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I miss thinking hard

https://www.jernesto.com/articles/thinking_hard
421•jernestomg•4h ago•228 comments

Lessons learned shipping 500 units of my first hardware product

https://www.simonberens.com/p/lessons-learned-shipping-500-units
558•sberens•2d ago•238 comments

Data centers in space makes no sense

https://civai.org/blog/space-data-centers
536•ajyoon•13h ago•635 comments

How watercolor brushes are made

https://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/brush1.html
11•YeGoblynQueenne•6d ago•1 comments

Show HN: Craftplan – I built my wife a production management tool for her bakery

https://github.com/puemos/craftplan
288•deofoo•2d ago•55 comments

High-Altitude Adventure with a DIY Pico Balloon

https://spectrum.ieee.org/explore-stratosphere-diy-pico-balloon
23•jnord•3d ago•3 comments

Deno Sandbox

https://deno.com/blog/introducing-deno-sandbox
420•johnspurlock•15h ago•136 comments

The largest zip tie is nearly 4 feet long and $75

https://www.thedrive.com/news/youll-have-that-on-those-big-jobs-the-worlds-largest-zip-tie-is-nea...
85•PaulHoule•5d ago•43 comments

New York’s budget bill would require “blocking technology” on all 3D printers

https://blog.adafruit.com/2026/02/03/new-york-wants-to-ctrlaltdelete-your-3d-printer/
392•ptorrone•16h ago•442 comments

Agent Skills

https://agentskills.io/home
450•mooreds•18h ago•224 comments

Xcode 26.3 – Developers can leverage coding agents directly in Xcode

https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/02/xcode-26-point-3-unlocks-the-power-of-agentic-coding/
302•davidbarker•14h ago•245 comments

AliSQL: Alibaba's open-source MySQL with vector and DuckDB engines

https://github.com/alibaba/AliSQL
199•baotiao•13h ago•26 comments

Reimplementing Tor from Scratch for a Single-Hop Proxy

https://foxmoss.com/blog/kurrat/
27•Agreed3750•3d ago•4 comments

Resurrecting Crimsonland – Decompiling and preserving a cult 2003 classic game

https://banteg.xyz/posts/crimsonland/
101•banteg•2d ago•27 comments

221 Cannon is Not For Sale

https://fredbenenson.com/blog/2026/02/03/221-cannon-is-not-for-sale/
238•mecredis•15h ago•177 comments

Prek: A better, faster, drop-in pre-commit replacement, engineered in Rust

https://github.com/j178/prek
236•fortuitous-frog•16h ago•101 comments

X offices raided in France as UK opens fresh investigation into Grok

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ce3ex92557jo
329•vikaveri•22h ago•537 comments

1,400-year-old tomb featuring giant owl sculpture discovered in Mexico

https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/29/science/zapotec-tomb-mexico-scli-intl
103•breve•4d ago•19 comments

Y Combinator will let founders receive funds in stablecoins

https://fortune.com/2026/02/03/famed-startup-incubator-y-combinator-to-let-founders-receive-funds...
119•shscs911•14h ago•188 comments

The full history of Windows widgets, from 1997 to today

https://xakpc.dev/windows-widgets/history/
28•thunderbong•2h ago•12 comments

Qwen3-Coder-Next

https://qwen.ai/blog?id=qwen3-coder-next
645•danielhanchen•16h ago•383 comments

France dumps Zoom and Teams as Europe seeks digital autonomy from the US

https://apnews.com/article/europe-digital-sovereignty-big-tech-9f5388b68a0648514cebc8d92f682060
929•AareyBaba•15h ago•491 comments

FlashAttention-T: Towards Tensorized Attention

https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3774934.3786425
92•matt_d•11h ago•51 comments

Bunny Database

https://bunny.net/blog/meet-bunny-database-the-sql-service-that-just-works/
284•dabinat•20h ago•115 comments

Notepad++ supply chain attack breakdown

https://securelist.com/notepad-supply-chain-attack/118708/
273•natebc•10h ago•124 comments

Puget Systems Most Reliable Hardware of 2025

https://www.pugetsystems.com/labs/articles/puget-systems-most-reliable-hardware-of-2025/
121•zdw•4d ago•41 comments

The world is more equal than you think

https://economist.com/graphic-detail/2026/02/03/the-world-is-more-equal-than-you-think
14•andsoitis•1h ago•17 comments

Exploring Different Keyboard Sensing Technologies

https://www.lttlabs.com/articles/2026/01/27/exploring-different-keyboard-sensing-technologies
15•viraptor•1w ago•3 comments

Heritability of intrinsic human life span is about 50%

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adz1187
156•XzetaU8•2d ago•101 comments

1 kilobyte is precisely 1000 bytes?

https://waspdev.com/articles/2026-01-11/kilobyte-is-1000-bytes
96•surprisetalk•15h ago•304 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: Convert Large CSV/XLSX to JSON or XML in Browser

https://csvforge.com
41•Botlabs•9mo ago
Hello HN, I'm excited to share a project I've been working on: A simple, fast way to process huge CSV and XLSX files directly in your browser and export them as clean JSON or XML

Here's a few things that makes this converter different: - runs in the browser - all parsing and conversion is client side can handle data any size data - automatically detects delimiters, encodings, and data types as it parses - Live preview with column renaming, search/replace, and data cleanup - Export to JSON or XML — clean, structured output that can be used for API or Databases

backstory: I built this tool for myself. I work with massive CSV and TXT files, some over 10GB, and opening them in Excel would freeze my laptop, some of the online converters only limits to a certain size, so I started learning Python and pandas but ended up wasting so much time trying different delimiters or fixing badly structured data just to make it usable, and I thought this would be a really fun project to build

I'd love some feedback. Thank you

URL: https://csvforge.com

Comments

sverhagen•9mo ago
"Runs in the browser" and "client side" isn't as much of a selling point to me as it's made out to be. It's a claim that I can't really validate until it's too late. If it's a commercial service I'm going to have to pay for, then maybe you should go all the way in gaining my trust with whatever safeguards it takes, so that I no longer care if I upload my data to your server or not.
rustc•9mo ago
> then maybe you should go all the way in gaining my trust with whatever safeguards it takes

What kind of safeguards are possible with a web app?

sverhagen•9mo ago
I think this comes down to legally-enforceable contracts with some teeth. A lot of business seem okay to trust Google's cloud products, or Microsoft's? I think as private person with limited means for litigation, you're likely sol.
hahn-kev•9mo ago
Yeah I really wish there was a way for this to be enforced by the browser that the end user could trust. It would have to be a standard, but outside of opening dev tools and toggling offline mode there's no way to be sure.

The funny thing is that it feels safer to download a desktop app and give it the same data even though it's usually much harder to validate if it's shipping your data somewhere else.

strogonoff•9mo ago
There’s a cheap trick to make sure a website that claims to do everything client-side actually does everything client-side:

1. Open the site in an incognito window.

2. Turn off your Internet.

3. Do what you’ve got to do.

4. Close browser window.

As a bonus, and this makes it better than just flipping the offline switch in developer tools, if you turn off Internet in a way that keeps the browser thinking it’s online, you can also peek at whether any network requests are made (for pathological cases where the app does everything locally but phones home anyway).

Botlabs•9mo ago
Sure, but you can validate it dev tools exist for a reason. Honestly, I just can’t afford the storage costs if users are uploading 50GB+ CSVs. It’d be a huge strain on any server, not to mention painfully slow for users. Running everything client side was the easiest and most practical way to build this MVP at least for me thanks for the feedback
o11c•9mo ago
"Large" generally means "bigger than RAM"; 10GB is medium-sized these days since it fits in most people's RAM. Does the browser actually have the (web worker?) APIs needed to stream and "upload" and "download"?
shubhamjain•9mo ago
I don't get it. Are JSON and XML files more friendly to import vs CSV files? I always assumed CSVs were the standard. Any reasons to prefer structured formats?

Shameless plug: I am working on a similar problem of Excel not being a great tool for large datasets. My desktop app[1] lets you import raw data files and query them using SQL. (The website needs to be updated, the app looks much better than the current screenshots).

[1]: https://textquery.app

Botlabs•9mo ago
yes they are a lot easier to work with when inserting into the database
snappr021•9mo ago
This type of thing is fairly trivial to create with ChatGPT running entirely locally in HTML.

A couple of kb of open standard vanilla js that does some simple things faster than legacy spreadsheets etc ever could.

Even to the point of creating invoices, reports etc based on standard filters stored in local storage…

oschvr•9mo ago
Looks like you made it in lovable. It has that characteristic UI.

If so, how much time did it take you?

Botlabs•9mo ago
thanks for your comment, it took me almost 3 weeks to build this
constantcrying•9mo ago
I think it should go without saying, but never use this with anything more relevant than a hobby project.

Doing this with any kind of data you don't fully own (e.g. data from your company) is a terrible idea, from so many standpoints. That it is "allegedly" running locally is not making it much better.

I think my question to OP is, who is this for. Any developer can write up a convert for his own datasets, in basically any case I can think of where you are handling large amounts of data you are building a pipeline to do cleanup, renaming, conversion, etc. Who wants to have a part of that pipeline be uploading the data into the browser?