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Study confirms experience beats youthful enthusiasm

https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/07/boomers_vs_zoomers_workplace/
1•Willingham•3m ago•0 comments

The Big Hunger by Walter J Miller, Jr. (1952)

https://lauriepenny.substack.com/p/the-big-hunger
1•shervinafshar•4m ago•0 comments

The Genus Amanita

https://www.mushroomexpert.com/amanita.html
1•rolph•9m ago•0 comments

We have broken SHA-1 in practice

https://shattered.io/
1•mooreds•10m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Was my first management job bad, or is this what management is like?

1•Buttons840•11m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: How to Reduce Time Spent Crimping?

1•pinkmuffinere•12m ago•0 comments

KV Cache Transform Coding for Compact Storage in LLM Inference

https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.01815
1•walterbell•17m ago•0 comments

A quantitative, multimodal wearable bioelectronic device for stress assessment

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-67747-9
1•PaulHoule•19m ago•0 comments

Why Big Tech Is Throwing Cash into India in Quest for AI Supremacy

https://www.wsj.com/world/india/why-big-tech-is-throwing-cash-into-india-in-quest-for-ai-supremac...
1•saikatsg•19m ago•0 comments

How to shoot yourself in the foot – 2026 edition

https://github.com/aweussom/HowToShootYourselfInTheFoot
1•aweussom•19m ago•0 comments

Eight More Months of Agents

https://crawshaw.io/blog/eight-more-months-of-agents
3•archb•21m ago•0 comments

From Human Thought to Machine Coordination

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-digital-self/202602/from-human-thought-to-machine-coo...
1•walterbell•22m ago•0 comments

The new X API pricing must be a joke

https://developer.x.com/
1•danver0•22m ago•0 comments

Show HN: RMA Dashboard fast SAST results for monorepos (SARIF and triage)

https://rma-dashboard.bukhari-kibuka7.workers.dev/
1•bumahkib7•23m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Source code graphRAG for Java/Kotlin development based on jQAssistant

https://github.com/2015xli/jqassistant-graph-rag
1•artigent•28m ago•0 comments

Python Only Has One Real Competitor

https://mccue.dev/pages/2-6-26-python-competitor
3•dragandj•29m ago•0 comments

Tmux to Zellij (and Back)

https://www.mauriciopoppe.com/notes/tmux-to-zellij/
1•maurizzzio•30m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: How are you using specialized agents to accelerate your work?

1•otterley•31m ago•0 comments

Passing user_id through 6 services? OTel Baggage fixes this

https://signoz.io/blog/otel-baggage/
1•pranay01•32m ago•0 comments

DavMail Pop/IMAP/SMTP/Caldav/Carddav/LDAP Exchange Gateway

https://davmail.sourceforge.net/
1•todsacerdoti•33m ago•0 comments

Visual data modelling in the browser (open source)

https://github.com/sqlmodel/sqlmodel
1•Sean766•35m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tharos – CLI to find and autofix security bugs using local LLMs

https://github.com/chinonsochikelue/tharos
1•fluantix•35m ago•0 comments

Oddly Simple GUI Programs

https://simonsafar.com/2024/win32_lights/
1•MaximilianEmel•36m ago•0 comments

The New Playbook for Leaders [pdf]

https://www.ibli.com/IBLI%20OnePagers%20The%20Plays%20Summarized.pdf
1•mooreds•36m ago•1 comments

Interactive Unboxing of J Dilla's Donuts

https://donuts20.vercel.app
1•sngahane•37m ago•0 comments

OneCourt helps blind and low-vision fans to track Super Bowl live

https://www.dezeen.com/2026/02/06/onecourt-tactile-device-super-bowl-blind-low-vision-fans/
1•gaws•39m ago•0 comments

Rudolf Vrba

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf_Vrba
1•mooreds•40m ago•0 comments

Autism Incidence in Girls and Boys May Be Nearly Equal, Study Suggests

https://www.medpagetoday.com/neurology/autism/119747
1•paulpauper•41m ago•0 comments

Wellness Hotels Discovery Application

https://aurio.place/
1•cherrylinedev•41m ago•1 comments

NASA delays moon rocket launch by a month after fuel leaks during test

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2026/feb/03/nasa-delays-moon-rocket-launch-month-fuel-leaks-a...
2•mooreds•42m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

When Reverse Proxies Surprise You: Hard Lessons from Operating at Scale

https://www.infoq.com/articles/scaling-reverse-proxies/
101•miggy•2mo ago

Comments

stacktrace•2mo ago
Very interesting read! But I want to point out a small correction - the DNS collapse issue at HAProxy, along with O(N^2), also had some O(N^3) code paths, which is just mind-blowing.

Also, I believe this should be the correct GitHub issue link - https://github.com/haproxy/haproxy/issues/1404

> Production Lesson: Code that "works fine" at small scale may still hide O(N²) or worse behavior. At hundreds or thousands of nodes, those costs stop being theoretical and start breaking production.

whstl•2mo ago
It's nice to see someone else preaching this:

> Production Lesson: Never let exceptions dictate the norm. Handle them explicitly, in isolated paths or tiers, instead of polluting the mainline logic. What looks like "flexibility" is often just deferred fragility waiting to surface at scale.

I've seen this pattern far too often in production systems. In the name of "covering edge cases", a huge amount of complexity is moved over to configuration languages, interfaces, APIs, etc, to be more flexible. Not only this doesn't free up the developers time (because it overcomplicates it all), it also makes things worse on the other side for the users of such structures. We already have something "flexible": source code itself, no need to reinvent the wheel.

immibis•2mo ago
The configuration complexity clock: https://mikehadlow.blogspot.com/2012/05/configuration-comple...
whstl•2mo ago
I wish people would realize that moving back to code is possible, though.

It rarely happens because at this point the codebase is so littered with problems that things start requiring long QA, code freezes and once-a-month deployments, and it's impossible to get anything done.

dottedmag•2mo ago
Better never stray from code.

My faviourite configuration pattern for SaaS code: all the configuration for all targets, from local development setup, to unit tests, to CI throwaway deployments, to production is in a single Go package. The current environment is selected by a single environment variable.

Need something else configured beyond your code? Write Go code to emit configs for the current environment, in "gen-config some-tool && some-tool" stanza.

marcosdumay•2mo ago
Config values and a configurable plugins system completely solve the problem, dominating over the entire clock.

Iterating further from config values is a great predictor that a project will become a disaster to use, and probably fail completely.

btown•2mo ago
Ah, but what happens when your plugins need to themselves be configured for different client deployments?

You add a few flags, then you need to figure out backwards compatibility as your plugin evolves (which involves defining prioritization rules between options), then those rules get complex enough to have conditionals (say, for granular traffic patterns), which means you have a DSL. And when the DSL gets complex enough, it needs an entire Software Development Lifecycle, which means it's effectively hard-coded. Or, you have people fork the plugin, which is a hard-code in and of itself.

All in all, you don't avoid the "configurability clock," you just decentralize it!

The real problem is that clients inevitably have conflicting needs that cut across any modularization barriers you might think to build. When a configured plugin can have spooky action at a distance, perhaps under-tested due to configuration, is it truly modular? Thus, the clock emerges.

marcosdumay•2mo ago
You do multiple plugins or use constant configuration values for them. That's why you want plugins, for putting all complex stuff in actual code that doesn't have to live with the main product.

That doesn't decentralize the clock, it gives a maximum capable interface for the few people that need to handle exceptional cases, and a minimally capable one to the people that just want to use your software as is. That is, you make the product live on two opposite values of the clock at the same time.

nijave•2mo ago
I see something similar with AI generated code where it tries much too hard to handle all the exceptions and ends up swallowing or obfuscating them instead of making things more reliable. Claude seems particularly bad unless you prompt it to minimize complexity
bell-cot•2mo ago
Re-sort the takeaway points, to put this one first:

> Prioritize human factors. Outage recovery depends on what operators can see and do under stress. When dashboards fail, clear logs, simple commands, and predictable behavior matter more than complex mechanisms.

Why - to make it really, really clear to bullet-skimming managers and complexity-loving engineers that too-clever "solutions", and just-an-afterthought "testing & training", and poorly documented configurations will turn into worlds of pain when things really go wrong. The "smart people" won't be in the Operations Center then. Let alone with all the details fresh in their minds. And several of them may have taken jobs elsewhere, to not much care if the org is desperate for their help right now.

dwedge•2mo ago
The engineer killing the proxy because they assumed processes running as "nobody" were stray (whatever that means - processes without a parent don't change username, and nobody doesn't mean no username) doesn't belong in that list. That was just an engineer out of their depth (I assume one used to dealing with other systems)