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Show HN: RealXV6 – a faithful Unix V6 kernel port to 8086 real mode

https://github.com/FounderSG/RealXV6
1•FounderSG•1m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: What's the best place to look at snow webcams?

1•bastawhiz•3m ago•1 comments

Cleaner air is (inadvertently) harming the Great Barrier Reef

https://phys.org/news/2026-01-cleaner-air-inadvertently-great-barrier.html
1•Brajeshwar•5m ago•0 comments

Ancient Spanish trees reveal Mediterranean storms are intensifying

https://phys.org/news/2026-01-ancient-spanish-trees-reveal-mediterranean.html
1•Brajeshwar•5m ago•0 comments

What happens when you train an LLM only on limited historical data

https://www.popsci.com/technology/this-ai-thinks-its-the-1800s/
1•Brajeshwar•5m ago•0 comments

Hey guys, check out my idea

1•harinand•7m ago•4 comments

XSS –> RCE in Screeps, a programming game on Steam

https://outsidetheasylum.blog/screeps/
2•Tiberium•7m ago•1 comments

Geo Is Not the Next Generation of SEO

https://valarmorghulis.io/view/202601-geo-vs-seo/
1•socrateslee•9m ago•1 comments

Human Approval as a Service

1•mf_taria•9m ago•0 comments

Software patches in NixOS for fun and productivity

https://log.pfad.fr/2026/software-patching-in-nixos/
3•todsacerdoti•12m ago•0 comments

The First Full-Scale Cyber War: 4 Years of Lessons

https://techtrenches.dev/p/the-first-full-scale-cyber-war-4
1•bryanrasmussen•12m ago•0 comments

Heart rhythm problems detected four times more often with smartwatches

https://nltimes.nl/2026/01/22/heart-rhythm-problems-detected-four-times-often-smartwatches
1•giuliomagnifico•13m ago•1 comments

More than a quarter of Britons say they fear losing jobs to AI in next 5 years

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/jan/25/more-than-quarter-britons-fear-losing-jobs-ai-ne...
2•chrisjj•14m ago•0 comments

Jack Kerouac on the Steve Allen Show with Steve Allen 1959 [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3LLpNKo09Xk
1•aabiji•15m ago•0 comments

Kingdoms of Water: The Mekong River, empire, and the limits of human ingenuity

https://worldhistory.substack.com/p/kingdoms-of-water
1•crescit_eundo•18m ago•0 comments

Ice cream is one of the healthiest foods in existence

https://twitter.com/Outdoctrination/status/2015449347920396347
2•bilsbie•18m ago•0 comments

Inside Apple's AI Shake-Up and Its Plans for Two New Versions of Siri

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2026-01-25/inside-apple-s-ai-shake-up-ai-safari-and-pl...
2•thm•18m ago•0 comments

Good Taste

https://emsh.cat/good-taste/
1•embedding-shape•19m ago•1 comments

AMD Releases MLIR-AIE 1.2 Compiler Toolchain for Targeting Ryzen AI NPUs

https://www.phoronix.com/news/AMD-MLIR-AIE-1.2
2•pella•20m ago•0 comments

Show HN: MCP Security Documentation with Code Examples

https://github.com/FinkTech/mcp-security
1•finktech•20m ago•0 comments

Interview: Kim Stanley Robinson, Science Fiction Maestro and Utopian, in 2026

https://sammatey.substack.com/p/interview-kim-stanley-robinson-science-111
2•mitchbob•22m ago•0 comments

Agent-Browser by Vercel Labs

https://github.com/vercel-labs/agent-browser
2•franze•22m ago•0 comments

An Open-Source Alternative to Vercel

https://www.shorlabs.com/
1•shorlabss•23m ago•0 comments

What posting Rails UI to Hacker News taught me

https://railsui.com/blog/what-finally-posting-rails-ui-to-hacker-news-taught-me
2•dorianmariecom•25m ago•0 comments

Turns out I was wrong about TDD

https://martinalderson.com/posts/turns-out-i-was-wrong-about-tdd/
1•martinald•26m ago•0 comments

I Tried to Give AI "Imagination" to Solve Physics Problems

https://github.com/a1j9o94/foresight
1•a1j9o94•26m ago•2 comments

Immanuel 'the Königsberg clock' Kant (2015)

https://www.versobooks.com/en-gb/blogs/news/1963-immanuel-kant-the-errrr-walker
1•rishabhd•29m ago•0 comments

The Home Computer Hybrids

https://technicshistory.com/2026/01/25/the-home-computer-hybrids/
1•cfmcdonald•30m ago•0 comments

DCCast: Efficient Point to Multipoint Transfers Across Datacenters (2017)

https://arxiv.org/abs/1707.02096
1•tanelpoder•31m ago•0 comments

Apex-Agents – Benchmark Productivity of Agents

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.14242
1•hereme888•33m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

UN Declares That the World Has Entered an Era of 'Global Water Bankruptcy'

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/united-nations-declares-that-the-world-has-entered-an-era-of-global-water-bankruptcy-180988045/
101•pseudolus•1h ago

Comments

radicalethics•1h ago
Four billion people face severe water scarcity for at least one month each year

Does anyone know what this looks like for typical cases? The water just cuts off for a month in some places I guess?

worldsavior•1h ago
Probably something like having water for a few hours a day.
codyb•1h ago
And being told to restrict showers, not to water lawns, etc
Juliate•56m ago
This has happened about every year in the past 10 years during Summer in France at least (I guess Spain/Portugal/Italy, all mediterranean countries are alike in this regard, even most continental European countries).
ben_w•50m ago
That's the British idea of a water shortage; I suspect that many people would be thrilled if their water supply was good enough to consider a lawn in the first place.
darkerside•1h ago
Probably seasonal?
jesse_faden•1h ago
In a large city in southern India, our house would get water supplied one day of the week during summers. Our small one bedroom flat had barrels of water drums stored inside the house. We even had one in the bedroom.

I was 14 and I would go down to the street to fetch ground water and fill those barrels up. This was in 2014.

vdupras•52m ago
I don't know about the rest of the world, but here in Quebec, Canada, we had a very dry summer in 2025 and some farmers had to bring literal truckloads of water to their farm for their animals to stay alive. I remember that they were saying to the press that the cost it incurred made them lose a lot of money, making these animals net negative for them, budget wise.

This year was an exception, I'm guessing it's going to become the norm. So, much higher food prices.

sdoering•48m ago
The reality is usually less dramatic than "water completely gone" but more chronically exhausting.

For a sub-Saharan family, "severe water scarcity" often means:

Daily life shifts

Wells and water points yield less or run dry. Wait times at functioning sources grow from minutes to hours. Walking distances to water double or triple. Water quality drops as everyone crowds the remaining sources.

Who carries the burden Mostly women and girls. During dry season, water collection can expand from one hour daily to four to six hours. Girls miss school, women lose time for farming or income generation.

Practical consequences

Washing, cooking, hygiene get rationed. Livestock often gets priority because it's the livelihood. Latrine hygiene suffers, raising disease risk. Conflicts at water points increase.

What "one month per year" obscures

The statistic sounds manageable, but that month typically falls during dry season when harvests also fail and food gets scarce. The effects compound.

Water rarely just "cuts off" - it's more of a grinding struggle over a shrinking resource, where the poorest have to walk furthest.

Edit: Formatting

funkyfiddler69•42m ago
imagine a camping trip or a long hike and you didn't bring even remotely enough water; your shoes are extremely uncomfortable and your clothes are all soaked and dirty and you are constantly itching; heat, stress, kids, sickness, waiting lines, the crowds, noise, air pollution ...

but these people are not on a hike, and they didn't get their full set of nutrients, "ever" and they don't have the safety of "just a couple more hours".

you are constantly on edge. you are tired. there's work to be done. distances to be walked. through the dust and dirt and smog. children to be fed and old people that depend on your care. and you do get horny, and you fuck and you have to wash before and after ... with ... well, not really clean water ...

and did I mention the smell?

now that doesn't apply to all the four billion, of course but you should get the picture.

I know poverty, and some of the itchiness that comes with it but I don't know "severe water scarcity" ... even in townships in SA they'll tell you it's enough and they'll "hit you" if you waste any.

Simboo•1h ago
Down with lawns!
thechao•1h ago
Our least tasty crop!
londons_explore•1h ago
I can assure you there is plenty of water. There are floods in lots of places every year. The oceans are full of water that for just 5kWh we can desalinate 250 gallons.

The problem is that the water and energy aren't where the users want it to be.

But pipes are relatively cheap - if humanity cared enough, we could build pipes to distribute the plentiful water everywhere.

But it turns out the people without much water tend to be in very poor places and warzones where there isn't much appetite for spending money on pipes.

pfdietz•1h ago
There are also impediments to the economically rational allocation of water. Look at California for a prime example of this.
calvinmorrison•1h ago
theres no drought in california.

if we wanted to tomorrow we could stop it.

its like complaining you are sweaty after working out

bryanlarsen•1h ago
Pedantically, you're correct. There's been drought in California for the previous 24 years, but this year there isn't one.
rationalist•1h ago
> allocation of water

I thought the GP was referring to the water allocated to farming.

ajross•1h ago
> theres no drought in california.

CA is not in a drought right now. CA has been in conditions of persistent drought, with no more than a year or two of respite, for two decades. The last sustained period of sustained at-or-above-desired-level precipitation ended in 2007.

As always, Wikipedia explains this well: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droughts_in_California

Your logic amounts to "I'm not poor because I just got paid! Let's go to the bar tonight!"

tdeck•1h ago
The "drought vs no drought" conversation hides the fact that a significant percentage of the water in the central valley aquifer has been pumped out for agriculture and other uses. Even if we stopped that tomorrow it would not recharge quickly, and the surface water is not sufficient for current demand.
deepdarkforest•1h ago
Yes 250 gallons can save a lot of people from dying of thirst but have you considered that with that same 5kwh we can also produce 1 tiktok ai slop video of the queen boxing with mike tyson?
estearum•1h ago
In other words: a crisis.
mycall•1h ago
Saudi Arabia has an incredible water piping system because they are rich. The poor cannot do that.
mgaunard•1h ago
Saudi Arabia uses more than half of the petrol they extract on desalination.

It's not sustainable and once it runs out, the country will go back to being a poor desert.

louthy•1h ago
There’s a big glowy thing in the sky that they can use to extract energy also. They have a lot of that energy too
mycall•55m ago
One estimate focused specifically on oil burned for desalination puts Saudi Arabia at about 300,000 barrels per day used for desalination.

Separately, a reputable energy sector overview notes desalination is about 6% of Saudi Arabia’s electricity consumption (in 2020) [0] [1], which is nowhere near implying over half of extracted petroleum.

300,000 ÷ 9,500,000 ≈ 3.2% of crude production.

[0] https://www.ifri.org/en/studies/geopolitics-seawater-desalin...

[1] https://www.eia.gov/international/content/analysis/countries...

londons_explore•46m ago
Some older and less efficient desalination plants directly burn oil/coal/gas to desalinate water, so no electricity is involved.

That is perhaps the source of the discrepancy.

With cheap oil, there is little financial incentive to upgrade these plants.

Remember the government need not 'pay' market price for this oil - they can prop the market up by restricting oil exports whilst simultaneously using oil internally at production cost.

api•51m ago
Are you sure? That’s insane if true.

It genuinely puzzles me why they wouldn’t buy some solar panels to run desalination. The oil they’d then be able to sell instead of burning would pay for it easily.

Of course there is not always a good reason. The reason may be that the country is run by aristocrats who are rich and comfortable and don’t care and the present thing works so why fix it. If the system does stop working it’ll only really impact the poor.

embedding-shape•1h ago
I don't think UN is sounding the alarm of the planet running out of water all of a sudden, even they understand we have huge oceans that aren't going anywhere.

The report itself (https://collections.unu.edu/eserv/UNU:10445/Global_Water_Ban...) does actually talk about a lot of the background, why's and how we can start addressing it, in a very fleshed out form + an executive summary at page 13.

omgJustTest•59m ago
He's also not saying the world is running out of water or clean drinking water... etc.
globular-toast•1h ago
> But it turns out the people without much water tend to be in very poor places

Hmm... I wonder why those places are poor.

omgJustTest•1h ago
If you have references for these I would appreciate what you can find.

In general I believe abundance of resources exist in modern society and that there is less and less consideration for the lives of others, not in the "generational trauma" sense, but in the real basics of food, water and shelter.

A lot of people point to hard problems such as the "food miles problem"[1] but are, in many cases, conflicts that drive scarcity for one purpose or another.

[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_miles

sigwinch•34m ago
5-10 kWh per cubic meter pumped to Riyadh makes sense if you include the older process which requires oil to be burned to heat water first. Per capita, maybe Nicaragua can afford that. There are 65 countries poorer than Nicaragua.
strangescript•59m ago
Same with food. Plenty of food, just not where its needed.
jonway•22m ago
well for food, its that "where its needed" is somewhere really specific: Plenty of food, just not paid for.
athrowaway3z•58m ago
It's as if they choose the word bankruptcy for a reason.
water-data-dude•56m ago
Oh boy, lemme tell you: water management is one of those things that's More Difficult Than It Seems.

I'm going to recommend Cadillac Desert, which is by far the most entertaining and readable book on water. It goes into the history of water in the western US, a dry region that's very dependent on the Colorado River. The American West isn't a poor, war-torn area, and a LOT of money has been spent on various projects - but water is still a serious issue.

Things like "big pipelines to move water around" have been tried, but they're enormously expensive, and they don't really put as much of a dent in the problem as you'd imagine. Dams can store some excess water, but they cause problems of their own (which is why we don't build as many, and are getting rid of dams we don't need), and they're a bandaid at best. There's not a good solution to "how do we move a TON of water around", at least not now.

repelsteeltje•53m ago
Indeed, it's easy to overestimate the capacity of a large tube and underestimate that of a small river.
api•48m ago
Isn’t the problem ultimately that water is heavy and it takes a lot of power to pump it and that’s expensive?

You can pump water faster through a big tube but then you need big pumps and tons of electricity. If it’s going uphill that’s going to be serious power.

Loughla•31m ago
1 ton of water is only 240 gallons. So if we're talking a tube that is 4 feet in diameter and 10 miles long, that's 12.5 million gallons, or 52100 tons (or 104,000,000 pounds). While it wouldn't take that much to move that if your pushing downhill, I have to imagine the energy cost would be AMAZING moving it uphill at all.

But also fluid dynamics is the only college course I dropped because it was fucking witchcraft, so who knows.

einszwei•35m ago
I'd also add that it is easy to underestimate the water usage.

Desalination could be viable if it was only for subsistence/drinking. But water use is extensive in every single product/service we use and thing we cconsume. Cost of water going up across the board will have effects that shouldn't be underestimated.

repelsteeltje•55m ago
A very efficient way to preserve large amounts of potable water for longer periods has traditionally been: glaciers in mountains. Climate change doesn't make water disappear but amplifies shortages as well as surplus. In many (previously) habitable parts of the world that change drives the price of water (and food mitigation) significant enough to render those areas uninhabitable. For example in Syria, Afghanistan and Iran this is a cause of poverty and conflict.
kiba•50m ago
I assured you that water usage can be mismanaged even with plenty of pipes and water infrastructure.
rafale•50m ago
Salt is engineers' kryotonite.
i_cannot_hack•47m ago
What are your credentials on this topic? You speak with a lot of certainty, but fail to acknowledge any nuance that would complicate you world view, such that a lot of water shortages happen also in developed and peaceful regions (as it mentioned in the article). The people without much water are not only in very poor places and warzones, unless you are specifically referring to the people dying due to lack of water.

How would your proposed solution of "the oceans are full of water, just desalinate" affect affordability in agriculture and industry? I assume it would require vast investments in infrastructure that has not been built and is not even planned to be built, what would be required for such an infrastructure to be put in place and what challenges need to be overcome? Are there ecological concerns with the required scale of the operation (such as massive brine runoff at the coast)?

In short, you say "I can assure you there is plenty of water", but is that assurance coming from actual knowledge in the area at hand, or is it misplaced confidence due to dodging any inherent complexity before reaching your conclusion?

cogman10•47m ago
The problem is that while there is a lot of water available, more than our needs, we do not use water efficiently. In particular, food production is horribly wasteful with water. Even small farms will dump 100s of gallons of water per minute (yes minute) onto the ground to ultimately be washed away or evaporated.

What that means is that the piping to get enough water everywhere is enormous. The global usage was 2 quadrillion gallons of water. [1]

There are ways to use water much much more efficiently, but they are expensive to implement. Hydroponics can grow a lot of food, but it requires a lot of power and infrastructure to get setup.

[1] https://www.htt.io/learning-center/water-usage-in-the-agricu...

charles_f•45m ago
It's fun that desalination is always the first thing to pop up as an answer to that, and never water usage reduction
arter45•33m ago
It's not just pipes.

Filtering (from bacteria, pollution, ...) is another issue, and it also affects floods (floods are not periodic, so you have to store water, but storing water for a long term is not always safe).

Even desalination costs are not trivial in all countries.

Let's say 1 kWh = 50 gallons. UN estimates talk about at least 50 gallons/day per person.

According to Wikipedia [1], the 2023 average electricity consumption in Burkina Faso was 0.14 MWh (=140 kWh) a year per person.

Then there's gravity. If your main source of water comes from the sea, you have to pull water from a lower altitude to a higher altitude, which means you are going against gravity, which means you need pumps. Other energy is required.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_electrici...

dahart•9m ago
> for just 5kWh we can desalinate 250 gallons … pipes are relatively cheap

I live 1500km from the ocean at 1500m altitude with 3 million other people in a place that’s neither poor nor a war zone.

Ignoring the cost of pipes for a minute (which is probably not small), googling the energy required to get 250 gallons (or about 1 cubic meter) of water from there to here, I get at least 140kWh [1], assuming a straight shot and no ups and downs along the way.

If that cubic meter is distributed to 5 households per day (so ~30kWh / household), which is less water than the average household uses [2] but might be reasonable for drinking water needs, we’d still probably be doubling the energy requirement for the entire region from ~30kWh per household [3] to ~60kWh. And the current ~30kWh usage is somewhat elastic and reducible, where the energy to pump water is not.

[1] (my calculation: large pipeline, 112MJ * 3<altitude> * 1.5<distance> ~= 140kWh) https://www.quora.com/How-much-energy-would-it-cost-to-pump-...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residential_water_use_in_the_U...

[3] https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/use-of-energy/electricit...

MeteorMarc•1h ago
And all these huge new data centers are gonna make things worse: https://www.eesi.org/articles/view/data-centers-and-water-co...
pfdietz•1h ago
The idea that data centers are huge water hogs is nonsense.
margalabargala•1h ago
Data centers consume enormous amounts of water for evaporative cooling. What part is nonsense?

If the data center is built somewhere with ample water supplies this isn't an issue. If it's pulling from groundwater this can be a huge issue. Groundwater isn't infinite and is being depleted in many areas.

moomoo11•1h ago
They’ll be built and deployed in space soon. Elon said so.
PaulKeeble•1h ago
The reason they consume water is the same reason space is a bad place to put data centres, getting rid of the heat is a challenge. Having only radiative heat dissipation is going to severely limit space based manufacture and computing, it puts significant constraints on the space station already.
estearum•1h ago
I was under the impression they capture the evaporation, let it cool, and recycle it?
sidewndr46•1h ago
I guess it's possible to have a condensing station, but generally speaking you'd need to supply input energy to allow it to cool down and condense somehow. The bigger question here is if a datacenter using evaporative cooling where does the moisture go? If it just feeds a cloud system that rains on nearby fields, it's not much different than irrigating crops. If it feeds clouds that go offshore and rain into the ocean, it's similar to just diverting drinking water into the ocean
306bobby•52m ago
I must be missing something, why can't it be entirely closed loop like a water radiator in an old car? A simple fan running through large radiator cores would certainly condense within the system, keeping the water in the system
michaelt•56m ago
In the USA, data centres consume about 164 billion gallons of water annually [1]

Irrigation consumes 118 billion gallons per day [1] and thermoelectric power plants a further 133 billion gallons per day.

There's enormous amounts, and there's enormous amounts. If you really want to get mad about water being wasted, look up what californian alfalfa growers pay for their water.

[1] https://www.eesi.org/articles/view/data-centers-and-water-co... [2] https://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2018/3035/fs20183035.pdf

rapatel0•49m ago
New datacenter projects are usually closed loop now.

From your first citation:

> Closed-loop cooling systems enable the reuse of both recycled wastewater and freshwater, allowing water supplies to be used multiple times. A cooling tower can use external air to cool the heated water, allowing it to return to its original temperature. These systems can reduce freshwater use by up to 70%.

rapatel0•51m ago
Most new datacenters use closed loop systems now. the water just circulates.
ktm5j•1h ago
The water used by data centers are either closed loop, meaning that they recirculate a set amount of water.. or the water evaporates, and my understandingis they don't use potable water for those systems. I might be wrong, but I don't think data centers aren't destroying potable water.
nunobrito•47m ago
The water is reutilized, a big reason is the difficuty to filter new incoming water because of impurities and uncertainty about quality (e.g. winter times make the river water very muddy and difficult to filter).

Second because is because adding water is a cost, whereas reuse existing water is simpler and saves money. There are always losses of water, however these are neglectible.

Not mentioned here but for more extreme cases of devices cooling is done with distilled water (zero minerals) and the whole device works submerged under this water, the hot water isn't thrown away because it distilled water takes a lot of effort to remove the minerals and effort to keep them out, so the closed loop is very efficient.

garg•1h ago
Microsoft is piloting new zero water cooled datacenters in some locations https://www.axios.com/local/des-moines/2026/01/16/microsoft-...?

Hopefully this can be the new standard.

b65e8bee43c2ed0•52m ago
yes, yes, AI bad.

https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!Dy-x!,w_1272,c_limit...

phanimahesh•1h ago
Before commenting water is cheap and plentiful please read the proposed definition.

> Water bankruptcy refers to “a state in which a human-water system has spent beyond its hydrological means for so long that it can no longer satisfy the claims upon it without inflicting unacceptable or irreversible damage to nature.”

goodluckchuck•1h ago
Anything is true if you define the terms contrary to their meaning.
miltonlost•1h ago
Good thing that isn't what happened with this sensible definition. What part of that definition do you object to?
tdeck•1h ago
So when you read "water bankruptcy", you assumed it meant a legal process where the world can apply to a court to have its water debt annulled and start again?
dwedge•50m ago
This really made me laugh, but at the same time "water bankruptcy" doesn't mean anything before this statement but bankruptcy did. The term was chosen to give the same kind of emotional reaction as bankruptcy
funkyfiddler69•1h ago
wait, is that why "humanity" redefines and reinterprets words and meanings all the time?
tromp•1h ago
I find this other article [1] more informative, including for instance the global map of Vulnerability to Water-Related Challenges taken from the actual report [2].

[1] https://www.thebrighterside.news/post/our-world-is-entering-...

[2] https://collections.unu.edu/eserv/UNU:10445/Global_Water_Ban...

jmclnx•1h ago
I would no say the "world", but areas of it has as noted. Like South Asia, SW N America, N Africa and Spain.

For many of these areas, desalination could meet the gap, but someone will need to pay for it. That is the main issue, no one wants to pay.

bilsbie•54m ago
Sounds like a bunch of useless scare mongering.

Large scale Desalination is getting increasingly achievable: https://caseyhandmer.wordpress.com/2022/11/20/we-need-more-w...

hereme888•47m ago
Reminds me of what's happening in Tehran, where they might have to relocate the capital due to severe, chronic mismanagement of their water supply.
avereveard•46m ago
has Iran tried not to farm pistachios and watermelon in drought areas?
alecco•9m ago
UN and EU push hard for the closure of reservoirs and dams then cry about lack of freshwater, and shout "climate change" when preventable floods cause mass casualties.