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Rapprochement between Hyperion and Amiga; OS 3.2 available again

https://amiga-news.de/en/news/AN-2026-03-00108-EN.html
1•doener•7s ago•0 comments

OpenAI Parameter Golf Challenge

https://openai.com/index/parameter-golf/
1•mellosouls•1m ago•0 comments

I built a free web tool to generate Kubernetes YAML for Podman play kube

https://podman-generator.rzen.at/
1•Garfieldttt•9m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Depending on AI for anything important is a horrible idea, agree?

1•roschdal•10m ago•0 comments

Porting Doom to ESP32-P4 Using Doom Generic

https://github.com/alexkid77/ESP32P4DOOM
1•alexkid777•12m ago•1 comments

Show HN: VeilVault – an Android password manager built to stay local

https://veilvault.codeveil.de/index.en.html
1•codeveil•13m ago•1 comments

Someone has publicly leaked an exploit kit that can hack iPhones

https://techcrunch.com/2026/03/23/someone-has-publicly-leaked-an-exploit-kit-that-can-hack-millio...
1•simonebrunozzi•15m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built the modern, clean and AI native linktree app

https://linkroot.space
1•IsruAlpha2•16m ago•0 comments

Russian Authorities Block Archive.today

https://techcrunch.com/2026/03/23/russian-authorities-block-paywall-removal-site-archive-today/
1•treebrained•19m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Overlay map tiles onto Autodesk's 3D BIM Viewer

https://github.com/infra-plan/bim-tile-overlay
1•gubets•20m ago•0 comments

Have You Paid Your "Intuit Tax"?

https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/tax-season-income-wealth-data/
1•petethomas•24m ago•0 comments

The US government just banned consumer routers made outside the US

https://www.theverge.com/news/899172/fcc-foreign-router-ban
4•bennett_dev•27m ago•0 comments

An end-to-end AI drug discovery platform – accessible to anyone

https://orac-nt-core.onrender.com/
3•DREDREG•27m ago•0 comments

23,464 Stock Trades Cross-Referenced Against 12,350 Breach Signals

https://ciphercue.com/blog/stock-transactions-breach-signals-cross-reference
3•adulion•29m ago•0 comments

Gasoline prices around the world, 16-Mar-2026 – GlobalPetrolPrices.com

https://www.globalpetrolprices.com/gasoline_prices/
3•janandonly•34m ago•0 comments

Native Instant Space Switching on macOS

https://arhan.sh/blog/native-instant-space-switching-on-macos/
2•signa11•43m ago•0 comments

You can now enable Claude to use your computer to complete tasks

https://twitter.com/i/status/2036195789601374705
2•matthieu_bl•44m ago•0 comments

Apple is set to put ads in Apple Maps in services push

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/apple-is-set-to-put-ads-in-apple-maps-in-services-push/ar-A...
2•01-_-•45m ago•0 comments

The Homework Machine

https://insightfultroll.com/blog/2025/12/30/homework-machine/
1•vparikh•46m ago•1 comments

Is TrustMRR the right place to sell a SaaS?

https://trustmrr.com/startup/picx-studio
1•Yash16•46m ago•0 comments

Tangent Tree for ChatGPT Conversations

https://www.getaiworkspace.com/
2•Strikeh•49m ago•0 comments

The Death of OpenAI's Whistleblower Makes No Sense: What Happened to Suchir[video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5WgQHCPB8Q
1•Imustaskforhelp•50m ago•0 comments

We're burning the future to simulate intelligence. Aether is the alternative

https://github.com/stillsilent22-spec/Aether-
2•Trybetter•54m ago•0 comments

OCP – Use your Claude Pro/Max subscription as an OpenAI-compatible API($0 extra)

https://github.com/dtzp555-max/openclaw-claude-proxy
3•dtzp555-max•55m ago•2 comments

PicoZ80 Is a Drop-In Replacement for Everyone's Favorite Zilog CPU

https://hackaday.com/2026/03/23/picoz80-is-a-drop-in-replacement-for-everyones-favorite-zilog-cpu/
2•neomech•1h ago•0 comments

March, 19-21: God is a comedian

https://no01.substack.com/p/march-19-21-god-is-a-comedian
9•tastyface•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: Knitting – shared-memory function calls for JavaScript workers

https://knittingdocs.netlify.app/
1•mimiMonads•1h ago•0 comments

MagicAudio – Free Noise, Echo and Background Music Remover

https://magicaudio.pro/
9•polayan•1h ago•4 comments

Mixing Post-Quantum KEMs into Noise

https://runxiyu.org/comp/nkem1/
1•runxiyu•1h ago•0 comments

Modular 26.2: Image Generation and Upgraded AI Coding with Mojo

https://www.modular.com/blog/modular-26-2-state-of-the-art-image-generation-and-upgraded-ai-codin...
2•tosh•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

The U.S. Ammo Shortage Is Worse Than You Think

https://www.wsj.com/opinion/the-u-s-ammo-shortage-is-worse-than-you-think-97096193
41•Teever•1d ago

Comments

mikestew•1d ago
https://archive.is/6o3SP
pstuart•1d ago
We need a military that is well-equipped but also cost-conscious in how they are provisioned. The Military Industrial Complex is designed to extract as much cash from the coffers as possible without regard for the value added to national defense.

This is yet another example of two sides yelling past each other where the Left simply insists on cutting military spending and the Right glorifies the military and salutes increased spending as "patriotic".

This is the rot of our politics today across all projects...

bigfatkitten•1d ago
A large part of the problem is that the defense procurement process is so burdensome, in the interests of appearing to ensure value for money, that suppliers must wade through years of bureaucracy before they see a dime.

This is why a $700 printed circuit assembly for a weapon system sells for $50,000, and why investors discourage startups from chasing defense business.

theultdev•1d ago
Kind of a nothing article. I think the title hinges on this once sentence:

> The U.S. lacks enough munitions to support its war plans if a protracted conflict with China, Russia or North Korea arises.

But no actual amounts or anything mentioned, just supposing.

Not that I expected anything more from WSJ.

bigyabai•1d ago
Magazine depth is a matter of national security, you won't get close to the "actual amount" even with an insider leak.
theultdev•1d ago
Yeah I realize that. I just don't see the point of the article then.

They have NO information in it, purely speculation.

treetalker•1d ago
Not to mention that all war is based on deception.
JoBrad•1d ago
Whether true or not, the article’s author also argued this point in 2023 (link below), and this article uses some of the same language (empty bins) as the paper.

https://www.csis.org/analysis/empty-bins-wartime-environment...

For me, the main point comes down to exactly how much of a weapons stockpile should a peaceful nation carry? We (US) already have a large number of nuclear weapons, and have been fighting a proxy war of sorts with Russia for over a year. Now we’re the aggressor in several other high profile strikes that have taken out the leaders of several nations. In my opinion, this _should_ be stressing the supplies of our military, _because it’s not (or shouldn’t be) our normal mode of operation_. We already have mechanisms like the Defense Production Act which would allow us to rapidly scale the creation of weapons when needed. Carrying enough weaponry to fight an extended large-scale conflict is incredibly wasteful, and seems like it would mostly serve those who would profit from the required spending to accomplish it.

readthenotes1•1d ago
Why can't we just import munitions and medicines from overseas as usual?

It's inefficient to manufacture in the US because of all the regulations to prevent occupational hazards and environmental destruction, the minimum wage and unions, the high price of medical care, and having to transport all the input materials to a US factory.

rpcope1•1d ago
Hopefully your question is sarcasm, as it should be obvious why this is a terrible idea on many fronts.

In case it isn't, for starters, especially given the way the world seems to be changing these days, if you put all of your critical supplies in the hands of another nation, especially an adversary like China, you basically are at their beck and call when things get ugly. Even non-advesary states can either have regime change or just not want to deal with you, and all of a sudden everything is completely out of your control. Others basically own you at that point, which is obviously unacceptable from a defense or critical logistics standpoint.

On a whole other level, it's incredibly immoral and stupid that we're ok with externalizing problems that labor and environmental standards protect. If you wouldn't accept having your kin or friends work in the sort of conditions you see in many exploitative "cheap labor" centers overseas so much so that it's codified in law, why is it OK to just pawn it off on another nation's people? If you wouldn't accept the environmental damage that other countries seem willing to inflict, why is it suddenly ok when laundered as free trade, especially given how concerned we are with the global reach of environmental problems. If there were ever an application for tariffs that made sense it would be to ding the shit out of products and services that come from states that don't meet minimum levels of labor and environmental law.

The only reason we don't do this is that we're addicted to cheap shit and can't think more than maybe a year ahead.

gotwaz•1d ago
Well read about the last years of the British Empire. They too spent a lot of time and energy giving speeches about what is "unacceptable" but that has nothing to do with what actually happened to the country after the empire wound down.
toomuchtodo•1d ago
Paper tigers preach and bully because words are cheap, winners build. Americans who have only known unearned prosperity through historical inertia are in for a painful century.
theultdev•1d ago
We do to some extent, but it's a national security issue to depend on it.

Personally I buy IMI 5.56 ammo because it's cheap and good quality.

I'm more concerned about civilians access to ammunition vs the government. I have no doubt they'll be able to get what they need.

ferryth•1d ago
https://archive.ph/XQINK
rjsw•1d ago
There was a RUSI paper at the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine that identified this problem.

The one area of munitions supply that was in good shape was 5.56mm, the "assault rifle" culture in the US means there are enough people plinking at targets to keep a good number of factories profitable.

queenkjuul•1d ago
Can't help but wonder what the fuck the trillions of dollars has been doing all these years if not buying weapons

Good to know the US can't even get its military right, though.

MrDrMcCoy•4h ago
The problem is precisely that those trillions have been spent buying "better" weapons. What they should have been spent on is factories. All the lessons of WWII have been forgotten.
lofaszvanitt•1d ago
Unrelated. After seeing some videos of people fighting on the UKR/RUS front. The first thing that struck me is, that people shoot like they are playing Counterstrike. Shooting in the air, in the ground, everywhere, just not on anything that resembles any enemy.
rickydroll•1d ago
I suspect it's because they know that shooting another human being does a great deal of mental damage to themselves, and they want to avoid that.
yorwba•18h ago
It's called "suppressive fire": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suppressive_fire

"The primary intended effect of suppressive fire is psychological. Rather than directly trying to kill enemy soldiers, it makes the enemy soldiers feel unable to safely perform any actions other than seeking cover. Colloquially, this goal is expressed as "it makes them keep their heads down" or "it keeps them pinned down". However, depending on factors including the type of ammunition and the target's protection, suppressive fire may cause casualties and/or damage to enemy equipment."

lofaszvanitt•15h ago
Yeah I know about that, but there is no brain behind these mindless shootings. Just the instinct that if someone shoots at me I shoot back into nothingness.
analognoise•1d ago
I’d argue a country that spends $500 billion additional dollars on its military, after spending $800 billion a year, but nobody has healthcare, isn’t worth defending.

We’re at the stage of open corruption now that this kind of thing isn’t called out for being as disgusting, but it is. It’s disgusting.

This person is an evil ghoul.

mritterhoff•20h ago
Most Americans have some form of health insurance [1].

I'd argue that my country is worth defending, despite its many flaws.

1. https://www.census.gov/library/publications/2025/demo/p60-28...

analognoise•12h ago
About 50,000 Americans die a year due to lack of health insurance. Estimates are about 25k in 2006 years to 60-80k now.

Americans are more likely than any other nationality to see other Americans as bad, immoral: https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2026/03/05/in-25-countr...

At least Americans have mostly come to realize the problem is other Americans.

It’s a little wild to run into someone willing to defend the place.