frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Achieving Ultra-Fast AI Chat Widgets

https://www.cjroth.com/blog/2026-02-06-chat-widgets
1•thoughtfulchris•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Runtime Fence – Kill switch for AI agents

https://github.com/RunTimeAdmin/ai-agent-killswitch
1•ccie14019•4m ago•1 comments

Researchers surprised by the brain benefits of cannabis usage in adults over 40

https://nypost.com/2026/02/07/health/cannabis-may-benefit-aging-brains-study-finds/
1•SirLJ•5m ago•0 comments

Peter Thiel warns the Antichrist, apocalypse linked to the 'end of modernity'

https://fortune.com/2026/02/04/peter-thiel-antichrist-greta-thunberg-end-of-modernity-billionaires/
1•randycupertino•6m ago•1 comments

USS Preble Used Helios Laser to Zap Four Drones in Expanding Testing

https://www.twz.com/sea/uss-preble-used-helios-laser-to-zap-four-drones-in-expanding-testing
2•breve•12m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Animated beach scene, made with CSS

https://ahmed-machine.github.io/beach-scene/
1•ahmedoo•12m ago•0 comments

An update on unredacting select Epstein files – DBC12.pdf liberated

https://neosmart.net/blog/efta00400459-has-been-cracked-dbc12-pdf-liberated/
1•ks2048•12m ago•0 comments

Was going to share my work

1•hiddenarchitect•16m ago•0 comments

Pitchfork: A devilishly good process manager for developers

https://pitchfork.jdx.dev/
1•ahamez•16m ago•0 comments

You Are Here

https://brooker.co.za/blog/2026/02/07/you-are-here.html
3•mltvc•20m ago•0 comments

Why social apps need to become proactive, not reactive

https://www.heyflare.app/blog/from-reactive-to-proactive-how-ai-agents-will-reshape-social-apps
1•JoanMDuarte•21m ago•1 comments

How patient are AI scrapers, anyway? – Random Thoughts

https://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/2026/02/07/how-patient-are-ai-scrapers-anyway/
1•samtrack2019•21m ago•0 comments

Vouch: A contributor trust management system

https://github.com/mitchellh/vouch
2•SchwKatze•21m ago•0 comments

I built a terminal monitoring app and custom firmware for a clock with Claude

https://duggan.ie/posts/i-built-a-terminal-monitoring-app-and-custom-firmware-for-a-desktop-clock...
1•duggan•22m ago•0 comments

Tiny C Compiler

https://bellard.org/tcc/
1•guerrilla•24m ago•0 comments

Y Combinator Founder Organizes 'March for Billionaires'

https://mlq.ai/news/ai-startup-founder-organizes-march-for-billionaires-protest-against-californi...
1•hidden80•24m ago•2 comments

Ask HN: Need feedback on the idea I'm working on

1•Yogender78•25m ago•0 comments

OpenClaw Addresses Security Risks

https://thebiggish.com/news/openclaw-s-security-flaws-expose-enterprise-risk-22-of-deployments-un...
2•vedantnair•25m ago•0 comments

Apple finalizes Gemini / Siri deal

https://www.engadget.com/ai/apple-reportedly-plans-to-reveal-its-gemini-powered-siri-in-february-...
1•vedantnair•26m ago•0 comments

Italy Railways Sabotaged

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/czr4rx04xjpo
5•vedantnair•26m ago•0 comments

Emacs-tramp-RPC: high-performance TRAMP back end using MsgPack-RPC

https://github.com/ArthurHeymans/emacs-tramp-rpc
1•fanf2•28m ago•0 comments

Nintendo Wii Themed Portfolio

https://akiraux.vercel.app/
2•s4074433•32m ago•2 comments

"There must be something like the opposite of suicide "

https://post.substack.com/p/there-must-be-something-like-the
1•rbanffy•34m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Why doesn't Netflix add a “Theater Mode” that recreates the worst parts?

2•amichail•35m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Engineering Perception with Combinatorial Memetics

1•alan_sass•41m ago•2 comments

Show HN: Steam Daily – A Wordle-like daily puzzle game for Steam fans

https://steamdaily.xyz
1•itshellboy•43m ago•0 comments

The Anthropic Hive Mind

https://steve-yegge.medium.com/the-anthropic-hive-mind-d01f768f3d7b
1•spenvo•43m ago•0 comments

Just Started Using AmpCode

https://intelligenttools.co/blog/ampcode-multi-agent-production
1•BojanTomic•44m ago•0 comments

LLM as an Engineer vs. a Founder?

1•dm03514•45m ago•0 comments

Crosstalk inside cells helps pathogens evade drugs, study finds

https://phys.org/news/2026-01-crosstalk-cells-pathogens-evade-drugs.html
2•PaulHoule•46m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Ask HN: How have you or your firm made money with LLMs?

12•bwestergard•3w ago
In many currently active threads, members of the community are alluding to major productivity gains with more recent LLM models. I think it would be illuminating for all of us to hear what sorts of problem domains and lines of business these successes have occurred in.

A good example would be: "My team used Claude Code Opus 4.5 to build and ship an iOS fitness app that now has 10k paying users." This shows that the results of your process found paying customers.

Less helpful example would be: "My team is closing tickets faster than ever" or "I finally finished the novel I have been working on and my friends say it's great!" These are less interesting because they do not give us any insight into the market response.

Comments

leros•3w ago
The best clear example I've seen of LLMs making money is a company that now generates custom email text instead of using standard email templates. They increased engagement by some meaningful metric like +15% which translates into hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue.
bwestergard•3w ago
Great example. Do you know what sorts of input they're using to drive this custom messaging?
leros•3w ago
Not really.

I know the original email was something like "Alert: you have a new thing: X Thing"

And the new emails are a prompt something like "we know all of this about the user and all of this about the X thing, write an email alerting them to the new thing with these particular goals".

I really don't know much about it so I'm being pretty vague and generic.

mstipetic•2w ago
I wonder how the new ai gmail features will affect email marketing
philwyshbone•3w ago
We've seen some tangible benefits from integrating LLMs into our workflow, particularly in automating customer support and content generation. By leveraging language models, we’ve been able to free up our team’s time and focus on more strategic tasks, which has led to improved efficiency.

We ran into this ourselves when we needed to manage a growing volume of inquiries without scaling our support staff. By using LLMs to generate responses and categorize requests, we not only enhanced our response times but also maintained a level of quality that our users appreciated.

We ended up building Wyshbone to handle sales lead generation and outreach timing, integrating seamlessly with our CRM. This has helped us identify potential leads more effectively and optimize our follow-up strategies.

dsr_•3w ago
So the money from LLMs is in selling them to people who aren't selling enough?
PrimalPower•3w ago
Yea, it's not not necessarily that the LLM itself is better at customer support than a human.

But i've found that it's just good enough that support and teams can handle addressing the systematic problems while the LLM deals with operational overhead.

thunky•3w ago
LLMs finally gave someone I know the confidence to up her business rates. Professional services, nothing to do with software dev (yes LLMs are not just for devs). It suggested she revamp her entire pricing structure. She thought her clients would walk, but she did it and nobody flinched. Big revenue boost.

She also uses it daily for all kinds of things. For example recording/transcribing/summarizing meetings, creating plans, writing emails, reviewing employee performance, and a bunch of other stuff. If it went away she would be devastated.

jurschreuder•3w ago
A bit the same way Egyptian history experts make money.

By making LLMs for people who want to make money with LLMs.

For me though I see ChatGPT take all the hype now. I'm seeing people get more and more bored with that and in quest of a step up or sideways from that.

That goes pretty slow outside of developers people are still trying to come to grips with OpenAI.

All earlier adopters have been builders interested in the technology for tech sake. The real consumers are veeery slow to ramp up.

raw_anon_1111•2w ago
I work in cloud consulting. We make money when companies come to us to do implementations using LLMs…
Waffle2180•2w ago
I’ve seen LLMs make money most reliably when they’re embedded into an existing workflow rather than sold as “AI” itself.

One example: a small team built an internal tool for SEO/content teams that generates structured content briefs and refresh plans from search data. The value wasn’t faster writing, but fewer failed pages. Clients were willing to pay because it reduced wasted content spend and made outcomes more predictable. It ended up as a SaaS with recurring subscriptions rather than a usage-based novelty.

Another case was customer support tooling for a B2B product. LLMs were used to summarize long ticket histories, surface likely causes, and draft replies, but humans stayed in the loop. The business impact showed up as lower support headcount growth while revenue increased, which leadership cared about more than raw “productivity.”

Across cases, the pattern seems to be: - tie the model to a clear economic decision - charge for risk reduction or revenue lift, not for text generation - keep humans in the loop where mistakes are costly

Pure “LLM apps” struggled more unless they were tightly scoped or had strong distribution already.