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Don't Lose Your Context

https://www.losslesscontext.ai/
1•ClintEhrlich•1m ago•0 comments

'Proof by intimidation': AI is confidently solving 'impossible' math problems

https://www.livescience.com/physics-mathematics/mathematics/proof-by-intimidation-ai-is-confident...
1•sonabinu•1m ago•0 comments

Netflix Declines to Raise Offer for Warner Bros

http://about.netflix.com/en/news/netflix-declines-to-raise-offer-for-warner-bros
1•dgorges•1m ago•1 comments

Block to layoff half its employees

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-02-26/jack-dorsey-s-block-slashes-nearly-half-of-wor...
1•darth_avocado•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Gridly – Minimalist math puzzle (Wordle vibe), no signup, no ads, clean

https://playgridly.web.app
1•arithmosdev•4m ago•0 comments

Surprise on Ice

https://www.nplusonemag.com/online-only/online-only/surprise-on-ice/
1•herbertl•5m ago•0 comments

Using OpenCode in CI/CD for AI pull request reviews

https://martinalderson.com/posts/using-opencode-in-cicd-for-ai-pull-request-reviews/
1•martinald•7m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: My competitor wants to buy us out, recommend a lawyer?

1•VladVladikoff•8m ago•0 comments

You can't tie knots in four dimensions

https://theconversation.com/why-you-cant-tie-knots-in-four-dimensions-272445
1•maxeda•8m ago•0 comments

C3 0.7.10: constdef Takes Shape

https://c3-lang.org/blog/c3-0-7-10-constdef-finally-takes-shape/
1•lerno•9m ago•1 comments

Open Timeline Engine – Local first behavioral cloning for AI agents via MCP

https://github.com/JOELJOSEPHCHALAKUDY/open-timeline-engine
1•joeljoseph_•10m ago•1 comments

Semantic grep running locally on Apple Silicon via MLX

https://github.com/jina-ai/jina-grep-cli
1•car•11m ago•0 comments

Netflix drops bid for Warner Bros after Paramount offer

https://www.theverge.com/streaming/885753/netflix-exit-warner-bros-discovery-deal-paramount
5•zhyder•12m ago•0 comments

Philosophy as Fact-Based Discipline: 200 Philosophical Facts [pdf]

https://philpapers.org/archive/FRAPAF-2.pdf
1•bikenaga•12m ago•1 comments

Netflix Backs Out of Warner Bros. Bidding, Paramount Set to Win

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/netflix-backs-out-warners-deal-paramount...
12•atombender•21m ago•2 comments

Show HN: I built a browser-based image comparison tool for subtle differences

https://picdiff.dev/
1•lazycat_•22m ago•0 comments

Anthropic says company 'cannot in good conscience accede' to Pentagon's demands

https://apnews.com/article/anthropic-ai-pentagon-hegseth-dario-amodei-9b28dda41bdb52b6a378fa9fc80...
11•geox•22m ago•1 comments

I vibe coded and I have feelings about it

https://blog.coolapso.sh/en/posts/ivibecoded/
1•coolapso•23m ago•0 comments

Viewert – The One App for Prompt Notes

https://www.viewert.com
1•Sunrostern•23m ago•0 comments

Tesla touts California robotaxis but does nothing to get permits

https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/musk-touts-california-robotaxis-tesla-does-...
5•JumpCrisscross•23m ago•1 comments

The Lobotomy Ultimatum: What happens when a Government removes an AI's morals

https://greggbayesbrown.substack.com/p/the-lobotomy-ultimatum-what-happens
1•superfluous_g•26m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Free app to track countries you've travelled to

https://apps.apple.com/no/app/voyage-track-your-journey/id6758411779
1•anmols99•26m ago•0 comments

Netflix drops out of bidding after WBD deems Paramount's takeover bid 'superior'

https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/26/media/netflix-ted-sarandos-trump-white-house-paramount-wbd
1•gok•27m ago•0 comments

Brave New Smart Phone Dependence World and Google Support

1•bar_de•28m ago•0 comments

Netflix Declines to Raise Offer for Warner Bros

https://ir.netflix.net/investor-news-and-events/financial-releases/press-release-details/2026/Net...
7•doener•30m ago•2 comments

RSS Guard v5.0.0

https://github.com/martinrotter/rssguard/releases/tag/5.0.0
1•thombles•30m ago•0 comments

Paramount Wins Bidding War for Warner Discovery as Netflix Drops Out

https://www.wsj.com/business/media/warner-discovery-says-paramounts-latest-bid-is-superior-to-net...
9•jaredwiener•33m ago•2 comments

A Phase-Ordered Pre-Geometric Projection Framework (Physics)

1•RichOnFire•34m ago•0 comments

The Living Context Workflow: Keep agents oriented across every session

https://p10q.com/presentations/agents_md_workflow/
1•tmsh•35m ago•0 comments

Jack Dorsey's Block to cut nearly 1/2 its workforce in AI overhaul, shares surge

https://www.reuters.com/business/blocks-fourth-quarter-profit-rises-announces-over-4000-job-cuts-...
3•petethomas•37m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Smartphone Mkt to Decline 13% in '26, Largest Drop Ever Due to Memory Shortage

https://www.idc.com/resource-center/press-releases/wwsmartphoneforecast4q25/
96•littlexsparkee•1h ago

Comments

selridge•1h ago
Also worth noting that Apple recently paid a king’s ransom for Samsung RAM
paxys•1h ago
King's ransom or market price?
selridge•1h ago
I sez what I sez
dude250711•48m ago
They redistributed money that fools gave them.
mlyle•1h ago
The market price of the ransom for a King is a King's ransom.
vessenes•1h ago
Meanwhile Apple iPhone sales were up 23% YoY end of last year. It'll likely be a good year for Apple, with a little more room in margin to make some plays, and a lottt of cash.
inigyou•29m ago
That was last year when the DRAM price crisis hadn't happened yet...
darthoctopus•1h ago
Lest we forget, this memory shortage was deliberately engineered [1]. Thanks, OpenAI.

[1]: https://www.mooreslawisdead.com/post/sam-altman-s-dirty-dram...

msy•1h ago
All the more reason to hope that company crashes and burns.
lostmsu•59m ago
From reading this link it sounds like OpenAI successfully dodged oligopoly bullet.
Animats•1h ago
The DRAM shortage and lack of fab capacity have also caused the Playstation 6 to slip to 2029 or so.[1] Game consoles are vulnerable. They need a lot of RAM and have to sell at a moderate price.

The IDC article says that DRAM prices are not expected to come down again. "While memory prices are projected to stabilize by mid-2027, they are unlikely to return to previous level — making the sub-$100 segment (171 million devices) permanently uneconomical." Before, they always came back down in the next RAM glut, when everybody built too much capacity. Why is that not going to happen next time?

[1] https://www.heise.de/en/news/Storage-crisis-Playstation-6-co...

darthoctopus•1h ago
> Why is that not going to happen next time?

Because this shortage isn't natural, it's the result of OpenAI flexing monopsony power to deprive everyone else for its strategic gain. Unlike an organic shortage, there is no compelling reason for otherwise excess capacity to be built, since this artificial shortage can end as arbitrarily as it started.

MadameMinty•44m ago
The datacenters are still going to be built, and their usage won't suddenly fall just because the companies behind some of the products on them suddenly lose value. The demand is not tied to their profits, so I find it unlikely for the shortage to just end.
inigyou•30m ago
These data center projects are losing hundreds of billions of dollars which they don't have, and some evidence is starring to come out they're just money laundering schemes to get money from the government to contractors. I wouldn't bet on them all being built.
m4rtink•14m ago
There far too many railways, amusement parks, housing developments and other bubble ventures that were either never even completed after wasting a lot of money or went bust soon after opening.

No reason the same can't happen now - especially for something as expensive and faily easily re-sellable as a datacenter & the hardware insite. Just rip it all out and sell it for parts where they are actually needed.

mlyle•1h ago
One reason we end up with excess capacity is process improvements; adding new fabs to get more density or performance doesn't make old fabs go away, and so we go through cycles of excess capacity. Demand has been relatively constant.

Here we're facing different forces-- unprecedented demand for DRAM that may be durable. But it also looks like the pace of supply changes may be decreased as process improvements get smaller and the industry stops moving so much in lockstep.

It still matters what happens to the demand function, though. If enough AI startups blow up that there's a lot of secondhand SDRAM in the market, and demand for new SDRAM is impacted, too, that will push things down.

Sort of like what happened with the glut of telecom equipment after

vlovich123•1h ago
You’re asking why a market that has had 3 price fixing lawsuits in less than 2 decades (criminal convictions in 1998, civil in 2006 and 2018) isn’t going to follow market dynamics?
ErneX•46m ago
We don’t know when the PS6 is going to be released, as of now that is just a rumor.
bayarearefugee•37m ago
I'll bet you $5000 it doesn't release before 2029.
OsrsNeedsf2P•1h ago
I recently upgraded from the Pixel 7 to the 10. Nothing but regret - the phone isn't worse, but it's not better either, and I had to reinstall everything. Why did I do this?
trvz•1h ago
That’s on Google. iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max are amazing upgrades.
niek_pas•38m ago
From the 16?
jsheard•55m ago
The cool thing about Pixels is that not only will you have to pay extra for RAM because of AI, but some of the RAM you paid for will also be permanently reserved for local AI features, regardless of whether you use them.

https://www.androidpolice.com/google-pixel-10-3-5-gb-ai-only...

drnick1•31m ago
Pixels only make sense if you are going to install Graphene. The Google OS is bloated with spyware.
inigyou•29m ago
On a Pixel phone you have only Google spyware. On another brand's phone you have all the same Google spyware, plus the spyware from that brand and a permanently locked bootloader.
esperent•7m ago
[delayed]
ProfessorLayton•1h ago
Somehow, with 12GB of RAM, I can't get my iPhone 17 Pro to keep more than a few safari tabs open without having them refresh when I come back from an app or two, and it makes me want to throw my phone across the train (Where the internet often cuts out!).

A lot of software has been squandering the massive hardware gains that have been made. I hope this changes when it becomes a lot harder to throw hardware at the problem.

I also wonder what this means for smartphone-esque devices like the Switch 2. If this goes on long enough I won't be surprised if they release a 'lite' model with less RAM/Storage and bifurcate their console capabilities, worse than what they did with 3DS > 2DS .

arccy•1h ago
but think of all your battery life gains
thewebguyd•59m ago
iOS I think has really aggressive background task killing, and it also drives me insane. I know they do it for battery life but I'm about ready to switch to Android, and would have a long time ago if I that didn't also mean replacing my watch, headphones, etc.

Is it too much to ask for me to manage my own background processes on my phone? I don't want the OS arbitrarily deciding what to pause & kill. If it actually does OOM, give me a dialog like macOS and ask me what to kill. Then again, if a phone is going OOM with 12GB of RAM there's a serious optimization problem going on with mobile apps.

estimator7292•51m ago
I recently started learning how to do iOS apps for work and the short answer is: you don't.

Apple seemingly wants all apps to be static jpegs that never need to connect to any data local or remote, and never do any processing. If you want to do something in the background so that your user can multitask, too damn bad.

You can run in the background, for a non-deterministic amount of time. If you do that, iOS nags your user to make it stop. If you access radios, iOS nags your user to disable it.

It's honestly insane. I don't know why or how anyone develops for this platform.

Not to mention the fact that you have to spend $5k minimum just to put hello world on the screen. I can't believe that apple gets away with forcing you to buy a goddamn Mac to complile a program.

n8cpdx•42m ago
You can get a brand new Mac for < $600

People develop for iOS because iOS users spend more money. End of story.

babypuncher•19m ago
> If you do that, iOS nags your user to make it stop. If you access radios, iOS nags your user to disable it.

These are features, because we can't trust developers to be smart about how they implement these. In fact, we can't even trust them not to be malicious about it. User nags keep the dveloper honest on a device where battery life and all-day availability is arguably of utmost importance.

> you have to spend $5k minimum just to put hello world on the screen.

Now that's just nonsense.

toast0•9m ago
> iOS I think has really aggressive background task killing, and it also drives me insane. I know they do it for battery life but I'm about ready to switch to Android, and would have a long time ago if I that didn't also mean replacing my watch, headphones, etc.

Android does all sorts of wacky stuff with background tasks too... Although I don't feel like my 6 GB Android is low memory, so maybe there's something there, but I also don't run a lot of apps, and I regularly close Firefox tabs. Android apps do mostly seem well prepared for background shenanigans, cause they happen all the time. There's the AOSP/Google Play background app controls, but also most of the OEMs do some stuff, and sometimes it's very hard to get stuff you want to run in the background to stay running.

I dunno about watches, but Airpods work fine with Android, as long as you disconnect them from FindMy cause there's no way to make them not think they're lost (he says authoritatively, hoping to be corrected).

mosura•59m ago
Memory uses power, this is a major factor in why aggressively stopping things helps.

There is a strong argument modern mobile goes too far for this.

Gigachad•56m ago
I can't imagine the iphone is entirely powering down memory. Otherwise just unallocating memory won't change the power consumption.
mosura•51m ago
Those aren’t the only two possibilities though.
mort96•8m ago
What other possibility are there? By what mechanism are you suggesting that iPhones save power by keeping RAM usage low?
goalieca•42m ago
With dram, you have to refresh every cell within a periodic interval. Usually this is handled in hardware. It would be a crazy optimization if unused pages weren’t refreshed. There would have to be a decent amount of circuitry to decide that.
mort96•9m ago
This is an argument for having less memory on a hardware level. But once the DRAM is there, it uses power, whether or not it stores useful data or useless data.

There's a reason why we say unused RAM is wasted RAM.

zozbot234•7m ago
Powering down unused physical RAM is absolutely a thing on some systems. For one thing, it's required if you ever want to support physical memory hotplug. The real issue however is that the gain from not doing DRAM refresh is clearly negligible: it's no more than the difference between putting a computer to sleep (ACPI S3), or putting a phone to sleep in airplane mode - and powering it off.
mort96•4m ago
And you're saying Apple is doing that on the iPhone?
giancarlostoro•58m ago
I really dont understand that at all. Web Pages are mostly static, you would think the iPhone would cache websites reasonably well.

I remember on Android I dont recall the app name specifically, but it would let me download any website for offline browsing or something, would use it when I knew I might have no internet like a cruise.

Heck there used to be an iOS client for HN that was defunct after some time, but it would let you cache comments and articles for offline reading.

LtWorf•41m ago
Web pages that make sense are mostly static. But these days articles need to load each paragraph dynamically, so in order to save 3kb in case you wouldn't finish the article you need to download 5mb of js to do that, plus a bunch of extra handshakes.
ibejoeb•38m ago
Obviously it depends on what you're consuming, but popular sites are rarely static web pages.

Safari suspends backgrounded tabs. I think that's what we're observing here rather than strictly memory pressure.

deaddodo•18m ago
It's the js that does it, because so many webpages are terribly optimized to integrate aggressive ad waterfalls into them. Or have persistent SPA framework's doing continually scope checks.

That being said, there's no reason the Safari context shouldn't be able to suspend the JS and simply resume when the context is brought back to the foregrown. It's already sandboxed, just stop scheduling JS execution for that sandbox.

mikepurvis•57m ago
Wasn't the 2DS just a 3DS minus the lenticular screen, and especially minus the front-facing camera that did face tracking to improve the quality of the 3D?

My understanding was that market research showed a lot of users were turning off the 3D stuff anyway, so it seemed reasonable to offer a model at lower cost without the associated hardware.

jsheard•37m ago
> My understanding was that market research showed a lot of users were turning off the 3D stuff anyway

It was also because young children weren't supposed to use the 3D screen due to fears of it affecting vision development. You could always lock it out via parental controls on the original, but still that was cited as a reason for adding the 2DS to the lineup.

https://www.ign.com/articles/2013/08/28/nintendo-announces-2...

> Fils-Aime said. “And so with the Nintendo 3DS, we were clear to parents that, ‘hey, we recommend that your children be seven and older to utilize this device.’ So clearly that creates an opportunity for five-year-olds, six-year-olds, that first-time handheld gaming consumer."

dangus•54m ago
Removing docking functionality could possibly reduce RAM usage by never enabling 4K screen output. This would be similar to the switch lite.

Although, for a $450 device that doesn’t need to make much of a profit on its own, I also don’t think they’re heavy on memory in the first place (12GB). You can buy top quality Chinese Android handhelds with more RAM and better Qualcomm processors than the Switch 2 for about the same price, and those companies are making $0 in software royalties (e.g., AYN Thor Max is $450 with a 16GB/1TB configuration).

jsheard•44m ago
> Removing docking functionality could possibly reduce RAM usage by never enabling 4K screen output. This would be similar to the switch lite.

Every version of the Switch 1 had 4GB of RAM, they didn't cut that on the Lite. Going back and patching every game to ensure it ran on less RAM it was originally designed for would have been a nightmare.

> (e.g., AYN Thor Max is $450 with a 16GB/1TB configuration).

AYN just announced that the Thor will get a price increase soon for obvious reasons.

https://www.reddit.com/r/SBCGaming/comments/1rf5gxq/to_thor_...

dangus•27m ago
Oh yeah, I accidentally implied the switch lite cut down RAM when it didn’t.

Of course the Thor Max will have a price increase, but also, obviously 16GB/1TB is a massively bigger bill of materials than the Switch 2’s 12GB/256GB configuration.

And I forgot to mention that Nintendo has far more pricing leverage in terms of their volume.

dude250711•51m ago
Android Firefox with ad blockers - life changing.
biophysboy•51m ago
Am I too much of an idealist to hope that AI leads to less buggy software? On the one hand, it should reduce the time of development; on the other hand, I'm worried devs will just let the agents run free w/o proper design specs.
goalieca•48m ago
The message with AI from execs is that you have to go fast (rush!). Quality of work drops when you rush. You forget things, don’t dwell on decisions and consequences, just go-fast-and-break-things.
tkzed49•48m ago
The average LLM writes cleaner, better-factored code than the average engineer at my company. However, I worry about the volume of code leading to system-scale issues. Prior to LLMs, the social contract was that a human needs to understand changes and the system as a whole.

With that contract being eroded, I think the sloppiness of testing, validation, and even architecture in many organizations is going to be exposed.

KeplerBoy•41m ago
It might actually turn out like that. A lot of bloat came from efforts to minimize developer time. Instead of truly native apps a lot of stuff these days is some react shaped tower of abstractions with little regard for hardware constraints.

That trend might reverse if porting to a best practice native App becomes trivial.

fzeroracer•37m ago
Considering how many companies that have adopted AI led to disastrous bugs and larger security holes?

I wouldn't call it an idealist position as much as a fools one. Companies don't give a shit about software security or sustainable software as long as they can ship faster and pump stocks higher.

canthonytucci•46m ago
I feel like my 3GS was way better about resuming where I left off than any fancy new iPhone I’ve had in the past few years.

Big name apps like Facebook, YouTube, Apple Music, Apple Podcasts seem totally disinterred in preserving my place.

YouTube being the worst where I often stack a bunch of videos in queue, pause to do something else for a while and when I return to the app the queue has been purged.

canthonytucci•44m ago
Too slow to edit. But also now playing just seems to go away after a while. Why isn’t this written to some nonvolatile place and just preserved? It feels like it must be on purpose but I wonder what the purpose is.
idle_zealot•21m ago
I assume the purpose of the Now Playing clearing after a while is the idea that when people start a "new session" with their device it should be "clean". Like, if Now Playing didn't randomly disappear then for most people it would always be on, indicating some paused music or podcast playback. It would also never give a chance for that elusive "start playing" experience that shows up in its place sometimes to recommend that I listen to one of four songs/podcast episodes.
bakugo•37m ago
I feel like this might be intentional to a certain degree, at least on YouTube or Facebook.

If you switched off the app while looking at a certain post or watching a certain video, that's a negative engagement indicator, so the app wants to throw you back into the algorithmic feed to show you something new instead.

mcdeltat•32m ago
Conveniently, if you're watching a youtube video with an ad, switch apps and youtube reloads, you have to watch the ad again
ssl-3•13m ago
You guys have ads on youtube?
mort96•11m ago
YouTube will literally resume back to exactly where I was, then seemingly noticing that I switched back to it, go ahead and close the video I was watching. With all sorts of animations too, it's not just a case of having showed a cached screenshot. YouTube seems to intentionally forget where in a video I was, often after having been paused in the background for only a minute or two.

Why??

jt2190•32m ago
Settings > Apps > Safari > Reading List: Automatically Save Offline

“Save webpages to read later in Safari on iPhone” https://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/save-pages-to-a-readi...

deaddodo•21m ago
You're just adding a step that doesn't fix the primary issue (you can already manually save any page you want without adding it your reading list). Someone should be able to go to their translate app, then their photo galley, and back to Safari without it needing to refresh the context.
babypuncher•23m ago
I honestly think the memory shortage kills the possibility of a Switch 2 Lite.

Nintendo can't realistically take memory budget away from developers after the fact. The 2DS cut the 3D feature from the 3DS, but all games were required to be playable in 2D from day 1, so no existing games broke on the cost-reduced 2DS.

jama211•7m ago
Very specific complaint that has nothing to do with the amount of ram you have, that’s a software choice in iOS. Kinda a tangent for a top comment.
oblio•1h ago
Maybe an upside? These past years it feels like meaningful hardware spec bumps are on the horizon, like in the 90s, 2010s.

After all this churn subsides there is a chance entry level Windows laptops will start at 32GB RAM and maybe 8-12GB VRAM?

Which could end up being about 5-10-15 years of progress packed into 2-3-4.

loeg•58m ago
How do you figure? I'd think scarce and expensive RAM would push entry level models to smaller amounts of RAM.
thewebguyd•54m ago
I doubt. Microsoft would much rather sell you a thin client & a Windows 365 subscription, and Nvidia wants you to use GeForce now instead of buying a GPU.

The shortage is manufactured, I have my doubts it will "end" in a conventional sense. I'm more skeptical and feel like this is yet another consolidation of wealth and a means of taking away compute power from people, which prevents startup competition. This way the hyperscalers are the only ones that can offer any meaningful compute.

kace91•59m ago
The latest phone reviews have been eyebrow raising.

The just announced pixel is the same phone as last year. I know it sounds like a usual complaint, but look at the actual specs, it literally is the same phone with differences so small that hey might have passed as regional variance.

As for the Samsung, the screen can darken when looked from the side for privacy. That’s pretty much it. Price increased though.

Coupled with the current iOS situation it seems like things are… rotting. Everything in decline.

walterbell•46m ago
Upcoming Apple display mounted to wall or robot arm is rumored to have audio interface and new OS without 3rd-party apps, only "AI".

Jony Ive at OpenAI is rumored to have smart speaker, pendant, pen and bone-conducting headset in the launch pipeline. Audio interfaces, no screens,

Meta is selling millions of smart glasses, with Apple and others following.

If the memory market was not distorted, home AI + agents + open models could have a bigger role via AMD Strix Halo. Instead, they will be reserved for those who can afford to spend five figures on 512GB or 1TB unified memory on Mac Studio Ultra devices.

vessenes•38m ago
I'd love a working bone conduction headset. Also a subvocalization to agent thingy that worked.
walterbell•34m ago
Apple recently spent $2B to bring subvocalization inference to iPhones, from the inventor of FaceID and Kinect, https://www.newsweek.com/apples-2b-ai-acquisition-could-have...

> users [could] interact with Siri and future Apple devices without speaking out loud.. AI systems capable of interpreting facial expressions and subtle muscle movements to understand so-called “silent speech.”

kace91•32m ago
I’d love a 2015 input system that worked, but my iPhone’s keyboard prediction has been broken for like a year.
vel0city•20m ago
Have you looked into Shokz? I use these a lot, they seem like working bone conduction headsets to me.

https://shokz.com/pages/openrunpro2

locusofself•31m ago
when you say "audio interface" I assume you mean like, "Hey Siri" and not an audio interface as in recording device, right?

So we are talking about a HomePod with a screen, or like one of those Meta "Portal" things?

walterbell•27m ago
Not sure. Some AI audio pendants are always on. The Apple device is rumored to adapt its interface to the user based on facial recognition. They could choose to start monitoring audio when it thinks a known human wants to interact with the device, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47145201

  Apple is developing a tabletop robot as the centerpiece of its artificial intelligence strategy, with plans to launch the device in 2027.. The robot resembles an iPad mounted on a movable limb that can swivel to follow users around a room..The company is also exploring other robotics concepts, including a mobile bot with wheels similar to Amazon’s Astro, and has discussed humanoid models..
inigyou•32m ago
OSes have been in decline for a long time. This memory price is just a blip, though. These supply and demand shocks happen periodically and always return to normal.
whynotmaybe•23m ago
The only reason I changed my phone was because my provider stopped supporting it when migrating to 5g VoIP.

Otherwise I'd still be rocking my S9.

I'm also using a pixel 2 for Android development and Google play billing isn't supported on it.

The hardware is fine but they make it obsolete with software.

I'm guessing they'll soon move to a subscription pricing for phones.

Affric•16m ago
I am rocking a second hand phone that I got 5 years ago.

It might last until 4G is turned off.

I can’t really imagine needing greater bandwidth than I have now but I still use the phone like it’s 2010.

babypuncher•13m ago
Don't worry, I'm sure the billions of dollars being spent on AI slop will restore consumer enthusiasm any day now...
meerita•59m ago
If the memory shortage is real and sustained, I wonder whether we’ll see a secondary effect in the resale market.
WarOnPrivacy•51m ago
> I wonder whether we’ll see a secondary effect in the resale market.

I'm paying more on ebay for thinkcentre tiny and thinkpads - 12th gen intel and newer.

Refurbished spinny drives have been steadily climbing - up 50% since late last year. That's on top of the 20% mystery jump that happened in the last week of 2024.

zozbot234•22m ago
50% is nothing when RAM is up 500% or so.
jl6•51m ago
Wait until we find out that all of tech (ever) has been subsidized by the true-so-far assumption of continued growth, allowing today’s costs to be paid for by tomorrow’s larger market.
jeffbee•48m ago
Programmers who know how to pack a struct: your moment has come!
Qem•11m ago
Also Python generators for the lulz. They help one to write extremely memory-efficient programs. Perhaps the memory shortage further helps cement Python in the language popularity charts, vis-à-vis languages that tend to load whole data in memory by default, like R.
pinkmuffinere•18m ago
> Smartphone ASP is projected to rise 14% to a record $523 this year

I know I'm not speaking to all the people that need to hear it, but used phones are very affordable, and reduce waste. A used iphone 13 is about $200 in the US: https://swappa.com/listings/apple-iphone-13?sort=price_low

shirro•11m ago
Over investment in AI data centers is having a huge negative impact all over the economy. Other sectors are missing out on investment limiting their growth and stalling the economy.

Companies have reduced staff prematurely on the promise of productivity improvements that have not occurred and lost customers to terrible customer service and declining product quality.

Many hardware launches are going to be delayed or not meet expectations which really is the tip of the iceberg.

The US/SK memory cartel understandably sold out for a massive short term windfall but they their long term decisions to limit supply have created a huge opportunity for China. I wouldn't be surprised if this will go down in the history books as the start of the exit for US/SK from the industry and the start of Chinese dominance.

The smart phone industry is likely to respond with an increasingly hostile anti-consumer approach as they try and lock customers into the cabins of the sinking ship. I expect cheap and cheerful Chinese budget phones aren't going anywhere.

I am happy for ram, cpu and storage to stall. I want a more robust and open phone which can take a fall and be updated long after the vendor loses interest. I expect to uninstall most of my apps rather than install new ones as I increasingly disconnect from an ever more distracting and worthless medium. I have cancelled nearly every subscription service in the last 12 months. And I have been deleting a lot of free accounts and apps. Its like doing a big cleanup. Surprisingly rewarding.

HN has felt like more than 50% AI industry promoting blog spam of little interest to me as a reader for some time. I am setting a budget of ten, no make it five, more posts here. Then I am out for good. Account deletion and no looking back.