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Pwning Supercomputers — A 20 year old vulnerability in Munge

https://blog.lexfo.fr/munge-heap-buffer-overflow.html
1•Lammy•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: EncroGram – Messaging When You Assume Everything Will Be Looked At

https://encrogram.com
1•truthleaks•3m ago•0 comments

tv 0.15

https://alexpasmantier.github.io/television/developers/release-notes/0.15/
1•alexpasmantier•4m ago•0 comments

More Lessons from 14 years at Google

https://addyosmani.com/blog/14-more-lessons/
1•cdrnsf•4m ago•1 comments

Harness Engineering

https://openai.com/index/harness-engineering/
1•bigwheels•11m ago•0 comments

Our New Observability Stack

https://engineering.merciyanis.com/blog/3-weeks-to-full-observability-our-deployment-journey
1•axi0m•12m ago•1 comments

AI and Jobs - What 3 Decades of Building Tech Taught Me About What's Coming

https://getcoai.com/article/ai-and-jobs-what-three-decades-of-building-tech-taught-me-about-whats...
1•djabatt•13m ago•0 comments

AI Is Getting Scary Good at Making Predictions

https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/2026/02/ai-prediction-human-forecasters/685955/
1•paulpauper•14m ago•0 comments

This is how A Child Dies of Measles

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/02/child-dies-measles-vaccines/685969/
3•paulpauper•15m ago•0 comments

Agents as Teammates

https://twitter.com/obie/status/2022061142294851837
1•obiefernandez•15m ago•0 comments

Supabase Incident (12 Feb 2026)

https://status.supabase.com/incidents/pqrf96m6fzxk
1•dotmanish•15m ago•0 comments

Past Automation and Future A.I.: How Weak Links Tame the Growth Explosion [pdf]

https://web.stanford.edu/~chadj/JonesTonetti_Automation.pdf
1•paulpauper•15m ago•0 comments

General Motors Replies to Bill Gates

https://www.wussu.com/humour/gm.htm
1•lr0•16m ago•0 comments

AI toy maker exposed responses to children

https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/ai-toy-maker-exposed-thousands-responses-kids-senators-miko...
1•averysmallbird•16m ago•0 comments

Ring won't store your camera data without a subscription unless it is important

https://www.reuters.com/world/guthrie-doorbell-video-delayed-by-difficult-data-recovery-privacy-a...
2•-warren•18m ago•3 comments

Windows 11 now has a proper Task Manager with performance history and more

https://www.neowin.net/news/windows-11-now-has-a-proper-task-manager-with-performance-history-and...
6•suprnurd•21m ago•0 comments

Faster Server Startup in Meteor 3.4 with Deferrables

https://blog.galaxycloud.app/faster-server-startup-in-meteor-3-4-with-deferrables/
1•o_gabsferreira•25m ago•0 comments

Openrappter- Local-First AI Agent Powered by GitHub Copilot SDK

https://github.com/kody-w/openrappter
1•kody_w•25m ago•0 comments

Python's Dynamic Typing Problem

https://www.whileforloop.com/en/blog/2026/02/10/python-dynamic-typing-problem/
2•wookashh•26m ago•1 comments

Stay in Your Human Loop

https://bjar.substack.com/p/stay-in-your-human-loop
1•jiito•26m ago•0 comments

Website Builder That Costs Pennies Instead of $25/Mo

https://www.jonaylor.com/blog/i-built-a-website-builder-that-costs-pennies/
1•jonaylor89•27m ago•0 comments

InfluxDB Cloud struggeling for 2 days to restore customer data

https://status.influxdata.com
2•fnordian•27m ago•0 comments

Show HN: LLM Welcome – explicitly opt in for AI contributions on your GH issues

https://llmwelcome.dev
2•tomasz-tomczyk•28m ago•0 comments

Pennysite: AI website builder without a subscription

https://www.pennysite.app/
1•jonaylor89•28m ago•0 comments

David Kindersley's serifs lost the road war but won the streets

https://thebeautyoftransport.com/2021/11/03/how-serifs-lost-the-road-war-but-won-the-streets/
1•fanf2•28m ago•0 comments

Simile

https://simile.ai
1•nebben64•29m ago•1 comments

YouTube on Apple Vision Pro (It's Finally Here) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvyhEJA5kFw
1•mistersquid•30m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Agentic – Vesta AI Explorer

https://kruks.ai/
1•scouzi1966•30m ago•0 comments

New and Upcoming IRCv3 Features

https://libera.chat/news/new-and-upcoming-features-3
2•birdculture•31m ago•0 comments

Outcome Engineering Manifesto

https://o16g.com/
2•theonething•31m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

What's the difference between a "disc" and a "disk"? (2023)

https://support.apple.com/en-gb/100749
39•IndySun•1h ago

Comments

dTal•1h ago
Disc = round part visible

Disk = round part hidden or no round part

Have I got it!?

Someone•1h ago
I think their primary difference is disc = optical, disk = magnetic. That’s what they mention first.

All of that “in the UK”.

Looking at the store, they’re using “SSD Storage” for SSD.

Symbiote•58m ago
The British spelling was used by Philips when they launched the Compact Disc with Sony.

Disk was used by American companies inventing hard disks, floppy disks etc.

British software often used "disc" for both, e.g. RISC OS on Acorn/ARM/Raspberry Pi [1].

[1] https://arcwiki.org.uk/index.php/RISC_OS_3 (see screenshot)

Wowfunhappy•53m ago
SSD, of course, stands for Solid State Dis[c,k]...
9rx•27m ago
Solid State Drive, usually, but when it comes to language anything goes.
HPsquared•27m ago
SSD could stand for "SSD Storage Device".

Bring back recursive acronyms!

ghurtado•1h ago
Kinda surprising that the article doesn't mention the actual origin of the words:

"Disc" comes from "discus" (the plate thrown in the Olympics)

"Disk" comes from "diskette" (French for "small disc")

I probably just outed myself as a boomer assuming that was common knowledge.

rf15•1h ago
You are (rightfully) saying that they semantically mean kinda the same thing. That doesn't neatly fit any branding guideline though, I'm sorry.
bitwize•49m ago
Both versions are disque in French. (presumably disquette for "diskette") Don't blame the French for this.

The fact of the matter is that the spelling "disk" probably entered common use from IBM who invented both the hard and the floppy disk, calling the latter the Type 1 Diskette. Enough people were exposed to the "disk" spelling from IBM usage that it kind of stuck, although in the early 1980s the spelling "floppy disc" was sometimes encountered.

forty•48m ago
Disquette*

In French we say disque for both. it's pronounced the same as disk and disc.

DonHopkins•48m ago
Pff! Disc comes from Disco!
coffee--•1h ago
There was a subculture communicating on FIDOnet about collecting AOL installation media (3.5" disks) and reusing them. Somehow we ended up coining the term "bisk" to refer to AOL's given-away media, and much sadness was had when they moved to CDs.

So add one more to the list: a commercial disk reused for your custom .WAD files can be a bisk.

ChrisArchitect•1h ago
"Disks" as in floppy disks, are removable also. Some weird seperation choices in this 'article'.
dcminter•1h ago
Plus a common alternative to "hard drive" was "hard disk."

My late father never quite got out of the habit of calling it the "Winchester" - itself a nickname for a specific IBM drive model.

onraglanroad•27m ago
More modern hard disks included the drive mechanism in one unit.

They used to be separate, so you would mount the hard disk on the drive to make it accessible.

rikthevik•1h ago
A disc looks like a disc, and a disk doesn't look like a disc.
fainpul•57m ago
And where is the "drive" in an SSD?

Trying to explain arbitrary words with logic always fails.

actionfromafar•13m ago
Same as the Alcubierre drive! ;)
gaigalas•56m ago
Apple, the etymology company.
OhMeadhbh•38m ago
They certainly do have bugs.

[Edit. Sorry, misread your comment as saying "entomology."]

bonesss•55m ago
The last letter.

[Did I pass the interview? No? Understandable.]

dheera•49m ago
What about bloc vs block
MarkusQ•47m ago
This is goofy. The difference was originally regional (US/UK), and which caught on depended on which product dominated which sub-market. There's no semantic difference.
innocentoldguy•40m ago
Philips is the company that came up with the term "Compact Disc" for CDs, so we can blame them for goofing up the regional spellings and making the world more confusing.

I think Alan Shugart (or at least his team at IBM) started calling portable data disks "floppy disks," and then "hard disk" emerged to differentiate rigid disks from bendy ones. Maybe we can also blame him and his team.

The important thing is that someone gets blamed. :D

Gualdrapo•46m ago
When I was much more active in Reddit did one time a meme for r/peloton of Froome yelling at disc brakes - but wrote it as "Old man yells at disk brakes".

Nobody told me anything so I guessed it was good grammar and such.

But then noticed everyone calls them "disc brakes"

adamdonahue•44m ago
So a floppy disk has a disc inside?
irishcoffee•40m ago
Sure does.
KwanEsq•40m ago
No because they weren't optical, they were magnetic.
onraglanroad•31m ago
Yes it did. They were magnetic disks. And they were floppy. The outer case of a 3.5" was solid but just rip it open and you can see the disk itself is floppy.

Edit: oh right, you're talking about the different spellings. Those were entirely arbitrary. We mixed between the two.

sedatk•41m ago
The term "disc" for storage predates optical media. "Disc" was the common spelling for a disk (like a floppy disk) on British 8-bit computers like Amstrad CPC or Sinclair Spectrum.[1][2]

It seems like the distinction simply comes from British and American preferences.[3]

I have no idea how Apple jumped to such an arbitrary conclusion.

[1] Kempston Disc Interface manual: https://k1.spdns.de/Vintage/Sinclair/82/Peripherals/Disc%20I...

[2] Amstrad Disc Drive Interface manual: https://www.cpcwiki.eu/imgs/3/3f/DDI-1_User_Manual.pdf

[3] Etymonline entry for "disk": https://www.etymonline.com/word/disk

Doctor_Fegg•38m ago
Disk was already the standard spelling in the UK by 1984 (in a computing context), just as program was used in preference to programme. But Amstrad mistyped it as disc on the plastic mouldings for their first CPC, and were too cheap to change them. Consequently CPC 3in disks were always called discs even into the 90s.
sedatk•30m ago
Did Acorn also misspell it in BBC Micro manual in 1984?

https://archive.org/details/BBCUG/page/n19/mode/2up?q=disc

OhMeadhbh•39m ago
Tron, if I remember correctly, had DISCS instead of DISKS. And if modern CPUs are RISCy, then maybe modern Intel architecture CPUs are Risky.
bmacho•37m ago
> In most varieties of English, disk is the preferred spelling for magnetic media (hence floppy disk, hard disk, disk drive), whereas disc is preferred for optical media (hence compact disc, digital versatile disc, optical disc).

> For all other uses, disk is preferred in American English and acceptable in Canadian English, and disc otherwise.

https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/disk#Usage_notes

sandworm101•21m ago
Also, disk is also used in "diskette", whereas disc stands alone. So as magnetic disks shrank and were called disketts on and off, they kept that spelling. Optical discs never really shrank over the years, never being called discettes.
oneplane•13m ago
When they shrank the disc it just became minidisc ;-) But that was technically MO, not just optical. And: it was in a cartridge so I suppose they really should have called it minidisk.
irishcoffee•12m ago
> Also, disk is also used in "diskette", whereas disc stands alone. So as magnetic disks shrank and were called disketts on and off, they kept that spelling. Optical discs never really shrank over the years, never being called discettes.

How old are you? Nothing you said is accurate.

delichon•32m ago

  sceptic - skeptic
  mollusc - mollusk
  celt - kelt
  cabob - kabob
  disc - disk
Corporate wants you to find the difference.
9rx•23m ago
sceptic - someone inclined to question or doubt what they sense optically.

skeptic - someone inclined to question or doubt what they sense magnetically.

asdfman123•23m ago
As a quick and dirty heuristic: the C in disc is for CD (or other optical media).
addaon•19m ago
Always thought that “disc” was the original word for an object of a certain shape. As they evolved for computer storage, we got smaller diskettes… which were abbreviated to disks.
irishcoffee•10m ago
Does anyone have a spate tire? My tyre popped, probably because someone jammed a 'y' in the middle.
dboreham•8m ago
Presumably this apple page is someone's idea of an April fool, date notwithstanding.

"Disc" is the correct spelling of the flat circular thing.

"Disk" was invented by someone in the 1980s either as an attempt at a trade name, or because they couldn't spell.

Then other people continued the mis spelling.

_wire_•6m ago
A disk is any planar circular shape.

A disc is a disk-shaped object, such as in the form of a plastic dingus: Frisbee flying disc.