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1•Panino•53s ago•0 comments

OpenClaw Creator: Why 80% of Apps Will Disappear

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uzGDAoNOZc
1•schwentkerr•4m ago•0 comments

What Happens When Technical Debt Vanishes?

https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/11316905
1•blenderob•5m ago•0 comments

AI Is Finally Eating Software's Total Market: Here's What's Next

https://vinvashishta.substack.com/p/ai-is-finally-eating-softwares-total
1•gmays•6m ago•0 comments

Computer Science from the Bottom Up

https://www.bottomupcs.com/
1•gurjeet•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a toy compiler as a young dev

https://vire-lang.web.app
1•xeouz•8m ago•0 comments

You don't need Mac mini to run OpenClaw

https://runclaw.sh
1•rutagandasalim•9m ago•0 comments

Learning to Reason in 13 Parameters

https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.04118
1•nicholascarolan•11m ago•0 comments

Convergent Discovery of Critical Phenomena Mathematics Across Disciplines

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.22389
1•energyscholar•11m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Will GPU and RAM prices ever go down?

1•alentred•11m ago•0 comments

From hunger to luxury: The story behind the most expensive rice (2025)

https://www.cnn.com/travel/japan-expensive-rice-kinmemai-premium-intl-hnk-dst
2•mooreds•12m ago•0 comments

Substack makes money from hosting Nazi newsletters

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/feb/07/revealed-how-substack-makes-money-from-hosting-nazi...
5•mindracer•13m ago•1 comments

A New Crypto Winter Is Here and Even the Biggest Bulls Aren't Certain Why

https://www.wsj.com/finance/currencies/a-new-crypto-winter-is-here-and-even-the-biggest-bulls-are...
1•thm•13m ago•0 comments

Moltbook was peak AI theater

https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/02/06/1132448/moltbook-was-peak-ai-theater/
1•Brajeshwar•14m ago•0 comments

Why Claude Cowork is a math problem Indian IT can't solve

https://restofworld.org/2026/indian-it-ai-stock-crash-claude-cowork/
1•Brajeshwar•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Built an space travel calculator with vanilla JavaScript v2

https://www.cosmicodometer.space/
2•captainnemo729•14m ago•0 comments

Why a 175-Year-Old Glassmaker Is Suddenly an AI Superstar

https://www.wsj.com/tech/corning-fiber-optics-ai-e045ba3b
1•Brajeshwar•14m ago•0 comments

Micro-Front Ends in 2026: Architecture Win or Enterprise Tax?

https://iocombats.com/blogs/micro-frontends-in-2026
1•ghazikhan205•17m ago•0 comments

These White-Collar Workers Actually Made the Switch to a Trade

https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/careers/white-collar-mid-career-trades-caca4b5f
1•impish9208•17m ago•1 comments

The Wonder Drug That's Plaguing Sports

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/02/us/ostarine-olympics-doping.html
1•mooreds•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Which chef knife steels are good? Data from 540 Reddit tread

https://new.knife.day/blog/reddit-steel-sentiment-analysis
1•p-s-v•18m ago•0 comments

Federated Credential Management (FedCM)

https://ciamweekly.substack.com/p/federated-credential-management-fedcm
1•mooreds•18m ago•0 comments

Token-to-Credit Conversion: Avoiding Floating-Point Errors in AI Billing Systems

https://app.writtte.com/read/kZ8Kj6R
1•lasgawe•18m ago•1 comments

The Story of Heroku (2022)

https://leerob.com/heroku
1•tosh•19m ago•0 comments

Obey the Testing Goat

https://www.obeythetestinggoat.com/
1•mkl95•19m ago•0 comments

Claude Opus 4.6 extends LLM pareto frontier

https://michaelshi.me/pareto/
1•mikeshi42•20m ago•0 comments

Brute Force Colors (2022)

https://arnaud-carre.github.io/2022-12-30-amiga-ham/
1•erickhill•23m ago•0 comments

Google Translate apparently vulnerable to prompt injection

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/tAh2keDNEEHMXvLvz/prompt-injection-in-google-translate-reveals-ba...
1•julkali•23m ago•0 comments

(Bsky thread) "This turns the maintainer into an unwitting vibe coder"

https://bsky.app/profile/fullmoon.id/post/3meadfaulhk2s
1•todsacerdoti•24m ago•0 comments

Software development is undergoing a Renaissance in front of our eyes

https://twitter.com/gdb/status/2019566641491963946
1•tosh•24m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Compiling Scheme to WebAssembly

https://eli.thegreenplace.net/2026/compiling-scheme-to-webassembly/
85•chmaynard•2w ago

Comments

nhatcher•2w ago
Eli Bendersky's post are always insightful and interesting.

I really would like to see a small language that compiles to wasm in the browser.

Of course you can use things like Lua that has it's own vm also in wasm. Or Rhai with it's own interpreter. But I am looking for a language that compiles to wasm in less than 1Mb of wasm

tromp•2w ago
Ben Lynn's page https://crypto.stanford.edu/~blynn/compiler/ compiles (a large subset of) Haskell to web assembly (which you can download; a prime number sieve yielded 40KB of code) and runs it in the browser.
nhatcher•2w ago
That is exactly the kind of thing I was looking for. Thanks you!
mathisfun123•2w ago
you can just compile c/c++ to wasm in the browser - there are wasi/emscripten builds of clang itself around (yosys, clang-repl, etc).
nhatcher•2w ago
Yes, those are fascinating technologies. But way too big to be running in a small app in the browser.
zamadatix•2w ago
C based Mandelbrot WASM demos can be ~1 KB total. Assuming you mean a simple scripting language though, Assembly Script does exactly that.
spankalee•2w ago
AssemblyScript ships its own garbage collector and doesn't seem to making progress on supporting WASM GC.
zamadatix•2w ago
AssemblyScript in general seems to have stopped making much progress. Unless you benefit greatly from having exact width numeric types it's very difficult to justify using it over normal TS.
spankalee•2w ago
I'm working on a TypeScript/Swift/Dart style language, and currently this hello-world is 1444 bytes:

    export let main = () => {
      console.log("Hello, World!");
    };
I'm trying to make that smaller. The binary includes the Console class, which is needed (I may be able to tree-shake the non log() methods away), but also the Error and IndexOutOfBoundsError classes which aren't needed because there are no catch() expressions.

I think it really helps to have a language designed from the ground-up to obsess over bytes for WASM. Trying to do that with a familiar high-level language with a rich standard library is tricky.

veqq•2w ago
> compiles to wasm in less than 1Mb of wasm

Janet, a Clojure-like Lisp compiles a whole playground of itself and the std lib in 823kb: https://janetdocs.org/playground

https://codeberg.org/veqq/janetdocs/src/branch/master/public...

you can do smaller for other things.

publicdebates•2w ago
If you're open to Forth,

https://github.com/remko/waforth

> WAForth is entirely written in (raw) WebAssembly*, and the compiler generates WebAssembly code on the fly.

* https://github.com/remko/waforth/blob/master/src/waforth.wat

burntcaramel•2w ago
WebAssembly Text Format (wat) is fine to use. You declare functions that run imperative code over primitive i32/i64/f32/f64 values, and write to a block of memory. Many algorithms are easy enough to port, and LLMs are pretty great at generating wat now.

I made Orb as a DSL over raw WebAssembly in Elixir. This gives you extract niceties like |> piping, macros so you can add language features like arenas or tuples, and reusability of code in modules (you can even publish to the package manager Hex). By manipulating the raw WebAssembly instructions it lets you compile to kilobytes instead of megabytes. I’m tinkering on the project over at: https://github.com/RoyalIcing/Orb

dleslie•2w ago
Related: the uLisp assembler. It's small, elegant, and well-documented.

http://www.ulisp.com/show?2Z88

dannyobrien•2w ago
Also (on the bigger than this rather than smaller), Hoot, Spritely's Guile-on-Wasm project https://spritely.institute/hoot/