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Screenshot Story Flows: The 2026 Framework for High Conversions

https://appscreenshotstudio.com/blog/screenshot-story-flows-the-2026-framework-for-high-conversio
1•Welten01•1m ago•0 comments

Sandboxing AI Agents in Linux

https://blog.senko.net/sandboxing-ai-agents-in-linux
1•speckx•2m ago•0 comments

Project Panama: 2M books scanned and destroyed by Anthropic AI

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/etimes/trending/inside-project-panama-2-million-books-scanned...
1•rustoo•2m ago•0 comments

AI helped me through burnout (but not how you think)

https://keygen.sh/blog/ai-helped-me-through-burnout/
1•ezekg•3m ago•0 comments

Deno Sandbox

https://deno.com/blog/introducing-deno-sandbox
6•johnspurlock•4m ago•1 comments

ICE Map

https://www.icemap.dev/
2•hunglee2•5m ago•0 comments

The Gumbel-Max Trick

https://blog.quipu-strands.com/gumbel
1•abhgh•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Stigmergy pattern for multi-agent LLMs (80% fewer API calls)

https://github.com/KeepALifeUS/autonomous-agents
1•keepalifeus•6m ago•0 comments

Why the mid-30s are a major turning point for men's heart health

https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/02/health/heart-disease-wellness
2•koolhead17•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Orchestrate Claude Code CLI from GitHub

2•elondemirock•7m ago•1 comments

Show HN: VeilStream – Per-Branch Preview Environments

https://www.veilstream.com
2•joram87•9m ago•0 comments

Coding Agents Need More Than Examples. They Need Guardrails

https://medium.com/@stefanvanegmond/coding-agents-need-more-than-examples-they-need-guardrails-1b...
1•stefanve•10m ago•0 comments

Russia's APT28 Rapidly Weaponizes Newly Patched Office Vulnerability

https://www.securityweek.com/russias-apt28-rapidly-weaponizes-newly-patched-office-vulnerability/
2•Bender•11m ago•0 comments

What a Diff a VS Code Fork Makes: Antigravity, Cursor and Windsurf Compared

https://visualstudiomagazine.com/articles/2026/01/26/what-a-difference-a-vs-code-fork-makes-antig...
2•daram•11m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Prism – 7 AI stories daily with credibility tags, no doomscrolling

https://www.prismai.news
1•ogulcanunal1•11m ago•0 comments

PDF phishing attack leads to stolen Dropbox credentials

https://www.scworld.com/news/pdf-phishing-attack-leads-to-stolen-dropbox-credentials
1•Bender•12m ago•0 comments

Distillable AI Models

https://openrouter.ai/collections/distillable-models
1•ddtaylor•12m ago•0 comments

'npx skills add' installs it globally for all AI agents

https://twitter.com/ZackKorman/status/2018376316681171367
1•tosh•12m ago•0 comments

Why 6-7 is the best meme

https://shreyanjain.net/2026/02/02/why-is-the-best-meme.html
1•ulrischa•12m ago•1 comments

Adam Smith's "New Imperialism"

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/social-philosophy-and-policy/article/federalism-and-the-u...
1•brandonlc•12m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Homomorphically Encrypted Vector Database

https://github.com/cloneisyou/HEVEC
2•cloneisme•13m ago•1 comments

Humans are infiltrating the social network for AI bots

https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/872961/humans-infiltrating-moltbook-openclaw-...
3•thm•13m ago•0 comments

Hosaka3 audiovisual stimulation to modify brainwaves

https://www.whiteclinic.net/
1•cslr•13m ago•1 comments

In Praise of Earnestness

https://www.autodidacts.io/earnestness/
1•Curiositry•13m ago•0 comments

Billions wiped off media and financial data groups after Anthropic AI launch

https://www.ft.com/content/48ec5657-c2e7-4111-a236-24a96a8d49e7
2•thm•14m ago•0 comments

Intel and SoftBank Subsidiary Saimemory Collaborate to Advance Next-Gen Memory

https://community.intel.com/t5/Blogs/Intel/Policy-Intel/Intel-and-SoftBank-Subsidiary-SAIMEMORY-C...
1•Bootvis•14m ago•0 comments

Senior staff departing OpenAI as firm prioritizes ChatGPT development

https://arstechnica.com/ai/2026/02/senior-staff-departing-openai-as-firm-prioritizes-chatgpt-deve...
3•Bender•14m ago•0 comments

Revisiting Disaggregated LLM Serving for Performance and Energy Implications

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.08833
1•PaulHoule•14m ago•0 comments

Adobe Animate is shutting down as company focuses on AI

https://techcrunch.com/2026/02/02/adobe-animate-is-shutting-down-as-company-focuses-on-ai/
2•01-_-•14m ago•1 comments

A Demonstration of Self-Profiling

https://www.geoffchappell.com/studies/windows/km/ntoskrnl/api/ex/profile/demo.htm
2•ingve•15m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: Metaswarm: Production-ready agent swarms, MIT license

https://dsifry.github.io/metaswarm/
1•dsifry•1h ago
A few weeks ago I posted about GoodToGo https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46656759 - a tool that gives AI agents a deterministic answer to "is this PR ready to merge?" Several people asked about the larger orchestration system I mentioned. This is that system. I got tired of being a project manager for Claude Code. It writes code fine, but shipping production code is seven or eight jobs — research, planning, design review, implementation, code review, security audit, PR creation, CI babysitting. I was doing all the coordination myself. The agent typed fast. I was still the bottleneck. What I really needed was an orchestrator of orchestrators - swarms of swarms of agents with deterministic quality checks.

So I built metaswarm. It breaks work into phases and assigns each to a specialist swarm orchestrator. It manages handoffs and uses BEADS for deterministic gates that persist across /compact, /clear, and even across sessions. Point it at a GitHub issue or brainstorm with it (it uses Superpowers to ask clarifying questions) and it creates epics, tasks, and dependencies, then runs the full pipeline to a merged PR - including outside code review like CodeRabbit, Greptile, and Bugbot.

The thing that surprised me most was the design review gate. Five agents — PM, Architect, Designer, Security, CTO — review every plan in parallel before a line of code gets written. All five must approve. Three rounds max, then it escalates to a human. I expected a rubber stamp. It catches real design problems, dependency issues, security gaps.

This weekend I pointed it at my backlog. 127 PRs merged. Every one hit 100% test coverage. No human wrote code, reviewed code, or clicked merge. OK, I guided it a bit, mostly helping with plans for some of the epics.

A few learnings:

Agent checklists are theater. Agents skipped coverage checks, misread thresholds, or decided they didn't apply. Prompts alone weren't enough. The fix was deterministic gates — BEADS, pre-push hooks, CI jobs all on top of the agent completion check. The gates block bad code whether or not the agent cooperates.

The agents are just markdown files. No custom runtime, no server, and while I built it on TypeScript, the agents are language-agnostic. You can read all of them, edit them, add your own.

It self-reflects too. After every merged PR, the system extracts patterns, gotchas, and decisions into a JSONL knowledge base. Agents only load entries relevant to the files they're touching. The more it ships, the fewer mistakes it makes. It learns as it goes.

metaswarm stands on two projects: https://github.com/steveyegge/beads by Steve Yegge (git-native task tracking and knowledge priming) and https://github.com/obra/superpowers by Jesse Vincent (disciplined agentic workflows — TDD, brainstorming, systematic debugging). Both were essential.

Background: I founded Technorati, Linuxcare, and Warmstart; tech exec at Lyft and Reddit. I built metaswarm because I needed autonomous agents that could ship to a production codebase with the same standards I'd hold a human team to.

$ cd my-project-name

$ npx metaswarm init

MIT licensed. IANAL. YMMV. Issues/PRs welcome!