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Ask HN: Karpathy auto research on a miata ecu?

1•alex7o•30s ago•0 comments

Welcome to the AI agent arms race

https://www.axios.com/2026/03/23/openclaw-agents-nvidia-anthropic-perplexity
1•indigodaddy•2m ago•0 comments

GSA extends comments on AI clause after industry pushback

https://fedscoop.com/gsa-extends-comments-on-sweeping-ai-clause-after-industry-pushback/
1•petethomas•4m ago•0 comments

The Builder's Dilemma: Why the World Rewards Hype and How to Win with Real Value

https://medium.com/@pierreneter/the-builders-dilemma-why-the-world-rewards-hype-and-how-to-win-wi...
1•pierreneter•6m ago•0 comments

A Claude plugin for the full software development lifecycle

https://github.com/shamkhall/sdlc
1•shamkhal•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Npx poke-PC – Give your Poke agent a full Docker box to play in

https://github.com/calganaygun/poke-pc
1•calganaygun•9m ago•0 comments

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says 'I think we've achieved AGI'

https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/899086/jensen-huang-nvidia-agi
2•mmastrac•9m ago•0 comments

Pony Gets a Template Engine

https://www.ponylang.io/blog/2026/03/pony-gets-a-template-engine/
1•adamrezich•9m ago•0 comments

WTF: Police responded on Saturday night due to a zero-day

https://www.heise.de/en/news/WTF-Police-responded-on-Saturday-night-due-to-a-zero-day-11221590.html
2•lschueller•12m ago•0 comments

Biology as Clockwork: Living systems as high temperature clocks

https://chillphysicsenjoyer.substack.com/p/biology-as-clockwork
1•crescit_eundo•13m ago•0 comments

Microsoft Rust Training Books: Beginner, advanced, expert level material

https://github.com/microsoft/RustTraining
1•matt_d•16m ago•0 comments

Digital ID for Companies: EU Commission Plans the European Business Wallet

https://www.heise.de/en/news/Digital-ID-for-companies-EU-Commission-plans-the-European-Business-W...
1•lschueller•16m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Are LLMs thinking, and does it matter for AGI?

1•isahalisyucel•17m ago•0 comments

Playbit: A local-first runtime for collaborative software

https://playbit.app/
2•marcomezzavilla•17m ago•0 comments

Go builder generator with compile-time required field enforcement

https://github.com/AlexanderYAPPO/go-papa-carlo
1•yapp0•18m ago•1 comments

VRGB – Asus Vivobook RGB keyboard control on Linux (no kernel mods, no daemon)

https://github.com/vrgb-dev/vrgb
1•vrgbdev•20m ago•1 comments

Show HN: OpenCastor Agent Harness Evaluator Leaderboard

https://craigm26.github.io/OpenCastor/
2•craigm26•20m ago•0 comments

ONNX inference engine using OxCaml's SIMD intrinsics

https://www.tunbury.org/2026/03/13/oxcaml-inference/
1•mrtz•20m ago•0 comments

Wing Expands Its Drone Delivery Service to the Bay Area

https://wing.com/news/wing-drone-delivery-bay-area
1•chfritz•22m ago•0 comments

Liquid Glass Is Permanent

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2026/03/23/liquid-glass-is-permanent/
2•robenkleene•23m ago•2 comments

Compose Multiplatform 1.9.0 Released

https://blog.jetbrains.com/kotlin/2025/09/compose-multiplatform-1-9-0-compose-for-web-beta/
1•andrewstetsenko•24m ago•0 comments

FCC adds "routers produced in foreign countries" to covered list [pdf]

https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DA-26-278A1.pdf
3•danhon•25m ago•1 comments

Cloudflare's Gen 13 servers: trading cache for cores for 2x performance

https://blog.cloudflare.com/gen13-launch/
1•wmf•26m ago•0 comments

What Does the Viral Afroman Trial Have to Do with Section 230?

https://www.techdirt.com/2026/03/23/what-does-the-viral-afroman-trial-have-to-do-with-section-230/
4•hn_acker•27m ago•0 comments

I don't understand how OpenAI can guarantee 17.5% returns

https://www.bankless.com/read/news/openai-guarantees-17-5-minimum-returns-to-private-market-inves...
5•ericlmtn•29m ago•2 comments

OpenAI sweetens private equity pitch amid enterprise turf war with Anthropic

https://www.reuters.com/business/openai-sweetens-private-equity-pitch-amid-enterprise-turf-war-wi...
1•consumer451•31m ago•1 comments

Hacker Mints $80M USD Worth of USR Stablecoins

https://bfmtimes.com/hacker-mints-80-million-worth-of-fake-stablecoins-and-swaps-them-for-eth/
3•timbowhite•32m ago•0 comments

Construction of Data Centers, Power Plants, Factories, and Office Buildings

https://wolfstreet.com/2026/03/23/construction-of-data-centers-power-plants-factories-and-office-...
1•toomuchtodo•33m ago•0 comments

FCC Adds Routers Produced in Foreign Countries to Covered List

https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-adds-routers-produced-foreign-countries-covered-list
5•kotaKat•34m ago•0 comments

Sun Exposure and Mortality from Melanoma

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15687362/
1•CGMthrowaway•36m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

The Treasury just declared the U.S. insolvent

https://fortune.com/2026/03/23/us-government-insolvent-fiscal-crisis-fix/
49•cols•1h ago

Comments

logicprog•1h ago
https://web.archive.org/web/20260323190551/https://fortune.c...
cat-turner•1h ago
Don't worry guys, we'll still set aside money to fund wars in deserts far away.
johnea•27m ago
Exactly! and no small amount of money is being set aside either:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_budget_of_the_United_...

And as you would expect in a Fortune Mag article, the "solution" of this budget shortafall is to fuck the people more.

Reigning in the totally out of control budget for incinerating people should have come long ago, but is unspeakable for major shareholders of the people incineration industry.

Or using the thing that no right-wing talking head is ever going to acknowledge in resolving budget shortfalls, increasing income (i.e. taxes)

This is especially true given the modern massive wealth gap, in which the highest earners pay a fraction of the percentage paid by working people.

SkyPuncher•58m ago
"....that could change everything"

Is this an AI generated article? Sure reads like it.

andriy_koval•57m ago
there are many numbers in that article, but they didn't tell US became insolvent this year, or was insolvent last year too by their criteria. What about the last decade?
mothballed•54m ago
The US can't go insolvent. The fed can could buy the entire debt out tomorrow out of newly created money. Sovereign debt in a country with such central bank is little more than future tax or inflation, but solvency is guaranteed.
croes•52m ago
But bonds and the Dollar could become nearly worthless
gmuslera•38m ago
It didn’t, the last 2-3 times that trillions were printed to sort that moment emergency (thinking in 2008 and 2020, but could be more) and there wasn’t a sudden drop of value then.
andriy_koval•26m ago
stocks and real estate prices indicate that dollar lost lots of value during this period.
AnimalMuppet•8m ago
In 2008, $4 trillion was printed. But in the financial crisis, $4 trillion evaporated. The net result was zero inflation for the next 12 years.

Then 2020 happened, and they printed too much, and we've had inflation since then.

metalman•29m ago
All money is a human construct, exactly like the easter bunny, there is a whole set of arbitrary "rules" and conditions required to get chocolate, basicly everywhere, but in the one situation you have to be small and credulous, or put on agood act(usefull later in life) to get chocolate, and in the other the construct has become non optional and will be enforced on you as soon as you are no longer a credulous believer in the easter bunny, and this is what you are refering to, the non optional partisipation in an arbitrary human construct. The latest twist bieng the introduction of the idea that whoever has the most, very large complicated numbers, wins, also known as crypto.
huijzer•53m ago
Not a nice timing by the treasury to post this at the same time that many companies fire employees, war is going on, and fuel is running out. Everything is piling up it seems
peteforde•31m ago
The good news is that a currency issuer cannot become insolvent. This is literally just semantic libertarian scare propaganda. I strongly urge you to watch Stephanie Kelton's interview on The Daily Show a few years back to calm your mind a bit.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1JpZZcD8C4M

Meanwhile, let's step back a bit... if we pretend that the US is insolvent - a repo man is going to come take it away with a big truck - do you really think that the US treasury is structured in a way that allows them to hold back something that significant because the national mood is anxious and they don't want to make people feel extra sad on a Monday? Seriously: wth.

thrill•20m ago
When other countries historically went insolvent they too pretended it meant nothing.
mullingitover•50m ago
Here's your reminder that this is of course a bunch of alarmist nonsense, because as an issuer of currency the United States is incapable of becoming "insolvent."

The authors are from an libertarian extremist think tank that pushes for a balanced budget amendment. If these people got their way, we would immediately solve the problem of people arguing about this on the internet since none of us would be able to afford to own a computer.

peteforde•37m ago
Moreover, the great con was to convince people that the US debt is a liability, as though there's someone who is going to come and repo man your country with a truck.

At the macro level, debt is one of the most powerful tools that a government is entrusted to deploy. It's literally how you grow an economy.

scrubs•26m ago
Oh c'mon! We know that. Good Lord, if a country's debts were held elsewhere, it'd be the Trump administration trying to repo someone first for Nato money or other some fool reason.

Meanwhile,there are in fact actual, bonafide, tangible problems to financial stupidity you're quip forgot to address.

CrzyLngPwd•49m ago
Trump isn't over yet; there is more to come...or go, depending on your perspective, I suppose.
mellosouls•46m ago
NB. This article could have been written under any recent administration (and no doubt was published in different forms).

I don't mean it's politically motivated or that the current admin shouldn't be criticized; the authors have legitimate economic views and concerns that follow - but the title is clickbait and shouldn't be used to infer something new is happening.

cyberge99•6m ago
Exactly. It’s commentary, not even an article. The big number is GDP and the is and will continue to be the most significant by a large margin.
alecco•35m ago
> These two bills represent the most credible path forward — if Congress has the will to act.

I’m not American, and yet I can tell this is extremely unlikely to happen. I’ve lost track of all the Cassandras raising the alarm who were shot down or even laughed at. But there is still a bit more road left for the can to be kicked one more time.

scotty79•33m ago
"There's infinite amount of money in the federal reserve."
jmclnx•31m ago
The bill that is missing, tax the very rich as the US did in 1960