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Drinking More Water Can Boost Your Energy

https://www.verywellhealth.com/can-drinking-water-boost-energy-11891522
1•wjb3•1m ago•0 comments

Proving Laderman's 3x3 Matrix Multiplication Is Locally Optimal via SMT Solvers

https://zenodo.org/records/18514533
1•DarenWatson•3m ago•0 comments

Fire may have altered human DNA

https://www.popsci.com/science/fire-alter-human-dna/
2•wjb3•4m ago•0 comments

"Compiled" Specs

https://deepclause.substack.com/p/compiled-specs
1•schmuhblaster•9m ago•0 comments

The Next Big Language (2007) by Steve Yegge

https://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2007/02/next-big-language.html?2026
1•cryptoz•10m ago•0 comments

Open-Weight Models Are Getting Serious: GLM 4.7 vs. MiniMax M2.1

https://blog.kilo.ai/p/open-weight-models-are-getting-serious
3•ms7892•20m ago•0 comments

Using AI for Code Reviews: What Works, What Doesn't, and Why

https://entelligence.ai/blogs/entelligence-ai-in-cli
3•Arindam1729•20m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Solnix – an early-stage experimental programming language

https://www.solnix-lang.org/
2•maheshbhatiya•20m ago•0 comments

DoNotNotify is now Open Source

https://donotnotify.com/opensource.html
5•awaaz•22m ago•2 comments

The British Empire's Brothels

https://www.historytoday.com/archive/feature/british-empires-brothels
2•pepys•22m ago•0 comments

What rare disease AI teaches us about longitudinal health

https://myaether.live/blog/what-rare-disease-ai-teaches-us-about-longitudinal-health
2•takmak007•27m ago•0 comments

The Brand Savior Complex and the New Age of Self Censorship

https://thesocialjuice.substack.com/p/the-brand-savior-complex-and-the
2•jaskaransainiz•29m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A Prompting Framework for Non-Vibe-Coders

https://github.com/No3371/projex
2•3371•30m ago•0 comments

Kilroy is a local-first "software factory" CLI

https://github.com/danshapiro/kilroy
2•ukuina•40m ago•0 comments

Mathscapes – Jan 2026 [pdf]

https://momath.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/1.-Mathscapes-January-2026-with-Solution.pdf
1•vismit2000•42m ago•0 comments

80386 Barrel Shifter

https://nand2mario.github.io/posts/2026/80386_barrel_shifter/
2•jamesbowman•43m ago•0 comments

Training Foundation Models Directly on Human Brain Data

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.12053
1•helloplanets•43m ago•0 comments

Web Speech API on HN Threads

https://toulas.ch/projects/hn-readaloud/
1•etoulas•46m ago•0 comments

ArtisanForge: Learn Laravel through a gamified RPG adventure – 100% free

https://artisanforge.online/
2•grazulex•46m ago•1 comments

Your phone edits all your photos with AI – is it changing your view of reality?

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260203-the-ai-that-quietly-edits-all-of-your-photos
1•breve•47m ago•0 comments

DStack, a small Bash tool for managing Docker Compose projects

https://github.com/KyanJeuring/dstack
2•kppjeuring•48m ago•1 comments

Hop – Fast SSH connection manager with TUI dashboard

https://github.com/danmartuszewski/hop
1•danmartuszewski•48m ago•1 comments

Turning books to courses using AI

https://www.book2course.org/
6•syukursyakir•50m ago•4 comments

Top #1 AI Video Agent: Free All in One AI Video and Image Agent by Vidzoo AI

https://vidzoo.ai
2•Evan233•50m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: How would you design an LLM-unfriendly language?

1•sph•52m ago•0 comments

Show HN: MuxPod – A mobile tmux client for monitoring AI agents on the go

https://github.com/moezakura/mux-pod
1•moezakura•53m ago•0 comments

March for Billionaires

https://marchforbillionaires.org/
1•gscott•53m ago•0 comments

Turn Claude Code/OpenClaw into Your Local Lovart – AI Design MCP Server

https://github.com/jau123/MeiGen-Art
1•jaujaujau•53m ago•0 comments

An Nginx Engineer Took over AI's Benchmark Tool

https://github.com/hongzhidao/jsbench/tree/main/docs
1•zhidao9•56m ago•0 comments

Use fn-keys as fn-keys for chosen apps in OS X

https://www.balanci.ng/tools/karabiner-function-key-generator.html
1•thelollies•56m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation and exercise capacity in healthy volunteers

https://academic.oup.com/eurheartj/article/46/17/1634/8023896?login=false
106•PaulHoule•5mo ago

Comments

bob1029•5mo ago
You can stimulate your vagus nerve simply by breathing out slowly while under moderate exertion. The sensation can be very unpleasant, but it also tends to take you slightly out-of-body for a while which can help with pushing through difficult tasks.
kazinator•5mo ago
20th century Czech runner Emil Zatopek practiced, among other things, interval training with held breath. He could have been training his parasympathetic system just as well as respiration pathways.

It's been my experience in endurance exercise is that if you are inexperienced in it, you overreact to certain signals from your body like rising CO2 or falling O2. After just small effort of a short duration you start gasping for air. Years later, in retrospect, you wonder why you did that.

Another adaptation, in high latitude outdoor runners, is the adaptation to inhaling cold, wintry air. The unbearable burning that feels like you're inhaling alcohol somehow goes away. The interesting thing is that it appears to be permanent. Even if you're out of the game for few years, that discomfort doesn't come back. Could be psychological. If you've been there and done that, you dismiss the discomfort signals and don't pay attention to them.

imglorp•5mo ago
And before that, maybe the Apache "Mouthful of water run" which among other things enforced nasal breathing when training.

https://indigenousability.blogspot.com/2017/11/apache-runnin...

metalman•5mo ago
and then there is the ? Wim Hoffman, breathing method, which is somewhat startling and unpleasant if you do it right, but not realy horrible, and it does become routine quickly will try the mouthfull of water exercise
idontwantthis•5mo ago
I’ve tried that and it just feels like getting high to me. It didn’t have any lasting benefit.
michaelg7x•5mo ago
I wonder whether swimmers benefit from this, after all, they're breathing-constrained (if going at anything more than a comfortable pace).
brandonb•5mo ago
This paper is relevant to Long Covid, where many patients have reduced parasympathetic function and suffer post-exertional malaise (PEM). The fact that vagus nerve stimulation improves VO2Max in healthy volunteers is a nice proof of concept for a treatment that could then be tried in sicker populations.
biomcgary•5mo ago
I use a TENS unit with an almost identical setup to the paper (ear clip is the same, duration is the same, frequency is 30hz instead of 25hz).

My use of vagus stimulation is for managing anxiety and promoting digestion / gut motility. I have neck issues that probably impinge on this nerve, contributing to these symptoms. Evidence suggests that the effect isn't purely psychosomatic; when laying on my back with TENS, I observe an increased frequency of GI tract "gurgles" relative to off. The observable product of my GI tract has also normalized somewhat.

biomcgary•5mo ago
I forgot to mention that the entire setup is about $60 on Amazon, so, for the HN audience, the biggest factor to trying it will be your time and/or intellectual aversion to non-mainstream medicine :-).
donclark•5mo ago
Which unit do you recommend? I see a wide variation of pricing and options on Amazon. *and thank you
dfoo2•5mo ago
Do you have a unit you would recommend? I have pretty bad GI issues, anxiety and terrible posture.
biomcgary•5mo ago
I bought a TENS 7000, which is #1 in Amazon's "Muscle Stimulators & Accessories" category. Mine came with a 9V battery. The specific "tens ear clips" that I purchased are no longer on Amazon, but similar ones are around $20 for a pack of 3-4.

Note: some people place electrodes on the tragus, as in this paper, but others stimulate the concha. Tragus needs one two pad clip, concha needs two one pad clips. The rubber pads are just slightly bigger than the eraser of a number 2 pencil.

dfoo2•5mo ago
Thank you, i will give it a try
7839284023•5mo ago
Which mode on your TENS 7000 unit do you use when doing the vagus stimulation?

Burst, Normal or Modulation?

biomcgary•5mo ago
normal
akkartik•5mo ago
Sounds like the place to start reading is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcutaneous_electrical_nerv...
nathan_douglas•5mo ago
Hmm, this is interesting. I have rheumatoid arthritis and recently saw news of trials for using vagus stimulation to treat that. https://www.npr.org/sections/shots-health-news/2025/02/03/nx...

It looks like it operates somewhat differently to this, but I'd be, well, delighted to be able to reverse my RA, even if a few of my joints are already FUBAR.

kristianp•5mo ago
So they stimulate the Vagus nerve, exercise them to exhaustion and measure vo2 peak during the exercise. Done for 7 days.

Would be interesting to see the effect on athletes, you would expect no effect on them, but if there's any benefit people will try it to get any performance gain.

bravesoul2•5mo ago
28 sample size. And sham reduced capacity by half as much as the real thing increased it? Anyone got any comment on tbe conclusion as I am sceptical but can be persuaded maybe.
jdhwosnhw•5mo ago
Unfortunately I’m in the same boat. What appears especially telling is:

> tVNS applied for 30 min daily over 7 consecutive days increased VO2peak by 1.04 mL/kg/min (*95% CI: .34–1.73*; P = .005), compared with no change after sham stimulation (−0.54 mL/kg/min; *95% CI: −1.52 to .45*)

(emphasis mine) The 95% CIs for the case and control groups overlap. Seems borderline irresponsible to have a the abstract reporting a significant result.