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What a $20 coding subscription actually buys

https://tailscale.com/blog/aperture-ai-passthrough-subscription-costs
1•Brajeshwar•2m ago•0 comments

The unreasonable difficulty of time series forecasting

https://suzyahyah.github.io/machine%20learning/2026/06/27/trouble-with-time-series.html
1•suzyahyah•3m ago•0 comments

OpenAI Strategic Lead Defines Open-Source AI as Dystopian Hellscape

https://twitter.com/deanwball/status/2078133895766114412
1•shellwirt•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Get alerts for good seats at 70mm IMAX showings of The Odyssey

https://imaxxing.io/
2•andrewtorkbaker•6m ago•1 comments

Electron apps: web browsers in a trenchcoat

https://ssg.dev/electron-apps-web-browsers-in-a-trenchcoat/
2•sedatk•11m ago•1 comments

The Death of the Software Developer

https://aimakesmesad.com/the-death-of-the-software-developer/
3•Rudism•15m ago•1 comments

Tangled · The next-generation social coding platform

https://tangled.org
1•antfarm•16m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: What did you learn last month? (June 2026)

1•bhu1st•16m ago•0 comments

PgGraph: Transform your Postgres data to graphs

https://github.com/Evokoa/pgGraph
1•handfuloflight•18m ago•0 comments

Freya 0.4 – Rust GUI library

https://freyaui.dev/posts/0.4
2•birdculture•18m ago•0 comments

In Germany if you say a restaurant is just ok they send the gestapo after you

https://twitter.com/eigen_moomin/status/2077471686295957749
4•bko•20m ago•1 comments

Orchflows: Build self-improving loops in one sentence

https://github.com/DanMcInerney/orchflows
2•DanMcInerney•23m ago•0 comments

Lucy 2.5 – Realtime Video Editing via World Model

https://lucy.decart.ai/
1•ProjectBarks•25m ago•0 comments

British runner Josh Kerr smashes 27-year-old men's mile record

https://www.espn.com/olympics/story/_/id/49391430/british-runner-josh-kerr-smashes-27-year-old-me...
2•linuxfan2718•26m ago•0 comments

Controlling Reasoning Effort in LLMs

https://magazine.sebastianraschka.com/p/controlling-reasoning-effort-in-llms
1•matt_d•27m ago•0 comments

New Drone Nearly Disappears in Flight

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mUgyV3A1O0
1•bookofjoe•37m ago•1 comments

The Kimi K3 Moment

https://stephen.bochinski.dev/blog/2026/07/18/the-kimi-k3-moment/
3•sbochins•40m ago•0 comments

Sushi – Your Raw Data Served Perfectly

https://trysushi.xyz
2•premxai•42m ago•0 comments

A 30-year-old open problem in complexity theory resolved by GPT-5.6 Pro

https://zenodo.org/records/21431468
1•bmisterxster•42m ago•0 comments

Palantir Durable Agents

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLSoYzKs38mqI
1•pascal-maker•43m ago•0 comments

Goodbye, and Thanks for All the Bikesheds

https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=3818307
26•Ygg2•45m ago•2 comments

Direct H2 generation from mixed plastic waste via alkaline thermal treatment

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2537552123
1•bookofjoe•48m ago•0 comments

An uroboros program with 100 programming languages

https://github.com/mame/quine-relay
2•modinfo•49m ago•0 comments

Overtraining as the path to human-like AI

https://www.seangoedecke.com/overtraining-as-the-path-to-human-like-ai/
4•Brajeshwar•49m ago•0 comments

We Built a Multiplayer Code Editor with Cloudflare, Yjs, and CodeMirror

https://coderscreen.com/blog/building-multiplayer-code-editor-cloudflare-yjs-codemirror
2•rogutkuba•49m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Todowing – A browser extension that shows Todoist sub-tasks inline

https://todowing.com/
1•vivgui•54m ago•0 comments

AI's new political donor class is outspending Big Tech's last one

https://sfstandard.com/2026/07/18/ai-s-new-political-donor-class-already-outspending-big-tech-s-l...
5•roddylindsay•55m ago•0 comments

Polybius: The Most Dangerous Arcade Game Ever Made. A Dive into Some Arcade Lore

https://lowendbox.com/blog/polybius-the-most-dangerous-arcade-game-ever-made-a-deep-dive-into-som...
2•bananamogul•55m ago•1 comments

SadServer Solutions

https://www.vladimircicovic.com/2024/06/sadserver-solutions
2•taubek•58m ago•0 comments

Strange loops: from autological words and quines to consciousness

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MFR6SMV64h4
1•modinfo•59m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Frozen 2 should be Rated R

https://interconnected.org/home/2026/07/17/frozen
21•peteforde•2h ago

Comments

hhh•1h ago
Ground your LLM searches and actually look through the script or at least an overview or something. Don’t rely on it being in training data, it undermines your entire discussion
afandian•1h ago
I was horrified by the literal waterboarding scene in Shrek. Granted it was a year or two before the USA started trying to normalise that form of torture. I don’t know what was in the popular consciousness in the US at the time. But it’s very spooky.

Children’s fiction has always had a very dark side though.

Grombobulous•1h ago
Yeah, I think the “adult media disguised as kids media” has been a thing for a long time.

But I also think that a lot of teen and preteen media has very little functional distinction from adult media.

A lot of non-parents don’t realize that the difference between G and PG can be huge. Shrek sounds like it should be something for a 3 year old but it really isn’t. Even without the torture scene it’s immediacy really scary. You have to go with something a lot more gentle than that for young kids.

I think the torture scene is funny to an adult as a mockery of the zeitgeist if you decide to interpret it that way. After all, Farquad is intended to be a villain.

IveSeenItAll•9m ago
There is no 'literal waterboarding scene' in the theatrically released Shrek. In the scene you've seen, unless you're deep into dubious fan-remakes, Gingy 'just' gets dipped in milk (mostly off-screen) by an executioner-style heavy, then Lord Farquaad taunts them with their torn-off legs, which suggests legs-first dipping, not the head-first submersion that is the entire point of waterboarding.

Still pretty bad (even though the gingerbread buttons were apparently spared), but... not literal, and not even figurative, waterboarding.

Grombobulous•1h ago
Apparently the author didn’t actually watch the movie carefully.

Arendelle was already evacuated. No people were in danger from the tidal wave. Elsa was just saving the city from physical destruction.

I think you can also make a converse argument to the author very easily: death and disaster are common, almost universal, so avoiding discussing them in children’s media is over-protective.

In any event, I think there’s a point being missed here: the ratings system is a self-regulatory measure and mostly represents a way to classify films as the culture as a whole views profanity. In that respect, they have shifted over time as the definition of “acceptable” has shifted over time.

The author is really just lamenting the fact that their views don’t line up with the majority of Western society.

And that’s perfectly okay because the MPAA rating system is just one voluntary rating system of many. Parents are free to entirely ignore it, or they can reference the information rating systems from other countries, or third parties like common sense media.

As an analogy, the author could be upset if they were from a majority Muslim country and then decided to visit a nude beach in France. They might be upset about public display of nudity in that context. But they are in France and that is what is culturally acceptable in France in that specific public space.

billyp-rva•1h ago
Some might quibble with using AI for research, but this at least feels directionally correct. I'm not sure if ratings/MPAA is the right avenue to fix it, but the sheer laziness of manufacturing stakes by catastrophe instead of through characters definitely feels like its gotten worse.
Grombobulous•1h ago
Lazy storytelling is perhaps the issue here. Of course, I can reward or punish lazy storytelling by which media I choose to buy or skip.

I think it’s worth pointing out that the MPAA is just a voluntary private ratings board. If they want to say violence is less serious than sex that’s their prerogative. I don’t have to agree with it.