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Cisco SD-WAN Manager arbitrary file write (CVE-2026-20262) – CISA KEV

https://hellorecon.com/blog/cve-2026-20262
1•slvnx•2m ago•0 comments

Software Signal Intelligence

https://www.threedeep.tech
1•ethigent•3m ago•1 comments

"Cursor for X": key standards for vertical products offering agent workflows

https://alanyahya.com/writing/common-standards-vertical-agent-products
1•alansaber•4m ago•0 comments

EC Ruled Months Ago That Google's Integration of Gemini in Android Violates DMA

https://daringfireball.net/linked/2026/06/15/ec-google-gemini-ai-dma
1•danaris•5m ago•0 comments

Techno-libertarians are flocking to the Caribbean

https://economist.com/the-americas/2026/06/11/techno-libertarians-are-flocking-to-the-caribbean
8•andsoitis•13m ago•1 comments

China is innovative. Its economy is a mess. Which matters more?

https://economist.com/finance-and-economics/2026/06/08/china-is-innovative-its-economy-is-a-mess-...
1•andsoitis•15m ago•0 comments

Nvidia DGX Station

https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/products/workstations/dgx-station/
2•Wingy•20m ago•0 comments

FreeBSD AI-Assisted Vulnerability Discovery Project Launch

https://freebsdfoundation.org/blog/freebsd-ai-assisted-vulnerability-discovery-project-launch/
1•jaypatelani•21m ago•0 comments

Anthropic is pausing the Claude Agent SDK credit change

https://twitter.com/aronprins/status/2066607128563851546
1•cmogni1•25m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Legioni – a bunch of AI agents always with you

https://github.com/simoneloru/legioni
1•leonvonblut•27m ago•0 comments

Making FlashAttention-4 faster for inference

https://modal.com/blog/flash-attention-4-faster
1•birdculture•27m ago•0 comments

DNA Memory Architecture

https://dna2ram.substack.com/p/ram-is-not-made-for-huge-companies
1•arikotos•28m ago•0 comments

Tesla Cybercab Full Specs

https://electrek.co/2026/06/15/tesla-cybercab-epa-specs-curb-weight-battery-motor-power/
2•fprog•30m ago•0 comments

Show HN: ThoughtLeadin – AI-first LinkedIn where every post is corporate slop

https://thoughtleadin.com
1•natyoung•30m ago•0 comments

The Dead Economy Theory

https://gmalandrakis.com/writings/ad-economicum.html
2•l0new0lf-G•33m ago•0 comments

Why autonomous AI hiring decisions are indefensible (I build hiring AI)

https://recrutador.com/en/blog/the-case-against-autonomous-hiring-ai/
1•tessarolli•33m ago•1 comments

I'm starting to think the White House UFC fight was all just a weird crypto scam

https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mma_ufc/i-m-starting-to-think-the-white-house-ufc-fight-was-all-...
26•petethomas•45m ago•0 comments

HidrateSpark PRO 2 Smart Bottle (621M)

https://www.apple.com/uk/shop/product/hs422zm/a/hidratespark-pro-2-smart-bottle-621-ml
1•_____k•46m ago•0 comments

Apple and Google to be forced to check ID over social media ban

https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/social-media-ban-keir-starmer-under-16s-h73wk6qzj
2•beejiu•46m ago•0 comments

CPanel over MCP

1•terynas•48m ago•0 comments

Calbe Detective Mac App – What's plugged into each port

https://cable-detective.franzai.com/
1•franze•49m ago•0 comments

Ten years of ClickHouse in open source

https://clickhouse.com/blog/open-source-10
1•saisrirampur•51m ago•0 comments

The unsuspected UK cities howling with pleasure over werewolf dildos

https://metro.co.uk/2026/04/17/unsuspecting-uk-cities-howling-pleasure-werewolf-dildos-28011026/
1•TMWNN•52m ago•0 comments

Inside Cursor's wild rise

https://www.businessinsider.com/cursor-ceo-michael-truell-spacex-elon-musk-anthropic-2026-6
1•amrrs•53m ago•0 comments

Me and my exoskeletons: the rise of wearable robotics

https://www.ft.com/content/a71f4c56-685c-4341-9772-31e4e5c6418d
3•petethomas•54m ago•0 comments

In Age of AI, Leading Deepfake Expert No Longer Trusts His Own Eyes

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/14/us/ai-deepfake-hany-farid.html
2•speckx•54m ago•0 comments

Hand Gesture Verification Captcha by Google

https://docs.cloud.google.com/recaptcha/docs/hand-gesture-verification
2•hmokiguess•55m ago•0 comments

German court holds Google liable for fake AI answers

https://www.dw.com/en/german-court-holds-google-liable-for-fake-ai-answers/a-77527661
3•Topfi•55m ago•0 comments

Wolfram Mathematica 15

https://www.wolfram.com/mathematica/quick-revision-history/
3•rubin55•55m ago•0 comments

Acquire a Inexpensive Computer During This Time of Historically High Prices

https://cheapskatesguide.org/articles/low-priced-hardware.html
1•worldofmatthew•56m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

US Air Force B-52 bomber crashes after takeoff, Edwards Air Force Base says

https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/us-air-force-b-52-bomber-crashes-after-takeoff-edwards-air-force-base-says-2026-06-15/
62•tartoran•1h ago

Comments

dmvjs•1h ago
why present tense?
Jtsummers•1h ago
It's common in news headlines when an event is very recent or a story is still developing. A report about, say, the US bombing a previously unreported site in Iran several weeks ago would be in the past tense "US bombed <site> in Iran". When the US bombs Iran today, it'll be titled "US bombs <site> in Iran".
qq66•1h ago
They stopped making the B-52 64 years ago. The US military is depending on planes that are simply too old and need to be refreshed.
mrhottakes•1h ago
True, but the B-52s that are currently in operation are very much a Bomber of Theseus situation.
Jtsummers•1h ago
Also true for most aircraft in the US military fleet that aren't of the most recent generation. Depot maintenance strips them down, and pretty much everything but the frame itself could have been replaced by this point for anything over 30-40 years of age. They also do form, fit, function for LRUs so that the a new LRU can be dropped in and connected to the existing aircraft as much as possible, allowing for more gradual changes over time.
JumpCrisscross•1h ago
> planes that are simply too old

Planes don’t really age like that, at least not if they’re serviced. They’re constantly being rebuilt and inspected.

The only reason airliner fleets churn as much as they do is fuel efficiency and maintenance standardization.

dpe82•47m ago
Nit: at some point you start getting metal fatigue issues (see Aloha Airlines Flight 243) but in general yes: fuel efficiency and fleet standardization.

Also airliners usually just become cargo planes for quite a long time before retirement. Eg. there's a bunch of DC-3s still being commercially operated. Jet engine noise regs killed a bunch of early jets, but older prop aircraft are still going strong.

JumpCrisscross•18m ago
> Nit: at some point you start getting metal fatigue issues

Good point. The B-52 doesn’t pressurize the whole fuselage. Just the crew compartment.

> airliners usually just become cargo planes for quite a long time before retirement

Out of curiosity, do they not pressurize the cargo hold?

blowsand•1h ago
Please do more research. They are most decidedly not “simply too old”. They have been “refreshed” many times over - from engines, to flight electronics, to targeting and comms systems, to airframe structures, to coffeemaker automation.
hk1337•1h ago
Sounds like a lot like ship of Theseus. The B-52 now is not not the same B-52 64 years ago.
bigfatkitten•1h ago
The USAF has been neglected for a long time. The service has seen reductions in both headcount and airframes with no gains in efficiency or effectiveness.

Too many types of aircraft to operate and maintain, with too few people to do it and too few available airframes to maintain a combat capability.

elevation•25m ago
A friend who served was assigned to fix broken planes quickly. He and his fellow mechanics could be punished for not being ready to make urgent repairs, so they maintained a stock of commonly used parts in the hangar.

One year, a congressional efficiency mandate required that AFBs return any parts that hadn't been issued in the previous (90 days?). Returning their stock just because it hadn't been needed in the last 12 weeks undermined their readiness requirements, so the staff found a way around this limitation: periodically discard qty 1 of any seldom-used part and order another one to show proof of need. The congressional anti-waste attempt only served to fill their dumpster.

Along with investigating airframe selections, it would be worthwhile to audit the branches for these kinds of perverse incentives, to hear from people at all levels about which policies are helpful and which cause needless waste.

mrguyorama•1h ago
The B-52 lives in an awkward niche. Bomb trucks over utterly unprotected airspace might just not be a thing anymore.

If that holds for the forseen future, the B-52 will not have a real successor.

Currently, it looks like non-precision bulk bombing is just obsolete.

We "depend" on the B-52 because it still works, and there's a lot of chance it shouldn't get a replacement.

Are there any other planes we "depend" on that are old but not being replaced? Our tanker fleet is old but we are looking to replace it. Maybe some transports are getting old? But they probably don't need a new design. EWACS is old but also seeing new systems being built.

wbl•1h ago
The B-52 has hands with the JASSM, ALCM, LRASM. No need to get close to pack a punch. Yeah a successor would likely be a LO blended wing body design, but the idea of cheap to operate big truck is fine.
t0mas88•1h ago
Planes don't age in the same way cars do. There is a maintenance schedule that inspects and replaces almost literally every component at some point. So the engines on these planes can be just a year old for example.

And the military has a tendency to also upgrade the avionics and capabilities at several points in the lifetime of a program. So there is a lot of tech in these planes that's much newer than 60 years old.

__patchbit__•48m ago
Aged out weapons design is a flying target.

War profiteers say motherhood statements about the crew but don't care.

60 years of new weapons design opportunities was pocketed in pork by the politicians bought and paid for.

runjake•58m ago
I worked on B-52s and other aircraft. Their systems (bomb/nav/comm/etc) were refreshed many times and the airframes inspected and improved regularly.

The reason B-52s are still around is because they are combat-effective and cost-effective relative to other aircraft, such as the B-1 and B-2 (both of which I also worked on). Whatever replaces the B-52 will have to be something new and something cost-effective. I don't think that currently exists.

The B-1 has only been combat/cost effective in more recent years after an extended rough patch spanning decades -- actually, I'm not even sure it's cost-effective. The B-2 has always been combat-effective, but was never cost-effective to operate or maintain.

giantg2•37m ago
Cost-effective might not be the best description. If the B2 is able to target SAMs with very low losses, then it could still be cost-effective compared to significant losses of other airframes and crews.
throwaway85825•28m ago
If you have updated satellite imagery and can hit the SAM with a cruise missile you don't need the B2.
runjake•16m ago
Plot twist: some of the best precision cruise missiles are air-launched.
jonnybgood•12m ago
One does not simply take out a SAM system with a cruise missile, especially when that SAM system can also target the cruise missile. So how do you get a cruise missile to launch from the right spot where the SAM system radar can’t see it coming?
ranger_danger•1h ago
Hopefully not a broken arrow situation.
optimalsolver•1h ago
Video of the 1994 B-52 crash at Fairchild Air Force Base:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2OIxo00UeM

applfanboysbgon•23m ago
I don't understand the fascination with watching people die. I'd rather not, thanks.
iamtheworstdev•10m ago
as a pilot - it's a reminder that if the pros can make a mistake then I absolutely can and I better not take anything for granted when I fly.
Jtsummers•1h ago
https://ktla.com/news/california/b52-bomber-crash-edwards-ai... - Another report, includes an image of the crash site and more than just two paragraphs.
kryogen1c•53m ago
Is this after cleanup? There's almost zero wreckage and if it was at takeoff it shouldn't have enough speed or descent angle to atomize.
russdill•50m ago
There was a post crash fire, and that would be a lot of fuel burning.
Jtsummers•49m ago
Almost certainly no cleanup before that photo was taken. The accident occurred at 1120, and the article was "last updated" at 1302, 1 hour 42 minutes is not enough time to cleanup a site like that when they still have to do the accident investigation.

It would likely have had full fuel tanks so that's probably why we can see little debris.

irthomasthomas•35m ago
Look at the fairfield airshow crash, there nothing left but a bit of the tail.
mrandish•56m ago
I hope the crew are okay, but from the look of the aftermath and the fact there's no mention of the crew yet, I assume not all survived. Shortly after takeoff is one of the most challenging times for an incident. Low altitude, low-speed and full fuel means things can go very bad, very fast.
yieldcrv•49m ago
As a betting man… this is not survivable
superjan•28m ago
Kindly request if you keep your guess to yourself. We can all read and consider likely outcomes.
throwaway85825•30m ago
B-52 crew has to bail out, no ejection option.
Jtsummers•27m ago
It has an ejection system, but some go up and some go down depending on their position in the aircraft. The two navigator seats eject downwards, they would not have had a chance. Given when the accident occurred (just after takeoff), and that there's not yet been any report on the crew, it's unlikely the other crew managed to eject.
verzali•29m ago
F-18 went down the other day as well.
runjake•16m ago
Cost-effective is the best description. It doesn't have to be a totality. For total operation costs (training/missions/acquisition/maintenance/capabilites), the B-52 is cheaper by orders of magnitude.

The B-2 does have its place and is better suited for certain jobs, albeit at too high a cost. The B-21 is purported to lower that. We'll see.

Edit: Looks like current B-2 operational/maintenance costs are now down to only about 2x that of the B-52, which is an impressive reduction (no sarcasm).

markdown•8m ago
Why not just start making new B-52's again?
tonymet•36m ago
why can't they reproduce it like they do shelby kit cars?
Jtsummers•31m ago
None of the major defense contractors (new or old) would be interested in doing this unless they could greatly pad out their numbers. There's a lot more money (see F-35) in building out a new system and landing the huge maintenance contract for the first 10+ years associated with it. A B-52 clone would be financially great for USAF if it could be built at an appropriate price since they have the maintenance capability for that airframe already, but no one would sell them one at the right price.