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Show HN: Django-rclone: Database and media backups for Django, powered by rclone

https://github.com/kjnez/django-rclone
1•cui•1m ago•1 comments

NY lawmakers proposed statewide data center moratorium

https://www.niagara-gazette.com/news/local_news/ny-lawmakers-proposed-statewide-data-center-morat...
1•geox•3m ago•0 comments

OpenClaw AI chatbots are running amok – these scientists are listening in

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00370-w
2•EA-3167•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AI agent forgets user preferences every session. This fixes it

https://www.pref0.com/
4•fliellerjulian•5m ago•0 comments

Introduce the Vouch/Denouncement Contribution Model

https://github.com/ghostty-org/ghostty/pull/10559
2•DustinEchoes•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: SSHcode – Always-On Claude Code/OpenCode over Tailscale and Hetzner

https://github.com/sultanvaliyev/sshcode
1•sultanvaliyev•8m ago•0 comments

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

https://jpcaparas.medium.com/microsoft-appointed-a-quality-czar-he-has-no-direct-reports-and-no-b...
1•RickJWagner•9m ago•0 comments

Multi-agent coordination on Claude Code: 8 production pain points and patterns

https://gist.github.com/sigalovskinick/6cc1cef061f76b7edd198e0ebc863397
1•nikolasi•10m ago•0 comments

Washington Post CEO Will Lewis Steps Down After Stormy Tenure

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/07/technology/washington-post-will-lewis.html
4•jbegley•10m ago•0 comments

DevXT – Building the Future with AI That Acts

https://devxt.com
2•superpecmuscles•11m ago•4 comments

A Minimal OpenClaw Built with the OpenCode SDK

https://github.com/CefBoud/MonClaw
1•cefboud•12m ago•0 comments

The silent death of Good Code

https://amit.prasad.me/blog/rip-good-code
2•amitprasad•12m 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•13m ago•0 comments

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

https://github.com/AveryClapp/glance
2•AveryClapp•14m 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•15m ago•0 comments

Imperative

https://pestlemortar.substack.com/p/imperative
1•mithradiumn•16m ago•0 comments

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

https://github.com/XxCotHGxX/Instruction_Entropy
1•XxCotHGxX•20m ago•1 comments

I went back to Linux and it was a mistake

https://www.theverge.com/report/875077/linux-was-a-mistake
3•timpera•21m ago•1 comments

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

https://github.com/Octrafic/octrafic-cli
1•mbadyl•22m 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•23m ago•1 comments

Peacock. A New Programming Language

2•hashhooshy•28m 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/
3•bookofjoe•29m ago•1 comments

What to know about the software selloff

https://www.morningstar.com/markets/what-know-about-software-stock-selloff
2•RickJWagner•33m ago•0 comments

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

https://www.getsyntux.com/
3•Goose78•34m ago•0 comments

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

https://jpcaparas.medium.com/ab75cef97954
2•birdculture•34m ago•0 comments

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

https://lowlighter.app/
1•andylytic•35m ago•1 comments

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

https://seafloor.bot/
1•k0mplex•35m 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•37m 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
5•sleazylice•37m ago•1 comments

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

https://codeslick.dev/learn
1•vitorlourenco•38m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: BusterMQ, Thread-per-core NATS server in Zig with io_uring

https://bustermq.sh/
134•jbaptiste•1mo ago

Comments

spicypixel•1mo ago
You should at least try and align the ascii flowchart in the readme on the repo.

One day Claude will do it correctly but today is not that day.

maxpert•1mo ago
I did a similar thing few days back just not with NATS protocol (Made it pure websocket based), and with rust. Couple of questions:

- Where did you get the machine to test your server on?

- Why did you end up going with zig?

simlevesque•1mo ago
Anyone can buy a 9950x on Amazon or any tech store, it's consumer hardware.
littlestymaar•1mo ago
Given that this entire project is a single[1] vibe-coded commit, I really doubt the author bothered buying hardware to test it.

[1]: https://github.com/bustermq/bustermq/commits/master/

speedgoose•1mo ago
Who cares whether it’s vibe coded ? As long as it’s good and well maintained over time of course.

Maybe there is a niche market for artisanal software engineering where real humans make holes in punchcards, but I would not bet.

littlestymaar•1mo ago
> Who cares whether it’s vibe coded ? As long as it’s good and well maintained over time of course

Maybe 12 hours after the first commit is a bit early to be confident about that…

> Maybe there is a niche market for artisanal software engineering where real humans make holes in punchcards, but I would not bet

Or maybe there exist a world between punchcards and evening AI slop “projects”, who knows.

steeve•1mo ago
he’s been working on it for 2 weeks, as he said somewhere else
littlestymaar•1mo ago
And he later said that he doesn't intent to maintain it:

> And as what it is, not a nats replacement, certainly dont have the time to maintain that this way

jbaptiste•1mo ago
My personal rig and Zig because I worked with it for a little more than a year. It was a fun test to do.
dorianniemiec•1mo ago
I'm also building a network server with thread-per-core and io_uring, except it's a web server, it's written in Rust, and io_uring is provided by a fork of Monoio runtime (I forked it to make it work with Windows and FreeBSD).
jpgvm•1mo ago
Upvote for Bazel. I think these days I place a lot more value on how well an ecosystem slots into Bazel/friends because monorepos are increasingly more useful and relevant.

So nice to see there are good rules for Zig and that folks are using them.

Also ironically I think starting with Bazel/Buck/whatever your poison of choice is almost always a good move even if people tell you it's overkill. The easiest time to do it as at the beginning, all times after that is too hard and the marginal cost of building with it from the start is minimal.

owyn•1mo ago
Downvote for this web site is a horror movie billboard and zig already has a build system which is zig and that's one of it's neat features.
fellowmartian•1mo ago
People are free to knock themselves out with Bazel if they’re into that kind of masochism, but having it as the ONLY way to build your OSS project is a big no.
simlevesque•1mo ago
Yeah I'm never touching Bazel again. I value my sanity.
steeve•1mo ago
well, bazel is by far the most reliable one so I'm not sure why you're complaining
synalx•1mo ago
The problem with "the language tooling is already a build system" is that cross-language dependency chains are a thing. The moment you need a Rust or Zig file to be regenerated and recompiled when a JSON schema or .proto file is updated, you're outside what most of those language-specific toolchains can support. This is where Bazel absolutely shines.
Cloudef•1mo ago
Zig build system can do all that just fine though
eska•1mo ago
If all of your dependencies need to use the same build system as your project then your build system/process is defect anyway. It should be possible to invoke a foreign build system as part of your build.
steeve•1mo ago
and it would be terrible for hermeticity and reproducibility, nix tries very hard and gets mediocre results

perhaps, just perhaps, why people go through the trouble not because they are idiots but for actual engineering reasons

dlahoda•1mo ago
Rust build system can do all that just fine though
carverauto•1mo ago
agreed, love Bazel + BuildBuddy
PaywallBuster•1mo ago
Comparison/benchmark to other alternatives?
BiteCode_dev•1mo ago
Does it have a similar system to Jetstream? If yes, does it address the reliability issues Jetstream has been criticized about lately?
jbaptiste•1mo ago
Absolutely not and will never have.
ngrilly•1mo ago
Why use Basel instead of Zig build tools, as it’s all written in Zig anyway?
ahoka•1mo ago
That was in the prompt.
neomantra•1mo ago
Unusual tones all around in the thread here. My initial observations before reading the comments here:

* "wow, OSS projects are starting to have some pretty wild landing pages, guess it's not just AI logos at the top of the README anymore"

* "wow, all in one commit. was it vibe-one-shotted, curated private work that was squashed, or something in between"

* "wow, Zig is kind easy to read although I really don't want to learn another language in 2026 although I already started learning some to use libghostty"

* "wow, is Zig really this much performant than Golang at the tails"

* "weird it uses Bazel, doesn't Zig have it's own build system like Golang"

* "so who is the author? I see they made an GitHub org for this. Are they going to keep doing stuff after the commit and should I keep this in my messaging queue neurons? Is this some company or person I should follow"

* "the README has a misalignment, do I PR that?"

* "oh cool, it lets you tune memory and the dispatcher"

---

I never thought of exactly how it manifested, except about the single commit. I have started "vibe coding" much more as the capabilities really improved in the last few months, so that isn't intrinsically a trash approach.

But the "who" and the "how" and the "why" do matter, in terms of whether one should look at it for education or infotainment or as a potential tool.

Disclosure of the intention and method would be courteous to the community when we create and share these things. Otherwise we'll all have high cognitive burden with the amount of projects we'll be seeing in 2026!

jbaptiste•1mo ago
That’s fair, I should have framed it more clearly upfront. Thanks for the feedback.

I was excited about the results. The intent was to talk about performance and architecture, not to imply this was a quick or effortless project. There’s been a lot of iteration and experimentation behind it, and I should have communicated that context better as well as the use of AI for the help.

neomantra•1mo ago
I totally get it and received the offering. =) Love seeing more use of io_uring too and interesting to see how that's done in Zig. Happy New Year: All the best on this and other projects.
koakuma-chan•1mo ago
Is it bad if I work in private and then squash?
neomantra•1mo ago
No, that’s very common and appreciated, especially when curated. All my comments there were musings, not value judgements.
smarx007•1mo ago
I am assuming the message durability guarantees lean towards YOLO rather than ACID? See also https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46196105
codys•1mo ago
> I am assuming the message durability guarantees lean towards YOLO rather than ACID?

"Core" nats doesn't have durability. Nats jetstream is the api built on top of nats that in the main nats-server impl provides durability. Jepsen tested Nats Jetstream.

Also from your link:

> Regular NATS streams offer only best-effort delivery, but a subsystem, called JetStream, guarantees messages are delivered at least once.

The project linked here does not implement the nats jetstream api, just normal nats.

So yes, it seems its same (documented, understood) "yolo" as normal nats.

samgranieri•1mo ago
This looks fairly cool. If I had the production need for this, I’d definitely consider this.

I paired with Claude and simply added nats.c to the zig buildup system for my zig project at work. It works like a charm.

mindslight•1mo ago
Putting aside the whole presenting slop-coded things as cromulent projects, is anyone else tired of this constant myopic focus on performance? I don't need a message queue that can "saturate the bandwidth of the next generation of hardware". Rather I want middleware that is easy to use - simple to set up (not hundreds of configuration knobs for optimizing performance), reliable (can run clustered on a few instances on its own, not using k666s or anything, and handle instances going away for a few weeks if one dies or I'm reconfiguring things), has good semantics that won't encourage Heisenbugs down the line (eg look at MQTT's actual semantics versus how it's incorrectly used by Home Assistant generic MQTT endpoints), and so on. I get that there's no surveillance industry money backing projects aimed at individual users, but it's still pretty sad that individuals creating projects in their spare time are still focusing on features desired by the surveillance industry.
hhhhhggg•1mo ago
jepsen on nats still gives me anxiety
snehesht•1mo ago
Wow, the whole thing (website, github repo) is down.