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The Godfather – Vogue Movie Review – May 1972

https://archive.vogue.com/article/1972/5/the-godfather
2•georgecmu•4m ago•1 comments

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says robots could be 'AI immigrants'

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/nvidia-ceo-jensen-huang-says-robots-are-ai-immigrants-...
2•panic•7m ago•1 comments

Logistics Is Dying; Or – Dude, Where's My Mail?

https://lagomor.ph/2026/01/logistics-is-dying-or-dude-wheres-my-mail/
1•ChilledTonic•8m ago•0 comments

Angular Version 21 EStore and Shopping Cart Prototype

https://horsecode-e216d.web.app/signup-login
1•lstanikmas•10m ago•1 comments

Asus on integrated graphics in gaming laptops being the norm

https://www.tomsguide.com/computing/i-asked-asus-about-integrated-graphics-on-gaming-laptops-beco...
4•not4uffin•10m ago•1 comments

iOS 26 still struggles to gain traction with iPhone users

https://www.cultofmac.com/news/ios-26-adoption-struggles-with-iphone-users
1•layer8•11m ago•1 comments

The most influential game design articles

https://www.reddit.com/r/gamedesign/s/OPbhQRnWHT
3•azhenley•16m ago•0 comments

Zirgen: Compiler for a Domain-Specific Language

https://github.com/risc0/zirgen
1•0xkato•18m ago•0 comments

Test your MCP Server for spec compliance, security, and agent-friendliness

https://mcpscan.dev/
1•norcalkc•19m ago•0 comments

Avoiding TanStack Form Pitfalls

https://matthuggins.com/blog/posts/avoiding-tanstack-form-pitfalls
1•matthuggins•20m ago•0 comments

Nvidia Brute-Force Bubble: Why 90% of Physics AI Compute Is a Mathematical Waste

https://github.com/isaac-sim/IsaacSim/discussions/394
1•ZuoCen_Liu•21m ago•1 comments

Retirement of Microsoft Lens

https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/retirement-of-microsoft-lens-fc965de7-499d-4d38-aeae-f6...
1•toomuchtodo•23m ago•0 comments

Y2K bug delayed my honeymoon by 17 years

https://www.theregister.com/2026/01/02/on_call/
1•CHB0403085482•23m ago•0 comments

Distinct AI Models Seem to Converge on How They Encode Reality

https://www.quantamagazine.org/distinct-ai-models-seem-to-converge-on-how-they-encode-reality-202...
2•sonabinu•24m ago•0 comments

Deep sequence models memorize atomic facts "geometrically"

https://bsky.app/profile/vaishnavh.bsky.social/post/3mbwt77arv22x
1•neehao•24m ago•0 comments

Code review of vibe coded HTML parser translations

https://felix.dognebula.com/art/html-parsers-in-portland.html
2•nicoburns•25m ago•0 comments

The Berry That Ferments Itself

https://fruitwine.substack.com/p/the-berry-that-ferments-itself
1•djrivard•28m ago•0 comments

Show HN: CallMe – Minimal plugin that lets Claude Code call you on the phone

https://github.com/ZeframLou/call-me
1•zefram_l•29m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Fast (0.5 GB/SEC) dedup utility for the era of LLMs written in C23

https://github.com/ThirdLetterC/corpus-dedup
1•yehors•29m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Why isn't AI spawning profitable indie games?

1•eveningsun•29m ago•1 comments

Taming the Tart: Malolactic Fermentation Strategies for Superfruit Wines

https://fruitwine.substack.com/p/taming-the-tart-malolactic-fermentation
1•djrivard•29m ago•0 comments

The Tailwind Debacle

https://njump.me/naddr1qqtk7m3dw35x2tt5v95kcamfdejz6er9vfskxmr9qgsvhgf6d6s4qykqn9qfykf5tu6vw6smnd...
2•andunie•30m ago•0 comments

Why I Left iNaturalist

https://kueda.net/blog/2026/01/06/why-i-left-inat/
3•erutuon•30m ago•0 comments

Writing an LLM from scratch, part 30 – digging into the LLM-as-a-judge results

https://www.gilesthomas.com/2026/01/20260109-llm-from-scratch-30-digging-into-llm-as-a-judge
1•gpjt•30m ago•0 comments

FFTW: Fastest Fourier Transform in the West

http://fftw.org/
1•Anon84•32m ago•0 comments

Researchers craft new recipe for groundbreaking alcohol studies

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-12-lab-rigor-real-life-craft.html
1•PaulHoule•33m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Fzf-navigator, a terminal file system navigator

https://github.com/benward2301/fzf-navigator
1•benward2301•34m ago•0 comments

Myths about Logitech Developer ID certificate expiration

https://lapcatsoftware.com/articles/2026/1/2.html
1•frizlab•35m ago•1 comments

Working memory for Claude Code – persistent context and multi-instance coord

https://github.com/GMaN1911/claude-cognitive
1•bochoh•39m ago•1 comments

Framework Lock: From 10-38 to Revolutionary

https://zenodo.org/records/18179143
1•andreguzzon•42m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Musashi: Motorola 680x0 emulator written in C

https://github.com/kstenerud/Musashi
122•doener•1d ago

Comments

kazinator•23h ago
I made one a 68010 emulator in C in 1994.

For the opcode dispatch, I made a file which consisted of regex and name pairs. The regexes matched strings of 0s and 1s: the bit patterns of the opcode space. The names mapped these to C functions. A script processed the file, generating the dispatch switch.

I seem to remember that on a 66 MHz 486 DX2 box running Linux, the thing was emulating about half a million instructions per second.

Code: totally lost to the sands of time.

self_awareness•19h ago
FYI: MIT licensed
self_awareness•16h ago
Is it wrong? Who the heck downvotes this?
debo_•10h ago
username checks out
self_awareness•7h ago
I felt bad after reading your comment.
rcarmo•18h ago
I took a look at this during my holiday break (where I was hacking BasiliskII to do JIT emulation on ARM), and it’s quite neat but, IIRC, wasn’t enough of a speed up over the existing emulator.
dukoid•13h ago
I'd expect the main advantages to be portability and maintainability?
rcarmo•9h ago
I was looking for more speed on ARM devices.
kstenerud•17h ago
Wow! Wasn't expecting this to be on HN.

So here's the backstory:

I'd just graduated from BCIT a year before. A friend invited me to visit Japan, so I got a working holiday visa, hopped on a plane, and there I was in a 1K apartment with 2 other people. I had one whole square meter of floor space for my computer (which I'd packed with me) and a donated monitor.

While looking for tech work, I fiddled around with MAME, doing small fixes to drivers and such, but I'd always had a love for the 68000 chip (from my Amiga days), so I looked at what MAME was doing and saw that its 68k emulator was written in assembler.

So I set a goal: Can I outperform the current assembler core with one written in portable C? Spoiler: Yes.

I spent 2 months sitting Buddha-like on the tiny square of floor in between job interviews, writing (and leveraging MAME's debugger). My proudest moment was when I finally saw the title screen for Rastan Saga pop up! (of course it crashed on launch, but still)

I named it Musashi, after Shinmen Musashi-no-Kami Fujiwara no Harunobu (新免武蔵守藤原玄信), commonly known as Miyamoto Musashi, who wrote the Book of Five Rings - a book that had a huge effect on me.

jacquesm•17h ago
Great story. It is interesting how being stranded in some place with a computer and some skills always results in the most fantastic projects.
lelanthran•11h ago
> Great story. It is interesting how being stranded in some place with a computer and some skills always results in the most fantastic projects.

TLDR: IME, solitude is required for clear thinking.

-----------------------------------

Long ago, I used to drive 600km (one-way) twice a month . Kept it up for 4 years or so. As I drive with the radio off, I had much time alone with my thoughts.

Now, I wonder if always reading is having a negative effect: we're constantly bombarded with content all the time, and even though I never doomscroll (no tiktok account, no FB account, no instagram, etc), I think sometimes that enforced solitude might do wonders for my problem-solving.

I wonder how people who are on all those social networks ever find time to just ruminate.

jacquesm•8h ago
Heh, that's a very timely comment. I just drove up and down to Berlin through absolutely crap weather and still figured something out I'd been struggling with for weeks.
ale42•8h ago
Very true. Had a somewhat similar experience while being offline in trains for some hours at a time.
matwood•17h ago
Also the book simply named “Musashi” is amazing and tells the ‘story’ of his life. It has arguably the best ending of any book I’ve ever read where the lead up builds for 1000+ pages ending in a crescendo.