it is to be an Indian site but it is based in the US.

Curious about the connection.

pyuser583•6mo ago
There's an English saying, "an elephant never forgets." I'm guessing its about that.
shervinafshar•6mo ago
Tangential:

- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant_Memory_Systems

- https://i.imgur.com/vNQURE3.jpeg

JdeBP•6mo ago
You can still find the original answer, from 2008, at https://old.www.hathitrust.org/help_general.html .
apaprocki•6mo ago
I would use this site all the time for genealogy purposes. It’s hard to unravel how the datasets are shared, because many things here are from Google’s scanning, but IMO there are lots of things that do not appear anywhere else.
robin_reala•6mo ago
We use Hathi a lot at Standard Ebooks as a source of scans to proof productions against. Archive.org has a somewhat better interface, but Hathi has a wider selection.
cxr•6mo ago
Try John Mark Ockerbloom's Online Books Page:

<https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/>

For the books that have been manually curated, multiple collections are indexed, including HathiTrust and the Internet Archive. Search will also fall back to showing hits from the "extended shelves" if a title is not in the catalog.

shervinafshar•6mo ago
Thanks for your volunteer work for Standard Ebooks!
leetrout•6mo ago
My family is from Eastern KY and I had access to the HTDL and NYPL through my stint working for a public university a few years ago. It's fascinating what you can find in there! When I had looked a couple years ago it seemed like there wasn't as much publicly available as what I am seeing now.
philipkglass•6mo ago
HathiTrust is much better than Google Books about allowing access to works that are no longer under copyright in the United States. Under US law, everything published 1929 and before is currently in the public domain. But there are a lot of special cases where 20th century works published after 1929 are also in the public domain:

https://guides.library.cornell.edu/copyright/publicdomain

Google Books appears to follow the blanket 1929 rule, or did the last time I looked. HathiTrust has cleared the copyright status for many additional works following the more complex rules, e.g.

"Drawing Birds" by Joy Postle, 1953:

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433115876140&se...

Unfortunately, the Google-originated scans that HathiTrust has come with special restrictions. Google itself required that only people associated with the academic libraries could download whole books as a unit, even for works that are in the public domain:

https://hathitrust.atlassian.net/servicedesk/customer/portal...

Fortunately, members of the public can download individual page scans without any special affiliation. People have naturally written tools to automate this process so that full books can be reassembled and then uploaded to the Internet Archive or other book sites.

Google Books has a much faster and sometimes better search interface, so a common flow I use is to search Google Books for terms and then go to HathiTrust to read inside books that Google Books surfaced but won't show.

EDIT: corrected 1926 to 1929 per cxr's comment below.

billbrown•6mo ago
This is very helpful context. I have disparaged HathiTrust in my mind for several of these public domain problems and it makes sense that it's actually a Google Books problem.
acidburnNSA•6mo ago
As a nuclear power historian, this resource is unbelievably valuable. I've been using it for years and it constantly delivers the goods. It contains incredible multitudes.
roadside_picnic•6mo ago
Somewhat tangential, but HathiTrust was born from what I would consider the "golden age" of technical work coming out of libraries (2002-2010). One of the unintended consequences of the dotcom crash was that compensation falling meant that there were a lot of talented software people working on what interested them rather than what simply paid the most (since the gap was much smaller).

As a result research libraries were well staffed with very technical people all genuinely interested in making software that made the world a better place. MIT's DSpace, LibraryThing, Open ILSs like Evergreen/Koha, and a huge range of quirky/innovative smaller projects that no longer exist all came out of this period.

It ended around 2010 since the GFC fallout started to hit library budgets while tech suddenly started getting really hot. Even if you loved libraries, most library devs where facing pay cuts to stay in libraries versus massive raises and other quality of life improvements for going into tech. Plus startups and tech companies in general at the time felt more inspired.

geephroh•6mo ago
And now that government funding sources like IMLS, CLIR, NEH, NARA and LoC have been nuked and/or crippled, things are unlikely to get better any time soon, especially for collaborative research projects that have no immediate commercial benefit.
sadcodemonkey•6mo ago
I worked at a university library for a few short years in the 2010s. Reading your comment helped me make sense of some of the experiences I had there. I still try to keep on top of some of the trends, with the vague hope of working in that field again one day.

I'm curious what some of the "quirky/innovative smaller projects that no longer exist" are, if you're inclined to go into some details. Or if you could point to a good resource on this somewhere. A lot of technology projects in the library space seem to reinvent the wheel over and over, so I think such a list is very valuable.

TZubiri•6mo ago
One day I needed some legal info, I call the library of congress, they send me a link to hathitrust with a hearing from 1980. Sent to my email, boom I take that link add it to wikipedia.

All free (tax dollars ok) and swift, felt surreal.