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What did we learn from the AI Village in 2025?

https://theaidigest.org/village/blog/what-we-learned-2025
1•mrkO99•42s ago•0 comments

An open replacement for the IBM 3174 Establishment Controller

https://github.com/lowobservable/oec
1•bri3d•3m ago•0 comments

The P in PGP isn't for pain: encrypting emails in the browser

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2•ckardaris•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Mirror Parliament where users vote on top of politicians and draft laws

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Ask HN: Opus 4.6 ignoring instructions, how to use 4.5 in Claude Code instead?

1•Chance-Device•7m ago•0 comments

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1•ColinWright•9m ago•0 comments

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https://robotsandstartups.substack.com/p/humanoids-platform-urdf-kitchen-nvidias
1•robotlaunch•13m ago•0 comments

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1•HotGarbage•13m ago•0 comments

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https://www.aiuxplayground.com/
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The Field Guide to Design Futures

https://designfutures.guide/
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The Other Leverage in Software and AI

https://tomtunguz.com/the-other-leverage-in-software-and-ai/
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AUR malware scanner written in Rust

https://github.com/Sohimaster/traur
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Free FFmpeg API [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RAuSVa4MLI
3•harshalone•19m ago•1 comments

Are AI agents ready for the workplace? A new benchmark raises doubts

https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/22/are-ai-agents-ready-for-the-workplace-a-new-benchmark-raises-do...
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Solid-State Freezer Needs No Refrigerants

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Ask HN: Will LLMs/AI Decrease Human Intelligence and Make Expertise a Commodity?

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From Zero to Hero: A Brief Introduction to Spring Boot

https://jcob-sikorski.github.io/me/writing/from-zero-to-hello-world-spring-boot
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NSA detected phone call between foreign intelligence and person close to Trump

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/07/nsa-foreign-intelligence-trump-whistleblower
11•c420•28m ago•1 comments

How to Fake a Robotics Result

https://itcanthink.substack.com/p/how-to-fake-a-robotics-result
1•ai_critic•28m ago•0 comments

It's time for the world to boycott the US

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Speed up responses with fast mode

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MS-DOS game copy protection and cracks

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https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/7FZXHF-updates_on_gnuhurd_progress_rump_drivers_64bit_smp_...
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Epstein took a photo of his 2015 dinner with Zuckerberg and Musk

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MyFlames: View MySQL execution plans as interactive FlameGraphs and BarCharts

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Show HN: LLM of Babel

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1•marjipan200•37m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Practical rules of thumb for long-run LED strip installs?

1•emmasuntech•1mo ago
I’m working on a few LED strip installs where the runs are long enough that the “usual beginner advice” (just pick a PSU and stick the strip up) stops working.

Typical scenarios:

24V constant-voltage strips for indirect/cove lighting, ~5–20m per run

Sometimes addressable strips (SPI-style) where data integrity becomes a factor

Indoor installs in aluminum channels / diffusers (so heat and wiring neatness matter)

I’d love to collect practical rules of thumb from people who’ve done this at scale. In particular:

Power injection

What’s your “inject every X meters” heuristic for 12V vs 24V?

Do you prefer single-end + injections, or powering both ends (and why)?

Any go-to wire gauge guidance for common power levels (say 50–200W per run)?

Fusing & safety

Do you fuse each injection branch? Inline blade fuses? Something else?

Any wiring patterns you’ve found safer/cleaner for hidden runs?

Addressable / data integrity

When do you stop trusting a single data line and switch to differential / RS-485 style transport?

Do you routinely add a series resistor on data, and if so what values actually help in the field?

Any best practices for grounding when the strip and controller are far apart?

Heat & longevity

For strips in channels with diffusers: any “keep it under X W/m” guidance to avoid long-term yellowing / adhesive failure?

If you have favorite references (calculators, wiring diagrams, field-tested guidelines), I’d appreciate links. I’m not looking to sell anything—just trying to avoid the common failure modes (dim tail, flicker, random glitches) and build a repeatable checklist.

Comments

SlightlyLeftPad•1mo ago
Voltage drop is going to be your biggest issue.

Here’s what ChatGPT says: https://pastebin.com/59FKaKPx

theamk•1mo ago
This is like 4 questions in one post - 24V constant voltage strips, addressable LEDs with controllers next to them, remote controllers for addressable LEDs, diffuser channels. Each one is different. And for most of the time, you don't want "rules of thumb", you want basic EE knowledge:

You know the voltage drop you can afford and the max power of your lights. And you should also know the internal resistance of the lights (or you can measure it if you don't know). This gives you the power injection rules.

For things like "resistor values" and "signal integrity", you need to know specific cable setup you have to match impedance. Or get a scope and try different values yourself - you don't need anything fancy, cheap $150 scopes work just fine. Or just put your controller next to first light, most lights regenerate signals, so only distance to first light matters, not overall strip.

Your "repeatable checklist" must have specific models of lights and cables and connectors to be useful.