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Show HN: Bringing stacked diff workflow to Perforce

https://github.com/minhkhoango/p4-stack
1•kai2006•2m ago•0 comments

MCP Ultimately Leads to Closed Gardens

https://chatbotkit.com/reflections/mcp-ultimately-leads-to-closed-gardens
1•_pdp_•6m ago•0 comments

New software toolbox enables brain-like models to learn directly from data

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.08.21.608979v2
1•PaulHoule•8m ago•0 comments

Kimchi's Immune System Benefits

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41538-025-00593-7
1•DaveZale•8m ago•0 comments

We Built the v0 iOS App

https://vercel.com/blog/how-we-built-the-v0-ios-app
1•MaxLeiter•11m ago•0 comments

Have You Considered Load-Bearing Shell History? (2022)

https://blog.tjll.net/load-bearing-shell-history/
1•wonger_•11m ago•0 comments

Terraform Industries' Business Case Doesn't Add Up

https://klaasnotfound.com/2025/06/03/terraform-industries-business-case-doesnt-add-up/
1•verzali•12m ago•0 comments

A tool for dealing with GPS time in Ns

https://andrew.diamonds/gpsnanos
1•andrewxdiamond•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Realtime, expressive AI personas that you can video call

https://playground.keyframelabs.com/playground/persona-1-live
2•kraddypatties•17m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: GitHub vs. self-hosted forges – What's your first impression?

2•bitbasher•18m ago•0 comments

We're Helping Companies Turn Open Source Contributions into Hiring

https://issuepay.app
1•Mario10•19m ago•1 comments

The Web Install API is ready for testing

https://blogs.windows.com/msedgedev/2025/11/24/the-web-install-api-is-ready-for-testing/
2•syx•23m ago•0 comments

Avian Influenza H5N5 Washington Death

https://www.idse.net/Influenza/Article/12-25/First-Person-Dies-From-H5N5-Bird-Flu/78941
3•howard941•26m ago•0 comments

One of the Greatest Polar-Bear Hunters Confronts a Vanishing World

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/12/01/one-of-the-greatest-polar-bear-hunters-confronts-a-...
1•bookofjoe•29m ago•1 comments

Launching the Genesis Mission

https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/11/launching-the-genesis-mission/
1•oidar•29m ago•0 comments

A P2P Grindr alternative I built in a weekend: no server, no accounts

https://meateor2.netlify.app/
1•guiprav•33m ago•1 comments

Pornhub Is Urging Tech Giants to Enact Device-Based Age Verification

https://www.wired.com/story/pornhub-is-urging-tech-giants-to-enact-device-based-age-verification/
2•toomuchtodo•34m ago•1 comments

Amazon's X-energy gets backing from Jane Street as investors bet big on nuclear

https://www.ft.com/content/59d9b7d5-e34b-4131-b80f-815208a2d4cc
1•perihelions•35m ago•0 comments

US presses Europe on rules for big tech companies

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/clydjnlm54po
1•reqo•35m ago•0 comments

Safe Chain: Stopping Malicious NPM Packages Before They Wreck Your Project

https://www.aikido.dev/blog/introducing-safe-chain
7•nailer•38m ago•0 comments

Khosla-backed startup can track drones, trucks, and robotaxis, inch by inch

https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/20/this-khosla-based-startup-can-track-drones-trucks-and-robotaxis...
1•iamtech•43m ago•0 comments

Notes from a Pyre, by Amal Singh

https://psychopomp.com/deadlands/issue-23/pyre/
1•thunderbong•45m ago•0 comments

No copays for asthma inhalers in New York under new law

https://gothamist.com/news/breathe-freely-no-copays-for-asthma-inhalers-in-ny-under-new-law-signe...
5•geox•46m ago•0 comments

BREX Syntax Reference

https://www.proxylity.com/docs/destinations/brex-syntax.html
1•mlhpdx•48m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A faster day-count to Y,M,D algorithm – 30-40% speedup

https://www.benjoffe.com/fast-date-64
2•benjoffe•48m ago•0 comments

Enabling cheap LCD HUDs – 0.015px calibration eliminates waveguide optics

1•nighthawkcar•51m ago•1 comments

Development-Cycle in Cargo: 1.92

https://blog.rust-lang.org/inside-rust/2025/11/24/this-development-cycle-in-cargo-1.92/
1•todsacerdoti•55m ago•0 comments

Show HN: X Timeline Cleaner, block tweets by location from your X timeline

https://github.com/jawerty/X-Timeline-Cleaner
2•jawerty•57m ago•0 comments

The Colonists

https://store.steampowered.com/app/677340/The_Colonists/
1•doener•1h ago•1 comments

Fastest LLM Picker

https://metrik-dashboard.vercel.app/
1•mbouassa•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

DoGE "cut muscle, not fat"; 26K experts rehired after brutal cuts

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/11/doge-doesnt-exist-anymore-but-expert-says-its-still-not-dead/
116•jnord•1h ago

Comments

LunicLynx•59m ago
Isn’t this part of Elons „process“: Delete until you deleted too much, then restore enough to make it work again, hopefully in a leaner state
Jtsummers•54m ago
That's what the supporters said. The problem was, and is, a complete lack of deliberation, which his process doesn't provide room for.

As mentioned in one of the linked discussions by ChrisArchitect, they didn't go out and actually talk to the groups they were cutting (or not cutting). The people in the field know where a lot of waste is, and having an organization, theoretically, at the level of DOGE take interest in it would have gotten things moving that just don't happen when you're 10-20 levels from those with actual authority to change policy.

ikrenji•25m ago
no one gives a shit if a tweet fails to post. can't bring the same energy into running a country, can you
benzible•23m ago
Unfortunately, 600K people and counting are no longer in a condition to be restored...

> As of November 5th, it estimated that U.S.A.I.D.’s dismantling has already caused the deaths of six hundred thousand people, two-thirds of them children.

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-new-yorker-documentary...

mullingitover•21m ago
The fallacy here is assuming Musk actually knows what he's doing (or even where he is) most of the time.

He is objectively, measurably spending the majority of his waking hours tweeting, not learning or performing work of any value. There was a whole project to install a bigass gaming rig in his government office dormitory[1], because the remaining time when he wasn't tweeting he needed to play video games.

[1] https://www.polygon.com/opinion/532455/elon-musk-gaming-pc-d...

ChrisArchitect•52m ago
[dupe]

'Suddenly exposed' DOGE employees fear prosecution after Musk abandoned them

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46024983

Doge 'doesn't exist' with eight months left on its charter

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46028721

KaiserPro•52m ago
Its one of those things that's a hard lesson to learn; ideology isn't greater than experience.

One of the biggest lessons I learnt when I was a younger dev is a living allegory that my manager told me:

"one day the new boss came in to a budget meeting. The boss was out to make a good impression, and come out winning. The boss looked for any 'useless spend'.

Looking at the budget, the Boss saw how much was being spent on cleaner.

Looking around, the Boss boomed 'The place is spotless, why the fuck am I paying for cleaners. There's nothing to clean'

The underlings laughed and clapped. Oh how clever the Boss was, saving such a big amount at the first budget.

Needless to say the Boss was most put out when the invoice for pest removal, food standard violation and toilet cleaning landed in the next budget. "

There's a reason why things are done that way. It might not be a good reason, but its still a reason. You need to find and evaluate the reason for something existing, before you fuck it up. Yes, before you ask, I did fuck up, more than once.

yoyohello13•46m ago
I have a big legacy code base as part of my responsibility and Chesterton's Fence comes up at least once a month.
alistairSH•47m ago
Who’s going to prosecute them? It won’t be the Trump DOJ. They’re safe, sadly.
bgirard•46m ago
This is one of many frequent reminders: In some environments, how you brand and market your work (Mush with a chainsaw cutting spending comes to mind) is often more important than the work you do. Most wont bother to look at the actual results of your work.
restes•24m ago
I don’t understand. Are you claiming the actual results of Musk’s work here were good?
floren•23m ago
I think rather he's saying that Musk loudly declared he was slashing government waste and firing do-nothing bureaucrats, and the people who supported him never really bothered to see if that was the case or not.
Zigurd•23m ago
I guess I'm what they derisively call a normie. Both the sink and the chainsaw seemed like red flags.
encomiast•46m ago
This is coming out the same day two DOJ cases led by a US attorney with no previous prosecutorial experience were unceremoniously tossed out. DOGE sent in a bunch of 20 somethings to "fix" the technology while cutting entire groups of experienced technologists like 18F. To say nothing of the CDC, whose communications are starting to look like a bad, late-night infomercials.

I understand having a problem with a authority that manifests as a distrust of experts, but the combination of ignorance and arrogance is breathtaking.

Hopefully 2026 can be a year of restoring some adults to positions of responsibility.

spwa4•28m ago
> DOGE sent in a bunch of 20 somethings to "fix" the technology ...

Elon Musk claims that the vast majority of decisions were made by AI modeling.

water-data-dude•23m ago
The transformer architecture was introduced in 2017, so they send in a bunch of 8 year olds to "fix" the technology ;)
jorts•19m ago
It was all incredibly reckless.
CrossVR•17m ago
I'd trust the 20 somethings more than the AI model.
spwa4•14m ago
I think we can all agree that the whole thing was an incredibly bad idea.
ben_w•14m ago
Synthetic 20-somethings that cost a few bucks per megatoken may technically be different from flesh 20-somethings working for free for the exposure or whatever it was, but it's not an important distinction.

Much as I find LLMs useful, even today I'd only rate their competence in any given domain like a 21 or 22 year old in that domain. The Penguin Island* tariffs comes to mind as an example of probably-AI; I can think of a few mistakes of this level before the days of AI, the only one I'd like to mention is having had to explain to a real human that someone saying they're in "London" doesn't automatically mean they're in the UK.

And that's if I'm being generous and assuming Musk's statements on this topic were based in reality — given Musk also asserted that savings of 1-2 trillion dollars were possible when this was not only beyond the powers of the executive, but obviously so with minimal research, I don't trust his word.

* Heard and McDonald Islands, IIRC

vasco•25m ago
Nothing wrong with being 20 somethings in itself regardless of the rest. Average age for the Manhattan project was 25-27. We can focus on the merits or mistakes no need to focus on age.
kbos87•22m ago
I’m ok with age being used as a partial proxy for experience when we’re talking about highly specialized roles with massive implications like the ones that DOGE staffers were dropped into.
ulrashida•16m ago
The average age for scientific contributors was 29. https://blog.nuclearsecrecy.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/L...

Did the DOGE 20-somethings also have the benefits of supervision from PhDs in various specialties? It's not the age alone, but the age in combination with other factors that make it concerning.

encomiast•16m ago
You are right — I shouldn't have been dismissive about the age, but rather the complete lack of experience around governance, why some of these rules exist, and why some of the technology is the way it is.
mistrial9•13m ago
I think this misses a point.. hiring adolescent hacks with after-midnight chops and thrill-trophies on the walls IS part of the selling point of the DOGE raids. It was a raiding party. That is as old as pre-history, in itself. But the playing fields are terminals and web browsers. Age is a "partial maybe just a little bit proxy for experience" no it is judgement and some healthy understanding of the weight of historic events, and the financial weight of some of the systems.

All that said there is another side of the coin. That is that there were under-the-radar payment systems and not quite audited channels of money in those systems. Built with care, you bet. Essentially diagramming the tech stacks, documenting admin systems, getting and using root and root equivalent at all times possible.. those were the scalps taken, and the targets were actually rotten in some ways in some places. /rant

counters•8m ago
I wouldn't compare someone like Richard Feynman to "Big Balls."
beanjuiceII•37m ago
doge in the end was not allowed to do their work, they tried to fight the swamp but the swamp won. In my sector management fought tooth and nail after doge pinpointed major waste..and we made sure they could not go any further. meanwhile the wheels of waste kept rollin'
encomiast•18m ago
What I saw was that DOGE spent all their time chasing non-existent (or at most minor) problems imagined from the conspiracy theories they heard about in the media (e.g. woke contracts). They drank their own kool-aid and when they were actually given the keys they came up with nada. A total waste of everyone's time.

I would be interested in knowing what specific 'major waste' DOGE found in your agency. I would also be curious, given how much latitude they were given, how your management made sure they could now go any further. What I saw was senior managers escorted from the building by security and put on administrative leave if they offered anything other than complete cooperation.

fwip•37m ago
At the risk of stretching the metaphor - fat is useful, too. In animals, a layer of fat will help you withstand 'lean times' of less nutrition or higher work. Run the body too hard without fat, and you burn muscle for short-term gain, or worse, die.

Similarly, in organizations, 'fat' helps out when the workload increases or productivity decreases. Run an organization too lean, and when you need to respond to a new situation, you burn out your muscle (workers) and/or go broke. This is similar to the concept of "slack."

Zigurd•21m ago
...said no junior associate at a private equity firm ever.
jfengel•21m ago
The metaphor extension is valid. If they had succeeded in just cutting fat, it might have been merely a mistake -- failing to understand how redundancy works in an organization.

Instead, they cut without regard to fat content. Many of the organizations were already operating on a shoestring. We didn't have an abundance of park rangers. It wasn't "merely" a mistake. It was the application of ideology, without regard to either the principles of good governance or the law.

vessenes•32m ago
The way the federal employment system is setup, this mass firing / closure and rehiring is the only way to effect significant labor reductions. I'm not saying it's a good idea or a bad idea, but this is really the only way. There are a number of federal laws around RIFs that massively move hiring considerations away from performance; what is still allowed is the shuttering of departments and groups. (Well, sometimes it is allowed.)

Anyway, if you're dunking on DOGE in your mind, be careful - this stat in particular is not proof they were dumb or didn't implement their objectives.

mullingitover•24m ago
> this stat in particular is not proof they were dumb or didn't implement their objectives.

No argument on that point: their objectives were always graft, mixed with a sprinkling of revenge and self-promotion.

calvinmorrison•24m ago
Its one of those things that's a hard lesson to learn; the bell is run, the canary in the coal mine is yowling yet people do not listen. Then a country, or large organization, or a business is at the end of its ropes and hard decisions have to be made.

The bumbling idiots who lead us into the situation won't take the blame, the "mean guy" who makes the cuts to save the country does.