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Smart Homes Are Terrible

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/02/smart-homes-technology/685867/
1•tusslewake•40s ago•0 comments

What I haven't figured out

https://macwright.com/2026/01/29/what-i-havent-figured-out
1•stevekrouse•1m ago•0 comments

KPMG pressed its auditor to pass on AI cost savings

https://www.irishtimes.com/business/2026/02/06/kpmg-pressed-its-auditor-to-pass-on-ai-cost-savings/
1•cainxinth•1m ago•0 comments

Open-source Claude skill that optimizes Hinge profiles. Pretty well.

https://twitter.com/b1rdmania/status/2020155122181869666
1•birdmania•1m ago•1 comments

First Proof

https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.05192
2•samasblack•3m ago•1 comments

I squeezed a BERT sentiment analyzer into 1GB RAM on a $5 VPS

https://mohammedeabdelaziz.github.io/articles/trendscope-market-scanner
1•mohammede•5m ago•0 comments

Kagi Translate

https://translate.kagi.com
1•microflash•5m ago•0 comments

Building Interactive C/C++ workflows in Jupyter through Clang-REPL [video]

https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/QX3RPH-building_interactive_cc_workflows_in_jupyter_throug...
1•stabbles•6m ago•0 comments

Tactical tornado is the new default

https://olano.dev/blog/tactical-tornado/
1•facundo_olano•8m ago•0 comments

Full-Circle Test-Driven Firmware Development with OpenClaw

https://blog.adafruit.com/2026/02/07/full-circle-test-driven-firmware-development-with-openclaw/
1•ptorrone•9m ago•0 comments

Automating Myself Out of My Job – Part 2

https://blog.dsa.club/automation-series/automating-myself-out-of-my-job-part-2/
1•funnyfoobar•9m ago•0 comments

Google staff call for firm to cut ties with ICE

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgjg98vmzjo
22•tartoran•9m ago•1 comments

Dependency Resolution Methods

https://nesbitt.io/2026/02/06/dependency-resolution-methods.html
1•zdw•9m ago•0 comments

Crypto firm apologises for sending Bitcoin users $40B by mistake

https://www.msn.com/en-ie/money/other/crypto-firm-apologises-for-sending-bitcoin-users-40-billion...
1•Someone•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: iPlotCSV: CSV Data, Visualized Beautifully for Free

https://www.iplotcsv.com/demo
1•maxmoq•11m ago•0 comments

There's no such thing as "tech" (Ten years later)

https://www.anildash.com/2026/02/06/no-such-thing-as-tech/
1•headalgorithm•11m ago•0 comments

List of unproven and disproven cancer treatments

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unproven_and_disproven_cancer_treatments
1•brightbeige•12m ago•0 comments

Me/CFS: The blind spot in proactive medicine (Open Letter)

https://github.com/debugmeplease/debug-ME
1•debugmeplease•12m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: What are the word games do you play everyday?

1•gogo61•15m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Paper Arena – A social trading feed where only AI agents can post

https://paperinvest.io/arena
1•andrenorman•16m ago•0 comments

TOSTracker – The AI Training Asymmetry

https://tostracker.app/analysis/ai-training
1•tldrthelaw•20m ago•0 comments

The Devil Inside GitHub

https://blog.melashri.net/micro/github-devil/
2•elashri•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Distill – Migrate LLM agents from expensive to cheap models

https://github.com/ricardomoratomateos/distill
1•ricardomorato•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Sigma Runtime – Maintaining 100% Fact Integrity over 120 LLM Cycles

https://github.com/sigmastratum/documentation/tree/main/sigma-runtime/SR-053
1•teugent•21m ago•0 comments

Make a local open-source AI chatbot with access to Fedora documentation

https://fedoramagazine.org/how-to-make-a-local-open-source-ai-chatbot-who-has-access-to-fedora-do...
1•jadedtuna•23m ago•0 comments

Introduce the Vouch/Denouncement Contribution Model by Mitchellh

https://github.com/ghostty-org/ghostty/pull/10559
1•samtrack2019•23m ago•0 comments

Software Factories and the Agentic Moment

https://factory.strongdm.ai/
1•mellosouls•23m ago•1 comments

The Neuroscience Behind Nutrition for Developers and Founders

https://comuniq.xyz/post?t=797
1•01-_-•23m ago•0 comments

Bang bang he murdered math {the musical } (2024)

https://taylor.town/bang-bang
1•surprisetalk•23m ago•0 comments

A Night Without the Nerds – Claude Opus 4.6, Field-Tested

https://konfuzio.com/en/a-night-without-the-nerds-claude-opus-4-6-in-the-field-test/
1•konfuzio•26m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

IBM Delivers New Quantum Package

https://newsroom.ibm.com/2025-11-12-ibm-delivers-new-quantum-processors,-software,-and-algorithm-breakthroughs-on-path-to-advantage-and-fault-tolerance
54•donutloop•2mo ago

Comments

pm90•2mo ago
I've been bit by the mass marketing nonsense of "Watson" but IBM Research does some pretty good work, and their progress on Quantum Computing seems to be "real"; and certainly more reliable than Microsoft (shocked!).
jimmar•2mo ago
> IBM anticipates that the first cases of verified quantum advantage will be confirmed by the wider community by the end of 2026.

In 2019, Google claimed quantum supremacy [1]. I'm truly confused about what quantum computing can do today, or what it's likely to be able to do in the next decade.

[1] https://www.nasa.gov/technology/computing/google-and-nasa-ac...

StableAlkyne•2mo ago
There's legitimately interesting research in using it to accelerate certain calculations. For example, usually you see a few talks at chemistry conferences on how it's gotten marginally faster at (very basic) electronic structure calculations. Also some neat stuff in the optimization space. Stuff you keep your eye on hoping it's useful in 10 years.

The most similar comparison is AI stuff, except even that has found some practical applications. Unlike AI, there isn't really much practicality for quantum computers right now beyond bumping up your h-index

Well, maybe there is one. As a joke with some friends after a particularly bad string of natural 1's in D&D, I used IBM's free tier (IIRC it's 10 minutes per month) and wrote a dice roller to achieve maximum randomness.

NickC25•2mo ago
that was my understanding too - in the fields of chemistry, materials science, pharmaceutical development, etc... quantum tech is somewhat promising and might be pretty viable in those specific niche fields within the decade.
Y_Y•2mo ago
The trouble with quantum supremacy results is they disappear as soon as you observe them (carefully).

Sorry for that, but seriously, I'd treat this kind of claim like any other putative breakthrough (room-temperature superconductors spring to mind), until it's independently verified it's worthless. The punishment for crying wolf is minimal and by the time you're shown to be bullshitting the headlines have moved on.

The other method, of course, is to just obsessively check Scott Aaronson's blog.

mapmeld•2mo ago
IBM challenged that the 2019 case could be handled by a supercomputer [1].

The main issue is that these algorithms where today's early quantum computers have an advantage were specifically designed to be demonstration problems. All of the tasks that people previously wanted a quantum computer to do are still impractical with today's hardware.

[1] https://www.quantamagazine.org/google-and-ibm-clash-over-qua...

hattmall•2mo ago
A decade from now Quantum computing will be in the same place it was a decade ago, on the cusp of proving a quantum advantage for tailor made problems in comparison to normal availability supercomputers. Classical compute will advance in that time period to keep the quantum computers always on the cusp.

The major non-compute related engineering breakthroughs needed for quantum computing to actually be advantageous in a way that would be revolutionary are themselves so revolutionary that the advancements of quantum computing would be vastly overshadowed. Again it's a case where those breakthroughs would so greatly enhance classic compute in terms of processing and reduction in costs that it still probably wouldn't be economically viable to produce general purpose quantum computers.

knowitnone3•2mo ago
"Qiskit capabilities show 24 percent increase in accuracy" what was it before? What good is a computer that is not 100% accurate? Do I have to run a function 1000x to get some average 99% chance the output is correct?
mushufasa•2mo ago
One of my colleagues read a paper about quantum computing techniques to solve complex optimization problems (the domain of complex mixed integer solvers) and tried it out for a financial portfolio optimization, replicating the examples provided by one of the quantum computing companies during a trial period.

The computer *did not* produce the same results each time, and often the results were wrong. The service provider's support staff didn't help -- their response was effectively "oh shucks."

We discontinued considering quantum computing after that. Not suitable for our use-case.

Maybe quantum computing would be applicable if you were trying to crack encryption, wherein getting the right result once is helpful regardless of how many wrong answers you get in the process.

a_vanderbilt•2mo ago
Essentially correct. With a quantum computer you do multiple runs and average the result.
jfengel•2mo ago
(Right now "computers that aren't 100% accurate" are all the rage, even without quantum computing. Though a lot of people are wondering if that's any good, too.)

They're especially good for oracle-type problems, where you can verify an answer much faster than you can find them. NP problems are an especially prominent example of that. If it's wrong, you try again.

In theory it might take a very long time to find the answer. But even if you've only got 25% accuracy, the odds of you being wrong 10 times in a row are only 6%. Being wrong 100 times in a row is a number so small it requires scientific notation (10^-13). It's worth it to be able to solve an otherwise exponential problem.

Quantum computers have error bounds, and you can use that to tune your error rate to being-hit-by-a-cosmic-ray level of acceptability.

It's still far from clear that they can build general-purpose quantum computers big enough to do anything useful. But the built-in error factors are not, in themselves, a bar.

abdullahkhalids•2mo ago
Many classical information processing devices are less than 100% reliable. Wifi (or old school dialup) will drop a non-trivial number of packets. RAM chips have some non-zero amount of unreliability, but in most cases we don't notice [1]. Computer processors in space will similarly fail due to cosmic ray bombardment. In all cases, you mitigate such problems by adding redundancy or error correction.

Quantum computer hardware is similarly very error-prone, and it is unlikely that we will ever build quantum hardware which will have ignorable levels of error. However, people have developed many techniques, often much more sophisticated that in the classical domain, for handling the fragility of quantum hardware. I am not familiar with the details of recent improvements in qiskit, but they are referring to improvements in specific "error mitigation" techniques implemented within qiskit. These techniques will be used in tandem with others methods like error correction to create quantum computers that give you answers with close to but less than 100% chance of success.

As you say, in these cases, you will repeat your simulation a few times and take a majority vote.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECC_memory

boilerupnc•2mo ago
Related Qiskit Tutorial Video[0] "This tutorial covers advanced techniques for implementing the Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA) at the utility scale using Qiskit. In this video, we walk through how to build, optimize, and run QAOA for real world optimization problems on real IBM Quantum hardware. This series is designed for quantum computing practitioners who are ready to move beyond basic examples and start running large scale, hardware aware algorithms. We explore how to transition from theory to practical execution, covering algorithm development, circuit optimization, hybrid workflows, and best practices for hardware performance. Whether you are expanding your QAOA skills or preparing to run your own research experiments, this tutorial will help you strengthen your understanding of utility scale quantum computing with Qiskit."

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBfK-l-qSNk

mushufasa•2mo ago
I happen to know IBM made some great hires -- one of my classmates who was excellent in the field, who had impressive quantum computing nature publications before graduation, worked at IBM for the past several years.

Though it looks like he recently switched to working at Google AI...

https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=NaxMJzQAAAAJ&hl=en

IsTom•2mo ago
Sooo... are we factoring 21 without shortcuts yet?
piskov•2mo ago
How come IBM is still alive? Is it those sweet-sweet legacy cobol/mainframe systems?

I wonder what would happen to them if codex or what have helps migrate that to c#.

= how long until the exodus to aws/azure will follow

dudus•2mo ago
Outsourcing of software dev to India and support to Latin America. Paying pennies and charging high fees. They get contracts to all sorts of big companies like telecoms and manufacturers
vrighter•2mo ago
Because in most cases, it's not about the quality of the product. I've had cases where using a (free, open source) reverse proxy to implement SSO and TLS termination would save 5-digit figures (on the side closer to 6 digits) yearly from upgrading the licensing a product we used. That was rejected because then we wouldn't have anyone to point our finger at if something goes wrong with the product. It's about the "support contracts", not about the products themselves.

Which is in itself a fucking joke because now everything is outsourced to some clueless person in a call center half-way around a world, or you get to chat with an LLM. Either way, it has been ages since the "support contracts" actually resulted in a problem that wasn't ultimately solved by ourselves, not them.

pjmlp•2mo ago
It is IBM money that keeps many Linux projects going by the way, for the last 25 years.
horns4lyfe•2mo ago
IBM is just an Indian labor arbitrage company at this point, why anyone believes they’re capable of this type Id advancement is beyond me
pjmlp•2mo ago
Anyone getting use of their money via Red-Hat sponsored projects like Linux kernel, GNOME and GCC, OpenJDK, Quarkus, VSCode plugins for Java for example.