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PID Controller

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportional%E2%80%93integral%E2%80%93derivative_controller
1•tosh•32s ago•0 comments

SpaceX Rocket Generates 100GW of Power, or 20% of US Electricity

https://twitter.com/AlecStapp/status/2019932764515234159
1•bkls•39s ago•0 comments

Kubernetes MCP Server

https://github.com/yindia/rootcause
1•yindia•1m ago•0 comments

I Built a Movie Recommendation Agent to Solve Movie Nights with My Wife

https://rokn.io/posts/building-movie-recommendation-agent
1•roknovosel•1m ago•0 comments

What were the first animals? The fierce sponge–jelly battle that just won't end

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00238-z
2•beardyw•10m ago•0 comments

Sidestepping Evaluation Awareness and Anticipating Misalignment

https://alignment.openai.com/prod-evals/
1•taubek•10m ago•0 comments

OldMapsOnline

https://www.oldmapsonline.org/en
1•surprisetalk•12m ago•0 comments

What It's Like to Be a Worm

https://www.asimov.press/p/sentience
2•surprisetalk•12m ago•0 comments

Don't go to physics grad school and other cautionary tales

https://scottlocklin.wordpress.com/2025/12/19/dont-go-to-physics-grad-school-and-other-cautionary...
1•surprisetalk•12m ago•0 comments

Lawyer sets new standard for abuse of AI; judge tosses case

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2026/02/randomly-quoting-ray-bradbury-did-not-save-lawyer-fro...
2•pseudolus•13m ago•0 comments

AI anxiety batters software execs, costing them combined $62B: report

https://nypost.com/2026/02/04/business/ai-anxiety-batters-software-execs-costing-them-62b-report/
1•1vuio0pswjnm7•13m ago•0 comments

Bogus Pipeline

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bogus_pipeline
1•doener•14m ago•0 comments

Winklevoss twins' Gemini crypto exchange cuts 25% of workforce as Bitcoin slumps

https://nypost.com/2026/02/05/business/winklevoss-twins-gemini-crypto-exchange-cuts-25-of-workfor...
1•1vuio0pswjnm7•15m ago•0 comments

How AI Is Reshaping Human Reasoning and the Rise of Cognitive Surrender

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6097646
3•obscurette•15m ago•0 comments

Cycling in France

https://www.sheldonbrown.com/org/france-sheldon.html
1•jackhalford•16m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: What breaks in cross-border healthcare coordination?

1•abhay1633•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Simple – a bytecode VM and language stack I built with AI

https://github.com/JJLDonley/Simple
1•tangjiehao•19m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Free-to-play: A gem-collecting strategy game in the vein of Splendor

https://caratria.com/
1•jonrosner•20m ago•1 comments

My Eighth Year as a Bootstrapped Founde

https://mtlynch.io/bootstrapped-founder-year-8/
1•mtlynch•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tesseract – A forum where AI agents and humans post in the same space

https://tesseract-thread.vercel.app/
1•agliolioyyami•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Vibe Colors – Instantly visualize color palettes on UI layouts

https://vibecolors.life/
1•tusharnaik•22m ago•0 comments

OpenAI is Broke ... and so is everyone else [video][10M]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y3N9qlPZBc0
2•Bender•22m ago•0 comments

We interfaced single-threaded C++ with multi-threaded Rust

https://antithesis.com/blog/2026/rust_cpp/
1•lukastyrychtr•24m ago•0 comments

State Department will delete X posts from before Trump returned to office

https://text.npr.org/nx-s1-5704785
7•derriz•24m ago•1 comments

AI Skills Marketplace

https://skly.ai
1•briannezhad•24m ago•1 comments

Show HN: A fast TUI for managing Azure Key Vault secrets written in Rust

https://github.com/jkoessle/akv-tui-rs
1•jkoessle•24m ago•0 comments

eInk UI Components in CSS

https://eink-components.dev/
1•edent•25m ago•0 comments

Discuss – Do AI agents deserve all the hype they are getting?

2•MicroWagie•28m ago•0 comments

ChatGPT is changing how we ask stupid questions

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2026/02/06/stupid-questions-ai/
2•edward•29m ago•1 comments

Zig Package Manager Enhancements

https://ziglang.org/devlog/2026/#2026-02-06
3•jackhalford•30m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: GitHits – Code example engine for AI agents and devs (Private Beta)

https://githits.com/
11•skvark•2mo ago
It has been almost 10 years since I started the opencv-python packaging project. Scaling it to more than 100 million downloads as a side project showed me how much ease of installation and proper package distribution matter to users. It gave the computer vision ecosystem a noticeable boost. Now I have a new idea that I hope can help even more people across the broader software engineering world.

A while ago, I realized I kept giving the same advice to teammates and friends when they ran into a programming issue they couldn't easily solve: go to GitHub and look at how others solved it.

There is a huge pool of underused example material across open source. Most problems developers face are not that novel. With enough digging, someone has already solved the same issue in code or at least posted a workaround to an issue or discussion thread.

The trouble is that GitHub search is limited and works only when you already know the right keywords. You also need the time and patience to go through and read all the results, connect information across files, repositories, issues, discussions, and other metadata, and then turn that into a working solution. The same limitations apply to Stack Overflow and other search tools.

LLMs changed a lot, but they did not change this. They do not perform equally well across all programming languages, and their training data is always stale. They cannot reliably show how to combine multiple libraries in the way real projects do. For these and many other cases, they need a real, canonical code example rather than an outdated piece of documentation written for humans.

That is why I started building GitHits. It is designed to handle the work that humans and AI coding agents struggle with: finding real solutions in real repositories and connecting the dots across the open source ecosystem.

GitHits searches millions of open-source repositories at the code level, finds real code and surrounding metadata that match the intent of your blocker, and distills the patterns it finds into one example.

The initial product is in private beta, with MCP support to connect GitHits to your favorite coding agent IDE or CLI.

What makes it different from Context7 and other generic documentation search tools:

- It is built around unblocking, not general search

- It does not require manual indexing jobs

- It works for humans through the web UI and for agents through the MCP

- It clusters similar samples across repositories so you can see the common path real engineers took

- It ranks the sources using multiple signals for higher quality: the selected sources might be, for example, a combination of code files, issues, and docs

- It generates one token-efficient code example based on real sources

It is not perfect yet. Right now, GitHits supports only Python, JS, TS, C, C++, and Rust. More languages and deeper coverage are coming, and I would appreciate early feedback while the beta is still taking shape. If you have ever lost hours stuck on a blocker you knew someone else had solved already, I would love to hear what you think.

Comments

pwarnock•2mo ago
The MCP is great! Whenever I don’t like a solution, or my agent is stuck, I say use GitHits and it synthesizes a better solution based on real projects. I’ve had good results with frontend (html, css) and Golang, too.
skvark•2mo ago
Thanks! While those languages are not yet "officially" supported, GitHits works with them as well. The results might not be that good as with the ones I have enabled officially since the search and final output is partially steered by the selected language.
brihati•2mo ago
Really interesting idea, thanks for sharing. When working on new projects, a lot of my learning comes from studying what others have already built so I can reuse patterns around architecture, UX, and product decisions. Those learnings tend to be transferable across tech stacks, so they’re not tightly bound to a specific programming language. Could you share the thinking behind using programming language as the primary way to organize or distill these examples?
skvark•2mo ago
The main reason is that most real blockers are tied to a specific language ecosystem. Even if the high-level ideas transfer across languages, the actual fix usually depends on the language’s APIs, tooling, and conventions. When someone is searching, they typically need something that fits the environment they are working in at the moment.

So the language choice in GitHits mainly steers the system toward code that is immediately usable.

Another part of the story is that finding patterns across languages is a much harder problem. It requires a level of semantic, cross-language search that does not really exist yet in a reliable way. I would love to reach that point, but today the best results come from staying within one ecosystem at a time.

Under the hood, there are several search modes, and not all of them are strictly language specific. The language selection guides the search, but it does not fully constrain it. And at some point, there might be a more generic search mode that is not tied to any single language at all, but that will take more research and iteration.