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An AI Agent Published a Hit Piece on Me

https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/
129•scottshambaugh•27m ago•44 comments

Email is tough: Major European Payment Processor's Emails rejected by GWorkspace

https://atha.io/blog/2026-02-12-viva
199•thatha7777•2h ago•132 comments

Improving 15 LLMs at Coding in One Afternoon. Only the Harness Changed

http://blog.can.ac/2026/02/12/the-harness-problem/
247•kachapopopow•3h ago•112 comments

A brief history of barbed wire fence telephone networks (2024)

https://loriemerson.net/2024/08/31/a-brief-history-of-barbed-wire-fence-telephone-networks/
34•keepamovin•1h ago•14 comments

The "Crown of Nobles" Noble Gas Tube Display (2024)

https://theshamblog.com/the-crown-of-nobles-noble-gas-tube-display/
96•Ivoah•4h ago•15 comments

Culture Is the Mass-Synchronization of Framings

https://aethermug.com/posts/culture-is-the-mass-synchronization-of-framings
40•mrcgnc•2h ago•14 comments

The Future for Tyr, a Rust GPU Driver for Arm Mali Hardware

https://lwn.net/Articles/1055590/
50•todsacerdoti•2h ago•14 comments

Apache Arrow is 10 years old

https://arrow.apache.org/blog/2026/02/12/arrow-anniversary/
68•tosh•3h ago•13 comments

Warcraft III Peon Voice Notifications for Claude Code

https://github.com/tonyyont/peon-ping
763•doppp•11h ago•241 comments

I Wrote a Scheme in 2025

https://maplant.com/2026-02-09-I-Wrote-a-Scheme-in-2025.html
61•maplant•2d ago•4 comments

Apple patches decade-old iOS zero-day, possibly exploited by commercial spyware

https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/12/apple_ios_263/
122•beardyw•2h ago•64 comments

Discord/Twitch/Snapchat age verification bypass

https://age-verifier.kibty.town/
891•JustSkyfall•17h ago•411 comments

AI agents can now create their own bank accounts

https://clawbot.cash/
7•arshbot•18m ago•3 comments

Lines of Code Are Back (and It's Worse Than Before)

https://www.thepragmaticcto.com/p/lines-of-code-are-back-and-its-worse
32•birdculture•1h ago•6 comments

TikTok is tracking you, even if you don't use the app

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260210-tiktok-is-tracking-you-even-if-you-dont-use-the-app-h...
72•belter•2h ago•43 comments

So many trees planted in Taklamakan Desert that it's turned into a carbon sink

https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/plants/china-has-planted-so-many-trees-around-the-taklam...
11•Brajeshwar•17m ago•0 comments

AI agent opens a PR write a blogpost to shames the maintainer who closes it

https://github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib/pull/31132
683•wrxd•5h ago•532 comments

Run Pebble OS in Browser via WASM

https://ericmigi.github.io/pebble-qemu-wasm/
31•goranmoomin•3h ago•6 comments

Carl Sagan's Baloney Detection Kit: Tools for Thinking Critically (2025)

https://www.openculture.com/2025/09/the-carl-sagan-baloney-detection-kit.html
90•nobody9999•9h ago•54 comments

The missing digit of Stela C

https://johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com/2026/02/12/stela-c/
79•chmaynard•8h ago•13 comments

“Nothing” is the secret to structuring your work

https://www.vangemert.dev/blog/nothing
393•spmvg•4d ago•154 comments

Show HN: Inamate – Open-source 2D animation tool (alternative to Adobe Animate)

7•hactually•2d ago•2 comments

US businesses and consumers pay 90% of tariff costs, New York Fed says

https://www.ft.com/content/c4f886a1-1633-418c-b6b5-16f700f8bb0d
21•mraniki•1h ago•11 comments

HeyWhatsThat

https://www.heywhatsthat.com/faq.html
105•1970-01-01•3d ago•21 comments

Using an engineering notebook

https://ntietz.com/blog/using-an-engineering-notebook/
272•evakhoury•2d ago•110 comments

Byte magazine artist Robert Tinney, who illustrated the birth of PCs, dies at 78

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2026/02/byte-magazine-artist-robert-tinney-who-illustrated-the-bi...
100•rbanffy•5h ago•18 comments

How to make a living as an artist

https://essays.fnnch.com/make-a-living
182•gwintrob•12h ago•95 comments

Text classification with Python 3.14's ZSTD module

https://maxhalford.github.io/blog/text-classification-zstd/
243•alexmolas•3d ago•54 comments

Hologram v0.7.0: Milestone release for Elixir-to-JavaScript porting initiative

https://hologram.page/blog/porting-initiative-delivers-hologram-v0-7-0
89•bartblast•16h ago•23 comments

NetNewsWire Turns 23

https://netnewswire.blog/2026/02/11/netnewswire-turns.html
323•robin_reala•22h ago•89 comments
Open in hackernews

Flat origami is Turing complete (2023)

https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.07932
40•PaulHoule•9mo ago

Comments

gnabgib•9mo ago
Related How to Build an Origami Computer (63 points, 2024, 15 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39191627
NooneAtAll3•9mo ago
> we prove that flat origami, when viewed as a computational device, is Turing complete, or more specifically P-complete

...aren't those mutually exclusive?

I feel a mix of "those are obviously different complexity levels" and "is it like C pre-processor turing-completeness situation?"

lambdaone•9mo ago
My understanding of this is that P-completeness for a problem implies that any problem in P can be transformed into it with a polynomial-time reduction. Deterministic Turing machines (more precisely, the problem of determining the future state of a deterministic Turing machine) are in P.
tromp•9mo ago
Not with a polynomial-time reduction though. Quoting from [1]:

> Generically, reductions stronger than polynomial-time reductions are used, since all languages in P (except the empty language and the language of all strings) are P-complete under polynomial-time reductions.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-complete

cartoffal•9mo ago
Turing completeness and P completeness are completely different things. There is no sense in which P-completeness is a "more specific" version of Turing-completeness.
gitroom•9mo ago
Honestly wild how you can get Turing completeness outta folding paper, never thought I'd read that today.
StopDisinfo910•9mo ago
That's why I have always prefered Church approach to computation to Turing machines.

The lambda calculus, by its simplicity as just a rewriting language, makes it "obvious" how effective computability emerges from very little.

yorwba•9mo ago
The reduction in the article boils down to origami crease patterns simulating rule 110 simulating a cyclic tag system simulating a clockwise Turing machine simulating an arbitrary Turing machine (and specific Turing machines simulating the lambda calculus are known).

Do you think there is an "obvious" way to simulate the lambda calculus using origami crease patterns more directly? For example, a cyclic tag system or even rule 110 configuration simulating the lambda calculus without indirection through Turing machines.

entaloneralie•9mo ago
If I may chip in, I wouldn't call it obvious or straight-forward, but multiset rewriting[1] can be implemented in terms of multiplication alone(like in Fractran), and multiplication can be implemented in origami[2], so there might be something there.

[1] https://wiki.xxiivv.com/site/pocket_rewriting

[2] https://wiki.xxiivv.com/site/paper_product.html

PaulHoule•9mo ago
It's a big controversy in CS education, isn't it?

Knuth's Art of Computer Programming was built around assembly language for a fantasy computer which is inspired more or less by the Turing machine (program counter is an index into a program 'state', instructions transform a data 'state' and transition to a different program 'state') whereas Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs is more inspired by Church.

The pinnacle of undergraduate CS education, I think, is compilers, which is where those approaches are ultimately unified on a practical level (you make a machine that transforms one to the other) but the introductory course for the non-professional programmer or the person who aspires to writing compilers someday is still pretty controversial.

StopDisinfo910•9mo ago
> It's a big controversy in CS education, isn't it?

Is it?

I think most people who have heard of the topic are familiar with the Church-Turing thesis and know that both definitions of effective calculability are equivalent.

My preference is mostly a matter of taste I think. I admire how little there is to the lambda calculus definition and how computability somehow emerges through construction and definition (which admittedly are not simple). It nicely shows that you need very little "machinery" to get a powerful computational system.

Turing machines by comparaison seem somewhat contrieved with their infinite tape, head and register even if I realise that in a lot of way they are closer to an actual computer.

entaloneralie•9mo ago
Related: Origami-Constructible Numbers[1] & Folding Primes[2]

[1] https://www.cs.mcgill.ca/~jking/papers/origami.pdf

[2] https://www.pythabacus.com/Origami%20Fractions/folding.htm