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66 million-year-old dinosaur ‘mummy’ skin was actually a perfect clay mask

https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/23/science/duck-billed-dinosaur-mummy-clay-mask
1•breve•1m ago•0 comments

Forgejo v13.0.2 contains critical security fixes

https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/src/branch/forgejo/release-notes-published/13.0.2.md
1•kassner•3m ago•1 comments

Washington lawyer on furlough lives out dream of running a hot dog cart

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/washington-lawyer-furlough-lives-out-dream-running-hot-dog-cart-...
2•hansmayer•6m ago•0 comments

GenAI Image Editing Showdown

https://genai-showdown.specr.net/image-editing
2•Hard_Space•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Project Journal – Give AI coding assistants persistent memory

https://github.com/CursorWP/ai-project-journal
1•CursorWP•18m ago•0 comments

Sandbox Your Program Using FreeBSD's Capsicum [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ne4l5U_ETAw
1•todsacerdoti•18m ago•0 comments

TIL: Figma provides a helper function for gradient transforms

https://wpconverters.com/demystifying-figmas-gradient-transformations-a-developers-guide
1•drzivil•24m ago•1 comments

Scientists are racing to grow human teeth in the lab

https://www.cnn.com/science/lab-grown-human-teeth-spc
1•breve•26m ago•0 comments

We want to move Ruby forward

https://andre.arko.net/2025/10/26/we-want-to-move-ruby-forward/
3•ciconia•29m ago•0 comments

The Magic of Precision Engineering

https://www.hightechinstitute.nl/the-magic-of-precision-engineering/
2•o4c•51m ago•1 comments

Gluing and framing a 9000-piece jigsaw

https://river.me/blog/puzzle-glue-9000/
1•busymom0•57m ago•0 comments

AI Pullback Has Officially Started

https://www.planetearthandbeyond.co/p/ai-pullback-has-officially-started
3•danfritz•1h ago•0 comments

Lampedusa's 1958 Novel The Leopard skewered the super-rich

https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20250304-the-leopard-the-1958-italian-novel-that-skewered-the...
1•walterbell•1h ago•0 comments

Practical Defenses Against Technofascism

https://micahflee.com/practical-defenses-against-technofascism/
3•HotGarbage•1h ago•0 comments

The Magna Anima Genius Project

https://magnaanimageniusproject.substack.com/
1•jbutlergenius•1h ago•0 comments

Raster Master v5.4 Sprite/Tile/Map Editor 88 Stars on GitHub

https://github.com/RetroNick2020/raster-master/releases/tag/v5.4R121
3•retronick2020•1h ago•0 comments

Salesforce Enterprise Deep Research

https://github.com/SalesforceAIResearch/enterprise-deep-research
2•Raven603•1h ago•2 comments

Operating Systems Written in Free Pascal

https://wiki.freepascal.org/Operating_Systems_written_in_FPC
2•kristianp•1h ago•0 comments

Sustained western growth and Artificial Intelligence

https://datagubbe.se/llmfix/
2•brazukadev•1h ago•0 comments

Tell HN: Don't Vibe Your Design

2•davidtranjs•1h ago•1 comments

Hey LLM, write production-ready code

https://wejn.org/2025/10/llm-write-production-ready-code/
1•wejn•1h ago•1 comments

Student Handcuffed After School's AI System Mistakes a Bag of Chips for a Gun

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/oct/24/baltimore-student-ai-gun-detection-system-doritos
4•m463•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: I analyzed 3,465 remote job listings – 72% hide salary information

https://no-commute-jobs.com/blog/remote-work-statistics-2025
1•remimatteo•1h ago•1 comments

Why bosses need to wake up to dark patterns

https://www.economist.com/business/2025/10/16/why-bosses-need-to-wake-up-to-dark-patterns
1•Austin_Conlon•1h ago•0 comments

The Layer 1 Blockchain Built for AI Agent

https://harvestai.co/
1•salkahfi•2h ago•0 comments

Success Always Spawns Haters

https://world.hey.com/dhh/success-always-spawns-haters-75edaede
1•doppp•2h ago•0 comments

DHS Posts Video Featuring Song Popular with Nazi Creators

https://gizmodo.com/dhs-little-dark-age-nazi-video-2000676359
2•nobody9999•2h ago•1 comments

Language Modeling with Hierarchical Reasoning Models: Lessons from 1M Parameters

https://williamthurston.com/ml/language-models/transformers/2025/10/25/language-modeling-with-hie...
2•jhspaybar•2h ago•0 comments

GameStop Declares Console Wars Over

https://twitter.com/gamestop/status/1982213786221109263
2•avonmach•2h ago•1 comments

Quick Dungeon Crawler Update 3.5.0: New Passives, CRIT DMG Nerf

https://dungeon.werkstattl.com/
1•logTom•2h ago•3 comments
Open in hackernews

In memory of the Christmas Island shrew

https://news.mongabay.com/2025/10/in-memory-of-the-christmas-island-shrew/
68•hexhowells•10h ago

Comments

WorkerBee28474•10h ago
> by 1908 the shrew was thought extinct... Brief rediscoveries in 1958 and 1984 brought fleeting hope

So 2025 might be the 4th time the shrew has been declared extinct.

cubefox•10h ago
No?
culi•1h ago
First time it's been scientifically declared extinct.
cactusplant7374•8h ago
It's hard to imagine an animal like a shrew weighs only 6 grams.
WastedCucumber•8h ago
Try the etruscan shrew, they weigh about two grams.
pregseahorses•6h ago
Yes, abundant on Socotra island. I recently explored Socotra on Google Earth and and was surprised I had never heared about this isolated, prestine Island. One of its caves is a treasure trove of writings/drawings by travellers from various parts of the world over the centuries.
yareally•5h ago
The bee hummingbird weights 2 grams and it's 6cm long (about 2 inches) including the tail.

I always thought my budgerigar weighed nothing at 30grams (about an ounce), but he's not even close.

pants2•1h ago
Incredible that they have the same general hardware as any other mammal, compare a shrew to a blue whale, potentially 50,000,000X heavier - they both have one heart, two eyes, hearing, smell, lungs, sex organs, kidneys, brain, spine, etc.

It's fascinating.

deadbabe•8h ago
how could they say with any certainty it is extinct? It is tiny.
analog31•8h ago
I'm a scientist, and I work in a setting where there are a lot of non-scientists including engineers, managers, etc.

A word like "extinct" sounds like an absolute, and a rigorous statement would include a detailed disclaimer about the limitations of talking in absolute terms, such as "within the limits of our knowledge, and we could be wrong, yadda yadda."

When talking amongst scientists, those disclaimers are unnecessary because scientific thinking is taken for granted. Thus we talk in abbreviated terms, for instance where "extinct" implies "extinct, with all of the usual disclaimers."

But I think scientists have to remember that this is a habit, and most normal people don't get it. And then our words get filtered through the press. I think an article like this could include a brief working definition of "declared extinct" which would help reinforce the idea that what we sacrifice as the price of scientific knowledge, is absolute knowledge.

swagmoose•7h ago
I think I knew this deep down, but I am curious if there's "extinct (with the usual disclaimers)" and "extinct (it ain't comin back)". i.e. the Christmas Island Shrew vs. the Dodo
JKCalhoun•6h ago
Maybe the difference between the Dodo and the Christmas Island Shrew is 350 years.

Which is to say, the certainty of the Dodo's extinction is related to how long we've not seen one.

Every year that passes then without the shrew will be to underscore its extinction, I suppose. Sad.

analog31•5h ago
I have a feeling that it depends to some extent on the organism. It would be hard for a breeding pair of Dodo's to hide for very long, whereas a colony of little shrews could creep around in the bushes without notice. "Last seen on X date" would cover both cases.
teddyh•3h ago
This comes to mind: <https://x.com/MNateShyamalan/status/1951252793827729739>
analog31•2h ago
Indeed, I continue to feel humbled by the vastness of the natural world.
micromacrofoot•8h ago
with a population this low it would be functionally extinct anyway, not enough genetic diversity
duskwuff•5h ago
At 52 square miles, Christmas Island isn't terribly large either. And, given that shrews have a lifetime of perhaps a year or two and there's been no sightings in 40+ years, it seems unlikely that a stable breeding population has survived unnoticed.
culi•4h ago
Well it sounds like they replaced their native habitat with a phosphate mine. Seems like a wholesale displacement. Hard to imagine surviving not just your population hit but your entire ecosystem
HotGarbage•6h ago
I thought this was going to an obituary for the resident who got the original goatse.cx taken down.
culi•4h ago
> Yet it was not quite gone. Half a century later, in 1958, two shrews appeared as bulldozers tore into the forest for phosphate mining. They were seen, released, and forgotten.

I wonder how many thought-to-be-extinct species were not seen before it was too late. It's also wild that they were simply released instead of being moved to captivity to try to breed

fritzo•37m ago
Unpopular opinion: hundreds of years from now, loss of mammalian species will seem like sentimental naval gazing when our descendants consider the millions of strains of fungi, bacteria, archaea, and viruses we could have saved, were it not for our micro-blindness.