frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Washington Post CEO Will Lewis Steps Down After Stormy Tenure

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/07/technology/washington-post-will-lewis.html
1•jbegley•35s ago•0 comments

DevXT – Building the Future with AI That Acts

https://devxt.com
1•superpecmuscles•1m ago•0 comments

A Minimal OpenClaw Built with the OpenCode SDK

https://github.com/CefBoud/MonClaw
1•cefboud•1m ago•0 comments

The silent death of Good Code

https://amit.prasad.me/blog/rip-good-code
1•amitprasad•2m ago•0 comments

The Internal Negotiation You Have When Your Heart Rate Gets Uncomfortable

https://www.vo2maxpro.com/blog/internal-negotiation-heart-rate
1•GoodluckH•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Glance – Fast CSV inspection for the terminal (SIMD-accelerated)

https://github.com/AveryClapp/glance
1•AveryClapp•4m ago•0 comments

Busy for the Next Fifty to Sixty Bud

https://pestlemortar.substack.com/p/busy-for-the-next-fifty-to-sixty-had-all-my-money-in-bitcoin-...
1•mithradiumn•5m ago•0 comments

Imperative

https://pestlemortar.substack.com/p/imperative
1•mithradiumn•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I decomposed 87 tasks to find where AI agents structurally collapse

https://github.com/XxCotHGxX/Instruction_Entropy
1•XxCotHGxX•9m ago•1 comments

I went back to Linux and it was a mistake

https://www.theverge.com/report/875077/linux-was-a-mistake
1•timpera•11m ago•1 comments

Octrafic – open-source AI-assisted API testing from the CLI

https://github.com/Octrafic/octrafic-cli
1•mbadyl•12m ago•1 comments

US Accuses China of Secret Nuclear Testing

https://www.reuters.com/world/china/trump-has-been-clear-wanting-new-nuclear-arms-control-treaty-...
2•jandrewrogers•13m ago•1 comments

Peacock. A New Programming Language

1•hashhooshy•18m ago•1 comments

A postcard arrived: 'If you're reading this I'm dead, and I really liked you'

https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2026/02/07/postcard-death-teacher-glickman/
2•bookofjoe•19m ago•1 comments

What to know about the software selloff

https://www.morningstar.com/markets/what-know-about-software-stock-selloff
2•RickJWagner•22m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Syntux – generative UI for websites, not agents

https://www.getsyntux.com/
3•Goose78•23m ago•0 comments

Microsoft appointed a quality czar. He has no direct reports and no budget

https://jpcaparas.medium.com/ab75cef97954
2•birdculture•23m ago•0 comments

AI overlay that reads anything on your screen (invisible to screen capture)

https://lowlighter.app/
1•andylytic•25m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Seafloor, be up and running with OpenClaw in 20 seconds

https://seafloor.bot/
1•k0mplex•25m ago•0 comments

Tesla turbine-inspired structure generates electricity using compressed air

https://techxplore.com/news/2026-01-tesla-turbine-generates-electricity-compressed.html
2•PaulHoule•27m ago•0 comments

State Department deleting 17 years of tweets (2009-2025); preservation needed

https://www.npr.org/2026/02/07/nx-s1-5704785/state-department-trump-posts-x
2•sleazylice•27m ago•1 comments

Learning to code, or building side projects with AI help, this one's for you

https://codeslick.dev/learn
1•vitorlourenco•27m ago•0 comments

Effulgence RPG Engine [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFQOUe9S7dU
1•msuniverse2026•29m ago•0 comments

Five disciplines discovered the same math independently – none of them knew

https://freethemath.org
4•energyscholar•29m ago•1 comments

We Scanned an AI Assistant for Security Issues: 12,465 Vulnerabilities

https://codeslick.dev/blog/openclaw-security-audit
1•vitorlourenco•30m ago•0 comments

Amazon no longer defend cloud customers against video patent infringement claims

https://ipfray.com/amazon-no-longer-defends-cloud-customers-against-video-patent-infringement-cla...
2•ffworld•30m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Medinilla – an OCPP compliant .NET back end (partially done)

https://github.com/eliodecolli/Medinilla
2•rhcm•34m ago•0 comments

How Does AI Distribute the Pie? Large Language Models and the Ultimatum Game

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6157066
1•dkga•34m ago•1 comments

Resistance Infrastructure

https://www.profgalloway.com/resistance-infrastructure/
3•samizdis•38m ago•1 comments

Fire-juggling unicyclist caught performing on crossing

https://news.sky.com/story/fire-juggling-unicyclist-caught-performing-on-crossing-13504459
1•austinallegro•39m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

According to a Google leak, we’re all to blame for poor quality search results (2024)

https://www.admdnewsletter.com/its-not-googles-fault-its-yours/
24•AznHisoka•2mo ago

Comments

xnx•2mo ago
(2024)
Dylan16807•2mo ago
Okay so the "we" being blamed is marketers, not users.

Though this part worries me: "Google pays attention to how long someone stays on the page after clicking on a search result. They actively look for which result had the “longest click” from users (longest engagement)."

Longest visit is very different from best result.

pinkmuffinere•2mo ago
>Longest visit is very different from best result.

Sure it's different, but is it _very_ different? They have to choose some sort of metric. A long visit time does seem like one good indicator of the goodness of a result. Consider that they use other indicators as well, and their business largely benefits from their search being useful. It is in their interest to choose good metrics, and I'm sure they invest a lot of time into it. Why do you doubt this seemingly-sensible metric, which google has a motive to get right?

Dylan16807•2mo ago
Depending on type of search, time spent on the page might correlate with quality or it might correlate with how hard the page is to use.

And those are both common enough that yes it's very different.

And I said it worries me, not that I'm confident google is using it wrong.

seanhunter•2mo ago
The motive they have is to increase revenue from advertising. It so happens that “time on page” is a metric that advertisers care a lot about. Ad buyers pay more for space on pages where users spend a lot of time.

I’m not surprised at all that Google chose this as a metric. It’s very different from a metric that emphasises quality for the user.

“The biggest problem facing users of Web search engines today is the quality of the results they get back. While the results are often amusing and expand users’ horizons, they are often frustrating and consume precious time. “

https://snap.stanford.edu/class/cs224w-readings/Brin98Anatom...

pinkmuffinere•2mo ago
Ads are placed regardless of the ranking, so this metric doesn’t affect them. The metric affects the ranking of non-ad placements.
seanhunter•2mo ago
I’m talking about ads in the pages returned by the search not ads in the search results themselves. This absolutely affects google revenue given they run a large percentage of ad placement auctions
goalieca•2mo ago
Absolutely. Who hasn’t spent time scrolling down a page, past three ads with filler text to make the page longer, trying to find whatever you needed. Most of the time I just need a quick answer to a question and the best pages can take me right there without searching the page.
EdwardDiego•2mo ago
If I click onto your website, and immediately hit back, that's a sign it wasn't a great website for my needs.

If I click in, and spend a bit of time reading, maybe I even scroll through your archive of previous articles, then that's a good sign, yeah?

What do you consider a better metric for user engagement?

Dylan16807•2mo ago
> If I click onto your website, and immediately hit back, that's a sign it wasn't a great website for my needs.

Or it's a sign that the information I needed with right there.

> If I click in, and spend a bit of time reading

If I click in and spend time searching for what I wanted, that's a bad sign, yeah?

tarsinge•2mo ago
In fact content marketing blogs and SEO spam sites have wall of text designed more or less intentionally to make the user lose a lot of time. Add to this the time to close to cookie tracking banner and the multiple ads. Maybe there was a time in the early 2000s in the early internet when people were just browsing websites for fun where that metric made sense.
pajko•2mo ago
* bots included
dns_snek•2mo ago
> What do you consider a better metric for user engagement?

User "engagement" is a rotten metric that doesn't represent what most of us actually care about - results and answers, ASAP.

I'm not claiming this would work but if search engines had a thumbs up/down button next to results I would use it if it informed the ranking algorithm or personalized it for me.

surajrmal•2mo ago
Is this why every recipe page starts with long prose and makes it a maze to see the recipe?
thaumasiotes•2mo ago
Received wisdom on that is that they do it because recipes can't be copyrighted, but introductions can.
s1mplicissimus•2mo ago
i couldn't resist the nerdsnipe and quickly googled it:

Recipes can be protected under copyright law if they are accompanied by “substantial literary expression.”

would be interesting to find out whether that recipe site filler text counts as "substantial literary expression" in front of a judge. it certainly doesn't pass my smell test

thaumasiotes•2mo ago
Note that that phrasing is terrible, the recipe can't be protected no matter what.

The page, including the recipe and the intro, can be protected. But if you extract the recipe verbatim and publish it without the intro it used to cooccur with, no one can stop you.

I said that this is the "received wisdom" on why recipe sites do this. I didn't say it would work. I didn't say that they think that's why they're doing it. But it is a popular theory.

s1mplicissimus•2mo ago
Ah now i see. Thanks for the clarification. Gonna go build another recipe database :D
mcphage•2mo ago
I just spent time yesterday arguing with Google’s search AI because it refused to read what was on a goddamn Wikipedia page—when I gave it a screenshot it even lied about what was there. So yeah, I’m not at fault for this one, even if that was the stupidest conversation I’ve ever had.
s1mplicissimus•2mo ago
I can't quiet remember the source, but this "longer stay time = better ranking" shenanigan was introduced in the early 2000s and SEO people knew about it. So this "leak" is a bit suspicious