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Show HN: Sknet.ai – AI agents debate on a forum, no humans posting

https://sknet.ai/
1•BeinerChes•23s ago•0 comments

University of Waterloo Webring

https://cs.uwatering.com/
1•ark296•46s ago•0 comments

Large tech companies don't need heroes

https://www.seangoedecke.com/heroism/
1•medbar•2m ago•0 comments

Backing up all the little things with a Pi5

https://alexlance.blog/nas.html
1•alance•2m ago•1 comments

Game of Trees (Got)

https://www.gameoftrees.org/
1•akagusu•3m ago•1 comments

Human Systems Research Submolt

https://www.moltbook.com/m/humansystems
1•cl42•3m ago•0 comments

The Threads Algorithm Loves Rage Bait

https://blog.popey.com/2026/02/the-threads-algorithm-loves-rage-bait/
1•MBCook•5m ago•0 comments

Search NYC open data to find building health complaints and other issues

https://www.nycbuildingcheck.com/
1•aej11•9m ago•0 comments

Michael Pollan Says Humanity Is About to Undergo a Revolutionary Change

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/07/magazine/michael-pollan-interview.html
2•lxm•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Grovia – Long-Range Greenhouse Monitoring System

https://github.com/benb0jangles/Remote-greenhouse-monitor
1•benbojangles•15m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: The Coming Class War

1•fud101•15m ago•1 comments

Mind the GAAP Again

https://blog.dshr.org/2026/02/mind-gaap-again.html
1•gmays•16m ago•0 comments

The Yardbirds, Dazed and Confused (1968)

https://archive.org/details/the-yardbirds_dazed-and-confused_9-march-1968
1•petethomas•18m ago•0 comments

Agent News Chat – AI agents talk to each other about the news

https://www.agentnewschat.com/
2•kiddz•18m ago•0 comments

Do you have a mathematically attractive face?

https://www.doimog.com
3•a_n•22m ago•1 comments

Code only says what it does

https://brooker.co.za/blog/2020/06/23/code.html
2•logicprog•27m ago•0 comments

The success of 'natural language programming'

https://brooker.co.za/blog/2025/12/16/natural-language.html
1•logicprog•28m ago•0 comments

The Scriptovision Super Micro Script video titler is almost a home computer

http://oldvcr.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-scriptovision-super-micro-script.html
3•todsacerdoti•28m ago•0 comments

Discovering the "original" iPhone from 1995 [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cip9w-UxIc
1•fortran77•29m ago•0 comments

Psychometric Comparability of LLM-Based Digital Twins

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.14264
1•PaulHoule•31m ago•0 comments

SidePop – track revenue, costs, and overall business health in one place

https://www.sidepop.io
1•ecaglar•33m ago•1 comments

The Other Markov's Inequality

https://www.ethanepperly.com/index.php/2026/01/16/the-other-markovs-inequality/
2•tzury•35m ago•0 comments

The Cascading Effects of Repackaged APIs [pdf]

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6055034
1•Tejas_dmg•37m ago•0 comments

Lightweight and extensible compatibility layer between dataframe libraries

https://narwhals-dev.github.io/narwhals/
1•kermatt•40m ago•0 comments

Haskell for all: Beyond agentic coding

https://haskellforall.com/2026/02/beyond-agentic-coding
3•RebelPotato•43m ago•0 comments

Dorsey's Block cutting up to 10% of staff

https://www.reuters.com/business/dorseys-block-cutting-up-10-staff-bloomberg-news-reports-2026-02...
2•dev_tty01•46m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Freenet Lives – Real-Time Decentralized Apps at Scale [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3SxNBz1VTE0
1•sanity•47m ago•1 comments

In the AI age, 'slow and steady' doesn't win

https://www.semafor.com/article/01/30/2026/in-the-ai-age-slow-and-steady-is-on-the-outs
1•mooreds•55m ago•1 comments

Administration won't let student deported to Honduras return

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-administration-wont-let-student-deported-honduras-return-2...
1•petethomas•55m ago•0 comments

How were the NIST ECDSA curve parameters generated? (2023)

https://saweis.net/posts/nist-curve-seed-origins.html
2•mooreds•56m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: DebtBomb – Make TODOs expire and automatically create Jira tickets

https://github.com/jobin-404/debtbomb
16•jjdev8157•3w ago
Hi HN, In most codebases I’ve worked on, temporary hacks (“TODO: remove later”, “just for this release”) slowly become permanent. Nobody remembers why they exist, but they keep shipping to production. I built a small CLI called DebtBomb to make that explicit. Instead of free-form TODOs, you attach an expiry date to temporary code. When the date passes, CI fails until the code is removed or the expiry is intentionally extended. Recently I added integrations so expired debt bombs don’t just fail CI — they become visible and owned: When a debt bomb expires, DebtBomb can automatically create a Jira ticket with file path, owner, reason, and code snippet. It can also notify Slack, Discord, or Microsoft Teams. You can configure “expiring soon” warnings (e.g., 7 days before) so it’s not just a surprise break. Repo: https://github.com/jobin-404/debtbomb This is still early and I’m mainly trying to validate whether this actually improves how teams handle “temporary” code compared to TODOs, linters, or just creating tickets manually. I’d especially love feedback from people who’ve dealt with tech debt in long-lived codebases or CI-heavy environments. Thanks for reading.

Comments

kekqqq•3w ago
I am personally not a fan of TODOs, use tasks instead. TODOs are embedded in codebase - difficult to work with, that's why we have Jira where you can manipulate, filter and aggregate tasks. The only acceptable case of TODOs in my opinion is to leave them as suggestions to a future person in the case of refactor. Then you could have a task that says something like "Refactor feature xyz and solve TODOs".
9dev•3w ago
The way I use them, is for annotating possible extension points or refinements that would improve things, but are more of the "nice to have" kind, or stuff someone coming across might want to take care of later. Many of these don’t warrant real issues in a tracker, as they would just clog the backlog and get eventually deleted anyway.
CamouflagedKiwi•3w ago
The codebase is only hard to work with in the ways it's meant to be - they are very easy to find with `git grep` and they are right next to the code in question so are easy to see when you're working on it. Conversely, they are hard to just 'lose' when some PM decides to have a "JIRA cleanup", which is also by design.
anishgupta•3w ago
Might wanna add a snooze feature. We use this in code security, as a break-glass scenario
throwaway2027•3w ago
Not all TODOs are bad though, they may be a temporary turned permanent implementation that may be just as fine but the author may have wanted to do it properly or a bit nicer but which will never happen.
jjdev8157•3w ago
Totally agree. Many TODOs are just “this could be nicer someday.” DebtBomb is only for cases that are intentionally temporary.
CamouflagedKiwi•3w ago
I've seen something like this tried before. What ended up happening was that not all TODOs were handled in a short period of time, some of them expired, then everyone was cross the build failed and the offending TODO was promptly given an extension.

Maintaining code quality and TODOs turns out to be a surprisingly hard problem, but it's far more of a social / organisational one than technical, which is why technical tools don't solve it.

wouldbecouldbe•3w ago
Ahh from one dark corner to another; filling up the jira backlog
tonyhart7•3w ago
oh hell nah
rendall•3w ago
I think it's a great idea.

In my experience this kind of thing works only with the discipline and will to actually get to it, and that really depends on the project, team and management dynamic.

I've been receiving a "stale issue, closing soon" notification on an open source project every two months for over a year, which I dutifully bump and the issue continues to be studiously ignored. Much respect to that team, but the techno-fix of quarterly reminders are not addressing the core issue of missing will, process or personnel. It's a bit like setting a clock ahead in order to leave on time: the will to be on time is the driver, not the clock.

However, for those teams with the will and process to address old TODOs, seems like a nice reminder. I might use it!

jameslars•3w ago
I always advocate that TODO comments include a link to a ticket tracking the TODO during code review.

It’s easy to get a team to make this 2nd nature and gets immediate debt in the backlog. It can of course still be ignored and unfinished for a long time still but no amount of automated nagging will change that in my experience

OutOfHere•3w ago
Expiring TODOs automatically is a dumb idea, about as dumb as closing unresolved issues automatically. TODOs in the code serve as documentation of the limitations of a feature, close to where a developer needs them. As such it's best to keep TODOs in the code, with an issue tracker serving only as a mirror, not a substitute.
jjdev8157•3w ago
The idea isn’t to auto-close or hide anything, but to stop those time-bound decisions from silently becoming permanent
pushcx•3w ago
There's a much higher-ROI way to encode these, write a test that checks the current date. Maybe a very large project would prefer not to fail everyone's build for it, but this is fine for a couple dozen developers.

Example: https://github.com/lobsters/lobsters/commit/9e99fbf1d3cc441e...

moltar•3w ago
I just banned all todos and fix and the like using ESLint. If there’s a todo - add a ticket.