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Asahi Linux Progress Linux 6.16

https://asahilinux.org/2025/08/progress-report-6-16/
1•svenpeter•1m ago•0 comments

Low standards have devalued non-STEM study

https://www.slowboring.com/p/the-humanities-should-be-harder
2•JumpCrisscross•4m ago•0 comments

GPT 5 Predictions

https://christiancchung.com/
1•christianqchung•4m ago•1 comments

ChatGPT giving teens dangerous advice on drugs, alcohol and suicide: new study

https://nationalpost.com/news/chatgpt-giving-teens-dangerous-advice-on-drugs-alcohol-and-suicide-new-study
1•andy99•5m ago•0 comments

Andrew Ng and Anthropic Course – Claude Code: A Highly Agentic Coding Assistant

https://www.deeplearning.ai/short-courses/claude-code-a-highly-agentic-coding-assistant/
1•vinipolicena•9m ago•0 comments

HTTP/1.1 must die: the desync endgame

https://portswigger.net/research/http1-must-die
2•882542F3884314B•11m ago•0 comments

Concepts Behind AI's Future (and Why They Matter Now)

https://www.thepourquoipas.com/post/the-15-concepts-behind-ai
2•ThePourquoiPas•11m ago•0 comments

P2 – A Functional HTML Templating Engine for Ruby

https://noteflakes.com/articles/2025-08-07-introducing-p2
1•ciconia•17m ago•0 comments

Guided Learning in Gemini

https://blog.google/outreach-initiatives/education/guided-learning/
1•lackoftactics•19m ago•0 comments

Reams of fake scientific papers are getting into literature

https://www.latimes.com/science/story/2025-08-06/mass-fraudulent-science-is-polluting-literature
1•Bluestein•21m ago•0 comments

"Quantum neural networks form Gaussian processes"

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41567-025-02883-z
2•MrCoffee7•22m ago•1 comments

Ultra-Processed Foods Make Up More Than 60% of US Kids' Diets

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-08-07/sugar-snacks-and-ultra-processed-foods-are-majority-of-us-diet
7•JumpCrisscross•22m ago•1 comments

China's Export Machine Powers Ahead but Trade with US Slumps

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-08-07/china-export-growth-unexpectedly-quickens-despite-trump-tariffs
2•JumpCrisscross•24m ago•0 comments

PHP compile time generics: yay or nay?

https://thephp.foundation/blog/2025/08/05/compile-generics/
2•moebrowne•25m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Stasher – Burn-after-read secrets from the CLI, no server, no trust

https://github.com/stasher-dev/stasher-cli
6•stasher-dev•26m ago•0 comments

"AI hype" is the true AI product

https://hardresetmedia.substack.com/p/machine-learning-expert-ai-hype-is
17•aredox•27m ago•2 comments

Civil Service: A Victim or a Villain?

https://www.250bpm.com/p/civil-service-a-victim-or-a-villain
2•WillDaSilva•27m ago•0 comments

Weekend Warriors Are Prepping for a Chinese Invasion of Taiwan

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-07-31/china-invasion-fear-has-taiwan-defense-volunteers-training-with-airsoft-guns
6•mhga•27m ago•0 comments

Booting 5000 Erlangs on Ampere One 192-core

https://underjord.io/booting-5000-erlangs-on-ampere-one.html
2•lawik•30m ago•0 comments

The Royal Navy has the biggest force of 5th-gen carrier planes off China

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/07/18/china-pla-tank-boats-amphibious-invasion-royal-navy-carrier/
1•mhga•30m ago•0 comments

A New Jersey startup found an electrifying way to slash copper costs

https://techcrunch.com/2025/07/30/how-a-new-jersey-startup-found-an-electrifying-way-to-slash-copper-costs/
1•PaulHoule•34m ago•0 comments

Nvidia security boss pledges 'no backdoors'

https://www.theregister.com/2025/08/06/ai_chips_to_china_charges/
1•rntn•34m ago•0 comments

Two Chinese nationals accused of illegally shipping Nvidia AI chips to China

https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/two-chinese-nationals-california-accused-illegally-shipping-nvidia-ai-chips-2025-08-05/
3•mhga•35m ago•0 comments

Better Upload

https://github.com/Nic13Gamer/better-upload
1•bundie•36m ago•0 comments

CheckProfile: Verify Anyone by Social Media

https://profilecheck.vercel.app/
1•Georgii007•37m ago•0 comments

Hardmode-Triangle-0

https://glfmn.io/posts/hardmode-triangle-0/
2•todsacerdoti•43m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Blueprint, a desktop app to guard against rogue LLMs

https://github.com/BlueprintDesignLab/blueprint
1•yaoke259•44m ago•0 comments

SanDisk unveils 256 TB SSD for AI workloads, shipping in 2026 – Blocks and Files

https://blocksandfiles.com/2025/08/05/sandisk-pre-announces-256-tb-ssd/
1•rbanffy•45m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tasklyst – A minimalist offline-first multiplatform productivity app

https://tasklyst.app
1•zapzap40•46m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Generate Fine-tunning dataset using deep research in terminal

https://github.com/Datalore-ai/datalore-deep-research-cli
5•FineTuner42•46m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Vibe coding the MIT course catalog

https://stackdiver.com/posts/vibe-coding-the-mit-course-catalog/
86•low_tech_punk•17h ago

Comments

stackdiver•16h ago
tl;dr the app is at https://chuanqisun.github.io/courseek/

I also wrote a short piece reflecting on vibe coding this app and musing on the broader implication of building non-scalable software. https://stackdiver.com/posts/non-scalable-software/

ncr100•15h ago
Advice: capitalize the S in Courseek, to emphasize the misspelling as intentional.

And, AWESOME WORK. This is truly "making things better", which is my favorite What Does An Engineer Do saying.

plasticchris•13h ago
Unless the meaning was CourseEEK
r3a1d33p•15h ago
Lots of school infrastructure is decades old. I bet lots of students can better manage the IT than the IT department. The only issue is security and privacy. Not sure if there is a balanced solution for self-governance.
stokehacker•15h ago
SIPB is the student run hacking club at MIT (https://sipb.mit.edu/)
Thrymr•13h ago
At MIT, SIPB has managed IT better then the IT department for a long time.
isaacremuant•15h ago
Usually it's not a lack of will but just institutional entrenchment.

Students may volunteer but there's no path that would allow them to fix things.

kkylin•14h ago
I was around when MIT had its first online catalog. Reportedly hacked together by a grad student over a summer (probably not a whole summer).

Anyway I think for the catalog there are no serious privacy issues, and there wouldn't be a problem having students work on it. Databases with student information (and that includes registering for classes) are a different story.

godelski•13h ago
I can confirm this. I recently graduated (PhD) and was constantly submitting fixes for my department's servers. I'm not even a networking person or anything... I do ML.

And by fixes, I mean supplying the code and everything. One example is that the listing of classes generated a link as long as there was a folder on the server. Which the folders are automatically generated via the course offering of that term. This led to lots of links to nowhere when students were trying to see the course material and syllabus from previous offerings (so it was something people did quite a bit. Click, 404, back, click next, 404, repeat...). So the for my submit I found the file providing all the links, and the few lines around there. Provided a few alternatives such as "don't provide link unless there's an index.html inside" or "don't provide link if folder is empty". I even generated the one line `find` command that could go through and purge all empty directories that were older than 6mo (or any desired time). (That would clean up for anyone looking via the cli, which was more common than you'd expect) All the work was done, just someone with permissions needed to run.

There were tons of small fixes (as well as some much bigger ones...) like this that I and others submitted. Very few ever were done. Maybe the IT guy's hands were tied but every time I walked past his office he was sitting on his couch watching Netflix on his iPad[0]. I saw 3 different IT employees in my time and none of them took action on any of those types of issues.

I think the small things just get brushed off. Thinking "oh, well it's frustrating, but only happens a few times a year and doesn't cause much harm." Which, is true. But also, isn't the beauty of scaling in CS that even though 15 minutes of my work only saves a person 5 minutes (3 times a year, every year) that I'm saving that 5 minutes for hundreds or thousands of people? Saving 30 seconds doesn't sound like a lot but saving saving 100 people 30 seconds is saving an hour. If they have to do that once a day then you're saving a full work day every week. That's only 100 people too...

But I learned an important lesson: the little things matter.

[0] Not to bash him too much. When shit went down he usually responded pretty quickly. And grad students work some weird hours...

conception•14h ago
You probably were speaking in hyperbole, but there’s not a lot of school equipment out there still running windows XP and older. There’s some certainly but “lots”? Probably not except in the poorest of school systems.
buckle8017•14h ago
Windows XP? no

perl scripts written in the 90s controlling grades and course registration? Absolutely

wpm•13h ago
I started at a university full-time in 2014 in the IT department. Same year a project to decommission an aging IBM mainframe that sat as a lynchpin in nearly every important operation on campus; course registration and thus billing and grades, transcripts, as well as a home-grown SSO from the early 2000s no one understood any more. The consulting costs were insane, as were the support costs, so that poor thing had to go (second prettiest rig in the datacenter after my Xserves).

When I left that job in 2022, I believe most of it had been offloadded, but I can't say for sure if they had actually shut the fucker down yet.

daedrdev•15h ago
I've heard of people making reminder bots for schools that give you a short time slot to accept getting off a waitlist before it moves to the next person
mmmlinux•15h ago
My understanding is you're allowed to automate the discovery of classes as much as you want. but as soon as you try to automate signing up for them you're gonna get in trouble.
crm9125•12h ago
I guess they don't want my money...
pkal•13h ago
I have to say that https://student.mit.edu/catalog/index.cgi looks like a great site! It is all public, and when you open a category (a static site), all the information appears all at once and you can Ctrl-F for keywords. It might not solve that "unknown unknown" problem that the author mentions, but it is certainly much preferable to the solution that our university used (https://www.his.de/hisinone; one example: all courses are displayed in a tree and if you click to unfold a node, the server generates verbose HTML and sends it to the client. This takes at least 10 seconds on good days).
ndriscoll•13h ago
Yeah literally the only thing they need to do to fix it is get rid of the no-cache and Connection: close headers. Maybe make an "All" page for better CTRL-F? Surely their catalog doesn't change more than once per minute and could have some level of caching (at least with revalidation)? Keep-alive would cut out ~150 ms of page load time and letting at least something like nginx cache it seems like it would cut out another ~150 ms.
kuil009•12h ago
I enjoyed reading this. Among the points discussed, the one about structures that can be read by machines (machine-readable formats) seems to hold important implications for the future of data structures and representation.

While there are many attempts being made today, at the current pace of change I can imagine us returning to a clean, well-structured, text-based origin. As for UI representation, I believe AI will likely handle that on its own.

varun_ch•4h ago
I just did something similar last week: https://varun.ch/posts/elective-list/

it’s almost funny how similar the scraping code ends up looking for these kinds of things