frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Open Source @Github

fp.

Pokelike: A Pokémon Roguelike

https://pokelike.xyz/
1•gagdiez•16s ago•0 comments

Inverse Context Learning Principle

https://r5d.me/iclp/
1•solaire_oa•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Security MCP expose your org's policies and paved roads to agents

https://github.com/rakshasa-1729/agentic-paved-roads
1•prahathess•1m ago•0 comments

Experiences with Local Models for Coding

https://martinfowler.com/articles/exploring-gen-ai/local-models-for-coding-experiences.html
1•mpweiher•1m ago•0 comments

A key Arctic science outpost finds itself tangled in a geopolitical web

https://www.science.org/content/article/key-arctic-science-outpost-finds-itself-tangled-geopoliti...
1•pseudolus•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: PocketTTS-raven – fast local in-browser TTS with voice cloning

https://pantel.is/projects/pocket-tts-raven/
1•pantelisk•2m ago•0 comments

RAG-redteam, red-team your RAG pipeline for injection and leakage in CI

https://github.com/Srivatsa03/rag-redteam
1•Srivatsa_2003•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: InterviewWatch – Detect AI Assistance During Live Technical Interviews

https://www.interviewwatch.com/
1•bhuvanbk007•5m ago•0 comments

The future of governing AI agents

https://www.elastic.co/blog/the-future-of-governing-ai-agents
1•ilreb•5m ago•0 comments

Infoblox collects Kentik for network observability out of the box

https://www.sdxcentral.com/news/infoblox-collects-kentik-for-network-observability-out-of-the-box/
1•oavioklein•6m ago•0 comments

The robotaxi law that could ban Tesla

https://www.theverge.com/transportation/962309/new-jersey-robotaxi-bill-lidar-tesla
1•Brajeshwar•6m ago•0 comments

Surprisingly large number of people may have marker for tick-linked meat allergy

https://arstechnica.com/health/2026/07/surprisingly-large-number-of-people-may-have-marker-for-ti...
2•pseudolus•7m ago•0 comments

Freeport – a P2P ride-hailing marketplace I built on Nostr

https://ptrinh.github.io/freeport/
1•ptrinh•8m ago•1 comments

Top 10 Prompts for Your Monitoring Tool

https://blog.appsignal.com/2026/06/08/top-10-prompts-for-your-monitoring-tool.html
1•andreigaspar•11m ago•0 comments

It's officially the end of an era for Adobe

https://www.makeuseof.com/end-of-an-era-for-adobe-creative-software/
1•Stratoscope•12m ago•1 comments

How to Set Up a BIMI Record

https://dmarcguard.io/blog/bimi-record-setup/
1•meysamazad•13m ago•1 comments

ADHD and Masking

https://gomakethings.com/guides/adhd-masking/
2•meysamazad•13m ago•0 comments

How Polymarket plans to try to win back trust after 4 years in exile

https://www.fastcompany.com/91570591/how-polymarket-plans-win-back-americas-trust-after-4-years-e...
2•1vuio0pswjnm7•13m ago•0 comments

Additional Checkbox-Types in Obsidian

https://zerokspot.com/weblog/2026/07/05/additional-checkbox-styles-in-obsidian/
1•meysamazad•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Free plugin that finds where your code overpays for LLM APIs

https://tokendiet.dev/
1•eMoka•14m ago•0 comments

Node.js platform/arch possible values

https://jcbhmr.com/2025/12/19/node-platform-arch-values/
2•jcbhmr•15m ago•0 comments

EU court hands Brussels win over Apple on Big Tech rules

https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-court-knocks-down-apple-challenge-big-tech-rules/
2•1vuio0pswjnm7•15m ago•0 comments

Kentik Acquired by Infoblox

https://www.kentik.com/blog/kentik-is-joining-infoblox/
1•i314159•16m ago•0 comments

Vasily Grossman: The Unlikely Journalist Who Looked into the Heart of War

https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-unlikely-journalist-who-looked-into-the-heart-of-war
2•mitchbob•16m ago•1 comments

Show HN: FPGA-SIM – interactive virtual boards to help teach Verilog

https://github.com/TheHarmonicRealm/fpga-sim
2•theharmonic•16m ago•1 comments

SWE-1.7 Reach Near GPT 5.5 and Opus Intelligence

https://cognition.com/blog/swe-1-7
11•mekpro•16m ago•0 comments

The most, and least, liveable cities in 2026

https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2026/07/06/the-worlds-most-and-least-liveable-cities-in-...
2•donbox•17m ago•0 comments

GitHub Is Down (Again)

https://us.githubstatus.com/posts/dashboard
4•lacoolj•17m ago•0 comments

The Price of Palantir's Politics

https://www.ft.com/content/21038b20-646e-4773-a473-110c2d62ab15
4•JumpCrisscross•18m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Open-source web monitoring software

https://webdog.ai/
2•ICodeSometimes•18m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Answering "why do you want to relocate?" during interviews

https://relocateme.substack.com/p/a-mistake-to-avoid-during-relocation
16•andrewstetsenko•1h ago

Comments

atoav•1h ago
"I did not plan to relocate, but the opening at $your company made me reconsider. I then delved into $location history and culture, and found it really fascinating. Since I am [young|experienced in $oldcareer], I decided it would be worth trying out something new."
ElevenLathe•55m ago
The advice can be generalized even more. When communicating with an employer or potential employer:

-> Subordinate yourself to the desires of capital in all areas.

-> Suppress the self.

-> Become a true human resource. You are seeking to sell a large chunk of your life, and the buyers don't want scratched or dented goods. Desires of your own are flaws in the product you are selling.

This is, sadly, sound advice, but I think it's important to reflect on what this means about how incidental human flourishing is in our current political economy.

keiferski•48m ago
I don’t think the post says this at all. It’s mostly just common sense, like “don’t tell the interviewer you just want the job for the money and the ability to live abroad.” Instead be interested in whatever the company is doing.

This seems pretty straightforward, but I guess people like OP are exposed to a lot of bad interviewees by nature of their job.

luisminv•47m ago
Well I guess this is an overstatement for the sake of explaining your point and as such it's very effective, but I don't agree with this perspective. The advice tells you to remember that the person hiring you has also put work into that conversation, and that they'll appreciate realizing you have put work into it too. So i think there's an instance of letting our humanity flourish in this, since you're doing an exercise in empathy. There might be too few of these opportunties/spaces left tbh
Aurornis•36m ago
I’ve done a number of interviews in my career. You don’t have to be a genius to see through the candidates who play this game where they tell you a perfectly sanitized, idyllic response that they’ve calculated as the optimal phrasing that you want to hear.

A lot of applicants do it. The skill of interviewing is to get a sense of what the true situation is underneath what the candidate is saying with their words. These candidates who show up and do the “subordinate yourself to the desires of capital in all areas” schtick are plentiful. It doesn’t fool an experienced interviewer, so they’re going to be evaluating whether or not you can do the job without becoming a problem based on whatever other signals they can get. The candidate’s words are almost a no-op, other than a slight signal that they have a tendency to blow smoke instead of having real conversations.

bluGill•32m ago
I suspect a lot of interviewers think it is a good thing when someone repeats those lines. That is they are not trying to get under the words.
ElevenLathe•28m ago
Right, it's game of pretending that you sincerely desire these things. They don't want a faker, they want a true believer, and they have plenty of skillful people like you to use as tools to suss out who is and who isn't. To stick with the merchandise analogy, you must (sometimes) become like the "outlet" stores who fill their inventory with junk designed to be sold cheaply rather than marked down high end stuff. This flatters your customer into thinking they got a good deal, and is an effective way to make sales. This is an endless game of cat and mouse.
Aurornis•7m ago
> They don't want a faker, they want a true believer

I'm trying to explain that it's easy to spot the fakers.

When you do a lot of interviews you see a lot of candidates who follow the advice above. Unless it's your first month of doing interviews, it's really easy to see right through.

The candidates never think they're coming off as fake, though.

Really skilled interviewers can bait these candidates into telling little half-truths and inconsistencies that reveal their game.

thrill•51m ago
Sutton's Law.
pavel_lishin•49m ago
This feels like generically good advice when interviewing in general - show an interest in your potential future employer.
Aurornis•43m ago
This is very good, practical advice. I would go even further and say that you shouldn’t even allow yourself to get into a position where you need to manipulate your answers to interviewers for this question. If the primary reason you want a job is for the relocation, you might be signing up for a job you don’t even like!

I’ve been part of a small number of hiring decisions where relocation was involved. There were a lot of failures exactly like this article talks about: Candidates who will say anything in the interview and even signal that they’ll accept any average salary as long as you’ll take care of their relocation were, in my experience, not interested in doing the work after they got here. Taking the job was a means to an end (getting to their destination) and once they arrived they were either looking for the next job or too busy traveling around their new location to do work.

We tried to mitigate this with clauses requiring them to pay back relocation expenses if they left within N months of arrival, but this didn’t work. They would resign the week after that timer expired or, worse, would start trying to get laid off through poor performance as a way to avoid that clause.

The best fits for relocation were opposite of what I would have thought: The people most hesitant to relocate were the most successful, both at the job and in establishing their new social life outside of work in the new location. They were relocating and taking jobs for the right reasons.

ransom1538•38m ago
If you are in tech, never move for a job immediately. Work there for 90 days before you even touch a UHaul form. I have been at companies where within 20 minutes I hated my coworkers (playing EDM on high all day in office). Just get a hotel at motel 6. If you are loving the job then the move is a less stressful and enjoyable.
Hippocrates•38m ago
This seems so obvious. It's like asking your manager for a raise and giving the justification that you want a bigger house.

Always be marketing what you can/will/have done for the company to bring value, not what the company can do for you.

bluGill•23m ago
This isn't good advice in this case. The company needs assurance you are worth the investment and that means they need to know this will be personally good for you.
Kirby64•24m ago
Maybe I just haven't met these engineers, but isn't the problem usually "I don't want to relocate" ? Who talks about relocating as if that's the primary motivation for a job?
Aurornis•18m ago
You would be surprised. A large number of resumes for every job posted are from people outside of the area who want to move there for different reasons.

Most people want to have a job set up before they move to a new city.

josefritzishere•12m ago
This makes no sense. Even from a completely cynical corporate perspective, wouldn't these peoples dependency on you for sponsorship be a plus, not a minus?
threatofrain•17m ago
A no-op is exactly what the candidate wants. The candidate wants to be judged on their skills which are transferable from job to job. There's nothing to "see through" here which is precisely why it's a no-op.
surgical_fire•8m ago
> I’ve done a number of interviews in my career. You don’t have to be a genius to see through the candidates who play this game where they tell you a perfectly sanitized, idyllic response that they’ve calculated as the optimal phrasing that you want to hear.

I worked in multiple companies in my multi-decade career, including FAANG (or whatever acronym is used now). I was even an intervewer for one of those

The people that give the sanitized calculated responses are actually what employers are typically looking for. It shows the candidate is willing to do the job without causing problems by confirming as a good worker bee.

Your workplace is not somewhere for real conversations.