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Apache Poison Fountain

https://gist.github.com/jwakely/a511a5cab5eb36d088ecd1659fcee1d5
1•atomic128•1m ago•0 comments

Web.whatsapp.com appears to be having issues syncing and sending messages

http://web.whatsapp.com
1•sabujp•2m ago•1 comments

Google in Your Terminal

https://gogcli.sh/
1•johlo•3m ago•0 comments

Shannon: Claude Code for Pen Testing

https://github.com/KeygraphHQ/shannon
1•hendler•3m ago•0 comments

Anthropic: Latest Claude model finds more than 500 vulnerabilities

https://www.scworld.com/news/anthropic-latest-claude-model-finds-more-than-500-vulnerabilities
1•Bender•8m ago•0 comments

Brooklyn cemetery plans human composting option, stirring interest and debate

https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/brooklyn-green-wood-cemetery-human-composting/
1•geox•8m ago•0 comments

Why the 'Strivers' Are Right

https://greyenlightenment.com/2026/02/03/the-strivers-were-right-all-along/
1•paulpauper•9m ago•0 comments

Brain Dumps as a Literary Form

https://davegriffith.substack.com/p/brain-dumps-as-a-literary-form
1•gmays•10m ago•0 comments

Agentic Coding and the Problem of Oracles

https://epkconsulting.substack.com/p/agentic-coding-and-the-problem-of
1•qingsworkshop•10m ago•0 comments

Malicious packages for dYdX cryptocurrency exchange empties user wallets

https://arstechnica.com/security/2026/02/malicious-packages-for-dydx-cryptocurrency-exchange-empt...
1•Bender•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a <400ms latency voice agent that runs on a 4gb vram GTX 1650"

https://github.com/pheonix-delta/axiom-voice-agent
1•shubham-coder•11m ago•0 comments

Penisgate erupts at Olympics; scandal exposes risks of bulking your bulge

https://arstechnica.com/health/2026/02/penisgate-erupts-at-olympics-scandal-exposes-risks-of-bulk...
4•Bender•11m ago•0 comments

Arcan Explained: A browser for different webs

https://arcan-fe.com/2026/01/26/arcan-explained-a-browser-for-different-webs/
1•fanf2•13m ago•0 comments

What did we learn from the AI Village in 2025?

https://theaidigest.org/village/blog/what-we-learned-2025
1•mrkO99•13m ago•0 comments

An open replacement for the IBM 3174 Establishment Controller

https://github.com/lowobservable/oec
1•bri3d•16m ago•0 comments

The P in PGP isn't for pain: encrypting emails in the browser

https://ckardaris.github.io/blog/2026/02/07/encrypted-email.html
2•ckardaris•18m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Mirror Parliament where users vote on top of politicians and draft laws

https://github.com/fokdelafons/lustra
1•fokdelafons•19m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Opus 4.6 ignoring instructions, how to use 4.5 in Claude Code instead?

1•Chance-Device•20m ago•0 comments

We Mourn Our Craft

https://nolanlawson.com/2026/02/07/we-mourn-our-craft/
1•ColinWright•23m ago•0 comments

Jim Fan calls pixels the ultimate motor controller

https://robotsandstartups.substack.com/p/humanoids-platform-urdf-kitchen-nvidias
1•robotlaunch•26m ago•0 comments

Exploring a Modern SMTPE 2110 Broadcast Truck with My Dad

https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2026/exploring-a-modern-smpte-2110-broadcast-truck-with-my-dad/
1•HotGarbage•26m ago•0 comments

AI UX Playground: Real-world examples of AI interaction design

https://www.aiuxplayground.com/
1•javiercr•27m ago•0 comments

The Field Guide to Design Futures

https://designfutures.guide/
1•andyjohnson0•28m ago•0 comments

The Other Leverage in Software and AI

https://tomtunguz.com/the-other-leverage-in-software-and-ai/
1•gmays•30m ago•0 comments

AUR malware scanner written in Rust

https://github.com/Sohimaster/traur
3•sohimaster•32m ago•1 comments

Free FFmpeg API [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RAuSVa4MLI
3•harshalone•32m ago•1 comments

Are AI agents ready for the workplace? A new benchmark raises doubts

https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/22/are-ai-agents-ready-for-the-workplace-a-new-benchmark-raises-do...
2•PaulHoule•37m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AI Watermark and Stego Scanner

https://ulrischa.github.io/AIWatermarkDetector/
1•ulrischa•37m ago•0 comments

Clarity vs. complexity: the invisible work of subtraction

https://www.alexscamp.com/p/clarity-vs-complexity-the-invisible
1•dovhyi•38m ago•0 comments

Solid-State Freezer Needs No Refrigerants

https://spectrum.ieee.org/subzero-elastocaloric-cooling
2•Brajeshwar•39m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

I don't buy Macs anymore

https://jasonsaidwhat.substack.com/p/the-story-of-why-i-dont-buy-macs
24•overbring_labs•5mo ago

Comments

koakuma-chan•5mo ago
I skimmed through the post, and it seems all his complaints predate Apple Silicon.
eqvinox•5mo ago
what has that got to do with anything in TFA?
koakuma-chan•5mo ago
Apple Silicon outweighs "company cultural values blah blah blah" ?
runjake•5mo ago
I read the full article and it wasn’t about the architecture, so Apple Silicon doesn’t change it. Their rant still applies, although I think much of it is out of their own ignorance.
SanjayMehta•5mo ago
His issue is with his one iMac’s drive failure, and Notes.

He didn’t enable iCloud backups properly and apparently Notes does not have a way to bulk export.

martinky24•5mo ago
OP lost me when he said the edges of his Mac were “painfully sharp”…
mattnewton•5mo ago
Low-T hipsters is when I closed the tab. Just.. what?
wk_end•5mo ago
Don’t forget “soft urban yupsters who don’t know adversity” and “pin-dick contrarians”.

Over-the-top machismo from a Karen crying about an incident ten years ago when his computer was too pointy and now he’ll never shop here again and he’ll make sure none of his friends shop here, either.

nomel•5mo ago
Why? I agree. I could send you pictures of indentations in my skin, right below my wrists, that are present on my arms right now. It's a bit better with the newest, thinner, generation, but last generation was uncomfortable enough that I would use wrist support, or drape a mousepad on the edge. An 8 hours shift of typing would get uncomfortable, with questions of "wtf happened to your wrists?". Not to mention the ever present indentation in my hand, like this [1]. I'm probably "holding it wrong".

[1] https://www.reddit.com/r/mac/comments/1k07yqj/sharp_edges/

kccqzy•5mo ago
Exactly. I have carried my 27-inch retina iMac multiple times. It's only slightly sharper than the typical monitor given its thinness. But "painfully sharp" really? OP probably just has soft hands.
jameshart•5mo ago
The claim that Apple don’t deserve to be praised for their UX because Apple is a hardware company, so therefore are not constrained by the realities affecting software businesses, and are thus able to pursue an uncompromised user experience… is rather given the lie by the fact that every other hardware vendor is universally and uniformly terrible at UX.
makeitdouble•5mo ago
It can be looked at from a different angle: Apple always had a more restricted ecosystem (even now, when arguably it's at peak popularity), driven by a "our way or the highway" mentality that helps keep the experience within a happy path while forcing other needs outside of the platform.

It's not a ding against Apple, if you're running a select shop people expect a curated experience, but you can't look at it the same way as a home center or hardware shop.

pshirshov•5mo ago
My M2 Air is my last Mac. I'm so fed with gatekeeper breaking Nix packages randomly that I decided to buy a Framework laptop.
dlivingston•5mo ago
Not surprised. I've heard Nix support on macOS is significantly worse than Linux.
herval•5mo ago
What makes someone write so many words just to tell the world they don’t like a brand?
smitty1e•5mo ago
Years of pent-up frustration that were spleen-dumped into the post, as far as I can tell.
koakuma-chan•5mo ago
Could also be the bias that longer text is better.
adamredwoods•5mo ago
Computers are so integrated into our daily lives, OS, hardware are worthy of any critique. I also feel those choices are getting smaller.
jondwillis•5mo ago
I'll never get those five minutes back. Author is too busy dunking on low-T hipsters (no need to call me names) and imagined pin-dicked Apple employees while blathering on about skill issues.

Woah, walled-garden company doesn't have a convenient way for you to exit?

>NoteStore.sqlite

cosmic_cheese•5mo ago
Yeah, was gonna comment on the Notes format myself. It uses SQLite (as most Apple apps do) and individual note data is saved as gzipped binary blobs. Not the most arcane storage scheme out there by a long shot.

There’s ways to automate note exporting with AppleScript, too. The Notes app surfaces notes content in both plain text and HTML forms. Here’s an AppleScript and Automator workflow I found that does exactly that: https://github.com/johansan/AppleNotesExport

Not that export couldn’t be better, but post author clearly didn’t go far in researching any of this. All assumption no problem solving.

throw310822•5mo ago
Reminds me of the day I found an iPod mini on the ground, brought it home, had to download an entire damn software to put songs into it, and when I accessed it as a storage I discovered all the song names had become UUIDs. Fucking LOL.
Esophagus4•5mo ago
Have you considered that it was actually a whole bunch of records whose song names HAPPENED to be UUIDs??
throw310822•5mo ago
Damn! Now that I think of it, it was indeed an album by my favourite band, b93cf126-32b5-4806-90bd-7abdea4bee34!
firesteelrain•5mo ago
> Not only does the computer have no grab handles, but every single edge is painfully sharp. The iMac’s physical housing was designed to be “art” rather than a functional tool.

How many people are moving their computers like this?

I have a Dell Laptop and Monitor on my desk now. I move the laptop, never the monitor. It has lots of dust on it to prove it.

Not sure of the Author’s point

commandersaki•5mo ago
I find similarly annoying issues with Mac software and hardware. Exporting all your keychain settings can't be done as a bulk export last time I tried; it kept prompting my password for every entry using the `security` cli tool. I had a fusion drive iMac at my workplace and it was a horrid experience, and similarly I've had butterfly keyboard Macbooks were pretty unusable (I gave up on work laptops and just use my 2015 Macbook Pro) etc.

But I find the competitors in shambles. The hardware for virtually all PC laptops is pretty horrible. Software and UX have their own issues etc.

What keeps me on the Mac is Apple dedication to accessible technologies and having a *nix base, and for the most part they've been pretty consistent with that offering.

nottorp•5mo ago
> But I find the competitors in shambles.

That's the really sad part. Apple only has to be better than Windows :)

makeitdouble•5mo ago
That rant was long.

My take after having been in the Apple ecosystem for a while: it's perfect if you can throw money at any issues.

The author's issue with notes not exporting goes away if he had multiple Mac's and never cared to move away from the walled garden.

People pissed about gaming on the mac are IMHO in the same boat, the real answer is usually "buy a console or gaming PC", or in other words "throw money at it".

People wanting cellular on the mac solved the issue with money (either an iPhone or portable WiFi). People wanting the iPad to do more solved it with money (permanent server connection and/or Mac screen sharing).

For people who don't have money to throw around, that ecosystem will just be pain at all turns IMHO. (It might be well worth it, but you need to be willing to commit that money in the first place)

Esophagus4•5mo ago
Awful rant of an article, but I will say… Apple had a really frustrating period for laptops for a while. It was so bad that, while I loved OSX, I bought a different laptop.

- the early butterfly keyboards were fragile, difficult to type with, and stuff got stuck in them

- USB-C only transition made me have to use adapters everywhere

- the touch bar (and software escape key) was atrocious

- the glass screens were too thin and could break easily

They’ve fixed most of those issues since, but man, for a few years they were awful machines.

nottorp•5mo ago
> the early butterfly keyboards were fragile

... and the last butterfly keyboards. I bought one after they added extra insulation under the keys (or whatever they pretended to do) and it broke in a couple months just like the early ones.

"As such, they are not intended to encounter circumstances that don’t track to the lifestyle of the average Apple employee."

This one is right. For the wrong reasons.

poemxo•5mo ago
Why didn't he just use dtrace to find his notes, or make a bunch of changes to a note and do a find command, leading him to the sqlite file he needed?

Idk it seems to me like I just read something written by someone who considers himself a computer expert because he built a computer, but doesn't actually know anything.

D13Fd•5mo ago
This article is a pretty lame rant.

I'm no engineer, but I know I need to back up my Mac, just like every other PC. I run Arq and back it up to cloud storage, and I also have a sync program set up to back up my most critical files to secondary locations.

Yes, Notes is proprietary. But why is that a surprise? It basically says it on the tin. That's exactly why I have never used it. I used Notational Velocity, nvAlt, some others, and ultimately Obsidian. All my notes are text files that have followed me for 1.5 decades, through multiple Macs.

As he tells it, Apple support put in the effort to figure out how to restore his Apple notes on his old computer, including walking him through an OS upgrade to do it. And that's supposed to be a bad thing? It sounds like a pretty amazing support experience, honestly.

He says he can't export Notes individually. I don't use Notes at all. But I popped open Apple's Script Editor just now, pulled up the Notes dictionary, and I see AppleScript commands for opening notes and for saving them in particular formats. You can also read the "HTML content of each note." It should be pretty simple to set something up to pull each note and save them in plain text format as he originally thought. I bet this is better than most notetaking apps with proprietary formats.

This whole article basically boils down to "I didn't back up my stuff, Apple bent over backwards to help me recover it, but I don't like the Notes PDF export format or the sharp edges on the hardware so I think Macs suck."

throw310822•5mo ago
Sorry, just to recap what you are saying:

- Apple ships with the OS a notes app that is proprietary and not open enough for you;

- You do prefer to save your notes in different formats than notes does because of portability;

- The OS app lacks basic functionality to export notes;

- You need to write code to actually export your damn notes.

How is this not a disappointing UX experience for a 3 trillion company that is celebrated for its UX escapes me.

D13Fd•5mo ago
I bought a computer with an OS. I don't need or want a note taking app from the OS vendor, or a document editing app, or a photo editing app. Their note taking app is just irrelevant to me - I want a computer and an OS from them. For a note taking app and many other programs, I'd rather use one of the various great (and sometimes open source) options.

I'm not expecting Apple to write a notes app that tops Obsidian, a photo management app that beats Lightroom, or a news reader that beats NetNewsWire, etc etc.

The point about writing code to export from Notes was to show that, if a person nonetheless chooses for whatever reason to use the free note taking app they ship with the OS, then they can still export things.

abstractspoon•5mo ago
Hell hath no fury like a scorned Appleboi
brador•5mo ago
Apple notes were stored in SQL format if I remember correctly. So you gotta find that hidden database file in the computer.