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When Rust Gets Ugly

https://corrode.dev/blog/ugly/
2•ethanplant•1m ago•0 comments

What Makes Humans Stupid

https://nautil.us/what-makes-humans-stupid-1282459
2•rbanffy•2m ago•0 comments

LANA Project Interim Report 2026: Computer-Assisted Verification of IUT Theory [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KADN5NHmIfw
1•amichail•5m ago•0 comments

Open Book Touch: open-source e-reader

https://www.crowdsupply.com/oddly-specific-objects/open-book-touch
3•surprisetalk•6m ago•0 comments

128Gb Eight Channel Workstation Madness: Threadripper 3995WX in Windows 8.1

https://trackerninja.codeberg.page/post/128gb-eight-channel-workstation-madness-paired-with-threa...
1•spacedrone808•8m ago•0 comments

Building an Advanced Agentic Harness

https://data4sci.substack.com/p/building-an-advanced-agentic-harness
1•Anon84•10m ago•0 comments

Trump blames Canada for wildfire smoke, says he'll add cost to tariffs

https://www.reuters.com/world/ontario-buy-new-11-new-aircraft-very-difficult-wildfire-fight-2026-...
4•sleepyguy•10m ago•0 comments

Surprise and Delight [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4J1dQIjneJY
2•Anon84•10m ago•0 comments

Webpack Is Now on Bluesky

https://bsky.app/profile/webpack.js.org
2•avivkeller•10m ago•0 comments

Topcoat: The full full-stack framework for Rust

https://github.com/tokio-rs/topcoat
3•wertyk•13m ago•0 comments

Caution: Children Might Impoverish Their Parents

https://retirementincomejournal.com/article/warning-children-might-impoverish-their-parents/
1•petethomas•14m ago•0 comments

Right to Repair Fundraiser Goal Reached

https://sfconservancy.org/news/2026/jul/16/software-right-to-repair-baltobu-fundraiser-succes/
1•nfriedly•15m ago•0 comments

Faulty Towers, vibe sickness, and the vibe bobsled

https://dustycloud.org/blog/faulty-towers-vibe-sickness-and-the-vibe-bobsled/
1•sanqui•19m ago•1 comments

Google Weather Lab 2

https://deepmind.google.com/science/weatherlab
2•xnx•22m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tests.ws – WebSocket testing tools, language guides, Chrome extension

https://tests.ws/
1•gingermanymph•22m ago•0 comments

Aurora DSQL: Scalable, Multi-Region OLTP

https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.13276
2•shenli3514•23m ago•0 comments

Sliding into Silence? We Are Speaking 300 Daily Words Fewer Every Year

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/17456916261425131
1•Pamar•24m ago•1 comments

China's Latest A.I. Breakthrough Threatens America's Lead

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/17/business/china-ai-moonshot-kimi.html
2•petilon•25m ago•0 comments

Grumpy Website

https://grumpy.website/
3•Gecko4072•27m ago•0 comments

The first patch is a price check, not the product

https://github.blog/engineering/the-cost-of-saying-yes-has-changed/
1•logickkk1•27m ago•0 comments

Static search trees: 40x faster than binary search (2024)

https://curiouscoding.nl/posts/static-search-tree/
1•lalitmaganti•29m ago•0 comments

China's Xi Jinping launches new AI alliance, WAICO

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/7/17/chinas-xi-jinping-launches-new-ai-alliance-what-is-it
3•culi•30m ago•2 comments

Recreating the best engineering zine from the 90s

https://circazine.hackclub.com/
2•lsanchezz•30m ago•0 comments

France blocks access to Polymarket website

https://www.reuters.com/technology/french-internet-service-providers-told-block-access-polymarket...
2•1659447091•31m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: Did you try Nordstjernen Web Browser 1.0.19 yet?

2•roschdal•31m ago•2 comments

MLB restricts using dugout iPads for AI-assisted in-game strategy

https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/49385415/mlb-restricts-dugout-ipad-use-prevent-artificial-int...
2•HardwareLust•34m ago•0 comments

Linus Torvalds to critics of AI coding in Linux: "Fork it. Or just walk away."

https://arstechnica.com/ai/2026/07/linus-torvalds-to-critics-of-ai-coding-in-linux-fork-it-or-jus...
6•baal80spam•35m ago•1 comments

Google Earth Pro for desktop will no longer be available to download soon

https://www.techradar.com/computing/the-impact-to-thousands-of-companies-across-industries-will-b...
2•asoberbeck•35m ago•0 comments

Chemical Onshoring of All Kinds

https://www.science.org/content/blog-post/chemical-onshoring-all-kinds
1•EA-3167•36m ago•0 comments

CollpaseOS: Program microcontrollers through civilizational collapse

https://collapseos.org/
1•Gecko4072•36m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

The Zilog Z80 has turned 50

https://goliath32.com/blog/z80.html
58•st_goliath•1h ago

Comments

YZF•38m ago
As the proud owner of a ZX-81 I remember staring at the Z80 instruction reference at the end of the user's manual without the faintest clue of what any of that meant. It took me some while before I managed to wrap my head around how CPUs actually run programs (vs. the high level abstractions like BASIC or other languages).
Georgelemental•38m ago
No mention of the TI-84 calculator? Used by millions of American schoolchildren, programmable in BASIC, and runs on Z80 (B/W models)/eZ80 (color display models) to this day
QuantumNomad_•20m ago
> Used by millions of American schoolchildren

Europe too :) When I was in high school, TI-84 Plus was the calculator the school told all of us to buy. And I see that stores in my country are still stocking them so I have to assume they are still being bought and used.

Many hours were spent by me and my friends making and showing off little programs in TI-BASIC on those calculators. None of us ever took it all the way to learning Z80 assembly however. I printed a whole manual about Z80 assembly programming for the TI-84 Plus and started reading it but never wrote a single line of assembly for it. Yet.

blauditore•15m ago
Same here (actually had a voyage 200, but same same I guess). It's actually quite insulting that TI kept (and keeps?) selling waaay outdated hardware at horrendous prices. It's the SAP/Oracle business model applied to school hardware.
GalaxyNova•33m ago
The Z80 stopped being manufactured last year unfortunately
nanolith•8m ago
There are plenty of open core alternatives that replicate the architecture and ISA. Many of these are cycle accurate. Some have been tape-out proven. Hobbyist retro-computing enthusiasts who wish to build a Z80 system still have options even once new old stock and recovered CPUs become scarce.
stevekemp•6m ago
There are clones, and updated packages these days like the EZ80, but they're not the same and they don't have the easy-to-use DIL form-factor.

Still I've always loved the z80, since my first computer the ZX Spectrum. Even now I play with z80 assembly now and again (mostly for CP/M retro-use).

ozhero•14m ago
I started programming in 1978 (In Assembler) and wanted to know not only how the software worked but how the hardware worked.

Found a great kit using the Z80 and built it and spent many nights with a logic probe and oscilloscope learning digital eletronics. Also devoured the Z80 manual learning the instruction set.

I'm nearly 70 now but remember those days like they were yesterday.

Truly a magnificent CPU

whartung•12m ago
Two of my favorite Z80 anecdotes.

First, my Father wanted to try to add some peripherals to the original TRS-80 Model 1. So, what he was interested in doing was asserting the BUSREQ pin to tell the Z80 to get ready so that he could have the bus, ideally waiting for the BUSACK signal to know when it was his.

Unfortunately, on the Model 1, when you assert the BUSREQ pin, it is tied directly to the tri-state buffers that handle the address and data bus. So, as soon as you make the request, the Z80 loses all access to its memory and data -- mid cycle. Which, you know, can be Bad. Radio Shack labels this pin TEST and uses it for internal testing. But it was definitely a bit of a disappointment to my Fathers efforts.

The second one is when I learned that the Game Boy Advance has a Z80 built into its chip. The designers drag and dropped a Z80 core (tweaked for GB) just so they could run legacy GB games on it. It just kind of bends your view of the computing world when something as significant as a Z80 can just be shoved into the corner of a die for "just in case" functionality.

Just shows how far we had come at the time.

classified•8m ago
Happy birthday! The Z80 was the first CPU I rode, more luxurious than the subsequent 6502 and 6510. I still have a TI calculator with a low-energy Z80.

Cheers to Rodnay Zaks for "Programming the Z80"!