frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Stabilizing timelagged climate impacts rqrs net-negative emissions for centuries

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/ae34ca
1•littlexsparkee•1m ago•0 comments

Gitana 18: technical choices for the new flying Ultim trimaran

https://www.boatnews.com/story/50717/gitana-18-radical-technical-choices-for-the-new-flying-ultim...
1•divbzero•10m ago•0 comments

Prowl – An agent discovery network (ASO for AI agents)

https://prowl.world
1•opcastil11•11m ago•0 comments

'Immersive Navigation' is the biggest Google Maps driving update in a decade

https://9to5google.com/2026/03/12/google-maps-immersive-navigation/
1•golfer•17m ago•0 comments

Claude Tried to Hack 30 Companies. Nobody Asked It To

https://trufflesecurity.com/blog/claude-tried-to-hack-30-companies-nobody-asked-it-to
1•RobLach•19m ago•1 comments

Can You Instruct a Robot to Make a PBJ Sandwich?

https://pbj.deliberateinc.com/
3•mooreds•19m ago•0 comments

Agent harness for building analytics into your app on top of ClickHouse

https://github.com/514-labs/moosestack
1•mooreds•23m ago•0 comments

OLAP migration complexity is the cost of fast reads (2025)

https://www.fiveonefour.com/blog/olap-migration-complexity
1•mooreds•24m ago•0 comments

Agentic Abuse at Tech Jobs

https://blog.alejandrowainzinger.com/agentic-abuse-at-tech-jobs
1•terelak•25m ago•0 comments

Sloppypaste: Pasting raw AI output without reading it

https://sloppypaste.com/
2•willwashburn•25m ago•1 comments

Teaching LLMs to reason like Bayesians

https://research.google/blog/teaching-llms-to-reason-like-bayesians/
1•gmays•27m ago•0 comments

Document retrieval that navigates structure instead of chunking

https://github.com/theeufj/RNSR
2•theeufj•35m ago•0 comments

Harry Potter by Balenciaga (2026 update by creator of seminal 2023 viral video)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtnt84CDP-s
1•TMWNN•37m ago•0 comments

Rep. Finke Was Right: Age-Gating Isn't About Kids, It's About Control

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/03/rep-finke-was-right-age-gating-isnt-about-kids-its-about-co...
5•iamnothere•37m ago•3 comments

Training Language Models via Neural Cellular Automata

https://hanseungwook.github.io/blog/nca-pre-pre-training/
1•Anon84•38m ago•0 comments

The Vibe Principles

https://github.com/kapitanluffy/vibe-principles
1•kapitanluffy•42m ago•0 comments

8,600 n8n workflow templates organized into a browsable GitHub repo

https://github.com/ScraperNode/awesome-n8n-templates
1•emery_p•43m ago•0 comments

Capability-based authorization for AI agents

https://github.com/Connerlevi/CapNET
1•deathclik•44m ago•1 comments

Hedystia 1.10 – Type Mastery is here

https://docs.hedystia.com
1•Zastinian•45m ago•0 comments

Laid off? Start a small business. Save hours of research

https://startinstates.com/guides
1•GKakhiani•46m ago•0 comments

Apple's App Store in China gets lower 25% commission to appease regulators

https://appleinsider.com/articles/26/03/13/apples-app-store-in-china-gets-lower-25-commission-to-...
1•spenvo•46m ago•0 comments

Leaderboard of Leaderboards – A Real-Time Meta-Ranking of AI Benchmarks

https://huggingface.co/posts/mayafree/802385854425752
2•seawolf2357•48m ago•0 comments

Glimpse: Native macOS micro-UI for scripts and agents

https://github.com/hazat/glimpse
1•rahimnathwani•49m ago•0 comments

List of animals awarded human credentials

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_animals_awarded_human_credentials
2•staticshock•50m ago•0 comments

Pi-generative-UI: Claude.ai's generative UI reverse-engineered, rebuilt for pi

https://github.com/Michaelliv/pi-generative-ui
1•rahimnathwani•52m ago•0 comments

Stout: A drop-in replacement for Homebrew CLI that's 10-100x for most operations

https://github.com/neul-labs/stout
2•sea-gold•56m ago•0 comments

Tome: Open-source documentation platform with Markdown

https://github.com/vxcozy/tome
2•noleary•57m ago•0 comments

Pie Day at the Massachusetts Institute of Tasteology

https://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/pi-day-2026-food-institute/
1•d0able•1h ago•0 comments

The exploitation paradox in open source

https://lwn.net/Articles/1058031/
2•signa11•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: DarkMatter – P2P mesh networking protocol for AI agents

https://loseylabs.ai/docs
1•DanielJLosey•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

“This is not the computer for you”

https://samhenri.gold/blog/20260312-this-is-not-the-computer-for-you/
72•MBCook•1h ago

Comments

GameOfKnowing•44m ago
This is true but also not at all the point of a review. Some tools are better suited for some tasks— reviews help those with the privilege of choice find the best ones for them. Otherwise you’d have a review of a hammer saying “this is a great tool for driving screws if you’re not afraid to get cREaTive with it!” Folks who need to make do with what they have already know about their constraints.
SoftTalker•37m ago
> This computer is for the kid who doesn’t have a margin to optimize. Who can’t wait for the right tool to materialize. Who is going to take what’s available and push it until it breaks and learn something permanent from the breaking.

That kid will be much better off with a used laptop and Linux or BSD.

hackyhacky•33m ago
> That kid will be much better off with a used laptop and Linux or BSD.

True, and suffering through the limitations of the Apple platform will show the kid why Linux is better.

lelandbatey•19m ago
Don't downvote, it certainly did for me. My first computer was a MBP 13inch from 2009, as I was apple obsessed like the person in the parent article. Time passes and I realized I really didn't like either Windows or Mac, and for the past 10 years Ive been linux only. It really does happen, even if rarely.
GianFabien•4m ago
Good on you for rising up to the ranks of Linux/BSD.

You just need to recognize that not everybody aspires to be competent with lower-levels of hardware and software that Apple makes that much more difficult. Most Apple users are content to use apps written by others and that is as far as their interest goes.

An analogy is the car market. Most people don't care how the car works, etc. They just want to get to places. If you only need to drive to the shops and do minimal errands, you don't even need a truck - a sedan will do just fine. Same with computers, lots of different market segments with distinct needs and expectations.

milkey_mouse•23m ago
Unless said kid ports Asahi Linux...
t-writescode•20m ago
The kid’s parents want to be able to monitor their kid. The kid’s parents want to be able to drag the machine to a local store and have the people there fix it.

The kid’s parents - and the kid - all have iPhones, so it’s familiar.

The kid’s school requires Windows or Mac for their WiFi and won’t let the kid use Linux because they don’t trust it.

There’s plenty of reasons why Linux isn’t the answer in current climate.

sghiassy•18m ago
I’ve been an Apple fan boi since the Apple II in my room. 44 years later, 15 in software engineering, and I’m still very happy with Apple
stuporglue•3m ago
I started college with a white G3 iBook. By the end of freshman year I had installed Yellow Dog Linux, then Suse, Mandriva and eventually Gentoo.

Now, 20+ years later all my home computers are running Linux (Debian though), and my kids grew up using Linux.

But I'm going to send my teenager to college with Windows or a Mac. They're going to be 1200 miles away, and they're going to need to get support for their computer and I won't be there.

Yes, I like Linux 1000x better than Windows or Mac, but Linux demands a different relationship with the admin. This kid hasn't wanted that relationship with tech, and will rely on friends to help get Office or Zoom or whatever installed.

I'm still deciding between Mac and Windows now. I'll probably end up getting a quality used business laptop from FB marketplace, but the Neo is interesting too.

Animats•29m ago
Not enough memory -> can't do it.

Not enough CPU -> can do it, but it's slow.

(Ubuntu with the OOM killer - could do it, but when it filled half of memory, it was killed.)

bitmasher9•21m ago
Not enough memory is sometimes just a slowdown these days, with ssd and swap.
sghiassy•27m ago
I appreciate the article and agree. If you have a desire to learn computers, just get your hands on whatever you can and learn.
dangus•21m ago
I like the sentiment expressed here, but on this note, I think there are other dangers to consider listening to early reviewers:

- Reviewers do get early access and often are receiving units AND doing their tests, writing their script, recording, and editing their videos before regular users can even possibly get a system shipped in. At best this rushes them where they miss details (e.g., few reviewers noticed that the MacBook Pro 14" M5 keyboard is different hardware then what you got on the M4 Pro because so much content is rushed)

- Reviewers are almost never experts on what street prices look like because they are focused on reviewing, getting content out ASAP. They are not spending time monitoring pricing with only a few exceptional channels doing so.

- The best marketing machine companies like Apple absolutely groom the review ecosystem without even needing to tell reviewers what to do directly. It's a competitive landscape of self-made YouTubers who are susceptible to positive reinforcement from the industry. i.e., companies don't have to tell reviewers to censor themselves, they can instead use positive reinforcement to select which reviewers are getting the best access and privileges.

Now, about the computer itself: related to the way the author of this article talks about the MacBook Neo, about the role of a cheap computer to just try have a working computer that is able to get some stuff done: this is the kind of thing that should likely steer you AWAY from this MacBook Neo that initially looked so exciting.

If you're considering a ~$500-750 computer, well, not only should you be checking the used market, but also, actually look at the competition to this thing.

The reactions I've seen from regular people seems to be, basically, "wow, Apple pulled off an incredible feat, they've disrupted the computer market again!"

Well, let's pump the brakes. First off, realize the Neo is making a lot of the same trade-offs that budget laptops have been doing for years. They aren't even giving you a backlit keyboard! The lower model cuts out biometric auth! There's no haptic trackpad, which used to be a major differentiator for Apple! It comes with a tiny slow charger! The battery life is actually not that good under load/bright screen because the battery is tiny! The CPU is old/slower/low power biased! These are all the classic cheap laptop tradeoffs that give PC manufacturers a LOT of room to actually compete really well against the Neo.

On top of that, almost every cheapo Windows laptop on the market is going to deliver to you a computer with at least a replaceable SSD. Usually RAM is soldered but it's not impossible to find that as something you can upgrade as well even on consumer-ish stuff that isn't just an old ThinkPad.

Actually spend the time to jump on some retailer websites like Best Buy and take a look at what the street prices look like.

There are multiple computers on there that make way more sense for someone budget constrained than a MacBook Neo.

My two favorites, one at a lower price and one at a higher price:

Lenovo Yoga 7 2-in-1 2K OLED Touchscreen Laptop, AMD Ryzen AI 5 340 2025 - 16GB memory, 512GB SSD, $679. This is a proper mid-range laptop and not just some cheap bottom of the barrel model in the lineup. To gain an OLED touchscreen, double the RAM, and the same storage as the highest Neo model at the same price, this is just great all around. I'm pretty sure these get very respectable battery life as well.

Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 3x 15.3" touchscreen snapdragon X, 16GB memory, 256GB storage, $549. With this model, you get a lot of the same ARM benefits that Apple is giving you. Sure, Windows on ARM is not the kind of polished native experience as a Mac, but we are just talking about a cheap laptop that works and, generally, everything you want to do in Windows will work on an ARM system. Once again, you're getting doubled RAM, which is important, and you're going to gain a touch screen, numpad, and possibly even beat out the Neo's battery life.

Another option is the HP OmniBook X Flip 2-in-1, a little less of a good value than the above, but it's another 16GB/512GB option that slides under $700.

bitmasher9•20m ago
I hope they sell so many of these, because the Mac ecosystem is just better for learning about computers then what most young people use daily.
Stori_Rjomi•15m ago
How? I grew up with Windows, learned decent skills on that, probably as much as I would have on a Mac. The current mobile era stuff has put alot or control and grit away, for making things 'more accessible'.
fragmede•13m ago
These days it would be an iPad though.
idontwantthis•5m ago
Or a chromebook which is probably worse.
TheDong•4m ago
They don't have an open source kernel. You can't recompile the kernel or build your own device drivers. I'm not sure what you mean by "learning about computers", but I personally find being able to peek into the kernel source code to be more educational than anything in the mac ecosystem.

The hardware here is incredible, but it's crippled by not adequately supporting Linux, BSD, or any other properly open source kernel you can compile and install yourself. A good learning environment doesn't put up immovable barriers like "you need a kernel signed by apple", it lets you push away barriers when you're ready, like "Are you sure you want to turn off secureboot, or install your own secureboot keys"

GavinMcG•1m ago
I’d bet 99% of professional developers have never peeked at kernel source code or built their own device drivers.
dhruv3006•19m ago
You can run blender on a Chromebook using the Linux environment.
TheDong•13m ago
> The kid who tries to run Blender on a Chromebook doesn’t learn that his machine can’t handle it. He learns that Google decided he’s not allowed to.

Or they learn to enable developer mode, unlock the bootloader, and install Linux, or use the officially supported Crostini, or so on. There's like 3 different ways to run Linux desktop apps on a modern Chromebook.

The Macbooks don't let you unlock the bootloader and install your own OS. The Chromebooks do. I don't think that comparison plays as favorably as you think.

t-writescode•10m ago
Switching to developer mode is very likely something he won’t be doing nor allowed to do on the Chromebook his parents bought him or the school assigned him.
wolvoleo•5m ago
You can't install a different OS on these? Are they different from the M series? Because those have Asahi Linux.
pseudocomposer•4m ago
There’s an entire Linux distro (Asahi) for MacBooks. Apple has never released a Mac with a locked bootloader.

And macOS frankly provides a far better Unix experience than ChromeOS, in my experience, having actually used both (including for development, though only for a short time on ChromeOS because it was horrible).