frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Office365 Is Down

https://status.cloud.microsoft/m365/referrer=serviceStatusRedirect
2•major505•1m ago•1 comments

NPM flooded with malicious packages downloaded more than 86,000 times

https://arstechnica.com/security/2025/10/npm-flooded-with-malicious-packages-downloaded-more-than...
1•jnord•9m ago•0 comments

Adding quantum resistance to WireGuard (2021)

https://kudelskisecurity.com/research/adding-quantum-resistance-to-wireguard
1•car•11m ago•0 comments

Drew Struzan, Masterly Painter of Movie Posters, Dies at 78

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/26/obituaries/drew-struzan-dead.html
3•bookofjoe•13m ago•1 comments

Post-Quantum Cryptography in WireGuard VPN (2019) [pdf]

https://sar.informatik.hu-berlin.de/research/publications/SAR-PR-2020-03/SAR-PR-2020-03_.pdf
1•car•13m ago•0 comments

Post-Quantum-secure WireGuard tunnels

https://github.com/mullvad/wgephemeralpeer
1•car•16m ago•0 comments

I built an faster Notion in Rust

https://imedadel.com/outcrop/
2•birdculture•16m ago•0 comments

A Minimal Route to Transformer Attention

https://www.neelsomaniblog.com/p/a-minimal-route-to-transformer-attention
1•nsomani•20m ago•0 comments

Goodnight, MTV – Gen X fades along with the network

https://unherd.com/2025/10/goodnight-mtv/
2•jnord•20m ago•0 comments

OpenAI lays groundwork for juggernaut IPO at up to $1T valuation

https://www.reuters.com/business/openai-lays-groundwork-juggernaut-ipo-up-1-trillion-valuation-20...
1•dvrp•24m ago•2 comments

OpenAI may target $1T valuation in IPO

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-10-29/openai-could-target-1-trillion-value-in-ipo-re...
1•dvrp•25m ago•1 comments

OpenAI lays groundwork for IPO at up to $1 trillion valuation

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-openai-lays-groundwork-juggernaut-232125990.html
1•dvrp•27m ago•1 comments

Autopilot, Copilot, and Software Developers

https://rahulpandita.me/blog/2025-10-12-Copilot
1•azhenley•32m ago•0 comments

Space Type Generator

https://spacetypegenerator.com/
1•colinprince•34m ago•0 comments

A Man Who Keeps Predicting the Web's Death

https://tedium.co/2025/10/25/web-dead-predictions-george-colony/
1•shortformblog•35m ago•0 comments

Space Exploration Logo Archive

https://spaceexplorationlogoarchive.webflow.io/
1•gnabgib•45m ago•0 comments

Column Tax's master plan to automate tax filing (just between you and me)

https://www.columntax.com/blog/our-secret-master-plan-to-automate-tax-filing
1•michaelrbock•47m ago•0 comments

Eclipse Opens Up Enterprise AI Agent Development with ADL

https://thenewstack.io/eclipse-opens-up-enterprise-ai-agent-development-with-adl/
1•Jayfish258•49m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Hacker News in Dark Mode

https://hn.sysopscafe.com/
3•dbaio•50m ago•1 comments

Nvidia Is Now Worth $5T as It Consolidates Power

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/29/technology/nvidia-value-market-ai.html
1•perihelions•50m ago•0 comments

F-Droid Accuses Google of Restricting Sideloading with New Verification Rules

https://reclaimthenet.org/f-droid-accuses-google-of-restricting-sideloading-with-new-verification...
2•anonymousiam•51m ago•1 comments

OS/2 Warp, PowerPC Edition

https://www.os2museum.com/wp/os2-history/os2-warp-powerpc-edition/
4•TMWNN•55m ago•0 comments

My GSoC Journey: Contributing to Chrome Extensions

https://developer.chrome.com/blog/gsoc-2025-extensions
2•tech234a•56m ago•1 comments

Are migrations good for your career?

https://www.stevenoxley.com/blog/2025/10/29/are-migrations-good-for-your-career/
3•xonev•1h ago•2 comments

This Solo Founder Can Predict the Future – The Polymarket Story

https://solofounders.com/blog/this-solo-founder-can-predict-the-future
2•rmason•1h ago•0 comments

What Is a Data Center?

https://andymasley.substack.com/p/what-a-data-center-is
1•ycx•1h ago•0 comments

Rectifying Shortcut Behaviors in Preference-Based Reward Learning

https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.19050
1•PaulHoule•1h ago•0 comments

SaaS Is Finally Easy

https://daemoncore.app/
1•DaemonCoreApp•1h ago•0 comments

Crunchyroll is destroying its subtitles for no good reason

https://daiz.moe/crunchyroll-is-destroying-its-subtitles-for-no-good-reason/
48•Daiz•1h ago•8 comments

Bill Gates calls for pivot in climate change away from curbing emissions

https://www.nbcnews.com/science/climate-change/bill-gates-climate-change-memo-rcna240225
3•nradov•1h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Grammarly rebrands to 'Superhuman,' launches a new AI assistant

https://techcrunch.com/2025/10/29/grammarly-rebrands-to-superhuman-launches-a-new-ai-assistant/
112•coloneltcb•11h ago

Comments

haltingproblem•11h ago
"Grammarly announced Tuesday the acquisition of email client Superhuman in a push to build out its AI for its productivity suite. Neither companies provided details about the financial terms of the deal..... Superhuman was founded by Rahul Vohra, Vivek Sodera, and Conrad Irwin. The company raised more than $114 million in funding from backers including a16z, IVP, and Tiger Global, with its last valuation at $825 million, according to data from venture data analytics firm Traxcn." [1]

Interested to understand what would be the terms of the deal if Superhuman was valued at $825mm and what the founders cleared if the all the VCs rounds had 2-3x liquidation preferences.

edit: added source

[1] https://techcrunch.com/2025/07/01/grammarly-acquires-ai-emai...

nathancahill•10h ago
Acquired 4 months ago, rebranding now.
treetalker•11h ago
Just as everything tends to evolve into something resembling a crab, all software seems to eventually become email — and, now, an LLM.
MajimasEyepatch•10h ago
To be fair, productivity and writing tools are a better fit for LLMs than a lot of other use cases.
treetalker•10h ago
Responding to you and fullshark, I'm not criticizing, only observing. Just as there is some evolutionary pressure causing carcinization, it's interesting to consider what pressure pushes things in the directions of email and LLMs.

I don't know what it is, but would love to hear others' ideas.

wredcoll•8h ago
I think "email" is a bit of a overly specific term, but if we take a small step back, communicating with other humans is usually the most important part of any piece of software.
lm28469•10h ago
I have a feeling these things will spend 99% of their processing time reading other LLMs outputs.

Resumes written by LLMs and read by LLMs

PR summaries written by LLMs and read by LLMs

Emails written by LLMs and read by LLMs

...

Everything could just be a few bullet points... these things were already 90% posturing and trying to sound fancy by using convoluted sentences and big words, now that it's been automated what's the point

fullshark•10h ago
This company cannot afford to ignore LLMs.
Brajeshwar•10h ago
“Every program attempts to expand until it can read mail. Those programs which cannot so expand are replaced by ones which can.” — Zawinski’s Law

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamie_Zawinski

treetalker•10h ago
Thanks, I was slightly off!
nkko•11h ago
The company is being rebranded, not the product. Makes total sense, considering the brand equity, and also them going in the direction of productivity suite. Could be interesting.
jhaile•10h ago
The name Superhuman makes a lot more sense for a company with a suite of AI productivity products. The "Grammarly" name was too focused on their original use case of just improving writing.
0cf8612b2e1e•10h ago
It is a good product name. I can almost imagine an unimaginably rich AI company buying it just for the name.
ljlolel•9h ago
Grammarly bought Superhuman and it’s already a public company
wferrell•8h ago
Not a public company.
ljlolel•6h ago
Ah my mistake
cardanome•10h ago
"Superhuman" gives me the creeps as a German.

I know it has a positive connotation with super heroes in US culture but for me it sounds like Übermensch. Especially as it is the direct opposite of "subhuman".

Plus outside of tech bro circles, people either actively hate generative AI or are at least super annoyed by the over-hype of it. Duolingo went all in on AI and got a huge shitstorm.

Branding your company on a current hype that might either burst soon or/and leave lots of people unemployed is maybe not a wise decisions.

antiloper•9h ago
"Superhuman" is just "Superman" but without getting sued by DC comics.
embedding-shape•9h ago
And with the additional small hint of Nazism for Europeans. But otherwise exactly the same more or less :)
antiloper•8h ago
Nope. You must be thinking of the terms "Untermensch" (used a lot by Nazis) and "Übermensch" (introduced by Nietzsche, and rarely used by Nazis). "Supermensch" was never used at all.
embedding-shape•8h ago
Growing up in the 90s in Sweden, we definitively were taught that "Übermensch" ("Övermänniska" in Swedish, literally "Above Human") was something the Nazis promoted during their time, together with demoting "Untermensch". Maybe that's wrong, and if so I thank you for the correction, but "Superhuman" does give me similar vibes regardless, not because of the exact wording, but because of the ideas/concepts.
leobg•1h ago
Nietzsche’s sister tried to garner favor with the Nazi regime. After Nietzsche’s death, she took his notes, published them under the title “Will to Power” and made it all sound as though Hitler was the fulfillment of Nietzschean ideas. Even scholars who built their careers on Nietzschean philosophy fell for this. For example Ayn Rand. So your teachers were in good company. In truth, everything about the Nazis would have made Nietzsche sick to his stomach: group-think, racism, big government, socialism, robbery, personality cult, lack of intellect, mass appeal, Gleichschaltung, militarism.
nilamo•8h ago
HN can be so funny sometimes. An actual German says "hey maybe this specific word shouldn't be used", and a random follows it up with "Nope, you're wrong." lmao
mytailorisrich•8h ago
Because Ubermensch comes from Nietzche a century before the Nazis, as said, and had also a big influence on anarchists. No-one suggested that "Superhuman" shouldn't be used, either. A some point people need to put things in context and not "get the creeps" over any little things. I am sure that Germans don't even notice all those "Volkswagen" around them...
not-embedding•8h ago
maybe given their history of literally accepting Hitler, Germans shouldn't be the ones policing what words can be used?
embedding-shape•7h ago
Given everyone's history, someone somewhere has accepted evil in every country, so no one should police what words mean?
umanwizard•8h ago
Why would Germans be an authority on what words should or shouldn't be used in English?

This is sort of a reverse version of the very common trend of American political correctness / sensitivity language being exported around the world. Our ancestors committed heinous crimes, therefore we get to tell you how to speak, even though you had nothing to do with it.

integralid•8h ago
A German person just said that it gives them nazi viber, nothing about English words that should be used.

Person above argues that the words are different therefore such connection can't be made which is just... wrong because they reply in a thread where someone literally said they made that connection.

In short, we're explicitly talking about what Europeans see (me too, I'm not German), not what Americans should do.

umanwizard•8h ago
> nothing about English words that should be used

The comment I'm replying to says, verbatim, "hey maybe this specific word shouldn't be used" (as a paraphrase of that commenter's understanding of the argument being made by the German). That is what I'm responding to.

nilamo•6h ago
I guess I don't see what the problem is?

If someone says a particular word or phrase is problematic for them, no one can tell them they're wrong. You cannot dictate how other people respond to language, and it's really weird to see people trying to do that.

umanwizard•3h ago
Sure, I can't tell them they're "wrong", i.e. I think the self-reported subjective feeling is probably accurate.

What I object to is the implication that Americans should punish themselves by refraining from using normal words in their own language because Germans feel bad about something Germans did.

kelipso•1h ago
The implication is that if they want to market to Europeans (which I'm sure they do), they probably shouldn't use that word. I agree Americans see it in a positive light, including me, though I find superhuman generic to the point of background noise.
balaz•9h ago
Yes, the idea of the death of God also gives me shivers.
dude250711•8h ago
'Superhuman' sales representative: "Then you might be interested in our new Deus Ex package".
umanwizard•8h ago
You cannot expect other countries to stop using normal words because they remind you of the bad things your country did.

Shame for what Germany did during the Nazi regime is something for Germans to bear, not Americans. We are not at fault for that, and we have no obligation to change our own culture to accommodate your guilt.

urbandw311er•1h ago
That’s quite a leap. The parent commenter didn’t call for them to withdraw the branding, they were just sharing something interesting and unique about their perspective as a German.
cardanome•1h ago
Just to be clear, I never said that the word should be banned.

I am not sure how important the German or general European market is so hard to say whether it even should be a consideration for Grammarly.

That said the ideas of some people being intrinsically better than other people isn't specific to Germany. Eugenics used to be popular in many countries including the US. It is very advisable for other countries to learn from German history so our mistakes are not repeated.

JohnFen•8h ago
> I know it has a positive connotation with super heroes in US culture

I'm not sure about this. I'm a US citizen, but it absolutely does not have positive connotations to me at all. It has very negative ones.

umanwizard•8h ago
Are you a native English speaker? I can't think of a scenario where "superhuman" has negative connotations in American English. When we say someone has superhuman skill, or speed, or strength, it is always a positive thing.
JohnFen•8h ago
> Are you a native English speaker?

Yes, I am. Born and raised in the US.

There are instances where the term is used in a positive sense, yes, but those are limited in scope. "Superhuman strength" rather than just "superhuman".

"Superhuman" on its own is a term that has long been tightly associated with a wide variety of horrible things. Eugenics, for example.

umanwizard•3h ago
I honestly think most American English speakers are not thinking about eugenics when they hear that term. I believe you when you say that it has those connotations for you but I think you are in a small minority.
nxor•47m ago
Without a doubt
triceratops•10h ago
I thought Grammarly's brand was far better known than "Superhuman". I've never seen a YouTube ad for the latter.
Yizahi•9h ago
Imagine searching web or any system really for "superhuman". Grammarly will be buried ten pages deep under other results.
chemotaxis•9h ago
It won't be. Similarly, searching for "x" on Google returns Twitter as the first hit.

Search results are optimized based on inferred intent, and the intent of most people searching for "superhuman" will be the Grammarly app.

recapthis•10h ago
Strange that they didn't create a new name. Could it be that that was a deal breaker for Superhuman company and Grammarly wanted the deal so much?
diegof79•10h ago
Given their extensive expertise in browser and OS plugins, I understand this move.

You can foresee a challenging future for the Grammarly product for a long time. Now that the "improve writing with AI" feature is everywhere, there are fewer reasons to pay for their subscription (e.g., I didn't renew this year because I have multiple AI subscriptions, and Grammarly was the least critical of them).

However, for me, the main advantage of Grammarly was the user experience of having mistakes and suggestions inline and just a click away while editing, as well as the quality of the suggestions (with an LLM chat, there's a lot of trial and error and junk you need to filter out).

I understand their move, but I wish they had developed a good minimalist native text editor with the same Grammarly suggestions and click-to-correct interface.

charlie0•9h ago
That is my number one issue with startups. They all start minimalist and end up bloated, some sooner than others, and what made them great disappears behind all this bloat. See: tyranny of the marginal user.
jccalhoun•9h ago
This is getting to the antivirus bundle level of adding pointless features. I want grammarly to... check my grammar. I don't want it to write for me or suggest things.
torginus•9h ago
Too bad, management wants you to train this shitty chatbot they plan to replace you with
chemotaxis•8h ago
Perhaps you do, but I think this misses the point. For-profit writing is the most successful use case for LLMs today. A significant proportion of all the docs I see at work reek of LLMs. A fair amount of articles you read in the media are written by LLMs. Lawyers use it for legal briefs (sometimes with comical results). Doctors use it for patient notes.

Basically, a significant portion of the population doesn't like writing or isn't good at it and really wants a "get it done" button. I might not love it, but the market is there.

So Grammarly is addressing a very real need. Further, it's really the only way for them to stay relevant, because you're getting AI editing / writing features in Gmail, Docs, Office 365, etc.

toomuchtodo•8h ago
> So Grammarly is addressing a very real need. Further, it's really the only way for them to stay relevant, because you're getting AI editing / writing features in Gmail, Docs, Office 365, etc.

They are a feature, not a company, with my apologies to Jobs. To your point, software and tools with native writing functionality can incorporate their own LLM support, as can native apps on mobile and desktop. Anything local will eventually be on device imho as model efficiency improves, or perhaps in browser (if not making API calls).

ghaff•4h ago
Flagging likely spelling and basic grammar errors are pretty much incorporated into most word processors at this point. I may or may not choose to ignore them. But they work pretty well and I'm unlikely to use an external tool.

I did write for a while for a tech site that had some Wordpress add-on that was oriented to making my writing, I guess, more friendly to an 8th grade level. I ignored it.

gbalduzzi•8h ago
> because you're getting AI editing / writing features in Gmail, Docs, Office 365, etc.

To me it is exactly why this move doesn't make sense.

Why would I use Grammarly/Superhuman for writing with LLM assistance, when I have an out-of-box alternative that, at worst, is equal?

They can't even compete with pricing, because they need to use their competitor models

chemotaxis•7h ago
> Why would I use Grammarly/Superhuman for writing with LLM assistance, when I have an out-of-box alternative that, at worst, is equal?

I think the answer is basically that they have brand recognition and they're trying to ride it. Right now, they have two bad choices: become irrelevant more quickly by having a product that's inferior to built-in LLM tools, or become irrelevant more slowly by having a tool that's comparable (and also works anywhere on the internet, not just on specific websites).

viscanti•4h ago
Brand recognition that they're throwing away with a rebrand.
Mistletoe•8h ago
My Anker earbuds have a new update adding AI. :P
egorfine•8h ago
> I want grammarly to... check my grammar

That's not how it works today.

No sepulcator company gets profitable by shipping just a sepulcator. A sepulcator absolutely must have AI, monthly subscription, cloud services and - up until recently - has to be blockchain-based.

codethief•7h ago
What's a sepulcator?
egorfine•7h ago
Doesn't matter. No VC is going to invest in it unless it has AI.
VTimofeenko•7h ago
It's a prominent element of the civilization of Ardrites from the planet of Enteropia; see "Sepulkaria"
throwpoaster•7h ago
A widget.
teddyh•3h ago
A thingamajig.
romperstomper•3h ago
It is probably a reference to Stanislaw Lem's books https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sepulka
bitwize•59m ago
It's a thing that needs a turbo encabulator in order to function.
ghaff•4h ago
Maybe it's just because I'm a reasonably decent writer but I used to know someone who was adamant about using Grammarly because it would increase traffic to my website--and I was basically "don't care."

ADDED: Because it would make the writing friendlier to more people.

Yizahi•9h ago
Supercringe
andai•9h ago
Superhuman is such a funny name. It implies the Red Squiggles feature was the beginning of man-machine symbiosis...
wahnfrieden•9h ago
They are paying UGC creators $10 per 1000 views. Ambitious.
zonged•9h ago
Recently switched to Harper https://writewithharper.com/, a vastly superior grammar checker
hungryhobbit•8h ago
Harper is a nice alternative, but it's still rough around the edges.

For instance, if you have a misspelled word, and the correction options come up, you can't get out of them and return to where you were by using the keyboard. You can hit Escape to close them, but it doesn't restore your place in the text field, so you have to use your mouse to get back where you were.

As a programmer who tries to use the keyboard as much as possible, this (incredibly easy to fix, I'm sure) bug drives me crazy! Almost enough to make me go back to Grammarly.

embedding-shape•8h ago
That seems to me not like a "rough around the edges" thing but "most basic, table-stakes feature". If you cannot resume typing after either cancelling a correction, or doing a correction, I'd say it is very broken and not ready to be marketed as a functioning tool. I mean, it's supposed to help you write, not make it more cumbersome.
saint_yossarian•3h ago
I thought Harper is an LSP, so this sounds more like an integration issue with whatever editor you're using it with.
biophysboy•8h ago
I get that software companies are rebranding products with superhero/god terminology to increase their perceived value and raise margin, but its not working for me because they are losing product differentiation. Why would I choose this app among the dozens of other tech products that promise godlike AI capabilities?
yoyohello13•8h ago
Even if we haven't hit the LLM ceiling, we've hit a ceiling on branding for sure. I'm interested to see where these names go next. Uberbeing! Omnipotence Plugin!
dude250711•8h ago
The society is not yet ready to discuss branding ecology. Nice names are a finite resource.
ChrisArchitect•8h ago
Official post: https://www.grammarly.com/blog/company/introducing-new-super...
faefox•8h ago
A great tool if you want your own unique voice to blend seamlessly into the tidal wave of LLM-generated mush flooding the internet.
port11•8h ago
I really like your comment. Of course all the LLM-generated content really is for other LLMs to read/scrape.
egorfine•8h ago
I absolutely hate it when companies rename themselves. I know a company called an extremely stupid name by its young founder and they did not rename for decades and are now worth a bit short of $4T.

Why do the smaller ones constantly need to change their name. Like that changes anything in their substance.

janpio•3h ago
Data point 1: They get a TechCrunch post out of it.
superbowl•7h ago
Moving to "AI" and away from a well-known brand smacks of desperation. Makes me wonder if the industry-wide trend of shoving AI into every product and feature, and channelling all investment into AI, is equally desperate.
thw_9a83c•7h ago
One day, we will see a demand for services that are the opposite of "Superhuman". For example, a service like: "Deteriorate this text and make it look weirdly human. Add some typos and errors here and there, so that the final output looks 100% human-written."
coffeebeqn•5h ago
The end state job for all the laid off office workers. A man can dream
gaws•6h ago
Stop using Grammarly. There are better options available that don't exist just to collect your data to sell it to the highest bidder or feed it into an LLM.
chatmasta•5h ago
Grammarly is a keylogger. It’s astounding any enterprise allows it to run on their endpoints.
DLion•3h ago
Switched to https://languagetool.org/ and I'm super happy about it.
aetherspawn•2h ago
AIs are pretty bad at rewriting, they always pick gimmickey marketing words. I always thought of Grammarly as a premium entry into that segment for proper professional writing. Shame it’s going the way of slop.