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SanDisk to double price of 3D NAND for enterprise SSDs in Q1 2026

https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ssds/sandisk-to-double-price-of-3d-nand-for-enterprise...
1•speckx•59s ago•0 comments

A poker game written in PicoLisp for the Sensor Watch

https://thegeez.net/2026/01/05/watch_bird_poker_picolisp.html
1•fogus•59s ago•0 comments

USA TODAY mapped the potential consequences of a strike on US missile silos

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2026/01/06/nuclear-sponge-project-methodology/874001...
2•perihelions•1m ago•0 comments

Kagi releases alpha version of Orion for Linux

https://help.kagi.com/orion/misc/linux-status.html
2•HelloUsername•3m ago•0 comments

"If Starmer is successful in banning X in Britain, I will move forward in . . ."

https://twitter.com/RepLuna/status/2009460496668426449
1•chrisjj•3m ago•0 comments

A Deep Dive into the Linux Kernel Processes and Syscall [pdf]

https://lass.cs.umass.edu/~shenoy/courses/spring20/lectures/Lec09.pdf
2•7777777phil•3m ago•0 comments

Display Size

1•kilvar•4m ago•0 comments

EU envoys provisionally approve signing of record Mercosur trade deal

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/eu-countries-expected-clear-signing-record-mercosur-trade-...
2•saubeidl•4m ago•0 comments

Link found between gut microbes and symptoms in auto-brewery syndrome

https://today.ucsd.edu/story/what-causes-some-peoples-gut-microbes-to-produce-high-alcohol-levels
2•giuliomagnifico•5m ago•0 comments

What If Your Exhaustion Has Nothing to Do with Your Life?

https://thinkingrock.substack.com/p/what-if-your-exhaustion-has-nothing
2•djrivard•6m ago•0 comments

The Debugging Book – Tools and Techniques for Automated Software Debugging

https://www.debuggingbook.org/#
1•vismit2000•7m ago•0 comments

How LLMs Actually Generate Text [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NKnZYvZA7w4
1•y0eswddl•9m ago•1 comments

Metaculus and Markets: What's the Difference? (2025)

https://www.metaculus.com/notebooks/38198/metaculus-and-markets-whats-the-difference/
1•kqr•9m ago•0 comments

Essential Criteria for Emerging VC Managers in 2026

https://taghash.io/blog/12-essential-criteria-for-emerging-vc-managers-in-2026/
1•koolhead17•10m ago•0 comments

MiroThinker

https://github.com/MiroMindAI/MiroThinker
1•handfuloflight•11m ago•0 comments

Et AI.: A proposal for AI attribution

https://anagogistis.com/posts/et-ai/
2•anagogistis•13m ago•1 comments

PhD Admission 2026: Dates, Eligibility, Entrance Exams and Complete Guide

https://sites.google.com/view/backlinklistforcrawling
1•aimlay•14m ago•1 comments

Pseudorandom black swans: cache attacks on CTR_DRBG

https://security.cohney.info/blackswans/
1•fanf2•15m ago•0 comments

Gamified TLDR on A2A

https://mcpa2a.lovable.app
1•maieuticagent•17m ago•0 comments

People in Brazil are living past 110 and scientists want to know why

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260107225527.htm
2•phyzix5761•18m ago•0 comments

Show HN: The dev dashboard I built for my non-technical co-founder

1•akhnid•19m ago•0 comments

GM to take $7.1B hit from electric vehicle production changes, China

https://www.freep.com/story/money/cars/general-motors/2026/01/08/gm-to-take-7-1b-hit-from-ev-prod...
2•cebert•20m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Woid – High-performance C++ type erasure and polymorphism library

https://github.com/akopich/woid
2•akopich•22m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Rankiwiki a multilingual community ranking site

1•rankiwiki•23m ago•0 comments

Show HN: VeridisQuo – open-source deepfake detector with explainable AI

https://github.com/VeridisQuo-orga/VeridisQuo
1•theocastillo•24m ago•1 comments

Friday Links #33 – Fresh JavaScript Tools and Trends

https://jsdevspace.substack.com/p/friday-links-33-fresh-javascript
1•javatuts•25m ago•0 comments

Moss-kernel: a Linux-compatible kernel written in Rust

https://github.com/hexagonal-sun/moss-kernel
2•ravenical•29m ago•0 comments

A Simulation of Being Dropped Randomly in the Ocean Every Day for 5 Years

https://old.reddit.com/r/theydidthemath/comments/1q840uk/self_a_simulation_of_being_dropped_rando...
1•debesyla•30m ago•0 comments

Looking Back at the Best Inventions of 2001

https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/01/looking-back-at-the-best-inventions-of-2001/
2•blenderob•30m ago•0 comments

Organ Meat Is All the Rage Thanks to MAHA and the Natural Food Fad

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-09/liver-heart-and-tallow-are-maha-favorites-foun...
2•helsinkiandrew•31m ago•2 comments
Open in hackernews

China starts UHV power line: The new 700 km UHV line will transmit 8M kW

https://switchgear-magazine.com/tm-news/business/china-starts-uhv-power-line/
38•taubek•19h ago

Comments

allears•19h ago
Now that the US has abdicated world leadership in so many areas, it's good to see China pushing the envelope.
toomuchtodo•18h ago
They’re the first electrostate, and their success is our global success as their innovation and exports destroy the demand for fossil fuels globally.

Ember Energy: China Cleantech Exports Data Explorer - https://ember-energy.org/data/china-cleantech-exports-data-e... (updated monthly)

China’s Oil Hoarding Clouds Outlook for Slowing Demand Growth - https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-12-11/china-oil... | https://archive.today/YLDHL - December 11th, 2025

> China’s oil demand growth is forecast to be 150,000 barrels a day next year, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of analysts. Energy Aspects was the most bullish, expecting daily growth at 320,000 barrels, mainly on rising petrochemical demand. Still, the prediction is a year-on-year drop.

> “It’s an irreversible path,” said Ye Lin, vice president of oil markets at consultancy Rystad Energy, which also forecasts demand growth falling in 2026. “The market is now feeling the impact of China’s fast-growing EV fleet.”

Rhodium Group: Electric Trucks and the Future of Chinese Oil Demand - https://rhg.com/research/electric-trucks-and-the-future-of-c... - July 1st, 2025

> Analysts have been discussing “peak oil” for decades. We’re hardly equipped to wade into that debate ourselves, even as Chinese demand will be a critical variable in future global oil demand. But the ongoing electrification of China’s vehicle fleet, especially in trucking, suggests long-term headwinds to diesel and gasoline demand. We estimate the total electric vehicle fleet is already displacing over 1 million barrels per day in implied oil demand—equivalent to roughly the daily oil production of Oman. That level is likely to rise by around 600,000 barrels per day over the next 12 months.

(TLDR At current electrification rates, China is destroying ~1M barrels/day of oil demand every 24 months)

HN Search: china electrostate - https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...

HN Search: china renewables - https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...

SoftTalker•18h ago
Would be humorous in retrospect if all the dire forecasts about "peak oil" turned out to be the opposite problem: collapse in demand for oil.
toomuchtodo•18h ago
Can you expound? A problem in demand for oil for whom (besides perhaps petro states that cannot meet their budgets at low global oil prices [1] [2])?

[1] https://i.ibb.co/0jDyB6mX/Crude-Price-Forecasts-Are-Below-Le...

[2] https://oilprice.com/oil-price-charts/

SoftTalker•17h ago
Yeah, any major economic change can be destabilizing. Particularly if there are powerful incumbents who want to maintain the status quo. We fought a civil war over that sort of thing. So a "problem" in that sense, not that it wasn't the right thing to do.
jacquesm•17h ago
That would be one of the better outcomes because there are a number of things for which it is very hard to use other stuff as a substitute. Oil is way too precious to be burned up.
seanmcdirmid•17h ago
China doesn't have much oil. There dependency on oil is a huge weakness, and they are easily blockaded as well, making the problem of importing oil in wartime problematic as well. Their move away from oil is more national security even if it does help the environment.
palmotea•15h ago
> There dependency on oil is a huge weakness, and they are easily blockaded as well, making the problem of importing oil in wartime problematic as well.

How are they "easily blockaded"? I thought their shipbuilding capacity exceeds that of the US, and their navy is now larger.

seanmcdirmid•13h ago
Look at a map, China doesn't have open access to the ocean. They have Japan, Taiwan in their way, the only help out they have is the South China Sea, but even that is crowded and relies on Vietnam, Philippines, Indonesia not being again them. They can only really get oil from the middle east through the straight of Malacca (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malacca_dilemma), which is really easy to cut off. It doesn't matter if you can build lots of ships if the US navy can take them out as they leave port into the open ocean.

So overland is their best option, but Russia is huge, lacks infrastructure (no oil pipelines in the far east), and anyways, isn't always China's friend. Western China abuts some Central asian countries with oil (and Iran in the middle), but again, not so friendly, lots of mountains to get trains through, and it is still far away from East China where the oil is actually needed.

So...they have lots of coal and are really pushing into renewables and nuclear. Nuclear is the kind of thing where you can stockpile a few thousand years worth of fuel with a few ships from Australia in peacetime. And if your economy relies more on electric trains and cars, you are going to be ok if someone cuts off or restricts your oil supply.

palmotea•10h ago
> It doesn't matter if you can build lots of ships if the US navy can take them out as they leave port into the open ocean.

If China can build lots of ships, it can build lots of warships. I'm skeptical the US Navy would have it that easy.

Also, as the US Navy ships trying to enforce a blockade would be getting pelted by land-based anti-ship missiles.

seanmcdirmid•10h ago
The USA can also hammer them from nearby island based airbases. It isn’t easy to just saturate them with ships. Maybe if they can make breakthru with drones. Right now their best strategy is just be exposed less by making people drive EVs instead of gasoline vehicles. It also has other benefits like getting the rest of the world off of oil, and being able to sell the cars and clean energy production needed to do that, and also cleaner air. China wins 3 way here, so it’s really a very smart choice for them, and it gives them even more money to draw on to continue building a modern military.
christkv•17h ago
China is pushing this because they have an oil problem. They are deeply dependent on oil that ships via sea and any conflict could quickly starve them of access to oil. Thus a focus on trying to get some energy independence.
nubinetwork•18h ago
Such a weird numbering scheme... 8 million kilowatts is 8 gigawatts.
DiabloD3•18h ago
kW happens to be the unit of sale for power (well, technically, the kWh), so it ironically makes sense to use it here.
trvz•18h ago
Anyone sending and receiving power through this project doesn't deal in kW.
jacquesm•17h ago
At scale that isn't true, it is either MW or GW for instantaneous power and MWh or GWh for energy.
tuetuopay•17h ago
At grid scales, kW is a rounding error. Even MW is somewhat the decimal place, especially for a country as large as China.
dbeardsl•17h ago
"Technically"? It's just wrong and I'm not sure which they were intending. Similarly, "miles and miles per hour are different units, it's not just a technical distinction.

A journalist is reporting on something they don't understand.

seydor•17h ago
are people charged for kW only? it's not like internet connections
beAbU•15h ago
Anyone well versed in the metric system can easily scale up and down the orders of magnitude, and units like "millions of kilowatts" is just tautology in the end of the day.

Also, like others have pointed out, kilowatts and kilowatt-hours are most certainly not used on grid scale projects. Mega- and giga- are the standard throughout.

immibis•15h ago
Should have been 8 billion kWh per 1000 hours...
general1465•4h ago
Do you have 8 million kilobytes, or 8 gigabytes of RAM?
1970-01-01•17h ago
This is good news as they're still burning inexcusable amounts of coal to keep up with demand.
jacquesm•17h ago
HV interconnects are a key component in reducing fossil fuel dependence and they to a very large degree offset the need for battery storage if used properly.
rdtsc•17h ago
> Ultra-high voltage lines operate at voltages above 800 kV for direct current or 1,000 kV for alternating current,

Interesting, I thought above a certain distance DC is more viable. Or are they just describing the UHV term in general, not really that particular 700km line.

pwrsysengineer•17h ago
Ultra-high voltage is an industry term. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_voltage#Definition

> ANSI C84.1-2020 defines high voltage as 115 kV to 230 kV, extra-high voltage as 345 kV to 765 kV, and ultra-high voltage as 1,100 kV.

scblock•17h ago
China has completed a number of these projects and has several in construction. I am not able to directly confirm but this appears to be a DC line.

There's a decent high level summary on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultra-high-voltage_electricity...

kens•17h ago
The journal Science has an interesting article on China's remarkable shift to renewable energy:

"China’s turn to green energy dwarfs any other country’s, as a parade of astonishing numbers attests. In 2024 alone it installed new solar and wind generation equivalent to roughly 100 nuclear power plants, and the pace quickened early this year. Dozens of new, ultrahigh-voltage power lines are marching thousands of kilometers from western deserts where much of the solar energy is generated to the eastern cities where it is used. Hungrily awaiting the bounty of clean energy are millions of electric cars and a sprawling network of high-speed electric trains that can zip between cities 1000 kilometers apart in a morning."

The article also mentions that China produced more than 12 million electric cars in 2024, 70% of global production. "China now dominates global production of renewable energy technologies. It makes 80% of the world’s solar cells, 70% of its wind turbines, and 70% of its lithium batteries, at prices no competitor can match."

https://www.science.org/doi/epdf/10.1126/science.aee8001

ciconia•16h ago
Meanwhile the US is all about "drill baby drill", and the EU is still hedging its bets. Say what you will about the Chinese regime but they seem to be much more pragmatic and forward thinking than western democracies.
Arn_Thor•16h ago
I much prefer democracy (the lack of large scale human rights abuses is a big plus) but one can't argue that with the fact that a multi-generational one-party system CAN encourage a refreshing degree of long-term thinking. This is a good example. (Of course, examples abound of the opposite--also in China)
boredpeter•16h ago
I take issue with "the lack of large scale human rights abuses."

Are you ignorant or just deliberately ignoring the genocide of the Palestinian people with an estimated 680,000 dead (~30% of Gaza) that occurred with widespread support of almost every western democracy?

China may be an authoritarian state but I would argue their large scale human rights abuses are far tamer than what these so called western democracies have been doing for the past 2 years and the direction we're headed.

soldthat•13h ago
That’s just made up numbers. It’s like 10x the number claimed by the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Gaza_war

throwawayqqq11•16h ago
The best argument for democracies, are their possibility of peaceful revolutios and this problem might become very relevant for china too.

You can compare the early US with present china. Both countries had/have great potential for economic growth, and everything went well for its citizens as long as the pie got bigger. The interests of the elites and the working class were aligned by that. Once the interests of these two groups diverge, democracies become relevant again. That's why the tech oligarchs are so afraid and politically engaged, to distract us with the have-nots below us.

Today, china just has the better aligning plan, while the west is struggling to keep it's democracies. IMO any reasonable trajectory for sustainability and social stability is a contradiction to western elites, who cannot think outside their status quo, while china just builds it. I really wish china well and that they dont develop such an arrogant international stance like the west.

xg15•15h ago
> (the lack of large scale human rights abuses is a big plus)

Inside the country at least...

Arn_Thor•1h ago
Indeed
Barrin92•15h ago
I'd honestly turn the argument on its head. It's China that is being democratic, in the most literal sense. Giving the people what they want, clean energy, cheap stuff, infrastructure simply by satisfying market demand.

It's the largest western, ostensibly democratic nation that is run by some combination of occult neoreactionaries, techno-elites and pseudo-royalty all of which seem to have lost connection to immediate reality in pursuit of annexing territories, bringing about the singularity or what have you. It is ironically China who is more short termist and notably better off for it

I would actually much prefer if the US was run by people who fix potholes in the streets than something that resembles Dune's House Harkonnen

gamblor956•14h ago
It's not market demand. The government is ordering the construction of solar and wind farms without regard to the market demand or to the citizens residing in the locations where the solar farms and wind farms are to be built.

That's the exact opposite of democracy and capitalism.

phatfish•13h ago
It's a rational way to deal with their energy needs, reduce pollution and their impact on the climate.

They have small gas and oil reserves if I remember. Unfortunately, if they were sitting on Venezuela or Russian style reserves or oil/gas the story might be different. But unlike Europe, the Chinese can see that being beholden to foreign states to keep the lights on is asking for trouble.

They seem to have avoided the ideology the big fossil fuel companies push in the west to make fossil vs green a political/class discussion, not a rational one. Rationally it makes most sense for a nation to generate their energy needs in a way they control with wind/solar/nuclear.

bryanlarsen•11h ago
It's not small -- China is the world's 4th largest oil producer. They domestically produce about 75% of their demand.
Gathering6678•10h ago
This number is wrong. Instead, ~70-75%[0] of China's oil demand is met by importing.

[0]: "2024年,中国...石油对外依存度71.9%,同比下降0.5个百分点。" (In 2024, China's ... dependence on foreign oil was 71.9%, a year-on-year decrease of 0.5 percentage points.)(https://finance.sina.cn/2025-01-24/detail-inefzsek2941040.d....)

Yizahi•14h ago
Neither is democratic. Democratic is direct rule of citizens, or at least some significant fraction of citizens. Only Switzerland is partially a democracy nowadays. Western countries are oligarchies, where elected elites are ruling however they deem necessary, but possibly with some caution because of elections. China is not even an oligarchy, it's a despotic regime, completely severed from the citizens.
Arn_Thor•1h ago
you can't just go redefining terms until they mean what you want them to mean. You can say "China meets the wants of most of its citizens" (in which case, citation needed...) but that is definitionally not democratic. Democracy is a system, and a process can or cannot be democratic (within or outside a democratic system).
aeternum•16h ago
China has invested heavily in all forms of energy including coal and oil, not just green energy.

It's pretty biased to highlight only the increases in renewable energy.

bryanlarsen•11h ago
The others are a rounding error in comparison to renewable energy. Yes, they've added a considerable amount of coal electricity generation capacity but not very much coal electricity generation production. It's production that emits CO2, not capacity. Coal plants that sit around not burning coal are relatively harmless.
dmitrygr•16h ago
I really would not celebrate just yet: https://geovisualist.com/tag/greenhouse-gases/
tapoxi•15h ago
This post is 11 years old?
dmitrygr•15h ago
worry not, nothing changed since: https://www.forbes.com/sites/rrapier/2018/07/01/china-emits-...
kens•15h ago
That article is from 2018. According to Science, Nov 2025, China is very close to the point at which its carbon emissions will decline, which will probably correspond to a global plateau in emissions. “Everything we’re seeing is that China is peaking a decade ahead of where they said they would. That’s a big deal.” Researchers think that global emissions would have plateaued in 2025 except that US policies to boost oil and natural gas production and suppress renewable energy were enough to postpone the plateau.

https://www.science.org/content/article/global-carbon-emissi...

dmitrygr•14h ago
"we're very close to when X might decline" -- a second-order hypothetical?
tzs•8h ago
China has more people than the US and EU combined.
juancn•17h ago
8M kW? Isn't that 8GW?

That's more than 6 DeLorean Time Machines worth of power!

(~6.6 at 1.21 gigawatts per flux capacitor)

cayleyh•16h ago
DTM is my new preferred power generation measurement unit :D thank you!
MrGuts•16h ago
And this is why China is the future, and the US is Argentina.