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Reasons Mastodon won't survive (2017)

https://mashable.com/article/mastodon-wont-survive
1•doener•2m ago•2 comments

Tesla's stock suffers steepest drop of 2026 on disappointing deliveries report

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/04/02/tesla-tsla-q1-2026-vehicle-delivery-production.html
2•1vuio0pswjnm7•4m ago•0 comments

Eric Voegelin – From Enlightenment to Revolution

https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Eric_Voegelin
1•programmexxx•10m ago•0 comments

AI videos fuel rhetoric as Orbán bids for four more years in Hungary

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5yj97yd6v5o
1•breve•11m ago•0 comments

Repowise: Codebase intelligence for AI-assisted engineering teams

https://github.com/repowise-dev/repowise
1•i0exception•13m ago•0 comments

Thailand, pollution, AI, my books, and ADHD

https://indignified.substack.com/p/hasan-i-sabah-prologue
1•ZguideZ•24m ago•0 comments

Italian TV Copyright-Strikes Nvidia over Nvidia's Own DLSS 5 Footage (YouTube)

https://twitter.com/NikTek/status/2040898312262324362
5•alecco•24m ago•1 comments

What's the digital equivalent of fish dropping shrimp in front a mirror?

https://github.com/Bitterbot-AI/bitterbot-desktop
1•VtotheMtotheG•26m ago•0 comments

Trading Bot

3•TiaMane•32m ago•0 comments

Bitchat Pulled from Chinese App Store

https://twitter.com/jack/status/2040924565111537983
4•nidegen•32m ago•1 comments

Iran threatens 'complete and utter annihilation' of OpenAI's $30B Stargate

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/iran-threatens-complete-and-utter-annihilation-of-open...
30•gnabgib•34m ago•9 comments

Design.md that capture designs of popular websites

https://github.com/VoltAgent/awesome-design-md
2•vanyle•34m ago•0 comments

NMS Ceefax: Remember teletext? This is the same

https://nmsceefax.co.uk/
1•CharlesW•35m ago•0 comments

Row looms over Champions League elite's share of EFL deal payments

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2026/mar/17/champions-league-premier-league-efl-deal
1•PaulHoule•51m ago•0 comments

Introducing GEN-1 [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SY2xyrmV44Y
12•dgellow•53m ago•2 comments

Value Numbering

https://bernsteinbear.com/blog/value-numbering/
1•birdculture•56m ago•0 comments

The Harvard Library Passport

https://fi-le.net/stamps/
2•fi-le•56m ago•0 comments

A whole boss fight in 256 bytes

https://hellmood.111mb.de//A_whole_boss_fight_in_256_bytes.html
3•HellMood•57m ago•1 comments

In Japan, the robot isn't coming for your job; it's filling the one nobody wants

https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/05/japan-is-proving-experimental-physical-ai-is-ready-for-the-real...
19•rbanffy•57m ago•6 comments

The Era of AI FOMO Is Upon Us

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-03/why-ai-is-making-people-feel-like-they-re-fall...
1•blondie9x•1h ago•0 comments

Apollo 8, Artemis 1 and 2 Orbit Comparison [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PNQ7MoL7erI
1•qwertyuiop_•1h ago•0 comments

WTF, Anthropic's Claude Code keeps track of every time you swear

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/anthropic-leak-reveals-claude-code-tracking-user-frust...
1•mooreds•1h ago•0 comments

What Digital Isolation and Censorship Evasion Look Like in Wartime Iran

https://www.techpolicy.press/what-digital-isolation-and-censorship-evasion-look-like-in-wartime-i...
3•mooreds•1h ago•0 comments

Judge Moody's: Automating Semantic Search Relevance Evaluation with LLM Judges

https://haystackconf.com/us2025/talk-9/
1•mooreds•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Grug – Claude Code Skill Inspired by the Grug Brained Developer

https://github.com/replete/grug-skill
3•replete•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: TermHub – Open-source terminal control gateway built for AI Agents

https://github.com/duo121/termhub
3•duo121•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: Runfra – Decentralized GPU cluster designed for bulk generation

https://runfra.com/playground
3•spencer9714•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: Pure Go mosh client, server, and WASM build for the browser

https://github.com/unixshells/mosh-go
1•rasengan•1h ago•1 comments

The Miserable Introvert

https://artagnon.com/art/introvert
2•artagnon•1h ago•0 comments

Model provider can cut your throat tomorrow morning

https://zenfox.ai/blog/model-provider-platform-independence
3•alexflashdrive•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Ask HN: Any Interesting Niche Hobbies?

4•e-topy•1h ago
I'm looking for something novel and interesting, that isn't absolutely crowded that I could meaningfully contribute to.

In 2022 I was toying around with OpenAI's RL Gym, right when the first non-instruct GPT3 model came out. I was thinking about getting into ML a lot more, but hesitated. Before that it was 3D printers, mechanical keyboards, drones, etc. All of these have exploded, and while they are still very interesting, I do love my Browns and manage Prusas for my local hackerspace, they have just, for the lack of a better term, industrialized. I'm also now in a position where I have time and money for it, not like when I was 15 and rating Ender motherboard upgrades I knew I'd never buy.

Right now I'm making a chess engine, but that's already a solved problem. There's also biohacking, and while designing chips to go into my body is really interesting, I only have one, and don't want to push it too far. One promising idea is a kind of 'Personal Computer 2', where people try to innovate HCI, and while I really like that and do have some research ideas, I'd like to explore a bit more before delving deep into it.

Comments

Imustaskforhelp•1h ago
You mention chess, Chessboxing is an interesting niche hobby where you play both chess and boxing.

I play chess but not chessboxing but hey, you asked for some interesting niche hobbies!

It seems that what you do is mostly related to computers within the niche hobbies but what if you can do something else too?

> Right now I'm making a chess engine, but that's already a solved problem

Not everything should be done for the end-result, sometimes its the process which matters, there was a great hackernews post about it (https://ergosphere.blog/posts/the-machines-are-fine/)

If you want something niche, perhaps make some portal-2 mods or make more efficient versions of using GlaDOS TTS within browser etc. (this is just something that I want to be honest, but I feel like it can be a niche hobby in its regards seeing your interests)

Let me know if you want more ideas and have fun and have a nice day man!

e-topy•1h ago
I do boxing as a form of cardio so I'm not weightlifting all the time. So I've just invited a friend for a 1v1 and he accepted, time to start training both properly I guess.

I do want something related to computers because that's where I'm skilled the most, but it being mixed with something else is fine (i.e., biohacking). But computers generally are becoming stale, considering how much money has been poured into everything digital, it's going to be hard to find something novel. Maybe the next frontier is becoming an electrician?

Imustaskforhelp•1h ago
> But computers generally are becoming stale, considering how much money has been poured into everything digital, it's going to be hard to find something novel

I feel like it depends, there are many sorts of projects which are still low hanging fruits. you might not get appreciated to do things anymore because of the amount of competition but you can feel proud of yourself.

Breaking NATs without root permissions (try searching dropbear without root and building it and running it with something like pinggy to then make a minecraft server beneath a nat work), making a free crypto chain have data embedded within a loop of transactions to embed data on crypto for free, recently using single-file to somehow archive archive.is pages on archive.org* anonymously using piping-server.

I have used AI/LLM assistance in most of these but I feel like aside from being frustrated at the code aspects, I had some good ideas and even with everyone else having AI, I didn't see anyone else doing these things (the reason I say this is because if they did, I would've just used their services :] )

Not sure if a lot of these things sound novel, programmatically not, but idea-wise I think* they might-be novel.

A lot of my novel ideas come out of proving things. Can I prove that I can run minecraft on a free intel server that me and my friends can play on? Can I prove that I can save archive.is pages on archive.org anonymously-ish since the issue with archive.is

So my point is, out of personal experience, there are so many novel-ideas within things which seem obvious but nobody has really implemented them and to be honest, everyone is just creating yet another chatgpt wrapper with AI. Much of these experiments are prototyping/proving these ideas and I believe that there are some low hanging fruits in such sense of these ideas which can be interesting to think about.

So I don't suppose that you have to go bio-hacking to find things which pique your interest, there are some practical things too in my opinion which can pique your interest.

Not sure if this might be the answer you are looking for, but I hope this helps within the context you asked it. Sometimes two normal things combined together can be the novel thing to do.

My opinion is that people with money chase money oriented things, the people with passion/hobby-tinkering will do things that chase passion and so sometimes you have nothing to worry about :-)

So are there any things that you feel is similar to this for you, perhaps?

e-topy•52m ago
What you're doing is interesting but those are side-projects. I have plenty of random side-projects, just now after reading Gibson's Burning Chrome, I'm making an OpenBSD server where you can only log in using SSH keys in my implant, and logging in makes you a completely new but very restricted user with 1GB of free storage. Kinda like Johnny Mnemonic.

But I feel very disorganized when most of my attention is on distinct one-off side projects, I want to work on something novel and big. But thanks for your suggestions. It is true that most industries begin when passion oriented people finally meet money oriented people, but most time they are separate.

unsupp0rted•1h ago
My hobby is organizing in-person meetups for random people to get together, chat and make friends. Barely structured, if at all. I've found this rewarding and ended up making friends this way.

You have to accept that 5-15% of the people who would show up to something like this are genuine weirdos you probably don't want to be around. And another 10% at any given meetup are autistic or neuro-divergent but well-meaning, kind and full of interesting insights and hobbies, although perhaps difficult to socialize with, at least until they get to know you're well-meaning too.

These challenges come with the territory. You end up talking to people you'd otherwise never meet in the normal course of your life, and it's neutral at worst and wonderful at best.

Imustaskforhelp•1h ago
How do you do this? And do you find people within tech industry or just random-people, I am sort of curious to know!
unsupp0rted•31m ago
Just random people, but because of where I post my events I tend to get about 30% ~ 50% tech-adjacent people
e-topy•1h ago
This reminds me of [0], basically just inviting the most interesting people I know (also transitively the most interesting people they know), and just getting to meet people. I would really like to do this, but half the most interesting people I know are PhD professors I rant with because I'm next to them in a lab. Maybe once my network gets bigger. But I would still like to know more about how you do this, as other people doing this accidentally made me some good friendships, and I'd like to repay this favor to others

[0] https://takes.jamesomalley.co.uk/p/this-might-be-oversharing

unsupp0rted•29m ago
How I do it is context-specific. I used to live in a place where it's undoable and I was very lonely there. I moved to a place where people are much more open to it culturally and there's enough population to +/- bring in a constant flow of 4:1 regulars to newbies.

I advertise on local meetup platforms and in local social media. And I go to so many meetups myself that when people ask me what my hobbies are and I tell them, they get curious and self-invite.