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Show HN: RPLY - one Inbox for iMessage, WhatsApp, Slack, and Gmail on macOS

https://www.heynox.com
1•mcantillon•5m ago•2 comments

Track what top investors own (13F) and why they own it (10K AI Analysis)

https://superinvestorsbelike.com
2•oodelally•6m ago•0 comments

Framework? I sure hope it does

https://blog.valknight.xyz/framebroken.html
1•coinfused•12m ago•0 comments

Artemis II Tracker – Live Mission Control

https://artemis.cdnspace.ca/
1•rbanffy•12m ago•0 comments

Days Since OpenClaw CVE

https://days-since-openclaw-cve.com/
1•verandaguy•16m ago•0 comments

Show HN: MailMark – Cold email tool where you own your domain and mailboxes

1•debasishbarai•17m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Arbory – Native iOS dashboard and widgets for Plausible Analytics

https://arbory.io/
1•jorijn•22m ago•0 comments

An elegant Pomodoro timer for your terminal

https://github.com/kaushalvivek/pom
1•kaushalvivek•23m ago•0 comments

/Render – 3D Model Skill for Claude Code

https://github.com/mfranzon/render
3•mfranzon•26m ago•0 comments

Can We Measure Software Slop? An Experiment

https://pscanf.com/s/352/
1•RohanAdwankar•26m ago•0 comments

Chinese Chip Firms Hit Record High Revenue Driven by the AI Boom and U.S. Curbs

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/04/03/chinese-chip-firms-record-revenue-ai-boom-us-curbs.html
1•karakoram•27m ago•0 comments

Why Your Engineering Team Is Slow (It's the Codebase, Not the People)

https://piechowski.io/post/codebase-drag-audit/
2•BerislavLopac•28m ago•0 comments

Journalist detained for booing Trump at Kennedy Center Chicago performance

https://www.advocate.com/news/kennedy-center-journalist-detained-trump
5•wahnfrieden•28m ago•0 comments

Securing AI infrastructure to prevent backdoors and sabotage

https://www.the-substrate.net/p/securing-ai-infrastructure-to-prevent
1•erwald•31m ago•0 comments

Code Is Worthless

https://nathanielfishel.substack.com/p/your-code-is-worthless
1•birdculture•31m ago•0 comments

YAML is (not) my preferred configuration format

https://belkadan.com/blog/2026/03/YAML-Is-Not-My-Preferred-Configuration-Format/
3•frizlab•33m ago•0 comments

Eggplant

https://xn--gi8h42h.ws/
1•memalign•36m ago•1 comments

Look Back on Some of Apple's Forgotten Legacies at 50 Years

https://spectrum.ieee.org/apple-50th-anniversary
1•pseudolus•36m ago•0 comments

Port of LA turns to electric terminal trucks to to slash dwell times

https://electrek.co/2026/04/04/port-of-la-turns-to-electric-terminal-trucks-to-to-slash-dwell-times/
2•toomuchtodo•39m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: I don't get why Anthropic is limiting usage

2•ud0•39m ago•4 comments

DPRK Malware Modularity: Diversity and Functional Specialization

https://dti.domaintools.com/research/dprk-malware-modularity-diversity-and-functional-specialization
1•campuscodi•40m ago•0 comments

Satellite firm Planet Labs to indefinitely withold Iran war imagery

https://www.reuters.com/business/media-telecom/satellite-firm-planet-labs-indefinitely-withhold-i...
2•anigbrowl•41m ago•0 comments

The Triumph of the Embryo: Some Thoughts on Lewis Wolpert's Embryology Book

https://chillphysicsenjoyer.substack.com/p/the-triumph-of-the-embryo
1•crescit_eundo•43m ago•0 comments

An open source CLI for saving your X / Twitter bookmarks locally

https://www.fieldtheory.dev/cli/
1•afar•43m ago•0 comments

Your developer environment needs a CLI

https://stanislav.blog/your-devenv-needs-a-cli/
1•spanferov•46m ago•0 comments

Good APIs Age Slowly

https://yusufaytas.com/good-apis-age-slowly/
11•karakoram•47m ago•1 comments

Slow Software

https://www.inkandswitch.com/slow-software/
1•leephillips•48m ago•0 comments

Way to protect your phone from a warrantless search in 2026

https://www.zdnet.com/article/how-to-protect-your-phone-from-warrantless-search/
1•ohjeez•49m ago•0 comments

Researchers spent years interviewing 160 Bigfoot hunters – what they learnt

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvg58ydn4jpo
2•1659447091•50m ago•0 comments

Running LLMs locally? Cut your VRAM consumption by 45% with one line of code

2•CarlosCosta_•50m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

The Free Market Lie: Why Switzerland Has 25 Gbit Internet and America Doesn't

https://sschueller.github.io/posts/the-free-market-lie/
33•sschueller•1h ago

Comments

deafpolygon•1h ago
if the internet cabal in the US was actually a free market, you’d be right!
poly2it•1h ago
This article would be so much better without the generic AI-generated images everywhere.
sschueller•1h ago
Agreed but I didn't want to just take random images from the web that I don't have the rights too and I my artistic skills are not good enough.
LoganDark•1h ago
You could just not generate extra images that aren't relevant to the article. I like the charts and diagrams even when they're AI, because they serve a purpose. But the extra images for flair or whatever are completely pointless and even annoying.
sschueller•1h ago
Ok thanks. I will keep that in mind for my next post.
Svip•1h ago
I would go a little further (and apologies for being rather blunt): but I find the over-use of irrelevant images to be rather insulting, as if I am unable to maintain focus on an article, without the frequent shiny object.
LoganDark•1h ago
I wouldn't necessarily call that further. The images I like are relevant because they visually explain things that are helpful. The images I don't like are irrelevant because they serve no purpose other than to Be Images for no good reason.
0xsn3k•1h ago
i agree, i do like the article content itself, but the AI-generated images (clearly nano banana btw) really kill the credibility. even just using stock images with the watermarks clearly visible would be better
cjs_ac•1h ago
Australia and the UK both have a similar business environment to the Swiss model (but without the superior bandwidth) due to the way that their government-owned telephone monopolies were privatised: Telecom Australia (now called Telstra) and British Telecom (now called BT) were required to allow their newly-formed competitors to sell services over their networks (for appropriate maintenance fees, of course).

The US and German models are consequences of just yelling 'Free market!' without stopping to think about what's actually being sold in that market, and how to encourage genuine competition.

ttul•1h ago
In my small island community, I participated in a municipal committee whose mandate was to bring proper broadband to the island. Although two telecom duopolies already served the community, one of them had undersea fiber but zero fiber to the home (DSL remains the only option), whereas the other used a 670 Mbps wireless microwave link for backhaul and delivery via coaxial cable. And pricing? Insanely expensive for either terrible option.

Our little committee investigated all manner of options, including bringing municipal fiber across alongside a new undersea electricity cable that the power company was installing anyway. I spoke to the manager of that project and he said there was no real barrier to adding a few strands of fiber, since the undersea high voltage line already had space for it (for the power company’s own signaling).

Sadly, the municipality didn’t have any capital to invest a penny into that fiber, so one day, one of the municipal counselors just called up a friend who worked for a fiber laying company and asked them for a favor: put out a press release saying that they were “investigating” laying an undersea fiber to power a municipal fiber network on the little island.

A few weeks later, the cable monopoly engaged a cable ship and began laying their own fiber. Competition works, folks. Even if you have to fake it.

bestouff•32m ago
No it doesn't, and you just proved it. You managed it because you could fake you had leverage. But without that you were slaves of theses companies, and that's the general rule.
ma2kx•1h ago
Init7 has on its blog another amazing write up https://blog.init7.net/en/die-glasfaserstreit-geschichte/
jauntywundrkind•7m ago
Congress passed the Telecommunications Act of 1996 in the US which demanded network unbundling, splitting up the fiber/connections versus the internet service, demanding wholesale rate access to infrastructure. It was good.

Then the courts decided, meh, we just don't like it. We are going to tell the FCC otherwise. It all went away. The incumbent local carriers have now had monopoly power over huge swarths of the infrastructure. No access to dark fiber. https://www.dwt.com/insights/2004/03/federal-court-eviscerat... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Telecom_Associat...

Verizon also sued, and said, sure, there's laws for unbundling. But, we really don't like them. We aren't going to deploy fiber if we have to share. And the court once again said, oh, yeah, well, that's fine, we'll grant that: we'll strike down congress's law because "innovation" sounds better. https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/cadc/1...

It's just so so so much corruption, so much meddling from the court to undo everything good congress worked so hard to make happen, that was such an essential baseline to allow competition. I remain very very angry about this all. This was such a sad decade of losing so much goodness, such competition. These damn cartels! The courts that keep giving them everything they want! Bah!!

I think it was a other case,

bethekidyouwant•1h ago
Why isn’t france your European example? Its larger and better served than switzerland
joe_the_user•56m ago
Looks like a good article explaining some key concepts like natural monopoly.

And yeah, the US model is to tout free enterprise to the skies but then have the state give control of a given market to a single or a couple of monopolists.

The problem is the US has created a constituency of state-dependent small and large business people whose livelihood depends this contradictory free-enterprise ideology.

tickerticker•43m ago
I wish this kind of perspective (international comparison) could be applied to several areas of the USA economy: tax compliance, campaign finance, and banking regulation. Good work, OP.

In Charlotte NC, I have 3 choices of internet providers, two of them fiber.

As you are doing with this post, "broaden the base." The vast majority of voters do not understand the issues here. That is your biggest obstacle.

My POV would call this regulatory failure vs free market lie. That way, the enemy is a smaller target.

Path to progress is to get a friendly state (WY, RI, TX) to pass the legislation. Then shop that around among activists in other states.

If people knew they were only getting 1/25 of a shared product, that would get political hackles up.

Thanks for taking the time to think this through and make your argument.

burnt-resistor•21m ago
Municipal and co-op broadband in the US needs subsidies, loans, replication, and expansion. Where I live has a farmer co-op for electricity and internet in a mostly sparse, rural area with various residential housing developments scattered around. What was GFiber in the regionally-nearby metropolitan area had beta 20 Gbps internet for $250 USD/mo. 1 Gbps symmetric fiber co-op is $100 USD/mo. Prices are high compared to Europe. Possibly not high prices compared to Australia.
chrismcb•1m ago
Because it isn't a free market in the USA. And those that regulate it don't seem to care. Or maybe it is those that have been granted a monopoly do everything they can to retain said monopoly. Things would be different if we actually had a free market