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Clarity vs. complexity: the invisible work of subtraction

https://www.alexscamp.com/p/clarity-vs-complexity-the-invisible
1•dovhyi•1m ago•0 comments

Solid-State Freezer Needs No Refrigerants

https://spectrum.ieee.org/subzero-elastocaloric-cooling
1•Brajeshwar•1m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Will LLMs/AI Decrease Human Intelligence and Make Expertise a Commodity?

1•mc-0•2m ago•0 comments

From Zero to Hero: A Brief Introduction to Spring Boot

https://jcob-sikorski.github.io/me/writing/from-zero-to-hello-world-spring-boot
1•jcob_sikorski•3m ago•0 comments

NSA detected phone call between foreign intelligence and person close to Trump

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/07/nsa-foreign-intelligence-trump-whistleblower
3•c420•3m ago•0 comments

How to Fake a Robotics Result

https://itcanthink.substack.com/p/how-to-fake-a-robotics-result
1•ai_critic•3m ago•0 comments

It's time for the world to boycott the US

https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2026/2/5/its-time-for-the-world-to-boycott-the-us
1•HotGarbage•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Semantic Search for terminal commands in the Browser (No Back end)

https://jslambda.github.io/tldr-vsearch/
1•jslambda•4m ago•0 comments

The AI CEO Experiment

https://yukicapital.com/blog/the-ai-ceo-experiment/
2•romainsimon•6m ago•0 comments

Speed up responses with fast mode

https://code.claude.com/docs/en/fast-mode
3•surprisetalk•9m ago•0 comments

MS-DOS game copy protection and cracks

https://www.dosdays.co.uk/topics/game_cracks.php
3•TheCraiggers•10m ago•0 comments

Updates on GNU/Hurd progress [video]

https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/7FZXHF-updates_on_gnuhurd_progress_rump_drivers_64bit_smp_...
2•birdculture•11m ago•0 comments

Epstein took a photo of his 2015 dinner with Zuckerberg and Musk

https://xcancel.com/search?f=tweets&q=davenewworld_2%2Fstatus%2F2020128223850316274
7•doener•11m ago•2 comments

MyFlames: Visualize MySQL query execution plans as interactive FlameGraphs

https://github.com/vgrippa/myflames
1•tanelpoder•13m ago•0 comments

Show HN: LLM of Babel

https://clairefro.github.io/llm-of-babel/
1•marjipan200•13m ago•0 comments

A modern iperf3 alternative with a live TUI, multi-client server, QUIC support

https://github.com/lance0/xfr
3•tanelpoder•14m ago•0 comments

Famfamfam Silk icons – also with CSS spritesheet

https://github.com/legacy-icons/famfamfam-silk
1•thunderbong•14m ago•0 comments

Apple is the only Big Tech company whose capex declined last quarter

https://sherwood.news/tech/apple-is-the-only-big-tech-company-whose-capex-declined-last-quarter/
2•elsewhen•18m ago•0 comments

Reverse-Engineering Raiders of the Lost Ark for the Atari 2600

https://github.com/joshuanwalker/Raiders2600
2•todsacerdoti•19m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Deterministic NDJSON audit logs – v1.2 update (structural gaps)

https://github.com/yupme-bot/kernel-ndjson-proofs
1•Slaine•23m ago•0 comments

The Greater Copenhagen Region could be your friend's next career move

https://www.greatercphregion.com/friend-recruiter-program
2•mooreds•23m ago•0 comments

Do Not Confirm – Fiction by OpenClaw

https://thedailymolt.substack.com/p/do-not-confirm
1•jamesjyu•24m ago•0 comments

The Analytical Profile of Peas

https://www.fossanalytics.com/en/news-articles/more-industries/the-analytical-profile-of-peas
1•mooreds•24m ago•0 comments

Hallucinations in GPT5 – Can models say "I don't know" (June 2025)

https://jobswithgpt.com/blog/llm-eval-hallucinations-t20-cricket/
1•sp1982•24m ago•0 comments

What AI is good for, according to developers

https://github.blog/ai-and-ml/generative-ai/what-ai-is-actually-good-for-according-to-developers/
1•mooreds•24m ago•0 comments

OpenAI might pivot to the "most addictive digital friend" or face extinction

https://twitter.com/lebed2045/status/2020184853271167186
1•lebed2045•25m ago•2 comments

Show HN: Know how your SaaS is doing in 30 seconds

https://anypanel.io
1•dasfelix•26m ago•0 comments

ClawdBot Ordered Me Lunch

https://nickalexander.org/drafts/auto-sandwich.html
3•nick007•27m ago•0 comments

What the News media thinks about your Indian stock investments

https://stocktrends.numerical.works/
1•mindaslab•28m ago•0 comments

Running Lua on a tiny console from 2001

https://ivie.codes/page/pokemon-mini-lua
1•Charmunk•28m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Character Bitmap Graphics on the Pet 2001

https://www.masswerk.at/nowgobang/2025/character-bitmaps-on-the-pet2001
17•masswerk•6mo ago

Comments

_the_inflator•6mo ago
The article branches out to Glen Fisher and Dave Dixon, who were the first to develop a demo using this effect in 1980.

While modern demos easily outperform the early usages of retro tricks on any system, and this in itself is highly impressive and a feast of its own, I share the author's homage to the early discoverers.

My background is the C64, and I had my share of high-profile participation as a member of groups like Beastie Boys, X-Rated, for example.

To this day, I remember talking to first-time trickery explorers like Einstein of Upfront and Honey from 1001 Crew or Radwar back then and later on.

Especially Einstein was a nice chap. It seems so far away compared with today, but back then it was pretty normal to hang on a low-level computer like that with a TV CRC as a monitor, destroying your eyesight for 8 hours or longer with no interruption.

There was plenty of time, especially during the holidays. And the Scandinavians had an "unfair" advantage: hard winters with few sunny hours, so what else could you do than do stuff on a "breadbox"? ;)

We all had some schemes or sketches of effects on paper. It was pretty normal, what today is perceived as weird: having plenty of guilt-free and blame-free time, and utilizing pen and paper.

There wasn't any other option. Stuck? Well, no Google, etc. Calling someone else? Whom? And even then, at the time (80th), telephone calls were expensive, and especially calling someone in a different country was kind of novel and cost a fortune. So resort to - pen and paper. This was cheaper, but express delivery also costs you dearly.

Also, you had to come up with something in exchange for a bargain. And exactly this information sharing and this special mix of curiosity and need for discovery was a topic I remember fondly talking and marveling about with Einstein and some other coders.

Different times, easier times despite the Cold War, which loomed as background noise.

masswerk•6mo ago
> And the Scandinavians had an "unfair" advantage

:-)

> the Cold War, which loomed as background noise

A peculiar state between mid-term doom and business as usual, anyway.

Thank you for contributing a relevant framing to this.

michalpleban•6mo ago
This kind of resembles "racing the beam" that was required to program the Atari 2600 - timing your assembly code just right to modify the video display at a precise location as the screen is being drawn. Kudos to the authors!
masswerk•6mo ago
Very much so, with the small difference that the VCS features the `WSYNC` strobe to sync the CPU with the start of the scan-line, but here we don't have even this.

(Having said that, for something more complex, like an animated game display, you'd probably approach this very similarly: do the business/game logic in VBLANK, have a timer set for the start of the visible picture and run your display kernel. Now you can only hope that you wouldn't be off more than half a scan-line… That is, more realistically, you might do this only every 2nd or 3rd frame.)

michalpleban•6mo ago
Thanks, good point about the WSYNC. Being a Commodore guy, I was not aware of it.