frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

25% of new cars sold globally in 2025 were EVs – here's who bought them

https://electrek.co/2025/12/17/25-percent-of-new-cars-sold-globally-are-evs-heres-who-is-buying-t...
1•toomuchtodo•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: HiveSpace – GitLab Runner Health Dashboard

https://www.hivespace.io/
1•steffs•4m ago•0 comments

I made this to save my bookmarks to review later in an inbox-like view

https://cachetag.com
1•samweb3•12m ago•1 comments

From Human Ergonomics to Agent Ergonomics

https://wesmckinney.com/blog/agent-ergonomics/
1•nojito•16m ago•0 comments

Pituffik Space Base

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pituffik_Space_Base
2•handfuloflight•20m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Autonomous outbound research and outreach drafts

https://www.prospecter.io
1•Greateste•27m ago•0 comments

Stiffer Colon Linked to Increased Risk of Early-Onset Cancer

https://scitechdaily.com/stiffer-colon-linked-to-increased-risk-of-early-onset-cancer/
2•caned•29m ago•0 comments

Verizon starts requiring 365 days of paid service before it will unlock phones

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2026/01/verizon-starts-requiring-365-days-of-paid-service-bef...
5•voxadam•30m ago•1 comments

Amazon buyer unboxes "RTX 5080", turns out to be 5060 Ti

https://videocardz.com/newz/amazon-buyer-unboxes-rtx-5080-with-a-single-8-pin-connector-which-tur...
3•LeoNatan25•34m ago•1 comments

Nobody Gets Promoted for Great Docs

https://docsalot.dev/blog/why-most-developer-documentation-sucks
1•fazkan•35m ago•0 comments

AliSQL is a MySQL branch originated from Alibaba Group

https://github.com/alibaba/AliSQL
2•tanelpoder•41m ago•0 comments

Iceberg Sucks – But You Knew That Already

https://www.dataharness.org/2026/01/01/iceberg-sucks.html
2•jordepic•44m ago•0 comments

Show HN: MicroState – JavaScript City Builder

https://microstate.neocities.org
3•iaincollins•44m ago•0 comments

LLM architecture has evolved from GPT-2 to GPT-OSS

https://modal.com/blog/gpt-oss-arch
2•jxmorris12•44m ago•0 comments

The Dionne Quintuplets

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dionne_quintuplets
3•razodactyl•45m ago•0 comments

Whorl – Use Mentions in Thunderbird

https://github.com/dend/whorl
1•dend•50m ago•0 comments

Agent-Native Architectures

https://every.to/guides/agent-native
2•handfuloflight•54m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Linkedin2md – Convert LinkedIn Exports to Markdown for LLM Analysis

https://linkedin2md.daza.ar
1•juanmanueldaza•54m ago•0 comments

Full Transcript of Carney's Speech to World Economic Forum

https://globalnews.ca/news/11620877/carney-davos-wef-speech-transcript/
12•mefengl•57m ago•4 comments

Snap Settles Social Media Addiction Lawsuit Ahead of a Landmark Trial

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/20/technology/snap-social-media-addiction-lawsuit.html
1•1vuio0pswjnm7•59m ago•0 comments

Agentic AI and the Mythical Agent-Month

http://muratbuffalo.blogspot.com/2026/01/agentic-ai-and-mythical-agent-month.html
1•zdw•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: I created my first mobile app, could use some support

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/accumoo/id6754406993
2•gangelo•1h ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Was Node.js a Mistake?

3•danver0•1h ago•0 comments

Semiconductor Fabs III: Ion Implantation

https://nomagicpill.substack.com/p/ion-implantation
3•nomagicpill•1h ago•0 comments

Golden Dome, an AI-powered weapon system in orbit

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Dome_(missile_defense_system)
2•infinitewars•1h ago•1 comments

US science after a year of Trump

https://www.nature.com/immersive/d41586-026-00088-9/index.html
9•mcyc•1h ago•0 comments

Microsoft chief Satya Nadella warns AI boom could falter without wider adoption

https://www.ft.com/content/2a29cbc9-7183-4f68-a1d2-bc88189672e6
6•petethomas•1h ago•6 comments

Building a Real-Time HN Display for $15

https://medium.com/@lee.harding/building-a-real-time-hn-display-for-15-3ea1772051ff
4•mlhpdx•1h ago•1 comments

Opinions and Networking (latenighttakes)

1•iliakoliev•1h ago•0 comments

Help with Lineageos

2•ycombadmin2•1h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Ask HN: Is Linux Safe to Daily drive in 2026?

16•A_Random_Nerd•1h ago
I have been increasingly interested in daily running ubuntu (sorry, Arch people), and was wondering: how safe is it to daily drive an easy linux distro like Ubuntu in 2026?

To clarify what I'm asking: - Is Linux relatively safe compared to Windows or MacOS in a desktop setting - If it's not, what needs to be changed, configured, or avoided to make it so (if it can be)

Thanks for your time.

EDIT: (clarification) I have been experimenting a little with Linux already. This is more of a second step towards daily use for me. A more pressing concern (for me) is [gui] app sandboxing.

Comments

dismalaf•1h ago
Safe in what sense?

As someone who's been daily running it since 2008, I'm gonna say yes anyway though. It's secure (one definition of safe) and no more likely to eat your data than any other OS. Still back things up though, hardware failures happen.

What to config? Nothing. Don't touch shit if you don't know what you're doing. That's the secret to having a stable system, not messing with it.

Shellban•1h ago
This, exactly. I tend to run into a lot of problems, but that is mostly because I tend to tinker with it in non-standard ways (hard to be surprised about your computer no longer booting when you intentionally tried to change the encryption setup). However, if you install a distro closest to your use-case and and then stick with just general applications (i.e. the kind you can get from Flatpak), you should not run into issues.

Of course, some things will randomly break unexpectedly, but you get that with Windows and MacOS, too.

proof_by_vibes•1h ago
Perfectly safe. I would argue that it is the safest of the three, the least invasive both in terms of its design and in terms of privacy.

The open source model of development has encouraged the correct incentives for people to become active in identifying and fixing possible exploits in a global, communal effort.

Every server on the cloud has (by a large margin) chosen Linux as the OS to trust specifically for this reason.

pravenj•1h ago
I have
loodish•1h ago
Yes. Significantly safer than a Windows system in the default config.

If you expose a Windows server default install to the internet it will be compromised in days. (I don't know how. I do know AWS was very unimpressed with me.)

In contrast Linux systems are often set up that way without issue.

creditscoreprot•1h ago
It is possible to get Linux into a state where it becomes a huge headache to update
Shellban•1h ago
This usually happens when you do non-standard things like try to change the desktop environment and then update to a new major version. If you pick a distro that is already close to what you need in the first place, this should not be as much of an issue.

Source: Personally got it into a state where it became a huge headache to update.

cam_l•5m ago
Ditto for windows.

Source: Personally (like the other poster) I have got both into a state where it became a huge headache to update.

nextos•1h ago
Linux comes in a wide range of distributions, so it is hard to make universal claims. One area where security defaults need to improve is sandboxing.

If security is a major concern, bwrap or firejail can easily provide that extra sandboxing.

NixOS and GuixSD make it quite trivial to sandbox applications in a declarative fashion using firejail.

An alternative is to use e.g. Flatpak, which gets you sandboxing for free via bwrap. But I am not a fan of application images that bypass package management.

A_Random_Nerd•1h ago
I heard about the sandboxing being especially sketchy, thanks for a point in the right direction for mitigation.

Additionally, any thoughts on snap? (presently looking into Flatpak)

Shellban•57m ago
Functionally, it is very similar to Flatpak. The main reason people do not like it (for reasons independent of sandboxed applications in general) is that Canonical controls the store and that it is not open-sourced, and that it is very difficult to remove it on Ubuntu setups (a major pain-point for people who need an unsandboxed Firefox setup).
nextos•52m ago
I wouldn't use snap or Flatpak, just sandbox using bwrap or firejail. They are really easy to use.

Containers also provide good development sandboxing. With distrobox you can run many distributions inside your own within a clean and isolated environment.

iknowstuff•38m ago
Just use flatpak. Let's not steer newbies towards barely maintained untested bespoke solutions.
bubblethink•1h ago
If you mainly use a browser like chrome, it should be pretty safe. The general threat model is likely not as safe/mature as Win/MacOS as far as running a bunch of untrusted apps go.
keyringlight•1h ago
Assuming you're already running a PC with a desktop OS, you can use virtualization to 'get your toe wet' and try linux without diving in entirely with a real install. On windows virtualbox is free for non-commercial use and pretty simple to set up.

If you've got a spare drive then install it on that leaving your existing install alone, or if you have spare space on your existing drive you can shrink a partition (backup important data first) and set up a multi-boot

jmce•1h ago
Yes!
awkii•1h ago
I'll take a contrarian view here. Disclaimer: I'm interpreting "safe" as in "usability". I've been driving Ubuntu for years for gaming purposes, and it's come a long way. Most drivers are installed out-of-the box. The apps I care about run just fine.

But.... Relative to MacOS Ubuntu is certainly not as user-friendly. It's worth noting that Linux distros will force you to confront the command line at some point. If you come from OS-es where the most technical thing you have to do is pop open settings to set screen-share permissions or "right-click -> open" to install a package, you'll notice a stark difference.

m132•1h ago
Linux out of all those three is very specific in that it can be configured to be perfectly secure and, at the same time, if you explicitly ask it to shoot you in the foot, it will.

Generally the out-of-the-box experience of Ubuntu and Fedora is at least as secure or better than that of Windows. macOS tends to lean towards a more hardened configuration. Matching that is possible (Android being a great example), but will require some work on your part and is generally not worth it unless you download and run untrusted software.

And one area where desktop Linux really shines is how easy it makes it to only limit yourself to software you can generally trust: that in the default repositories. If you use a well-maintained distribution, keep your system up to date, and only use software that your distribution delivers, chances of your machine getting compromised by anything other than a strictly targeted attack are very slim.

It's understandable that eventually you might want to run third-party software. In that case, I'd definitely advise against running random scripts or commands from the Internet, especially the `curl | bash` kind, and adding third-party repositories to your system unless you absolutely trust their source. This and running out-of-date Internet-facing software are the most common attack vectors.

For third-party software, consider using Flatpak (desktop) and Podman/Docker (server). These sandbox software by default, limiting the damage it can do to your system. With Flatpak, always pay attention to what permissions your application will be granted (those are listed at installation time) and try to limit their scope as narrowly as possible. You can manage the permissions with `flatpak info -M` and `flatpak override`. There's also Flatseal, a GUI alternative which I personally haven't tried.

One more thing to watch out for: extensions. Some software, such as Visual Studio Code and derivatives, has very lax policies on extensions. Even if you install it from a trusted source, but then install an untrusted extension, the extension will run with full access to your files! If you're using such programs, I recommend installing them in Flatpak and limiting their permissions as well. I've been burned by some VSCode extensions in the official marketplace that immediately contacted Chinese IPs upon installation.

Of course, those are tips for those looking to get started. Long-time users interested in hardening should definitely look into SELinux, seccomp, namespaces, dm-verity, and their associated utilities.

A_Random_Nerd•1h ago
Thanks for the help. I will definitely take that advise into account.
pjdkoch•1h ago
You're fine with out of the box experience in most cases.

Try something from universal blue!

shiroiuma•1h ago
It was safe to daily drive in 1996.
zamalek•58m ago
I've been using it exclusively for a few years now, but I'd still say: it depends. e.g. we've yet to see an actual photoshop replacement in OSS (Krita seems to be on a good trajectory now that they've pivoted to a broader scope). First stop is checking whether you have viable replacements for things that you use.

Ubuntu is going to strong-arm you into Snaps, the snap-ectomy is nontrivial, and they have a habit of reappearing. Some people don't have a problem with Snaps - so non-issue if you don't care. Otherwise I'd go with a downstream distro that removes them: pop os, mint, or even upstream (Debian).

XFS is an extremely mature file system if you don't need anything fancy, and you're probably less likely to lose data compared to $proprietary. The other major ones (ext4 and btrfs) are probably just as good, but XFS honestly does stand out in terms of maturity and simplicity.

A common trap is trusting the installer with partitioning. My last Ubuntu installation ran out of space on EFI. 5gb is overkill, but given how abundant disk space is, who cares. Separating / and /home is a good idea for rescue/reinstalling but without btrfs subvolumes (Ubuntu uses btrfs subvolumes by default) it becomes a bit challenging to figure out how to dice things up: e.g. docker containers are stored in /var, so they can deplete your system drive space. Last time I didn't use btrfs, 200gb for / never caused issues for me.

Oh, and Windows has a habit of removing other boot loaders from its drive. If you dual boot, use a different disk for the entire installation.

That's really the extent of the gotchas I'd give to a person literate enough to install an OS. I would slightly urge towards immutable (Silverblue), but Ubuntu is just fine.

coldsunrays•16m ago
I would say yes! I would consider not sandboxing your internet browsers because the integration isn’t fully there yet, but everything else works. A lot of Flatpaks are maintained by their developers so you get releases faster with a layer of separation from an otherwise “slow” distro.

In my humble opinion, consider Fedora instead because of Ubuntu and Snaps. You’ll have the flexibility of Flatpaks, RPMs, Snaps if you really want, etc. Some suggested immutable distros (Silverblue), but you can adopt a containerized workflow incrementally with regular Fedora so that you don’t run into its sticky corners.