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Chinese car company patents voice-activated 'in-vehicle toilet'

https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2026/04/17/Seres-patent-in-car-toilet/8281776442128/
1•speckx•23s ago•0 comments

See and hear galaxies evolve from the dawn of the universe

https://ras.ac.uk/news-and-press/research-highlights/see-and-hear-galaxies-evolve-dawn-universe
1•gmays•6m ago•0 comments

Tario-2: A Whole-Transcriptome Foundation Model from H&E Alone

https://www.noetik.blog/p/tario-2-a-whole-transcriptome-foundation
2•abhishaike•7m ago•0 comments

Online PDF Password Protection Tool in 2025: Securing Your Digital Documents

https://amorpdf.com/online-pdf-password-protection-tool-in-2025/
1•microespana•8m ago•0 comments

"Show Me the Incentive, and I'll Show You the Outcome."

https://www.fixtheincentives.org/
3•paulpauper•9m ago•0 comments

In Defense of Utopia

https://ary31415.substack.com/p/in-defense-of-utopia
1•paulpauper•9m ago•0 comments

The Cashier Standard – Age Verification Without Surveillance

https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/7fe74381-a683-4f49-9c2b-171cba4b3e59
1•anonym29•9m ago•0 comments

If You Want a Better World, Act Like You Live in It

https://www.theatlantic.com/books/2026/04/henry-david-thoreau-great-american-dissident/686823/
1•paulpauper•9m ago•0 comments

I Went Back to the Dumb Phone

https://substack.magazinenongrata.com/p/back-to-the-dumb-phone
1•fictionreader•10m ago•0 comments

Shakespeare's 'missing' London house mapped with new discovery

https://www.kcl.ac.uk/news/shakespeares-missing-london-house-mapped-with-new-discovery-1
1•geox•11m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Wrong Side of Zero – Google Flow Music [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Syhgdct_VC4
1•modinfo•11m ago•0 comments

How to Read a QR Code from a Screenshot on Your Laptop Without Using Your Phone

https://www.codeava.com/blog/read-qr-code-screenshot-laptop-desktop
1•codeava•12m ago•0 comments

What Is a Hydrogen Gas Turbine?

https://www.greengasturbines.com/blog/what-is-a-hydrogen-gas-turbine-definition-types-how-they-work
1•codeava•13m ago•0 comments

Verijit – Up to 100x faster Verilog simulation [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXgUsEjvAOY
2•can_lehmann•14m ago•0 comments

'Everything is coming down': ChatGPT ads are getting cheaper

https://digiday.com/marketing/everything-is-coming-down-chatgpt-ads-are-getting-cheaper/
2•speckx•15m ago•0 comments

Court unanimously sides with oil and gas companies in suit over damage to coast

https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/04/court-unanimously-sides-with-oil-and-gas-companies-in-suit-ove...
1•Jimmc414•21m ago•0 comments

Xtrace-skill: xtrace – Command-line CPU Profiling for macOS as a skill

https://github.com/Kr1sso/xtrace-skill
1•mpweiher•23m ago•0 comments

Paper, Love and Software

https://github.com/mistachkin/docs/blob/trunk/paper_love_and_software.md
1•BaconDaddyX•24m ago•1 comments

You paid for it, you should be comfortable in it

https://idiallo.com/blog/you-paid-for-it-you-should-be-comfortable-in-it
1•speckx•26m ago•0 comments

Philz Coffee retreats from controversial plan

https://www.sfchronicle.com/food/restaurants/article/philz-reverses-pride-flag-ban-22212158.php
2•_doctor_love•27m ago•2 comments

A Close Look at a Spinlock

https://blog.regehr.org/archives/2173
2•jruohonen•30m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: In the AI world what does "great" look like?

2•armcat•31m ago•0 comments

How Netflix Built the Operations Layer Behind Live at Scale

https://netflixtechblog.com/the-human-infrastructure-how-netflix-built-the-operations-layer-behin...
4•tcp_handshaker•31m ago•0 comments

China surfaces details of spacecraft for Moon landing by 2030

https://jatan.space/moon-monday-issue-267/
2•tcp_handshaker•32m ago•0 comments

Doubling the voltage: What 800 V architecture changes in EVs

https://arstechnica.com/cars/2026/03/doubling-the-voltage-what-800-v-architecture-really-changes-...
1•PaulHoule•32m ago•0 comments

Exts to Odrzywołek's EML Uni Operator: Hybrid Best Routing, Phantom Attractors

https://www.monogate.dev/
1•zonked45•32m ago•0 comments

Why AI Is Not Getting You Out of a Job

https://yeikoff.xyz/blog/17-04-2026-not-out-of-a-job/
2•iglesiastj•34m ago•0 comments

OpenAI to spend more than $20B on Cerebras chips, receive stake

https://www.reuters.com/technology/openai-spend-more-than-20-billion-cerebras-chips-receive-equit...
2•gaurangt•34m ago•2 comments

Local Model Router: Ollama/OpenAI-compat bridges for local LLMs via llama.cpp

1•g023•35m ago•0 comments

The King James Bible (2016)

https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/blink/talk/tongue-in-check/article8476057.ece
1•bookofjoe•35m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

All 12 moonwalkers had "lunar hay fever" from dust smelling like gunpowder

https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Human_and_Robotic_Exploration/The_toxic_side_of_the_Moon
79•cybermango•1h ago

Comments

m463•1h ago
we have similar problems with volcanic ash on earth
jMyles•54m ago
I walked up to the flows on Fagradalsfjall when it was erupting a couple of years ago, and I found the cinereous, sulfurous air to be very medicinal and clearing. I'm not sure it'd have good for me for more than a few hours, but as it was, it was great. I occasionally wish I were able to just have a chamber with that air in it.
tim-tday•38m ago
Exactly, but the lack of a water cycle on the moon means that all the dust is sharp and always will be.

It will irritate human mucus membranes whenever it comes in contact. Irritate lungs, eyes, skin.

It degrades rubber seals.

jjmarr•1h ago
Have any of them developed cancer from the space asbestos yet?
loloquwowndueo•59m ago
Only 4 are still alive, all in their 90s so that’d be a long time - even if some do have cancer at this stage it’s not likely to affect life expectancy I guess.
AngryData•50m ago
We also have to remember that those astronauts were some of the most physically fit individuals in a nation of hundreds of millions which may skew the expected medical outcomes. Especially if we assume they always had the best healthcare available, if from nothing else than doctors asking similiar qiestions about the effects of space travel.
wat10000•41m ago
The exposure was brief, too. Wikipedia says mesothelioma has been known to develop from exposures of "only" 1 month. That's a scary short time if it's in your home or workplace, but comfortably longer than an Apollo mission. Could be an issue for a future base, though.
bdamm•31m ago
It definitely puts a damper on my personal enthusiasm for visiting the moon hotel, or even encouraging researchers to live there.
altmanaltman•32m ago
I mean Neil Armstrong literally smoked and did not "believe" in excercise so they were absolutely not the most physically fittest people. They were just freaks in terms of enduring a lot of stress tests. Physical endurance is just one aspect they train for. Other aspects were much more valued like them being military flight pilots/smart enough to understand the systems/mentally strong enough to not break down etc. You were not selecting for absolute raw fitness for the apollo missions.
porphyra•41m ago
Even with actual asbestos, the risk goes up a lot with duration and intensity of exposure. Probably, the risks of getting cancer from a brief exposure is fairly low, and combined with the ridiculously small sample size of only 12 people to ever set foot on the moon, it's natural that none of them got "moon cancer". That said, with asbesto, it's still possible to get cancer even from brief exposures:

> Although it is clear that the health risks from asbestos exposure increase with heavier exposure and longer exposure time, investigators have found asbestos-related diseases in individuals with only brief exposures. Generally, those who develop asbestos-related diseases show no signs of illness for a long time after exposure. It can take from 10 to 40 years or more for symptoms of an asbestos-related condition to appear. [1]

[1] https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/s...

OsrsNeedsf2P•53m ago
They describe the dust on the moon as,

> Fine like powder, but sharp like glass

Sounds scary. But totally worth it!

krunck•51m ago
Mars has toxic levels of perchlorates in the regolith. That will require that humans never come in contact with the regolith or things that touched it. Those space suits that dock to vehicles seem like a necessity.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perchlorate#On_Mars

snthpy•43m ago
TIL
tim-tday•34m ago
Yeah, the ground on mars is literally toxic. Makes the concept of a Martian colony less appealing. Almost equal to a floating station on Venus. At least there you’d have the correct pressure. I seem to recall that the temperature on Venus at an altitude of one atmospheric pressure is manageable. It’s just also acidic. Possibility easier to deal with than perchlorates.
MengerSponge•33m ago
Mars is so bad, y'all.
card_zero•30m ago
Since the perchlorate is generated by reaction with sunlight, it might be limited to a surface layer.

Well, I guess that's what regolith means.

lukan•27m ago
Without massive terraforming all of Mars is very hostile.

But having solid ground is still nice.

A workable compromise is making big habitats in a dome, that gives sunlight, but shields from radiation. And the ground needs to be processed obviously.

The advantage of Venus to me is is gravity.

cosmic_cheese•20m ago
Gravity kind of cuts both ways. Closer to that of Earth is nearly guaranteed to be better for long term human health, but there's a possibility that martian gravity is "good enough" when supplemented with excercise while also making heavy operations and getting back out of the planet's gravity well easier.
cduzz•9m ago
Venus seems like a wonderful place to live, relatively speaking.

At the right altitude where you can "float" on the ocean, it's a pretty comfortable temperature and there's plenty of solar energy but you're shielded from the solar radiation. So, long term, your body will still work, assuming you can solve "the other problems."

Of course, the down-side is that there's nothing to stand on and probably more importantly, there aren't many useful materials to work with besides tons of carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. Not much hydrogen there, so not much water, which probably is the biggest problem. One of them, anyhow. Also, there's probably not a whole lot to do besides float (zoom, actually) around and slowly go stir crazy in your bubble.

But relatively speaking, it's way nicer than living in a hole on mars where you'll slowly die from gravity sickness, or radiation poisoning, or whatever.

operatingthetan•3m ago
If we terraform mars, isn't the dirt still toxic?
ck2•19m ago
there's a great PBS Space Time for that (of course)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O5FqozA4IpA

darknavi•18m ago
If this fact piques your interest, the book Delta-v by Daniel Suarez glances off this fact and uses it to justify exploring asteroid mining instead of a colony on Mars.
imglorp•12m ago
Or effective decontamination performed in the airlock. There was a recent demonstration of an electrostatic repulsion device reducing dust on suit fabric which might help with sticking. And an air shower like used for clean rooms does not seem too far out.
BFV•50m ago
That’s such a weirdly specific detail but also kinda fascinating. Imagine going to the Moon and the first thing you notice is “huh… smells like gunpowder.
skywhopper•6m ago
I just had a filling replaced at the dentist yesterday and when he was grinding away at it to shape it, I would get a terrible whiff of something like gunpowder. It was quite disturbing.

But now I can just tell everyone my tooth is filled with moon dust.

tcp_handshaker•27m ago
"The toxic side of the Moon" - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47768039
ortusdux•24m ago
This is a big perk of the newer lunar rover design, wherein the suits stay outside the vehicle - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Exploration_Vehicle#Spec...

There has been some great research into laser or solar sintering of regolith, and one of my first questions was if the resulting material is safe for humans.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-42008-1

corysama•10m ago
I recall an article from a long time ago that basically said “astronauts report” the moon smells like spent gunpowder and outer space smell like… I think it was ozone.

What they were actually reporting was the smell of the airlocks after they returned from their excursions. The moon has no atmosphere, so it has been accumulating dust from billions of years of asteroid impacts that have never come in contact with oxygen. Many of the chemicals in the dust are oxidative and so when it is exposed to air for the first time it rapidly oxidizes just like gunpowder!

And I think the outer space report was from space walks, and the explanation was that the first time the airlock itself was exposed to hard vacuum, the surfaces of the airlock would have a reaction that left a scent of ozone.

hvs•5m ago
If you want to get depressed about all the problems with trying to colonize Mars, I recommend A City on Mars: https://www.acityonmars.com/

It's by the cartoonist of Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal and his wife (the one with an actual science PhD). https://www.smbc-comics.com/

lucasaug•4m ago
When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade