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Kelsey Hightower: Kubernetes and retiring at the top [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UlXpOGIpITM
2•juanpabloaj•1m ago•0 comments

Inference: Turning Electricity into Intelligence – Stanford CS336 – Dan Fu [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9EEm4iMAF5s
1•matt_d•3m ago•0 comments

Attackers had month-long head start on patched Check Point VPN zero-day

https://www.theregister.com/cyber-crime/2026/06/08/attackers-had-month-long-head-start-on-patched...
1•sbulaev•4m ago•0 comments

Declining Birth Rates Globally

https://flowingdata.com/2026/05/25/declining-birth-rates-globally/
1•gmays•16m ago•0 comments

Berkshirehathaway.com – The Perfect Minimalist Website

https://berkshirehathaway.com
4•SpyCoder77•32m ago•0 comments

Track Political Stories Across the Web

https://plotline.news
1•yshunnar•33m ago•0 comments

How Elon Musk Killed Hundreds of Thousands of People

https://www.currentaffairs.org/news/how-elon-musk-killed-hundreds-of-thousands-of-people
7•tastyface•33m ago•2 comments

WWDC 2026 Platforms State of the Union [video]

https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2026/102/
1•ksec•33m ago•0 comments

Show HN: DaysLeft – a bio-age clock that shows a range, not a death date

https://daysleft.io
1•neo-genesis•36m ago•0 comments

Waymo bought Apple's self-driving car proving ground for $220M

https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/08/waymo-bought-apples-self-driving-car-proving-ground-for-220m/
2•sbulaev•39m ago•0 comments

Deciding on secession: how familiar and unknown futures shape loss aversion

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/political-science/articles/10.3389/fpos.2026.1805138/full
1•PaulHoule•39m ago•0 comments

Screenlet lets you record and export product demo videos from the browser

https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/screenlet/cdefecgpidbfmcifjecnbhldndpflhod
2•sakhtar0092•40m ago•0 comments

Build a ZeroCost Web Automation Pipeline with OpenRouter, OpenClaw, and MediaUse

https://pub.towardsai.net/build-a-zero-cost-web-automation-pipeline-with-openrouter-openclaw-and-...
1•yooibox•46m ago•0 comments

I Analyzed 163K Lines of Kuzu's Codebase. Here's Why Apple Wanted It

https://medium.com/data-science-collective/i-analyzed-163k-lines-of-kuzus-codebase-here-s-why-app...
2•ksec•47m ago•0 comments

Lscpu for Mac / Apple Silicon

https://github.com/hcarvalhoalves/lscpumac
1•manoDev•47m ago•1 comments

My URL/NSURL bug in the OS 27

https://lapcatsoftware.com/articles/2026/6/1.html
1•ilreb•50m ago•0 comments

Hot path optimization. When float division beats integer division

https://blog.andr2i.com/posts/2026-06-08-optimization-catalog-when-float-division-beats-integer-d...
1•birdculture•51m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Durable, asynchronous LLM workflow engine in Rust

https://crates.io/crates/langcontinuation
1•rescrv•53m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Do you also feel like KYC is turning you off to the concept of money

2•JumpinJack_Cash•53m ago•0 comments

Faith, Dignity, and Human Flourishing: Hearing God's Voice in an Age of AI [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ts5Z64A0Vv4
2•ldayley•56m ago•1 comments

Show HN: SnakeBaby – Cute symbols, bios, kaomoji, and username ideas

https://snakebaby.com/
1•zylics•57m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Web tools an AI agent pays for per call in USDC, no API key (x402+MCP)

https://superhighway.walls.sh
2•patwalls•58m ago•0 comments

AI, Argentina and the Antichrist: Thiel's Vision Blooms

https://www.thenerdreich.com/ai-argentina-and-the-antichrist-thiels-vision-blooms/
1•prawn•1h ago•0 comments

New command-line in macOS 27 for interacting with Foundation Models

https://bsky.app/profile/alex.zenla.io/post/3mnswr2qxb22i
2•alexzenla•1h ago•0 comments

Reading Buffett and Munger, the stuff that stuck had nothing to do with stocks

https://old.reddit.com/r/ValueInvesting/comments/1u0hbzt/spent_my_first_year_actually_reading_buf...
1•dkga•1h ago•0 comments

Our Stock Market Is Broken

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/08/opinion/spacex-ipo-stock-market.html
4•2OEH8eoCRo0•1h ago•0 comments

Autonomy Is Not a Switch

https://autonomousagents19.com/blog/governed-autonomy/approval-hybrid-autonomous-three-modes-of-t...
1•KissMySaas•1h ago•0 comments

macOS 27 requires Apple Silicon, as Apple draws down the Intel Mac era

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2026/06/macos-27-requires-apple-silicon-as-apple-draws-down-the-i...
5•gk1•1h ago•0 comments

How to Find Consulting Clients (2015)

https://www.gkogan.co/how-to-find-consulting-clients/
1•gk1•1h ago•0 comments

If only you could be so lucky as to feel regret

https://www.bitsofwonder.co/p/if-only-you-could-be-so-lucky-as
1•ogundipeore•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Federal judge blocks H1B visa $100K fee

https://www.alaskasnewssource.com/2026/06/08/federal-judge-blocks-h1-b-visa-100k-fee/
68•naturalmovement•1h ago

Comments

alephnerd•54m ago
This is great news for healthcare, academia, and engineering subdisciplines that don't have the margins to support a $100K per application fee.

That said, Trump's announcement has done lasting damage to tech hiring in the US because it's set a price floor for opening a GCC (Global Capacity Center), which subsidizes in the CEE (Central and Eastern EU States), Israel, and India can outcompete most of the US excluding the Bay and NYC where the preexisting ecosystem's network effect negates it's impact.

snihalani•51m ago
What's a GCC/CEE?
jojobas•5m ago
It's awful news for all of these, it vacates any attempts to force these industries to make themselves attractive for Americans.
amazingamazing•54m ago
Why can’t Americans do these jobs?
genxy•50m ago
Because they were laid off?
curtisf•49m ago
The H1B visa is explicitly designed for high skill (high paying) jobs which companies have (supposedly) demonstrated they cannot find enough citizen workers.

There are much simpler mechanisms to making that would make the enforcement mechanism more effective without destroying the economy, like prioritizing them by salary instead of randomly.

You could also just have a more proactive government which punishes businesses for abusing the visa category.

"Immigrants taking good jobs" isn't an immigrant problem, it's a big-business problem

JCTheDenthog•37m ago
>There are much simpler mechanisms to making that would make the enforcement mechanism more effective without destroying the economy, like prioritizing them by salary instead of randomly.

The Trump admin already did that too:

https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/news-releases/dhs-changes-pro...

epistasis•48m ago
Anti-immigration policy blocks them from being Americans.

I know an awful lot of skilled people that live in the US, pay high taxes, and for whose lives have been thrown into disarray by backwards, anti-immigration policy like this illegal $100k fee, but it's just the beginning of the ways that anti-immigration policy is being used to make the US far weaker, just in order for pyrrhic harm to immigrants. I'm pissed about it.

JCTheDenthog
variety8675•47m ago
There must be a better way to prevent the consulting firms from abusing this program
alephnerd•43m ago
There are multiple [0], but the announcement of this policy helped overshadow the announcement of the Trump Gold Card at the exact same time [1].

[0] - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45312908

[1] - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-signs-proclamati...

JCTheDenthog•41m ago
Rigorous examinations for English fluency and for competency in their alleged field of expertise would be a good start. I have several H1B coworkers in the US who barely speak intelligible English, and who barely understand normal conversation let alone anything technical. A blatant example of this that I experienced recently being that several of them could not understand that just because a method in C# is asynchronous does not mean it executes out of order.
cguess•36m ago
This is a hiring issue, not a legal one. The US has no official language, and no language tests, so requiring English in law would be dicey to put it mildly. What if I'm hiring someone specifically to work at a Spanish language news outlet?
readthenotes1•
ApolloFortyNine•47m ago
I thought locking down H1Bs actually had bipartisan support?

How can you argue there aren't enough jobs, and support H1Bs to fill jobs?

I can see Alaska's case since encouraging people to move there very well may be a requirement, but surely there's somewhere between $0 and $100k that would convince someone to move there.

fhfbfbtbt•37m ago
You’re putting words in people’s mouths. The fact that people oppose this solution doesn’t mean they disagree with the problem. We oppose it because it’s stupid; it’s the first solution that a dim-witted eight-year-old would’ve come up with.

The program needs to be reformed so it only applies to people with skills that genuinely cannot be found domestically.

Given the difference in expected engineering salaries for many citizens/permanent residents and foreigners/temporary residents, $100,000 is not an effective way of making that happen.

jorgen123•26m ago
For those not reading the linked article, it was not about tech (although valid discussions here). I had not expected this (this is about rural Alaska):

> “In some rural districts, visa teachers make up 50% to nearly 80% of the teaching staff. School districts already invest $6,000 to $12,000 per teacher to recruit and sponsor educators through the H-1B visa process. Adding a $100,000 federal visa fee has made it financially impossible for many districts to continue hiring the teachers their students depend on.

Izikiel43•22m ago
Yeah, most of us think of tech, but the program affects doctors, nurses and teachers for rural America.
infecto•17m ago
Which is sadly very ironic.
alephnerd•21m ago
And it's not just education - nurses, doctors, and plenty of engineers in the Energy and Construction sector were also brought on H1Bs to Alaska.

Edit: can't reply

> Are they also using traditional incentive methods, like signing bonuses, for domestic prospects

Yes.

I have a good buddy of mine who is leadership at an ANRC and they will pay 6 figure salaries to non-natives in a number of cases.

Heck, even the starting salary for unskilled federal roles like TSA agents at Utquiatvik was $70K last I was there versus $30-40k in the rest of the mainland.

Much of Alaska is literal villages that are disconnected from the outside world aside from the occasional bush plane, and amenities are nonexistent. You are talking about towns and villages where most of the residents are entirely depending on UBI (Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend) and subsidence hunting/farming.

•
43m ago
>Anti-immigration policy blocks them from being Americans.

Yes, because the citizens of a country (through their elected representatives) have absolute control over who they choose to allow into their country. Even blocking a brilliant surgeon or inventor, if they so choose. There is no moral right to come to America (or any other country).

epistasis•27m ago
Saying "I have absolute control" is not a justification for making bad decisions that hurt the US. Furthermore, it was never a question of the US had a right to make these decisions, of course it does.

Do you find the argument "I have the right to make any decision I want therefor it justifies bad decisions" convincing? I sure don't.

roarcher•42m ago
> I know an awful lot of skilled people that live in the US

If they already live in the US, they're not applying for an H1B.

epistasis•30m ago
That's false. You can apply for an H1B while in the US (unless there has been another recent and random change to long standing policy for no reason except to make lives miserable).

H1B renewals are also common, and happen within the US.

reactordev•48m ago
We can, that's not the purpose of this.
JCTheDenthog•46m ago
They can, which is why many companies do the bare minimum malicious compliance to claim thet they attempted to hire Americans for these jobs. Things like ads in the local newspaper that 99% of qualified Americans will never see:

https://www.newsweek.com/h1b-job-ads-green-cards-targeted-im...

pton_xd•32m ago
Those newspaper tech job ads have been going on for at least the last... 20 years. When you see those, the company already has the role filled, they just need a justification for the visa. "We tried to find a US worker but failed!" Which honestly may or may not be true, I think the ad is just standard procedure at this point.
Wobbles42•40m ago
Being deported if you get fired is a basic job requirement. Keeps people in line.

Americans can't compete with that.

ericmay•38m ago
Well they can compete with that.

Being fired means you lose healthcare and much needed benefits and of course a paycheck and all of that stuff, right? If you're going to take this wildly cynical approach you should at least do a more proper comparison....

lmm•34m ago
> Being fired means you lose healthcare and much needed benefits and of course a paycheck and all of that stuff, right?

I think there's some law that lets you stay on health insurance for a few months at least, and you can save up as a countermeasure to the loss of the paycheck. Bad as it is it's not comparable to getting deported after a couple of months.

ericmay•22m ago
Hard to say how directly they can compare, and it probably depends on the individual situation and of course their line of work and other such items. In the woe-is-me olympics they both seem pretty awful and, one might even say, competitive in terms of how awful they are. Maybe being deported means you go back to France or Canada or something.
bitmasher9•20m ago
I think forcing this comparison shows a lack of empathy for how compromised of a position the H1B really is.

If I lose my job I have unemployment insurance, cobra benefits, personal savings, and I don’t require another employer to sponsor my visa. If I lose my job the most likely outcome is I find another one after searching a few months.

If someone on an H1B visa loses their job the most likely outcome is they are forced to leave the country.

ericmay•11m ago
Well, truthfully I don't really care all that much about it any more than I do any other problems that people generally experience. It's even more tragic that someone has an H1B means other folks don't - aren't their lives even worse for not having the opportunity that someone else does? Can the H1B visa holder even compete with the person denied the H1B?

The reason I wrote this comment is because the OP itself decided it was warranted with this cynical comment to suggest Americans don't work hard because oh if they get fired well they just find another job but the H1B visa holder gets gasp deported. But this itself diminishes the stresses and experience of those who don't find that other job, or don't find that replacement tech job, or any other devastating affects that someone experiences from job loss. Yea you might have a few months of COBRA benefits, but then what? You might not even have any savings because of some emergency that occurred. What's worse, being deported after a couple of months or becoming homeless in America? What if you're deported to Australia or Japan? Why are you or others assuming a happy ending for someone laid off in America but assuming the worst case scenario for an H1B visa holder and then comparing the two in that way?

BenFranklin100•38m ago
First, I think the H1B does need genuine reform to keep the big companies from gaming the lottery system.

Having said that, I’m not sure banning H1Bs or immigrants in general is going to help American workers. Take tech for instance. Many tech leaders are immigrants. If they hasn’t taken in the Jensen Huang’s, Sergei Brin’s, Sundar Pichai, etc… the companies they lead and jobs they created would be elsewhere. It’s amazing how immigrants have shaped the US tech scene:

https://www.forbes.com/sites/stuartanderson/2026/06/03/immig...

Second, when you ban immigrants/H1B, companies get around the ban by outsourcing to foreign countries.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/stuartanderson/2017/06/10/if-yo...

dboreham•31m ago
TFA is about teachers in Alaska. I'm guessing from a brief skim that no Americans want to be school teachers in Alaska for the money local school boards are offering.

This actually highlights two dumb things about the USA: prejudice against immigrants, and unwillingness to fund education.

Telemakhos•11m ago
This sounds like a self-correcting problem, if you don't allow immigration. Schools will have to pay more for teachers, which will raise salaries for native born teachers, instead of paying a lower rate to someone on a temporary work visa.

The matter is a little more complicated than that, because Alaska also has some of the nation's most stringent licensure requirements with no alternative routes for high-demand low-supply subject area teachers. You could probably relax those artificial barriers to employment and get more Alaskans teaching without raising the salary as much as if you kept the licensure requirements. You could also promise student debt relief for teachers who serve in rural areas for a certain length of time.

trelane•10m ago
> unwillingness to fund education.

"The United States spent $15,500 per FTE student at the elementary/secondary level, which was 38 percent higher than the average of OECD countries3 reporting data ($11,300). The United States had the fifth highest expenditures per FTE student at the elementary/secondary level in 2019 after Luxembourg, Norway ($18,000), and Austria and the Republic of Korea ($15,900 each)."

Source: https://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/indicator/cmd/education-exp...

phendrenad2•14m ago
[delayed]
olyjohn•11m ago
[delayed]
34m ago
The US has an official language, and there are now language tests for some occupations
bee_rider•25m ago
The executive branch has been instructed to act like we have an official language, but Congress hasn’t passed any law on the matter.
DANmode•32m ago
> This is a hiring issue, not a legal one.

When the law specifically dictates stuff like the talent of the person, I’m not convinced you’re correct.

panny•32m ago
>The US has no official language

Oh but it does. And it's English,

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2025/03/06/2025-03...

free652•29m ago
I dont think an EO can do that, so at most just executive agencies. Meaning the 2 other branches can ignore it.
bee_rider•27m ago
That’s just an Executive Order. Executive Orders are instructions to the executive branch, not the country itself (obviously, the president doesn’t have that ability). Congress hasn’t passed a law establishing an official language in the US.
parrellel•26m ago
I don't believe Trump's wacko EOs are binding law. Like, the Gulf of Mexico is still the Gulf of Mexico. The DoD is still the DoD.

No reason to give the fascist LARPers the respect. Just don't give the poor clerk forced to regurgitate the junk a hard time.

JCTheDenthog•31m ago
>What if I'm hiring someone specifically to work at a Spanish language news outlet?

Having actually worked at a Spanish language news outlet before (1 of 4 tv and radio stations in the office I was doing IT help desk work in), I can tell you that every single employee spoke English somewhere on the level of very good to near native fluency. As it turns out, knowing English (or the native language of whatever country you're in) is an incredible value-multiplier for almost every job position imaginable.

As far as language issues at my current job goes, it turns out once you hire a manager that speaks both Hindi and English (or Marathi and English, or Bengali and English, you get the picture) it doesn't matter much if the H1Bs he hires barely speak English because he can just start shouting at them in Hindi if they don't understand (even if several native English speakers are in the meeting too).

naturalmovement•27m ago
EO 14224 designates English as the official language of the US.
generj•13m ago
Which is clearly illegal.

Congress would need to declare any official language(s). Moreover, by treaty and law (NALA of 1990) obligations to Native American tribes there must be more languages than merely English.

naturalmovement•11m ago
Do you assume all EOs are illegal, or only the ones you disagree with?

Last I checked they run the casinos in English.

svachalek•26m ago
The H-1B visa is specifically for hiring "highly specialized" workers. Lack of the supposed skills that let them across the border is in fact a legal issue.
readthenotes1•36m ago
Many of the people I grew up with "barely speak intelligible English". Communication is important and the easiest way to fix that is to bring people from your linguistic group to be a coworker....
panny•15m ago
>Rigorous examinations for English fluency and for competency in their alleged field of expertise would be a good start.

I have a good friend who came in as H1B and is now a citizen. I have also worked with many H1Bs who were absolutely terrible and definitely shouldn't be in the country. What I've noticed is that the key difference seems to be which country you are from. He is from a first world country with education standards. The ones who were no good came from the third world where fake diplomas are for sale cheap. It won't matter what qualifications we screen for if the third world happily prints up those fake qualifications for a small fee. I was sent so many candidates to interview who knew absolutely nothing, but they shamelessly put the proper keywords on their resume.

anon291•34m ago
Only allow American firms to use H1-B. Most of the H1-B abuse is from the Indian 'WITCH' companies. Why foreign firms are allowed to hire foreign workers in the US is beyond me. For training / administration, there should be another visa type which does not confer family benefits and cannot progress to greencard or whatever.

BUT... at the end of the day, the solution must be passed by congress. Have we all forgotten about Congress since they stopped doing anything?

chupchap•14m ago
All of them have US subsidiaries and Cognizant is an US listed company.
naturalmovement•33m ago
There is no abuse. That's why tech companies recruit for software positions in the back pages of a gay mag in Salt Lake City and require resumes sent by postal mail.
ralph84•22m ago
Two rules:

1. No subcontracting. Visa recipients must work directly for the visa sponsor.

2. No layoffs. Any company that does a mass layoff is banned from sponsoring new visas for 5 years.

imglorp
•
16m ago
Are they also using traditional incentive methods, like signing bonuses, for domestic prospects?
cryptoegorophy•17m ago
Not from USA, is there shortage of teachers in USA? Or government pays too little to have local teachers consider such jobs? Seems like a broken system
nemomarx•10m ago
Teacher pay is low, but it also requires certification and a degree. And in exchange it will be relatively stressful and lacking in prestige.
TylerE•6m ago
The "Alaska" bit is very important. Very remote, very cold. Everything is very expensive because almost all of it has to be shipped in by air.

Yes, the US teacher pay is generally crap and we're short on teachers everywhere, but Alaska is a rather unique situation.

It's 16% of the US's land area, but only 0.2% of the population.

Rebelgecko•5m ago
Little bit of both. Pay varies drastically from state to state, even taking cost of living into account. By the time you pay for a degree and a credential the ROI isn't great. Jobs in better paying areas exist too but are understandably more competitive
brudgers•5m ago
[delayed]
wyager•14m ago
Isn't the entire point of this order to prevent filling low-paying jobs with cheap foreign labor, in order to increase demand for domestic labor? "Rural district schoolteacher" sounds like exactly the kind of job where the H1B program has very low public support
randyrand•13m ago
There are an excess of teachers in the USA already. It’s a big reason they aren’t paid that well.

No good reason to import them except to pay them even less.

culopatin•10m ago
But evidently they don’t want to move to rural America.
jojobas•8m ago
Hardly an argument to import teachers on work visas.
bijowo1676•7m ago
so you want to leave rural children without teachers?