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Warcraftcn/UI – UI component library inspired by classic Warcraft III aesthetics

https://www.warcraftcn.com/
1•vyrotek•46s ago•0 comments

Trump Vodka Becomes Available for Pre-Orders

https://www.forbes.com/sites/kirkogunrinde/2025/12/01/trump-vodka-becomes-available-for-pre-order...
1•stopbulying•2m ago•0 comments

Velocity of Money

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velocity_of_money
1•gurjeet•4m ago•0 comments

Stop building automations. Start running your business

https://www.fluxtopus.com/automate-your-business
1•valboa•8m ago•1 comments

You can't QA your way to the frontier

https://www.scorecard.io/blog/you-cant-qa-your-way-to-the-frontier
1•gk1•9m ago•0 comments

Show HN: PalettePoint – AI color palette generator from text or images

https://palettepoint.com
1•latentio•10m ago•0 comments

Robust and Interactable World Models in Computer Vision [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9B4kkaGOozA
1•Anon84•14m ago•0 comments

Nestlé couldn't crack Japan's coffee market.Then they hired a child psychologist

https://twitter.com/BigBrainMkting/status/2019792335509541220
1•rmason•15m ago•0 comments

Notes for February 2-7

https://taoofmac.com/space/notes/2026/02/07/2000
2•rcarmo•17m ago•0 comments

Study confirms experience beats youthful enthusiasm

https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/07/boomers_vs_zoomers_workplace/
2•Willingham•24m ago•0 comments

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

https://lauriepenny.substack.com/p/the-big-hunger
2•shervinafshar•25m ago•0 comments

The Genus Amanita

https://www.mushroomexpert.com/amanita.html
1•rolph•30m ago•0 comments

We have broken SHA-1 in practice

https://shattered.io/
9•mooreds•30m ago•2 comments

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

1•Buttons840•32m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: How to Reduce Time Spent Crimping?

2•pinkmuffinere•33m ago•0 comments

KV Cache Transform Coding for Compact Storage in LLM Inference

https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.01815
1•walterbell•38m ago•0 comments

A quantitative, multimodal wearable bioelectronic device for stress assessment

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-67747-9
1•PaulHoule•39m 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•39m ago•0 comments

How to shoot yourself in the foot – 2026 edition

https://github.com/aweussom/HowToShootYourselfInTheFoot
1•aweussom•40m ago•0 comments

Eight More Months of Agents

https://crawshaw.io/blog/eight-more-months-of-agents
4•archb•42m 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•42m ago•0 comments

The new X API pricing must be a joke

https://developer.x.com/
1•danver0•43m ago•0 comments

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

https://rma-dashboard.bukhari-kibuka7.workers.dev/
1•bumahkib7•43m ago•0 comments

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

https://github.com/2015xli/jqassistant-graph-rag
1•artigent•49m ago•0 comments

Python Only Has One Real Competitor

https://mccue.dev/pages/2-6-26-python-competitor
4•dragandj•50m ago•0 comments

Tmux to Zellij (and Back)

https://www.mauriciopoppe.com/notes/tmux-to-zellij/
1•maurizzzio•51m ago•1 comments

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

1•otterley•52m ago•0 comments

Passing user_id through 6 services? OTel Baggage fixes this

https://signoz.io/blog/otel-baggage/
1•pranay01•53m ago•0 comments

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

https://davmail.sourceforge.net/
1•todsacerdoti•53m ago•0 comments

Visual data modelling in the browser (open source)

https://github.com/sqlmodel/sqlmodel
1•Sean766•56m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Everything You Know About Fitness Is a Lie (2011)

https://www.mensjournal.com/health-fitness/everything-you-know-about-fitness-is-a-lie-20120504
5•dredmorbius•1mo ago

Comments

dredmorbius•1mo ago
Many submissions over the years, with particularly good discussions here:

March 10, 2014, 66 comments: <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7371478>

Dec 26, 2012, 334 comments: <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4971196>

What I appreciate about this piece isn't just the fitness knowledge (more below), but the business insights:

Here's the problem: If you're in the fitness-equipment business, free weights are a loser. The 2010 model looks too much like the 1950 model, and they both last forever. Far better to create gleaming $4,000 contraptions that can be reinvented every two years, and then hire a PR firm to promote some made-up training theory claiming that machines are the answer...

Commercial health clubs need about 10 times as many members as their facilities can handle, so designing them for athletes, or even aspiring athletes, makes no sense....

But the personal-training business model doesn't include teaching (or even learning) the fundamentals anyway. Trainers make a living by keeping clients coming back; fundamentals liberate clients to train themselves. So the savvy trainer tells you that these days, it's all about "functional fitness," a complex integration of balance and stability and strength....

Shaul gave me a great gift that day, cluing me in to a little secret: True sport-specific training, for literally everybody except elite athletes, isn't sport-specific at all. It's about getting strong, durable, and relentless in simple, old-school ways that a man can train, test, and measure.

Distilling the essential lessons:

- Anything works, especially over nothing, initially. Further progress adds to this with progression, specificity, technique, modalities, programming, and above all, consistency.

- Corollary: newbies often fall into the One True Religion trap, thinking that what works for them is 1) best for everyone and 2) the Best Thing Evar. There's substantial replicated science on non-newbie gains which is worth referencing.

- Physical fitness is far more than aerobic fitness, which much of the world still seems focused on. Strength and resistance training remain under-appreciated and under-utilised many decades after first reaching public awareness.

- Freeweights (stuff like dumbbells, barbells, kettlebells, and even cable machines) offer the biggest bang for the buck. As do compound movements (those in which multiple joints are flexed simultaneously), as opposed to isolation movements. Chin-ups are a compound movement (elbow, shoulder), arm curls are an isolation movement, both engage the biceps, but chins engage much more (forearms, lats, delts, rhomboids...).

- Movements (the specific exercise you're doing), sets, reps, rest, progression (usually increasing resistance over time), and programming (how you vary all of the above over a training year or longer) are the basic building blocks of strength training.

- Benefits are enormous at any age. Enjoy the easy gains in your 20s, revitalisation in your 30s and 40s, heading off metabolic diseases in your 50s and 60s, and slowing old-age demise in your 70s and beyond.

I'm going on my third decade of strength training, with ups and downs and pauses, but what I know with certainty is that I feel far better when I have regular access to weights. And some form of cardio (which I've been doing several decades longer).

The fundamental information is neither terribly complicated nor controversial, but clear presentation is at odds with business models, as noted at the top of this comment. I'm a fan of ExRx (<https://exrx.net>), and find the New Rules of Lifting books (Schuler, Cosgrove, et al) good introductions, though there are of course many other websites and books.