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The Thucydides Trap Is Coming for America

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/21/opinion/america-china-trump-g20.html
1•KnuthIsGod•1m ago•0 comments

Workers: Autonomous Agents in Slack

https://www.tagworkers.com/
1•handfuloflight•1m ago•0 comments

48x32, a 1536 LED Game Computer

https://jacquesmattheij.com/48x32-introduction/
1•duck•1m ago•0 comments

We can't launch our trash into the sun. But why?

https://www.popsci.com/science/launch-trash-into-the-sun-video/
1•wjb3•5m ago•0 comments

Tim Sweeney signed away his right to criticize Google until 2032

https://www.theverge.com/news/889595/tim-sweeney-signed-away-his-right-to-criticize-google-until-...
1•0in•8m ago•0 comments

Our AI code reviewer found a CVSS 10.0 authentication bypass in pac4j-JWT

https://www.codeant.ai/security-research/pac4j-jwt-authentication-bypass-public-key
1•Amartya_jha•9m ago•1 comments

Setting Up Preview Envs to Test Agent PRs Without Ever Pulling Locally

https://www.piersonmarks.com/posts/testing-agent-written-prs-in-the-cloud
1•PiersonMarks•12m ago•0 comments

Anthropic CEO calls OpenAI's messaging around military deal 'straight up lies'

https://techcrunch.com/2026/03/04/anthropic-ceo-dario-amodei-calls-openais-messaging-around-milit...
9•SilverElfin•21m ago•2 comments

Jeffrey Epstein: The Transhumanist Pedophile Who Hoped to Live Forever

https://www.truthdig.com/articles/jeffrey-epstein-the-transhumanist-pedophile-who-hoped-to-live-f...
4•cdrnsf•22m ago•0 comments

Apparently chardet got Claude to rewrite the codebase from LGPL to MIT

https://chaos.social/@Foxboron/116170859737134271
1•gaius_baltar•22m ago•0 comments

Pike – Solving the "should we stop here or gamble on the next exit" problem

https://tomjohnell.com/pike-solving-the-should-we-stop-here-or-gamble-on-the-next-exit-problem/
2•tjohnell•25m ago•1 comments

Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite

https://twitter.com/GoogleDeepMind/status/2028872381477929185
1•pat2man•26m ago•0 comments

Altman admits OpenAI can't control Pentagon's use of AI

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/mar/04/sam-altman-openai-pentagon
4•albumen•27m ago•0 comments

European pensions are a $30T missed opportunity

https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2026/03/04/european-pensions-are-a-30trn-missed-o...
1•vinni2•29m ago•0 comments

JSE: A Structural Expression Protocol for AI Agents

1•mars_liu•30m ago•1 comments

Unveiling the Weaponized Web Shell EncystPHP

https://www.fortinet.com/blog/threat-research/unveiling-the-weaponized-web-shell-encystphp
1•WeaklingOra•30m ago•0 comments

Extending single-minus amplitudes to gravitons

https://openai.com/index/extending-single-minus-amplitudes-to-gravitons/
4•telotortium•30m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Residuum | Agentic AI with continuous context

https://github.com/Grizzly-Endeavors/residuum
1•BearFlinn•31m ago•0 comments

Platform Designed for Motorists and Law Enforcement for Safety

https://www.traafik.com/
1•fcpguru•31m ago•0 comments

Rules for Pricing Client Engagements

https://b2bs.substack.com/p/op-note-3-rules-for-pricing-client
1•ohjeez•36m ago•0 comments

TakeoutReader – Turn your Google Takeout JSON into a readable report

1•martinZak•37m ago•1 comments

Show HN: One provider starts lying at request 50. The quorum catches it

https://github.com/sbw70/verification-constraints/blob/main/modules/integrated-constraint-demos/t...
1•sbw70•37m ago•0 comments

Roundup of Events for Bootstrappers in March 2026

https://bootstrappersbreakfast.com/2026/02/24/roundup-of-march-bootstrapper-events/
1•skmurphy•40m ago•1 comments

How Jeffrey Epstein Used Reid Hoffman to Court Silicon Valley's Elite

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-04/how-jeffrey-epstein-used-reid-hoffman-to-court...
7•petethomas•40m ago•1 comments

Stathat Is Shutting Down

4•jervant•42m ago•0 comments

Show HN: RustyRAG lowest-latency open-source RAG on GitHub

https://github.com/AlphaCorp-AI/RustyRAG
1•zer0tokens•44m ago•0 comments

Senate fails to block US involvement in Iran war

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2026/03/04/iran-war-powers-resolution-senate-vote/88...
7•geox•44m ago•0 comments

OpenAI, Anthropic turn to consultants to fight over the enterprise market

https://www.businessinsider.com/openai-and-anthropic-using-consultants-to-fight-enterprise-battle...
1•wavelander•44m ago•0 comments

Wgsl-Rs

https://renderling.xyz/articles/introducing-wgsl-rs.html
3•efnx•46m ago•0 comments

Show HN: MoatRadar – AI investment research through Warren Buffett's principles

https://www.moatradar.com/?promo=HACKERNEWS
1•chodelka•46m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Accessibility Issues Are Often Usability Issues

https://protovate.com/blog/you-dont-need-accessibility-until-you-do/
14•janadiamond•2h ago

Comments

verdverm•1h ago
I've been wondering how all the people who've decided not using capital letters between sentences is cool, how they think about accessibility. Do they recognize (1) it disadvantages people with reading / sight disabilities (2) it makes it hard for all humans to parse the boundaries of sentences, ergo thoughts?
monkey_monkey•1h ago
What?

Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, Arabic language systems don't use capital letters. They manage to parse the boundaries of sentences and thoughts just fine.

verdverm•1h ago
Different languages and cultures. When you spend a lifetime building reading clues, throwing them out the window makes it harder for people. The languages you mention also have delineation methods that involve more than simple punctuation marks.
munk-a•35m ago
You can find excellent examples of english written before capital letters (or even spaces) were standard and they tend to be significantly harder to parse because we're not used to parsing them. Familiarity is part of the problem but I also think that more visual clues allows for faster parsing and comprehension overall.
janadiamond•1h ago
That’s a good point. Spelling, grammar, and punctuation can all affect readability. A lot of modern design trends assume perfect reading conditions and typical visual processing.

When those assumptions break, accessibility issues start showing up very quickly.

asadotzler•1h ago
Accessibility issues are always usability issues if you're not a jerk who believes it's okay to not consider usability for about a quarter of the population.

Having said that, yes, tending to the needs of disabled people absolutely does help identify design shortcomings and making software better for disabled people often benefits far more users than than the targeted group. This is called the "curb cut effect" or simply "curb cuts" in the industry because like sidewalk curb cuts made for wheel chairs, the improvement was actually a win for everyone from jogger to parents with strollers, to rolling luggage, delivery people with hand trucks, etc. etc. When we make things better for one group, often many groups benefit so designing with everyone in mind, and not just people like you, is always worthwhile.

janadiamond•57m ago
That curb cut example is a great example of the pattern. Improvements aimed at a specific accessibility need often end up benefiting more people than expected.

While thinking about this, I realized that accessibility often acts like a kind of stress test for design assumptions. If something only works under ideal conditions, accessibility issues tend to surface those weaknesses very quickly. (I wish I'd known that when I was a tester!)

recursivedoubts•40m ago
interesting related aside: I'm comparing HTML/hypermedia w/MCP as an agentic protocol and adding accessibility information made using HTML-based APIs much easier some agents
janadiamond•27m ago
Interesting point.

One thing HTML has going for it is that accessibility info (semantics, ARIA roles, structure, etc.) is embedded.

Are you finding that agents can make use of that directly, or are you adding more accessibility metadata on top?

recursivedoubts•14m ago
right now the primary problem for hypermedia in agentic situations is the chattiness of the architecture, coupled with the geometrically expanding conversation dynamic of ReAct-style loops

some models are able to figure out hypermedia-based APIs more easily than MCP, which is very particular in its syntax, but for more advanced models MCP wins based on the "show me everything at once" model

munk-a•28m ago
There isn't one perfect way to design things since our needs are different. A relative of mine has failing eyesight and requires high contrast - while I am quite sensitive to bright lights and need to dim my screens beyond what most people find workable.

The best lesson in accessibility to learn is that our societal needs are complex and the various standards exist for good reason. If you want to create a complex and particular design using CSS that is fine but keep the tagging underlying that design compatible with screen-readers and allow easy overriding of styling.

One of the most frustrating things for accessibility is advertising since it specifically goes to lengths to use obfuscated class names (to avoid ad-blocks) and bright colors (often via images/videos that contain embedded text). At some point I really do hope we realize just how expensive advertising is and how many externalized costs it forces on us all.

moose44•27m ago
This entire thread is ai slop.