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Show HN: 83K lines of C++ – cryptocurrency written from scratch, not a fork

https://github.com/Kristian5013/flow-protocol
1•kristianXXI•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: SAA – A minimal shell-as-chat agent using only Bash

https://github.com/moravy-mochi/saa
1•mrvmochi•3m ago•0 comments

Mario Tchou

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mario_Tchou
1•simonebrunozzi•4m ago•0 comments

Does Anyone Even Know What's Happening in Zim?

https://mayberay.bearblog.dev/does-anyone-even-know-whats-happening-in-zim-right-now/
1•mugamuga•4m ago•0 comments

The last Morse code maritime radio station in North America [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzN-D0yIkGQ
1•austinallegro•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Hacker Newspaper – Yet another HN front end optimized for mobile

https://hackernews.paperd.ink/
1•robertlangdon•7m ago•0 comments

OpenClaw Is Changing My Life

https://reorx.com/blog/openclaw-is-changing-my-life/
1•novoreorx•16m ago•0 comments

Everything you need to know about lasers in one photo

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Commercial_laser_lines.svg
1•mahirsaid•18m ago•0 comments

SCOTUS to decide if 1988 video tape privacy law applies to internet uses

https://www.jurist.org/news/2026/01/us-supreme-court-to-decide-if-1988-video-tape-privacy-law-app...
1•voxadam•19m ago•0 comments

Epstein files reveal deeper ties to scientists than previously known

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00388-0
1•XzetaU8•26m ago•0 comments

Red teamers arrested conducting a penetration test

https://www.infosecinstitute.com/podcast/red-teamers-arrested-conducting-a-penetration-test/
1•begueradj•33m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Open-source AI powered Kubernetes IDE

https://github.com/agentkube/agentkube
1•saiyampathak•37m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Lucid – Use LLM hallucination to generate verified software specs

https://github.com/gtsbahamas/hallucination-reversing-system
1•tywells•39m ago•0 comments

AI Doesn't Write Every Framework Equally Well

https://x.com/SevenviewSteve/article/2019601506429730976
1•Osiris30•43m ago•0 comments

Aisbf – an intelligent routing proxy for OpenAI compatible clients

https://pypi.org/project/aisbf/
1•nextime•43m ago•1 comments

Let's handle 1M requests per second

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4EwfEU8CGA
1•4pkjai•44m ago•0 comments

OpenClaw Partners with VirusTotal for Skill Security

https://openclaw.ai/blog/virustotal-partnership
1•zhizhenchi•45m ago•0 comments

Goal: Ship 1M Lines of Code Daily

2•feastingonslop•55m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Codex-mem, 90% fewer tokens for Codex

https://github.com/StartripAI/codex-mem
1•alfredray•57m ago•0 comments

FastLangML: FastLangML:Context‑aware lang detector for short conversational text

https://github.com/pnrajan/fastlangml
1•sachuin23•1h ago•1 comments

LineageOS 23.2

https://lineageos.org/Changelog-31/
2•pentagrama•1h ago•0 comments

Crypto Deposit Frauds

2•wwdesouza•1h ago•0 comments

Substack makes money from hosting Nazi newsletters

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/feb/07/revealed-how-substack-makes-money-from-hosting-nazi...
4•lostlogin•1h ago•0 comments

Framing an LLM as a safety researcher changes its language, not its judgement

https://lab.fukami.eu/LLMAAJ
1•dogacel•1h ago•0 comments

Are there anyone interested about a creator economy startup

1•Nejana•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Skill Lab – CLI tool for testing and quality scoring agent skills

https://github.com/8ddieHu0314/Skill-Lab
1•qu4rk5314•1h ago•0 comments

2003: What is Google's Ultimate Goal? [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqdi1xjtys4
1•1659447091•1h ago•0 comments

Roger Ebert Reviews "The Shawshank Redemption"

https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-the-shawshank-redemption-1994
1•monero-xmr•1h ago•0 comments

Busy Months in KDE Linux

https://pointieststick.com/2026/02/06/busy-months-in-kde-linux/
1•todsacerdoti•1h ago•0 comments

Zram as Swap

https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Zram#Usage_as_swap
1•seansh•1h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Life, Work, Death and the Peasant, Part V: Life in Cycles

https://acoup.blog/2025/10/17/collections-life-work-death-and-the-peasant-part-v-life-in-cycles/
86•bell-cot•3mo ago

Comments

throwup238•3mo ago
This is a great series and I’d love to see an addendum covering different staples like rice, alternative social structures like tribal systems, and the impacts of different forms of irrigation.
bell-cot•3mo ago
From memory - Prof. Devereaux has briefly touched on those a few times. But with heavy disclaimers that all are outside his own areas of historical expertise - so anyone who cares should go read accounts by subject-matter experts.
jstanley•3mo ago
> the heavy extraction regime they operate under

It might be interesting to quantify this. How does it compare to typical tax rates today?

claytonwramsey•3mo ago
This is covered in a previous article: https://acoup.blog/2025/09/12/collections-life-work-death-an...

In short, most peasant farmers must sharecrop at least some of their land, and on sharecropped land, extraction rates are on the order of 50% (for basically nothing in return).

nosianu•3mo ago
> for basically nothing in return

Basix protection and basic law? Sure, far from an ideal model we would have in mind today, the comparison is against a completely "free" society as in much much longer ago.

> must sharecrop at least some of their land, and on sharecropped land, extraction rates are on the order of 50% (for basically nothing in return).

Uhm... so half of an unknown number? That's also an unknown number then, and the very concrete "50%" means nothing.

I'm only complaining about the TL;DR, the original article is great. After reading it, I think there is no good TL;DR possible. There is too much to consider, actually reading that link seems and unavoidable if one actually wants to know. Would someone in two hundred years looking at average income in the US today as the one or two sentence TL;DR have a useful picture of what life is like in the US today?

jalapenos•3mo ago
The rate floated around a lot by time period and domain, but 50% is a good approx figure.
nosianu•3mo ago
Reminder what the OP wrote, split into the two statements for more clarity:

> must sharecrop at least some of their land, and

> on sharecropped land, extraction rates are on the order of 50

That's not 50%. That's 50% of an unknown number.

jalapenos•3mo ago
And certainly that this statement about a 50% figure on the internet has not come with an absolute value is very important.
lm28469•3mo ago
> extraction rates are on the order of 50% (for basically nothing in return).

Hey that's pretty much what we have in Germany, probably even higher thanks to vat, capital gains, &c.

multjoy•3mo ago
You have roads, infrastructure, a social security system, hospitals, schools…

The peasant got nothing.

jalapenos•3mo ago
Not quite, there was social spending on things like (simple) roads and temples (which could double as schools), but obviously nothing close to today's (wealthy) standards.
lm28469•3mo ago
Yet I have to wait 2 months (literally) to have an orthopedic doctor look at my broken foot, by that time whatever could have been improved will be long fucked, or I have to go private and pay 100% out of my pocket. I don't own a car, can't afford kids, can't move out of my old contract: it would triple my rent to get an extra room, as for the pension I'll see when I'm 75 or whatever age they decide to make us slave until.

There are lots of countries with roads and hospitals that don't take that much, when I go to poland or other central european countries it feels like a upgrade, most people own their place, working pays in a way that your encouraged to work more, not less, hospitals are fine and much more accessible than in germany or france

xen0•3mo ago
Part 4c (this is quite a long series) goes into some detail here. https://acoup.blog/2025/09/12/collections-life-work-death-an...

My own interpretation is that it's difficult to precisely compare how peasants were exploited to modern taxation regimes in the developed world. Perhaps more as an unfavorable relationship with the only employer in town?

bell-cot•3mo ago
(Numerical) tax rates seem a very poor way to describe the reality of peasant life.

Generally, it was closer to "extract until the rate of malnutrition deaths and desperate uprising makes it not worth trying to extract yet more".

jalapenos•3mo ago
I'd say that since today, modern western government spending floats around 50% of the total, and that's widely believed roughly the average tax rate of feudal times (with big variance by place and time), they're about the same proportion wise.

The difference of course being, in our wealthy age, the communal benefits nowadays are similarly greater.

I think certain comparisons regarding social spending now are just cultural self-congratulation.

For instance, yes a politician can't just pocket any takings directly. Instead, it has to be indirect - post-office speaking fees, consulting, etc, that can easily render them far richer than any manor lord of old.

Also in such undeveloped, poor, and violent times, the value of law, military power, as well as what communal spending did happen - a granary, a road, a temple - would have similar value parity to them then as to us for what we get in the modern era.