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Spit On, Sworn At, and Undeterred: What It's Like to Own a Cybertruck

https://www.wired.com/story/owning-a-cybertruck/
1•toomanyrichies•1m ago•0 comments

The job-sharing apps that feel like online dating

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67413201
1•edward•2m ago•0 comments

Understanding Spec-Driven-Development: Kiro, Spec-Kit, and Tessl

https://martinfowler.com/articles/exploring-gen-ai/sdd-3-tools.html
1•janpio•7m ago•0 comments

Fynx: MobX Magic for Python State Management

https://github.com/off-by-some/fynx
1•off-by-some•8m ago•0 comments

How the Iframe Tag Changed the World

https://blog.hmpl-lang.dev/2025/10/14/how-the-iframe-tag-changed-the-world/
1•aanthonymax•10m ago•0 comments

ripgrep 15.0.0

https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep/releases/tag/15.0.0
2•weinzierl•10m ago•0 comments

FDA Awards First-Ever National Priority Vouchers to Nine Sponsors

https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-awards-first-ever-national-priority-vouch...
1•impish9208•11m ago•1 comments

Distributed Ray-Tracing

https://www.4rknova.com//blog/2019/02/24/distributed-raytracing
1•ibobev•11m ago•0 comments

Jeffrey Meldrum, Scholar Who Stalked Bigfoot, Dies at 67

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/16/science/jeffrey-meldrum-dead.html
1•quapster•19m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: How would you rebuild software PM in non-software Big Co? And would you?

2•mstaoru•20m ago•0 comments

Decomposed dinosaurs make Texas a top destination for AI bit barns

https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/16/texas_ai_bitbarns/
1•rntn•22m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Did your Internet just go down for a few minutes?

1•alexfromapex•22m ago•1 comments

Former Trump adviser John Bolton criminally indicted

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgql2qzkz5zo
8•tartoran•23m ago•0 comments

Common Painkillers May Accelerate Antibiotic Resistance

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/common-painkillers-may-accelerate-antibiotic-resistance-2025...
1•wjb3•24m ago•2 comments

The role of diet quality and adiposity in the pain experience

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00394-025-03772-0
1•wjb3•26m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Shōmei – Mirror your work commits to personal GitHub (timestamps only)

https://github.com/PetarRan/shomei
1•petarran•27m ago•0 comments

Tron 2.0 (PC Game)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tron_2.0
2•JojoFatsani•27m ago•2 comments

Show HN: Code First CDC from Postgres to ClickHouse with MooseStack

https://github.com/514-labs/debezium-cdc
4•okane•27m ago•2 comments

California to begin selling affordable state-branded insulin beginning next year

https://apnews.com/article/california-affordable-insulin-415edd0b915677d2051d22b4b8f8121c
5•toomuchtodo•28m ago•1 comments

Show HN: The Fastest Way to Build a Website (Under 2 Minutes)

https://twitter.com/heresmyintro/status/1978609089312596152
1•lukefernandez•28m ago•0 comments

Are you safe? (Part 1)

1•security1011015•30m ago•0 comments

FOSS Android 16 on Apple Silicon / Darwin (+ QEMU)

https://github.com/jqssun/android-lineage-qemu
2•jqssun•32m ago•1 comments

Ron Conway Resigns Salesforce Foundation over Benioff's National Guard Comments

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/16/ron-conway-salesforce-san-francisco-00611579
5•rurp•33m ago•0 comments

Planet Unveils 'Owl' Satellite Fleet with 1M Class Imagery

https://aviationweek.com/
2•ggm•39m ago•2 comments

Forest soil properties influence arsenic mobility and toxicity in soil organisms

https://phys.org/news/2025-10-forest-soil-properties-arsenic-mobility.html
2•PaulHoule•39m ago•0 comments

Vulnerability scores, huh, what are they good for? Almost nothing

https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/16/cve_cvss_scores_not_useful/
3•rntn•39m ago•0 comments

I mapped AI Agent adoption across 217,000 GitHub repositories

https://alteredcraft.com/p/mapping-ai-agent-adoption-across
2•flowardnut•40m ago•1 comments

Nobody Cares How Hard You Work

https://alifeengineered.substack.com/p/nobody-cares-how-hard-you-work
3•mooreds•40m ago•1 comments

End of Windows 10 support is the perfect time for Windows 11 installer to fail

https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/13/windows_11_media_creation/
4•rolph•41m ago•0 comments

The quest to make babies with lab-grown eggs and sperm

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-03308-w
1•bookofjoe•41m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Why is Switzerland so rich?

https://simongrimm.substack.com/p/why-is-switzerland-so-rich
10•paulpauper•2h ago

Comments

dgb23•1h ago
As a counterweight from a Swiss:

Yes, Switzerland is in many ways liberal, but I think there are other major factors that the article misses.

For one, our infrastructure is in large parts owned by the public. Energy production is owned by cantons, public transportation and telecommunocations are owned by the confederation. Infrastructure investments are streamlined and funded in a very efficient way.

Secondly we have a consensus government. It was shortly mentioned but the article doesn‘t give it enough credit. I‘m horrified by political news from other European countries and the US, who have competitive governments. So much energy is wasted by political ping pong and permanent campaigning. In contrast: compromises formed by all major parties lead to stability and markets _thrive_ in stability. It’s boring but effective and it compounds.

Third is pure luck. We are simply in a geographic region that has always been economically active.

inglor_cz•1h ago
You also vote so often on public topics that it takes the sting out of politics.

In a standard country, you have only one chance in 4 or 5 years to change your politicians and then basically have to put up with everything the winners come up with, checks and balances notwithstanding. And the candidates are chasing enormous power.

In CH, the threat of a hostile referendum is always hanging over the heads of your politicians. Their position of power over their voters is much weaker than elsewhere.

I envy you your system. I wish we adopted it in 1990 after the Velvet Revolution. By now, our people would have learnt how to use it and would tame the excesses of the first years.

"We are simply in a geographic region that has always been economically active."

So is Iraq (since Antiquity) or South Africa (since the Age of Sail).

ciconia•1h ago
> You also vote so often on public topics that it takes the sting out of politics.

The sort of direct democracy of Switzerland is something that is sorely lacking in all other western democracies. It's pretty clear that representative democracy doesn't work anymore (if it ever had).

psunavy03•1h ago
Direct democracy can only work if fundamental rights are also protected, otherwise it just turns into the tyranny of the majority.
psunavy03•1h ago
One of the other things that strikes me about Switzerland compared to the US . . . there is no single President; there is a council, and the position of "head of state" is just a "first among equals" role which rotates through the council.

The older I get, I think one of the major flaws of the US system was creating a sole President. The great strengths of the US Constitution over many European ones (even given today's craziness) is that it explicitly sets up checks and balances amongst both the branches of the Federal government and between the states and the Feds. And it also uses the Bill of Rights to essentially ban even the most popular laws if they infringe fundamental human rights.

But despite all that, the singular President has turned into a king-like figure, because we can't seem to get around the fundamental human tendency to want a strongman leader. And this along with toxic partisanship is beginning to corrode everything I mentioned above. I really wonder if the Founders made a mistake not splitting executive power up amongst 3-5 people, merely because it might have counteracted this "worship the strong man" tendency in the human psyche.

inglor_cz•57m ago
I wonder how the US or any other presidential systems would look like with a rule "for every 25 per cent of the vote, the particular candidate gets a year in power".
greekrich92•43m ago
Capital wants a king-like figure in this moment, not human nature, nor The People.
dragonwriter•35m ago
Capital, in an existing capitalist system, never wants an actual (as opposed to a distracting but powerless figurehead, which they might want) king-like figure (because such a figure is a transfer of power from capital as the existing ruling class to the monarch-like leader), but it is also structurally vulnerable to the emergence of such figures because for each individual capitalist there is an incentive to cooperate with any emerging king-like figure to receive favorable treatment over other capitalists.

This is one of the areas where a popular leftist mantra tends to be right in its conclusion (“Capital will always side with fascism”)—and this works for a wide variety of authoritarianisms that don’t overtly seek the utter destruction of private capital, not just fascism in the narrow sense—but exactly backwards in its rationale (“because fascism does not threaten capital”, when in fact the reason is because fascism does threaten capital, but does so both less and less immediately for capital that cooperates with it than capital that resists.)

ithkuil•31m ago
Capital seems to work well in Switzerland too, where there is no opportunity for a king-like figure to arise.

Capital wants clear and stable rules. If a king can provide those, then Capital likes the king. I'm not sure clarity and stability of rules is a property of the upcoming american monarchy.

panick21_•31m ago
Any statement like 'Capital wants' is foolish. Because by nature there is competition, and very few things beyond the basics are good for all capital.

And if anything history often shows that capital doesn't want a king while the people demand it.

gruez•40m ago
>In CH, the threat of a hostile referendum is always hanging over the heads of your politicians. Their position of power over their voters is much weaker than elsewhere.

Don't many US states have ballot initiatives? How is this different than that?

panick21_•34m ago
Fellow Swiss here. I mostly agree. I think the consensus government is incredibly important. I think that style of governments lead to a system where the polices stay along the center of the opinion of people more or less. That leads to some progress (voting for woman) being late, but it also leads to no share turns and extreme adoption of one position or another. Even when those positions are reversed, they often leave behind some institutional decay.

Another factor outside of consensus government is the federalism of government. From outside people would not believe how federal Switzerland is. In terms of school system, you can take the train, go 5 villages over and the school system might be very different. Along with many other things that would be different.

The amount of federalism Switzerland is comparable to what the US has, except Switzerland has it for areas that would be counties in the US.

What this prevents is the ultra dominance of capital city regions like England or France has. Infrastructure is developed for the whole country (even if the French speaking parts endlessly complain about not getting enough, arguably for good reason).

I would say, one of secret of Swiss success is simply, don't do anything really badly. Everything is somewhere between good and great.

One of the things I think we are not very good at is digital government, but because the old school government works pretty good and government is pretty responsive its not as big a deal. But I would love to be Estonia level with that. This is one case were federalism makes things harder.

incomingpain•1h ago
Landlocked and not in the EU; though friendly of course.

Switzerland's wealth comes from a number of causes; like a high quality education for example. You might call this the 'developed' world or the 'high income' world.

But there are many countries with similar high quality education systems. The actual reason why they are doing better than those is actually narrow.

https://tradingeconomics.com/switzerland/government-debt-to-...

The one key thing they do better than the others is balancing their budget. You can have your welfare state, but someone has to pay for it.

If you have high taxes, people and businesses leave only when the value for your taxation doesnt meet expectations. Switzerland has high taxation; personal income tax of 40% means you work for the government 40% of the year. Did the government really provide you that much value? That's a personal decision.

What Switzerland is doing better than the others is balancing that. Ensuring value vs taxation ratio is correct. By keeping the debt low, your debt servicing it low and you provide more value per $.

How do you get here? They have a literal balanced budget amendment but how to get there? Their consensus government and the lack of us vs them is just so much better.

panick21_•20m ago
> personal income tax of 40% means you work for the government 40% of the year

In Switzerland government directly spends about 32.0% of GDP. That is well below OECD avg.

In how we got there. Basically the government was naturally pretty conservative in spending terms for a long term. In the 90s all of a sudden debt shot up, going from 10% of GDP to 30% of GDP in 10 years (that federal only, its more if you take all the rest). This was something that wasn't popular, and we voted on it.

https://www.bk.admin.ch/ch/d/pore/va/20011202/index.html

84.7% of people voted to adopt the "debt break". Since then debt as % of GDP has been going down or remained flat.

We did take on extra debt for Covid, but this by law has to be paid back by 2035.

ahtihn•15m ago
> Switzerland has high taxation;

It certainly does not. It's among the lowest in Europe. Significantly lower than surrounding countries.

Lapsa•1h ago
something something ww2
panick21_•48m ago
On the internet, anytime Switzerland is mentioned that is brought up. For some reason its brought up more then what literally any other country did during that time. This includes other neutral who worked more with the Nazis, and even Germany and German allies. Anytime Switzerland is mentioned on reddit or here people bring this up. This is kind of baffling to me, as in monetary terms it is really not a relevant factor.

The only explanation I have for this phenomenon is that this was in the news media a lot in the 90s, but so many other things were in the news more, but this thing seems to have entrained itself as the first thing that comes to mind when mentioning Switzerland.

tauchunfall•12m ago
>The only explanation I have for this phenomenon is that this was in the news media a lot in the 90s

With the 90s you mean the case of Christoph Meili? Maybe it's because it's a spectacular case and that makes it brought up more.

dismalaf•18m ago
In most democracies, political parties can be bought with money, whether it's oligarchs, corporations, dark money from foreign powers, or the politicians themselves might just be rich assholes.

In Switzerland they vote on issues directly so some lying politician can't just sneak in then act like a dictator for 4 years forcing laws no one wants through...

hateontheswiss•11m ago
Switzerland is the only western country that allows literal legal child slavery. Please look at Glencore and Nestle.
scotty79•11m ago
I think that never having your industrial economy wiped by industrial era war is quite unique. It's also the source of US wealth despite doing almost everything terribly bad.

Being a famous hidey spot for all sorts of criminal multi-millionaires also worked in Switzerland's favor.