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Who are the companies that still use spring in the back end?

1•micorazon•26s ago•0 comments

In Ukraine, a New Arsenal of Killer A.I. Drones Is Being Born

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/31/magazine/ukraine-ai-drones-war-russia.html
2•pelasaco•4m ago•0 comments

An update from Commonwealth Fusion Systems (January 2026) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTzkmQei2oY
1•barbazoo•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Review all your Claude Code CLI sessions in one place

https://rcanand.gumroad.com/l/ccviewer
1•rcanand2025•4m ago•1 comments

Free domain-based breach and infostealer exposure monitoring for organizations

https://lunarcyber.com/
6•rangeva•5m ago•1 comments

Show HN: AeroGrid – A 3-layer airspace grid and standards for drone logistics

https://aerogrid.us/
1•todaycompanies•5m ago•1 comments

X faces global investigations for deepfake porn of women and minors

https://boingboing.net/2026/01/06/x-faces-global-investigations-as-grok-generates-deepfake-porn-o...
3•ryandrake•6m ago•0 comments

"Worst in Show" Returns at CES 2026, Calling Out Gadgets That Make Things Worse

https://www.ifixit.com/News/115344/worst-in-show-returns-at-ces-2026-calling-out-gadgets-that-mak...
1•FrankSansC•8m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I Made a Room Simulator

2•mikeaskew4•8m ago•0 comments

Designing SDKs that developers love

https://hatchet.run/blog/sdk-design
2•abelanger•8m ago•0 comments

Scientists create robots smaller than a grain of salt that can think

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260105165815.htm
1•malshe•10m ago•0 comments

About time: Setting up ctags for Vim and Git

https://peter-whittaker.com/getting-ctags-working-with-vim-and-git
2•PeterWhittaker•11m ago•1 comments

Fixing Telephony with Go

https://github.com/emiago/diagox/releases/tag/v1.7.0
1•emiagodev•11m ago•0 comments

Open firmware for the Xteink X4 e-paper reader

https://github.com/daveallie/crosspoint-reader
1•blutack•16m ago•0 comments

Funding Opportunities with Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC)

1•ARDC_73•18m ago•0 comments

Rethinking Quran Rendering for the Digital Age

https://tarteel.ai/blog/from-page-to-screen-rethinking-quran-rendering-for-the-digital-age/
8•amrrs•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A real-time Bullshit Bingo app for meetings, holidays, family gathering

2•l_oberbeck•23m ago•0 comments

Ada Web Lawsuit Trends for 2026: What 2025 Filings Reveal – UsableNet, Inc

https://blog.usablenet.com/ada-web-lawsuit-trends-2026
1•pkaeding•23m ago•0 comments

We got 78 GitHub stars within 24 hours for our next-gen AI coding tool

https://github.com/covibes/zeroshot
2•covibes•25m ago•3 comments

Show HN: A terminal-native web search agent built with the Subconscious SDK

https://github.com/subconscious-systems/subconscious/tree/main/examples/search_agent_cli
2•ohstep23•26m ago•0 comments

Logi Options+ doesn't work on Mac; Dev Cert expired on Jan 6th

https://old.reddit.com/r/logitech/comments/1q5vjyn/options_just_spins_and_spins_mac/ny3k3k9/
8•romanovtexas•27m ago•0 comments

Semantic Search Without Embeddings

https://softwaredoug.com/blog/2026/01/08/semantic-search-without-embeddings
3•softwaredoug•28m ago•0 comments

Private Inference

https://confer.to/blog/2026/01/private-inference/
2•archb•28m ago•0 comments

Show HN: The AI Party – Replaces Politicians with "Proxies" Bound to an AI

https://theaiparty.us/
2•todaycompanies•29m ago•0 comments

Marc Andreessen's 2026 Outlook: AI Timelines, US vs. China, and the Price of AI [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRh2sVcNXQ8
1•simonebrunozzi•29m ago•0 comments

Autonomous – Superintelligent financial advisor at 0% advisory fees

https://becomeautonomous.com/
10•DTE•31m ago•4 comments

Show HN: Building this platform for CTO's/devs/founders

1•akhnid•31m ago•0 comments

Template Parameter Deduction: Eliminating Hidden Copies in Generic Code

https://0xghost.dev/blog/template-parameter-deduction/
1•0xghost•31m ago•0 comments

Hydrogen plays part in global warming, study says

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/environment/2025/12/18/energy/hydrogen-global-warming/
1•PaulHoule•34m ago•0 comments

Robotopia: A 3D, First-Person, Talking Simulator

https://elbowgreasegames.substack.com/p/introducing-robotopia-a-3d-first
7•psawaya•35m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

BillG the Manager (2021)

https://hardcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/019-billg-the-manager
53•rbanffy•1d ago

Comments

anonymousiam•1d ago
So the main theme of the article is that Bill Gates was a "good" manager, and it enumerates through a bunch of examples of his innovative contributions.

I've always held the belief that even though Gates may have been an effective manager, he was a terrible person. IMHO, his repeated anti-competitive, deceptive, and often illegal behavior was the main reason for Microsoft's success.

WillAdams•1d ago
An excellent example of that:

https://www.folklore.org/MacBasic.html

An interesting spin on a "real" BillG review:

https://www.joelonsoftware.com/2006/06/16/my-first-billg-rev...

falcor84•1d ago
> how many billions of dollars has Microsoft lost, in R&D, legal fees, and damage to reputation, because they decided that not only do they have to make a web browser, but they have to give it away free?

Microsoft made many mistakes, but I don't see how integrating a browser into Windows was one. I still can't fathom that we live in a world where that got Microsoft in such trouble, but acquiring Activision Blizzard was deemed ok.

wredcoll•1d ago
I don't know where your quote is from, but trying to own the "default" web browser and tying it to your OS monopoly seems like a pretty great idea from a "making money" perspective, if perhaps not a legal or ethical one.
falcor84•1d ago
It's from Joel Spolsky in that post linked by the grandparent, from 2006. And that's exactly what I'm saying - it was one honking great idea. Microsoft saw how central the web is becoming, and integrated it into the OS

As for legality, I'm not a lawyer and definitely not an antitrust one, but as I see it, an OS is almost by definition an amorphous collection of tools that users need to make proper use of their computer and nowadays I can't imagine an OS that doesn't come with a browser, so would argue that they were absolutely right in integrating it. If anything, I see much more merit in suing them for abusing their OS monopoly to go into the solitaire gaming space.

endemic•22h ago
You're looking at it from the modern perspective. What Microsoft did was use their monopoly power to destroy a potential competitor -- the first step of the "EEE" trifecta.
falcor84•22h ago
I'm not a fan of Microsoft, but I don't think that they, or anyone, should be disallowed to Embrace new technologies. There has to be a better approach to antitrust.
CamperBob2•19h ago
They never "destroyed" anyone who didn't have it coming.

I remember paying for Netscape 4, and I remember the pile of steaming garbage I got when I did that.

WillAdams•18h ago
They destroyed MacBASIC --- as a person who suffered through using Microsoft BASIC for Macintosh, that's not something I'll forget.
roenxi•23h ago
Legal problem, absolutely. But it is hard to spin bundling a web browser as an ethical concern - especially from MS's perspective. Everything they put in the OS is a component bundled with the OS. Some components being legally special and problematic would have been quite confusing to them when it first hit. Web browsers aren't special and there is an expectation that an OS can access the internet using a variety of protocols.

The ethical issue would be around making it technically harder for competitors to create a web browser. Eg, standard practice on mobile phones (which is worse than anything MS ever did and has always seemed fine to me).

ferguess_k•1d ago
Even if it's true, it doesn't rule out that he was a good manager (CEO sort of). In the jungle you have to be a bad guy to fight the other bad guys. We give our own bad guys power so that we can keep our hands clean.
andrewflnr•1d ago
Or maybe "good" in the sense of effectiveness is entirely separate from moral "good", and any notion of nebulous other "bad guys" is irrelevant to an assessment of Bill Gates as a manager. I'd argue they're not relevant to assessing him morally, either, but of course that's a very old debate.
nemo•1d ago
>In the jungle you have to be a bad guy to fight the other bad guys.

One of my favorite places to go in the world is jungles. I've never really encountered bad guys there, and I've never fought anyone I've met in a jungle. I think you might want to work on a better metaphor, and also question your assumptions about any of this since on this I can't agree literally or metaphorically.

moron4hire•23h ago
Worst people I've ever met have all been in ornate offices
9rx•1d ago
Gates was an exceptionally good problem solver.

The trouble with great problem solvers is that they assume everyone else is also great at solving problems, and thus understand that if they are causing trouble for other people that those other people will step in and solve the problem that was created.

But, as you point out, not everyone is a problem solver.

sam_lowry_•1d ago
This is exactly why billg turned philantropist, in the footsteps of Alfred Nobel, the Merchant of Death.
gosub100•23h ago
Epstein really accentuated his bad side. I am interested to see what that was all about.
m463•19h ago
I think billg and sjobs had something important that other CEOs just don't have.

They started the company. They were parents.

bitwize•1d ago
I remember in the early 2000s Bill finally sat down in front of a Windows computer to play with and evaluate the software, found out how crap Windows and some of its related products really were, and sent out some angry memos telling his lieutenants to get it in gear from a quality and usability standpoint.

He may have enabled scalability by being more hands off, but I'm still kind of surprised it took him that long to learn that software quality had fallen off that far. And I'm not even getting into the monopoly aspect of it. Maybe that was the business model all along, you can save costs by not adhering to quality standards as long as you land the right exclusivity deals with OEMs. Microsoft gonna Microsoft.

romanhn•1d ago
I assume this is the email you mean: https://www.techemails.com/p/bill-gates-tries-to-install-mov.... His frustration is palpable.
slillibri•1d ago
"So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated" This has to be my favorite part.
p2detar•23h ago
So anyone knows what happened to poor Dave and his team?
TowerTall•12h ago
> I'm still kind of surprised it took him that long to learn that software quality had fallen off that far

Isn't that to some extent (or perhaps exactly) what is going on today? All employees at MS are using the polished Enterprise edition without all the cruft and without many of the annoyances. I bet most of them have never tried to use, eg, the home edition. Few of them has probably ever tried to pick a new PC from a retail store full of trialware and "optimizations" made by the retail store.

The point is that most MS employees don't get to see the edition of Windows that we, normal consumers, do.

hulitu•11h ago
> I remember in the early 2000s Bill finally sat down in front of a Windows computer to play with

What did he used before ? UNIX ?

AnotherGoodName•3h ago
Fwiw it becomes really really obvious when companies have someone at the top pushing for initiatives like this and when they don't.

A great example is how Apple used to be great at this. These days.the.keyboard.is.practically.unusable. As in it still doesn't type out the letter you tapped and you can see this via slow motion video recording https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hksVvXONrIo

It's not at all wrong to call out subordinates in the company for quality feel. It may seem like it leads to misprioritization (everyone in the company scrambles to fix the issue you saw) but not doing this at all is far far worse. Look at this issue BillG raised and the fact that no one cared until it was raised. Big companies are very siloed by nature. The only thing that breaks these silos is the leadership doing things like this.

GMoromisato•1d ago
I was working at Groove Networks, a tiny company in Beverly Massachusetts, when I learned that Bill Gates was dropping by. Founded by Ray Ozzie after his success with Lotus Notes, Groove had been negotiating with Microsoft to sell the company, and this was, potentially, the final step.

It was 2003, and Microsoft's next version of Windows, codenamed Longhorn, was not doing well. On top of that, Google and the rest of the internet natives were eating Microsoft's lunch, and many analysts expected the company to fade away, as IBM had done before.

Bill Gates, obviously, didn't want that to happen, and true to his nature, was looking for a technological solution. In many ways, Longhorn was fighting the last war: it invented a new graphical subsystem and a new storage system, at a time when modern apps were happily using HTML and SQL. Groove Networks had developed a peer-to-peer synchronization technology that blended online and offline so an app could have the best of both worlds. It was a true local-first architecture that was also internet native.

Gates arrived early in the morning with one or two assistants. In 2003 he was still the wealthiest person on the planet, but he carried himself like any normal engineer. One of my colleagues, who hadn't been told he was coming, only learned about it because they rode with him in the elevator. He introduced himself and made small talk. You can imagine their shock.

At the meeting, we presented our technology and our ideas for how we could fit into Microsoft's plans. Later I learned that this was a mini-product review, like Sinofsky talks about in the OP. I pitched him (somewhat half-baked) ideas about how Windows files folders could become collaborative, shared folders. He was very engaged, but thankfully polite--he didn't tell me it was "the stupidest thing he had ever heard." I suspect he was on his best behavior because he had already made up his mind to buy the company.

The highlight of the meeting, for me, was watching him and Ray (whom he'd known for a while) riff on everything around Windows, the internet, and technology in general. It was like improv, where every idea someone came up with was followed up with, "Yes, and then you can also...". You could tell Gates was engaged because he kept rocking in his chair, a classic tell we later learned.

Microsoft did ultimately buy Groove Networks, but not for the technology. I realized much later that Gates had bought Groove mostly to hire Ray. In 2006, Gates announced that he was retiring and appointing Ray Ozzie as Chief Software Architect.

At Microsoft, Ray spearheaded a project codenamed Red Dog, which the marketing folks later called "Azure". I'm convinced that Ray doesn't get enough credit for his contributions to turning Microsoft around.

Had Bill already planned all this when he visited us in 2003? Probably not, but seeing his mind work, it wouldn't surprise me if he had a little bit of an inkling. You never know.

romanhn•1d ago
Love this anecdote, thanks for sharing!
EvanAnderson•1d ago
Thanks for sharing this.

Ray has always sounded visionary to me. His comments on HN have been enjoyable to read, too: https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=rozzie

Angostura•21h ago
Just wanted to say, I really enjoyed using Groove. It was a memory hog and a bit flaky, but I thought it had tremendous potential and was conceptually really interesting. I was sad when it disappeared
canucker2016•1d ago
One major hire that you rarely hear about is when Microsoft hired an outsider (formerly at at IBM and Boeing) to take over as President and Chief Operating Officer.

https://www.nytimes.com/1990/03/20/business/business-people-...

But less than two years later

https://www.nytimes.com/1992/02/04/business/microsoft-presid...