frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Show HN

1•bytefish•1m ago•0 comments

Nova is a webframework for Erlang/BEAM

https://novaframework.org
1•buuurbas•2m ago•0 comments

What Is Control Flow Analysis for Lambda Calculus? – Iowa Type Theory Commute

https://rss.buzzsprout.com/728558.rss
1•matt_d•2m ago•0 comments

Tabstack: Browsing Infrastructure for AI Agents

https://tabstack.ai/blog/intro-browsing-infrastructure-ai-agents
1•nunodonato•3m ago•0 comments

When Polymarket Can't Agree on Reality

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/when-polymarket-cant-agree-on-reality.html
1•paulpauper•4m ago•0 comments

Testing a sci-fi story from 1953

https://blog.outlandish.claims/p/the-monkeys-finger
1•honoredb•5m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Is offline-first viable or do "free and cloud bundle" win?

1•rupinderdev•11m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Agint Flow – design the software as a graph, then generate the code

https://flow.agintai.com
3•AgintAI•12m ago•2 comments

Dnstt (DNS Tunneling) Bypassing Iran's Current DPI via DoH/DoT

https://www.bamsoftware.com/software/dnstt/
2•us321•14m ago•1 comments

When it comes to vaccine schedules, the U.S. is now the outlier

https://www.statnews.com/2026/01/09/childhood-vaccination-fact-check-denmark-not-america-is-the-o...
3•bikenaga•15m ago•0 comments

Show HN: CC TV remote plugin, pauses your binge-watching when Claude goes idle

https://github.com/HermannBjorgvin/claude-plugins/tree/main/tv-pauser
1•hermannbjorgvin•15m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Galaxy visualization using Redshift data (Raylib, C)

https://github.com/Avicted/galaxy_visualization_raylib
1•avicted•16m ago•0 comments

Pencil case feminism

https://glosswitch.substack.com/p/pencil-case-feminism
1•binning•18m ago•0 comments

TSMC Has No Choice but to Trust the Sunny AI Forecasts of Its Customers

https://www.nextplatform.com/2026/01/16/tsmc-has-no-choice-but-to-trust-the-sunny-ai-forecasts-of...
1•speckx•18m ago•1 comments

SkyVM (By Dioxus Labs): Instant-Boot Desktop VMs for AI Agents

https://skyvm.dev/blog/introducing-skyvm
2•satvikpendem•18m ago•0 comments

Reading across books with Claude Code

https://pieterma.es/syntopic-reading-claude/
2•gmays•19m ago•0 comments

IBM warns AI spend fails without AI literacy

https://www.thedeepview.com/articles/ibm-warns-ai-spend-fails-without-ai-literacy
2•CrankyBear•20m ago•0 comments

HN: Afk – Rust CLI for the Ralph Wiggum Approach to AI Coding

https://github.com/m0nkmaster/afk
1•m0nkmaster•20m ago•0 comments

Claudette Colvin, US civil rights pioneer, dies at 86

https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/13/us/claudette-colvin-death
2•binning•21m ago•0 comments

The Toxic Modernity Narrative

https://www.theargumentmag.com/p/the-toxic-modernity-narrative
5•honoredb•21m ago•0 comments

Langfuse Joins ClickHouse

https://langfuse.com/blog/joining-clickhouse
2•cnkk•21m ago•0 comments

Temporal API Ships in Chrome 144, Marking a Major Shift for JavaScript Date

https://socket.dev/blog/temporal-api-ships-in-chrome-144-major-shift-for-javascript-date-handling
2•feross•22m ago•1 comments

UPenn faculty condemn Trump administration's demand for 'lists of Jews'

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/13/upenn-trump-jews-list
5•binning•24m ago•0 comments

Framework for a Hypercapable World

https://aiprospects.substack.com/p/options-for-a-hypercapable-world
1•paulpauper•24m ago•0 comments

Daniel Walker Howe, 88, Revisionist Historian of Jackson's America, Dies

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/11/obituaries/daniel-walker-howe-dead.html
1•paulpauper•25m ago•0 comments

When tools pretend to be people

https://uxdesign.cc/when-tools-pretend-to-be-people-4283748d33e1
2•kaizenb•26m ago•0 comments

Batch Delete in SwiftData

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2025/12/18/batch-delete-in-swiftdata/
1•mpweiher•28m ago•0 comments

The Rise and Fall of Corba (2008)

https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/1378704.1378718?download=true
1•twoodfin•28m ago•0 comments

OpenAI to start testing ads in ChatGPT free and Go tiers

https://xcancel.com/OpenAI/status/2012223373489614951
2•qingcharles•31m ago•2 comments

LogiCode: LeetCode for hardware design. Synthesize, optimize, and compete

https://logi-code.com
1•nateb2022•32m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Dell UltraSharp 52 Thunderbolt Hub Monitor

https://www.dell.com/en-us/shop/dell-ultrasharp-52-thunderbolt-hub-monitor-u5226kw/apd/210-bthw/monitors-monitor-accessories
55•cebert•1h ago

Comments

piinbinary•1h ago
I have a 34" ultrawide and it is huge. I can't imagine a 52" - the edges would be so far away that it must be hard to read text without physically moving left/right
__mharrison__•1h ago
I have a 42" 4k TV that I use as a monitor (in gaming mode). Not sure I would want anything shorter than that. (Of course, I have an eye issue, so the side-to-side is even more pronounced for me.
rahimnathwani•58m ago
I used to use a 40" 4k TV.

Now I use a 38" ultrawide, which is roughly the same width (in pixels and in inches) but doesn't require my head to move up/down as much.

I could imagine using a 52" ultrawide if it were placed further away from me (i.e. deeper desk). The extra pixels would make it effectively a retina display.

Marsymars•55m ago
52" at that aspect ratio isn't just wide, it's also >50% taller than a 34" ultrawide.

It's akin to a 55" TV - basically the same width, but only 70% of the height.

simooooo•54m ago
I have a 57” ultra wide and it absolutely requires you to look around
reppap•41m ago
I think you would have to sit further back, almost tv watching distance.
gofreddygo•29m ago
And that would strain your eyes or force a bigger font. At that point, you'd be wondering, like me, on why I spent $$ to buy a bigger screen in the first place.

I got an open box lenovo 24 inch QHD monitor for years and it just works solid across windows, mac and various docking stations. I could imagine upgrading to a 27 or 30 inch but beyond that is just too much IMO.

Maybe taller, more square could be of more use than wider.

bityard•18m ago
Do you... usually read content in a full-screen window on that thing?

I only have a 27" monitor and sit about 2.5 feet away from it and I move my head _slightly_ to focus on different windows. But that's the reason I have a larger monitor, so I can have a bunch of normal-sized windows open at once.

ardit33•58m ago
I have a 39" (almost 40") LG ultrawide, and it is the perfect size. Can't see how a larger monitor would fit a normal desk...

BUT.... this is perfect for folks that want to use one monitor for both work, and as/for entertainment /just normal tv watching in a living room.

stalfosknight•57m ago
Abysmally low pixel density. :(
BlaDeKke•52m ago
No scaling required? Great!
tonyedgecombe•23m ago
Spot the Linux user ;)
Marsymars•52m ago
Eh, it's about the same as a 4K display at 33".
masklinn•31m ago
Which is a poor pixel density.
LtdJorge•21m ago
If compared to a smartphone, maybe.
masklinn•15m ago
Compared to a smartphone it's not just poor it's complete dreck. Smarphones are in the 400s.
bsimpson•24m ago
4k@27" is borderline too coarse. 5k@27" is preferred.
plorkyeran•5m ago
4k at 33" is awful too. 5k text is visibly better than 4k at 27".
throw0101d•55m ago
The pixels per inch (ppi) density is 129.

Some other specs: refresh rate, 120Hz; brightness, 400 cd/m².

tshaddox•48m ago
That's decent pixel density considering the size of the monitor. A 32" 4K monitor has slightly higher PPI at around 138.
jmarcher•43m ago
I have a 40in 5k (32in 4k, but wider). IMHO, 138ppi is the bare minimum, but it really depends on a person's eyesight and preferences.

I would love a large-ish ultra-wide with > 160ppi. One day, maybe, that being said, by that time those things will exist and be reasonably priced, my eyes might not be able to appreciate the difference.

leptons•27m ago
I'm using three 4k 32" screens arranged vertically, for 6480 x 3840 desktop size.

The only real monitor upgrade I'm willing to entertain is a ~50" 8k curved screen (basically a curved TV-sized screen), which has not been made yet AFAIK. I'm not into "ultrawide", for me it has to be "ultrawide" and "ultratall". I want all that screen real estate in high PPI.

I tried test-driving a 50" 4k TV for a week and the flatness of it was not what I wanted, it has to be a curved screen for workstation use.

tonyedgecombe•24m ago
It’s a fraction of what most Apple customers are used to.
__sp__•47m ago
Maybe time to boycott Dell for their business with gestapo ICE?
2OEH8eoCRo0•46m ago
Nice. I have the predecessor 40" U4025QW and it's outstanding.
fadedsignal•45m ago
Vibe coders liked this. More room for slop
dkobia•42m ago
At 52" I now believe that there is a limit to the size of a monitor. This might have crossed it.
bigstrat2003•39m ago
The smaller sizes would be nice if they had a 16:10 option. 16:9 just isn't a very nice aspect ratio imo, the extra height on 16:10 is much better.
mixmastamyk•18m ago
To whoever needs to hear it, I will never buy another 16:9 monitor. Vastly prefer the 3:2 on my Framework and also liked an old 4:3 I had. Also great in portrait.
lejalv•30m ago
This has pixels the size of my hand, and it fully covers my field of view. Not my cup of tea.

What I do recommend (having bought one) is the Kuycon G32p, 32 inches @ 6K. Incredible quality and unbelievable value for money (https://clickclack.io/products/in-stock-kuycon-g32p-6k-32-in...).

samdixon•27m ago
this looks like a rip off of another monitor that I can't quite put my finger on...
smilebot•19m ago
And no extra charge to have an adjustable stand! How do they make money?
usaphp•17m ago
Lg has a similar model: https://www.bestbuy.com/product/lg-ultrafineevo-32-6k-nano-i...
madeofpalk•6m ago
For context - this 51" monitor has 22% less pixels than the 32" Apple Pro Display XDR.
sulam•28m ago
I have a smaller version of this and it's pretty good as a display.

I'm somewhat disappointed with it as a hub/KVM. It's better than having to swap cables, but just barely. It can't handle any high bandwidth USB devices I've tried (Focusrite Scarlett 2i2, a DSLR via capture card DSLR and a Logitech webcam). The downstream USB strangely isn't even sending down a keyboard and mouse to a PC, I ended up having to get separate dedicated KVM for those. It worked fine with a Thunderbolt to my Macs, but that's not surprising. I'm not sure how it would work with two Macs (one would have to be HDMI or DisplayPort and use that downstream USB port). I could try that but it's not my use case.

apetrov•21m ago
Interestingly it has Thunderbolt 4 (40Gb), 6K typically saturates 30-31Gb, which leaves less 10Gb/s which isn't a lot especially assuming 2.5Gb network. Looks like a perfect case for TB5 and given its price.
gouthamve•18m ago
I just setup mine today, and I am not sure I recommend it.

I went from a 40" to a 52", and I'm just moving my head waaay too much and my shoulders hurt. It is curved, but very little imo, it's almost like it's flat. I'm going to try it for a week before making the call on whether to return it.

I feel like this needs a workflow where you do work in the middle and use the fringes for other applications that you rarely look at. Otherwise you're moving your head waaay too much and squinting a bunch.

cosmic_cheese•12m ago
Based on personal experience, I think the upper bound for comfortably useful size at normal sitting distances is probably about 32", and even then I think there'd be better returns on adding vertical pixels to a ~27" monitor. A modern equivalent to the old 16:10 30" 2560x1600 monitors (ideally 2x scaling 5120x3200) would be great for example, but one could also imagine a 4:3 or 5:4 monitor with the same width (~23.5") as current 16:9 27" monitors.
switchbak•6m ago
That was my issue with multiple monitors years ago - I'd be cranking my neck over too often (looking at logs, etc). I vastly prefer an ultrawide where I can put logs / monitors on the side flexibly.

I have a 34 inch now, and feel like I could use more space - but it's nice to know there's an upper bound. Do you feel like there's still room to go beyond 40, or is that the sweet spot?

esafak•17m ago
I never got into the ultra wide thing. Where the 8K monitors at?? We've been stuck on 4K for ten years!
hhh•13m ago
they’ve been around for a few years, as well as 5K and 6K
masklinn•7m ago
Sadly they're not super common which makes them expensive, and I don't think I've seen any that wasn't 16:9. The world has decided to go with refresh rates rather than resolution.
phaser•16m ago
Maybe this is the living room dumb-TV that I was waiting for
api•5m ago
Still would love a true AMOLED monitor that's decently large. Doesn't need to be this big. One with perfect contrast ratio.
ajross•4m ago
Looks nice enough. But seems pretty steep. The 42" TV I bought five years ago for $260 does basically the same thing. Slightly more vertical space (albeit at a lower DPI) and somewhat less horizontal. But it still supports four 80-column text windows without a sweat.

Late stage FAANGery is watching 20-somethings try to find ridiculous junk to spend money on.