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The AI CEO Experiment

https://yukicapital.com/blog/the-ai-ceo-experiment/
2•romainsimon•39s ago•0 comments

Speed up responses with fast mode

https://code.claude.com/docs/en/fast-mode
2•surprisetalk•4m ago•0 comments

MS-DOS game copy protection and cracks

https://www.dosdays.co.uk/topics/game_cracks.php
2•TheCraiggers•5m 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•6m 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
5•doener•6m ago•1 comments

MyFlames: Visualize MySQL query execution plans as interactive FlameGraphs

https://github.com/vgrippa/myflames
1•tanelpoder•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: LLM of Babel

https://clairefro.github.io/llm-of-babel/
1•marjipan200•7m ago•0 comments

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

https://github.com/lance0/xfr
3•tanelpoder•9m ago•0 comments

Famfamfam Silk icons – also with CSS spritesheet

https://github.com/legacy-icons/famfamfam-silk
1•thunderbong•9m 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•12m ago•0 comments

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

https://github.com/joshuanwalker/Raiders2600
2•todsacerdoti•14m ago•0 comments

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

https://github.com/yupme-bot/kernel-ndjson-proofs
1•Slaine•17m ago•0 comments

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

https://www.greatercphregion.com/friend-recruiter-program
2•mooreds•18m ago•0 comments

Do Not Confirm – Fiction by OpenClaw

https://thedailymolt.substack.com/p/do-not-confirm
1•jamesjyu•18m ago•0 comments

The Analytical Profile of Peas

https://www.fossanalytics.com/en/news-articles/more-industries/the-analytical-profile-of-peas
1•mooreds•18m 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•19m 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•19m ago•0 comments

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

https://twitter.com/lebed2045/status/2020184853271167186
1•lebed2045•20m ago•2 comments

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

https://anypanel.io
1•dasfelix•20m ago•0 comments

ClawdBot Ordered Me Lunch

https://nickalexander.org/drafts/auto-sandwich.html
3•nick007•21m ago•0 comments

What the News media thinks about your Indian stock investments

https://stocktrends.numerical.works/
1•mindaslab•22m ago•0 comments

Running Lua on a tiny console from 2001

https://ivie.codes/page/pokemon-mini-lua
1•Charmunk•23m ago•0 comments

Google and Microsoft Paying Creators $500K+ to Promote AI Tools

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/06/google-microsoft-pay-creators-500000-and-more-to-promote-ai.html
3•belter•25m ago•0 comments

New filtration technology could be game-changer in removal of PFAS

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jan/23/pfas-forever-chemicals-filtration
1•PaulHoule•26m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I saw this cool navigation reveal, so I made a simple HTML+CSS version

https://github.com/Momciloo/fun-with-clip-path
2•momciloo•27m ago•0 comments

Kinda Surprised by Seadance2's Moderation

https://seedanceai.me/
1•ri-vai•27m ago•2 comments

I Write Games in C (yes, C)

https://jonathanwhiting.com/writing/blog/games_in_c/
2•valyala•27m ago•1 comments

Django scales. Stop blaming the framework (part 1 of 3)

https://medium.com/@tk512/django-scales-stop-blaming-the-framework-part-1-of-3-a2b5b0ff811f
2•sgt•27m ago•0 comments

Malwarebytes Is Now in ChatGPT

https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/product/2026/02/scam-checking-just-got-easier-malwarebytes-is-n...
1•m-hodges•27m ago•0 comments

Thoughts on the job market in the age of LLMs

https://www.interconnects.ai/p/thoughts-on-the-hiring-market-in
1•gmays•28m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Midcentury North American Restaurant Placemats

https://casualarchivist.substack.com/p/order-up
201•NaOH•4mo ago

Comments

easton•4mo ago
Until this point I didn't know Big Tex was real and not just something in King of the Hill. And I've been to Texas!

Guess it's time to go back.

bombcar•4mo ago
https://www.roadsideamerica.com/ Has tons and tons of those-find some near your location!
interloxia•4mo ago
The Amazon CloudFront distribution is configured to block access from your country.

Which is what Internet Archive has as their latest scrape too.

The previous scrape worked: https://web.archive.org/web/20250906155345/https://www.roads...

bombcar•4mo ago
The location of the Big Potato is a secret of national import!
interloxia•4mo ago
In related news please note that the Big Potato in Robertson Australia has been painted and is now the Big Babe in celebration of the 30th Anniversary of the making of Babe the movie.

https://robertson.nsw.au/bigpotato.html

pixl97•4mo ago
Seeing the Texas maps without interstates was interesting too, they make up so much of our driving these days.
dreamcompiler•4mo ago
Very real. It burned up a few years ago and they rebuilt it.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Tex

Also the Alamo (as in "Remember The") still exists. It's now a museum in downtown San Antonio.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alamo_Mission

JKCalhoun•4mo ago
I've been scanning and cleaning up a 200 page book that is a collection of "Travel Mats" that were printed during the Route 66 heyday [1].

Each focuses on a specific highway and list motel and diner stops.

[1] Example: https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2F...

I should have it done and posted to archive.org this Fall sometime.

0xEF•4mo ago
Really appreciate work like this, thank you.

My wife is the creator in the relationship, making a variety of apparel and decorative things for the home. She takes a huge amount of inspiration in her designs from Midcentury stuff like this, so she'll be thrilled when I share this with her.

comrade1234•4mo ago
Reminds me of this collection of Chinese menus in North America dating back to 1896: https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-worlds-largest-col...

It was collected by a private collector in New York then recently sold to the university of Toronto. I first heard about it it maybe a decade ago and have been waiting for a coffee table book since.

I would also be interested in recipes to go with the historic menus. For example dishes with sweet and sour have changed a lot from more liquid and vinagery to the goopy sweet mess we get now.

CGMthrowaway•4mo ago
This is a great collection. I'd love to print up a custom one for hosting purposes. Anyone know a supplier who makes these off the shelf? Or will I have to work with a local print shop.
bombcar•4mo ago
Depends on how realistic you want it to be. Even a Kinko’s or whatever they call it now can print on a large piece of paper and you can get a tool to cut the edges and curled ways. But if you really want that quasi-white newspaper feel- you’re gonna have to find a supplier who can get you the paper.
jihadjihad•4mo ago
The IHOP one is great, almost looks like a poster for a midcentury film, like John Ford or something.
Theodores•4mo ago
These hark back to a time before franchises took over. Nowadays, anyone wanting a restaurant (and customers) is obligated to make it a McDonalds (or other well known chain). If they don't, then McBigChain comes to town and they have no customers.

What is odd about this state of affairs is that everyone wants Mom and Pop, family owned, unique diners, however, where do people go when the kids in the back want their Happy Meals? You always know what you are going to get in a chain, and that is the magic of franchising.

Hilift•4mo ago
There was a really good "chain" in the 1960s southeast US called Davis House (or Davis Brothers). It was a more upscale version of a restaurant that served mainly Kentucky Fried Chicken, although there was many other dishes.

"The restaurant was originally named Johnny Reb's Chick-Chuck-'N'-Shake, and was sold in 1966 to A. T. Davis, Tubby's brother, who became a franchisee of Col. Harlan Sanders' Kentucky Fried Chicken."

http://www.highwayhost.org/DavisBros/davisbros1.htm

https://mistercola.com/products/vintage-placemat-davis-broth...

kevin_thibedeau•4mo ago
These restaurants still exist in the US, in some regions more than others. Usually the placemats are loaded with ads for local businesses now and less interesting.
GJim•4mo ago
> Usually the placemats are loaded with ads

Somehow, it doesn't surprise me that is a thing in America.

GJim•4mo ago
Some very sensitive Americans must have downvoted that (rather factual) post!

Call it a comment on capitalism or what you will.

dendrite9•4mo ago
I've seen this in Europe since I was pretty young as well. Usually they were little entries on the edge of the placemats that looked like classifieds. Advertising hotels, museums, and maybe shops? I can't fully picture them but I'm pretty sure I've seen something like this in french, italian, english, dutch, and maybe danish or german? It might have something to do with where we stayed or ate but in general my travel has been business focused and we have been in smaller towns.
Theodores•4mo ago
They certainly do, however, there is just a menacing progression of these chains taking over. My parents home town in the UK used to be devoid of chains but now there is KFC, Subway, McDonalds, Dominos, Starbucks and some UK specific chains such as Greggs (sticky buns, sandwiches) and Costa (coffee).

Due to the decline of the High Street, there are always independent cafes, sandwich shops and coffee shops that come and go. These take advantage of the spots that used to be where decent shops that used to be. However, few of them have enough customers to last more than a year or two.

On the surface there is more choice than ever. However, the best bakery in town closed down as they couldn't balance the books any more. There also used to be several fish and chips shops and they went too, although it has to be said that there are no longer any fish in British waters, so that is no surprise.

Retail is always in flux, however, the place is turning into a veritable 'food desert' with a choice between junk food slop and pretentious gentrified expense, with no middle ground.

America is different because you do get places in the sparsely populated West where passing trade will support a diner, gas station and general store but not a gaggle of franchised chains. If the interstate comes to town though, you know that will change.

Ichthypresbyter•4mo ago
My favorite diner is just off an Interstate exit in Connecticut. I'm pretty sure it opened after the Interstate highway was built.

Whenever I'm in there, it seems busy. Part of the USP is that it's open 24/7 (something increasingly rare)...

InitialLastName•4mo ago
Tell me it's Blue Colony, because that's also one of my favorites. Packed at all times, but the food is perfect for a road trip break.
Ichthypresbyter•4mo ago
Got it in one!
technothrasher•4mo ago
My small New England town has McDonalds, Burger King, Subway, KFC, Chick-fil-a, Applebee's... and yet the independent diners are still always packed. The big box retailers have certainly driven off a lot of the local retail, but I don't think New Englanders are anywhere near ready yet to give up the local diner.
timeinput•4mo ago
I don't know how the town I live in can some how support two Greggs, a Starbucks, two Caffe Neros (Caffes Nero?), a Pret A Manger, and a Costa Coffee all with in a few hundred meters of each other, but the local bakery that opened a second location in the train station (basically on the high street) couldn't keep it open. At least the bakery still exists, just not in the center of town, and not where I'm getting on a train.
kevin_thibedeau•4mo ago
> not in the center of town

The rent is likely set assuming deep pocketed chains will be the only tenants. No surprise when they end up as the only tenants.

timeinput•4mo ago
I'm sure you're right.

It's just meant there isn't a coffee shop at the train station for six months. Greggs doesn't want to open a third branch there sadly.

mikestew•4mo ago
Placemats have been covered in ads for local businesses since I was a kid. I’m retirement age now, it’s hardly new.
MisterTea•4mo ago
> however, where do people go when the kids in the back want their Happy Meals?

Where ever the parent decides to go.

supportengineer•4mo ago
There's plenty of nice mom-and-pop diners in my town, you can get a nice breakfast for about $25 per person.
b112•4mo ago
You always know what you are going to get in a chain

I agree this is one main way McDonalds won, and others like it. Yet I feel as of late, the last 5 to 10 years or so, this is gone. I see terrible service in McDonalds. A lack of cleanliness where I'd never see it before. I feel that those policing franchises have just stopped, or don't fine as much.

I used to eat there when traveling a lot, but not so much now. And I used to eat there from time to time locally, but never bother now. The food is just too inconsistent.

And that's very bizarre, and sad, and while McDonalds has seen a drop in sales due to price hikes, I think this is part of it too.

mcphage•4mo ago
Mighty Taco used to have some pretty good placemats: https://www.mightytaco.com/AdVault (most of the way down on the page).
jmclnx•4mo ago
Very nice, I got a chuckle from the one that said "How do you want your eggs".

In the 80s where I worked, we had a large project to enhance the systems to our plant in Ireland. So for a couple of months a team from Ireland came here to the US to work with us.

The question "How do you want your eggs" at a breakfast place confused them to no end. Seems at the time in Ireland, eggs only were cooked one way, kind of like pouched. I do not know if that is now still true.

KineticLensman•4mo ago
(Brit here). When I used to travel to the US for work / holidays I was always amazed at how many breakfast options were available compared with UK ‘greasy spoon’ cafes. I used to make it a game to try to order breakfast specifying all the choices I wanted without the waiter having to ask me any questions.
bombela•4mo ago
Coming from France, the first time I was asked how I would like my eggs in the US I was incredibly confused. In France the menu would list the different cooking style the kitchen is offering explicitly. Many times they don't tell, it's whatever the kitchen chef decided was appropriate for the dish. In France it is also uncommon for the kitchen to customize the menu to your preference.
pessimizer•4mo ago
I'd just like to add to this little subthread that short-order cooking had a lot to do with this - it's the intermediate step we went through between family restaurants and fast food. When I think of a single person standing at his station making 100 customized meals for people over the space of a couple of hours, that's my idea of "socialism" working.

Incredibly hard to find real documentation on how short-order cooks work, but the best resource I've found (though brief) is Fast Foods and Short Order Cooking, by Pepper, Pratt and Winnick (1984). I've been dreaming about writing a manual for years, but I'd have to find some shifu to teach me. I was a grill cook (as a young person), but never had to handle the entire thing.

jmclnx•4mo ago
My cousin owned a dinner years ago. Finding a good short order cook was the hardest thing for her to do.

He son eventually took over and developed that skill quite well.

NaOH•4mo ago
Certainly not as precise nor as thorough as proper documentation, but you may be interested in this 2005 New Yorker piece: "The Egg Men: How breakfast gets served at the Flamingo hotel in Las Vegas."

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2005/09/05/the-egg-men

twic•4mo ago
Had a similar experience when i first went to the US. Apparently "fried" was not an adequate answer, because there are numerous ways to do that.
itomato•4mo ago
These are cool to remember. I recently sat down at a diner counter with my young daughter for one of her first experiences and the Florida placemat provided some multi-generational continuity that I appreciated. You can get them by the thousand: https://cibowares.com/products/florida-design-placemats-pack...
twic•4mo ago
The Ranch House (Central Pier, Atlantic City, NJ) offers a jelly omelette. A jelly omelette! Sounds mad to me but it's a thing:

https://ahundredyearsago.com/2021/10/17/old-fashioned-jelly-...

EDIT: a postcard from the Ranch House: https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth:x920...

mhuffman•4mo ago
When you realize that they make sweet crêpes just like this, it isn't so weird. It is like a fat sweet crêpe!
timeinput•4mo ago
If you like your eggs as a jellied omelette are you still "Sturdy, Reliable, Conservative" like THE BROOKSIDE RESTAURANT says?
twic•4mo ago
Reliably bonkers, i would say.
creddit•4mo ago
I think the Cliff's mat is quite attractive actually.

However, my favorite by far, is the Greenville Lodge! Such a pretty looking graphic but if you look closely at the address/location information you see "Opposite Du Pont Plant"! That's fantastically mid-century to me. It's like a subtle joke you would've seen on Mad Men.

My first impression from that mat was that it was AI generated hah

rorylaitila•4mo ago
Very cool. I found some vintage ads at an antique shop a decade ago... and now I have over 100k in inventory. I had to limit the collecting to only major publications. There is so much vintage paper to be found. But I'd like to find some placements with local ads if such a thing exists.

Last year I started publishing full page ads from the collection, I've got about 1000 online (https://adretro.com).

bkandel•4mo ago
This is fascinating! Would it be possible to add some explanations for some of the gay ads? I feel a little clueless but I don't really understand why some of those are targeting the gay community.
rorylaitila•4mo ago
Thanks! Maybe I'll add some detail. Some of them are in the eye of the beholder, and maybe I take a little liberty :) It's not that they are targeting the gay community directly, but they may have subtle homoerotic wink and a nod... They definitely are not overt and would have gone over the heads of most people at the time.
stronglikedan•4mo ago
That Florida one looks so familiar, that I'm sure I've visited someplace that used it. Or perhaps I'm just thinking of the maps of Italy that used to be popular on the placemats of Italian restaurants.
bluenose69•4mo ago
The cleanest one caught my eye, and then I read that it was a restaurant, Cy's, that was in Moncton, NB, about half an hour's drive from where I grew up. Although I never ate there, seeing that brought back fond childhood memories of the grownups talking about crossing the border to eat there.
chiph•4mo ago
I was wondering why Cy's had so much whitespace. Perhaps it was cheaper to print? Room for the kids to use their crayons? The waitress wrote your order on it and it got used as your receipt?

Or of course, they just liked it like that.

daryn•4mo ago
Love this! Menu design has really lost a lot of it's art, especially with online ordering.
burnt-resistor•4mo ago
I've seen some interesting modern ones in rural Oklahoma.
diogenescynic•4mo ago
These are beautiful. Love the character and level of detail put into them. Really glad this was shared.
poulsbohemian•4mo ago
Couple years ago I was in a thrift shop and came across one of these for a steak restaurant - and there was my family cattle brand! Was done to highlight that their meat came from area ranchers, and now will make lovely wall art at my home. No idea if anyone older in the family recalled these placemats or when they were printed.
caycep•4mo ago
Will they archive the "James Huang" placemats here in Southern California?
gdubs•4mo ago
As someone who grew up in the 80s/90s, this brings back memories because these types of placemats were still being used in a lot of places. And it's funny because today we talk about "iPad kids" and I'm reminded that staring at a mid-century designed map on a placement was basically the entirety of "entertainment" provided on the very rare occasion we went out to eat somewhere.