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Unlimited OCR: One-Shot Long-Horizon Parsing

https://github.com/baidu/Unlimited-OCR
219•ingve•3h ago•60 comments

Show HN: TikZ Editor – WYSIWYG editor for figures in LaTeX

https://tikz.dev/editor/
19•DominikPeters•42m ago•3 comments

Spying on kids to save kids from spying is stupid

https://pluralistic.net/2026/06/23/destroy-the-village/
115•hn_acker•1h ago•49 comments

Elevated error rate across multiple models

https://status.claude.com/incidents/jbhf20wjmzrf
129•rob•46m ago•108 comments

Steam Machine launches today

https://store.steampowered.com/news/group/45479024/view/685257114654870245
1784•theschwa•21h ago•1522 comments

MSG Made Dossier on Activists Who Opposed Facial Recognition

https://www.404media.co/madison-square-garden-made-dossier-on-activists-who-opposed-facial-recogn...
88•cdrnsf•1h ago•3 comments

Mistral OCR 4

https://mistral.ai/news/ocr-4/
77•meetpateltech•1h ago•7 comments

Plotnine

https://plotnine.org/
154•tosh•4d ago•45 comments

Show HN: Bun-sqlgen – Type-safe raw SQL for Bun, no ORM

https://github.com/ilbertt/bun-sqlgen
12•ilbert•46m ago•6 comments

Epidurals are a miracle technology

https://worksinprogress.co/issue/the-wonder-of-epidurals/
63•karakoram•2d ago•37 comments

Lift4D: Harmonizing Single-View 3D Estimation for 4D Reconstruction In-the-Wild

https://lift4d.github.io/
3•ilreb•26m ago•0 comments

GLM-5.2 – How to Run Locally

https://unsloth.ai/docs/models/glm-5.2
500•TechTechTech•17h ago•232 comments

Will It Mythos?

https://swelljoe.com/post/will-it-mythos/
229•mindingnever•10h ago•161 comments

Crypto in 2026: Oh, This Is the Bad Place

https://www.stephendiehl.com/posts/bad_place_2026/
236•ibobev•5h ago•260 comments

VibeThinker: 3B param model that beats Opus 4.5 on reasoning with novel SFT+GRPO

https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.16140
292•timhigins•13h ago•149 comments

Lossless GIF recompression via exhaustive search

https://blog.arusekk.pl/posts/lossless-gif-recompression/
11•ZacnyLos•2h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Neural Particle Automata

https://selforg-npa.github.io/
58•esychology•6h ago•13 comments

Researchers used math to crack Wordle

https://www.binghamton.edu/news/story/6327/s-m-a-r-t-these-researchers-used-math-to-crack-wordle
12•hhs•2d ago•6 comments

In praise of memcached

https://jchri.st/blog/in-praise-of-memcached/
224•j03b•13h ago•89 comments

The Traditional Vi

https://ex-vi.sourceforge.net/
43•exvi•6h ago•30 comments

Show HN: Shumai – open-source Frame.io alternative for creative work

https://github.com/shumaiOne/shumai
28•Yiling-J•5h ago•0 comments

Giant Banana Pulled Over: Driver Says Cops Have Stopped Him 100s of Times

https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/giant-banana-pulled-over-in-montana-driver-says-cops-have...
134•speckx•2d ago•47 comments

8086 Segmented Memory was a good idea

https://owl.billpg.com/8086-segmented-memory-was-a-good-idea-almost/
47•billpg•2d ago•91 comments

My Mathematical Regression

https://blog.dahl.dev/posts/my-mathematical-regression/
335•aleda145•4d ago•130 comments

Apple is going to raise device prices, but when?

https://daringfireball.net/linked/2026/06/22/apple-device-prices-when
63•tosh•4h ago•54 comments

OpenAI DayBreak – GPT-5.5-Cyber

https://openai.com/index/daybreak-securing-the-world/
163•AaronO•13h ago•125 comments

The Coming Loop

https://lucumr.pocoo.org/2026/6/23/the-coming-loop/
137•ingve•3h ago•120 comments

Kyber (YC W23) Is Hiring a Head of Engineering

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/kyber/jobs/FGmI8mx-head-of-engineering
1•asontha•18h ago

Optocam Zero: a Pi Zero based digital camera made using off the shelf components

https://github.com/dorukkumkumoglu/optocamzero
208•iamnothere•19h ago•54 comments

80386 Early Start Memory Access

https://nand2mario.github.io/posts/2026/80386_early_start/
3•nand2mario•2h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Throwaway Code: Don't recycle, throw it away (2017)

https://www.sung.codes/blog/2017/throwaway-code-dont-recycle-throw-away
26•sails•1y ago

Comments

RedShift1•1y ago
It'll be a cold day in hell before I start throwing away my 80+ "New" notepad++ tabs.
notTooFarGone•1y ago
i feel called out.

I had to manage my 350 notepad++ new tabs as I migrated to a new PC - it was not pretty.

mehulashah•1y ago
There’s something beautiful about not being riddled with previous artifacts and starting clean with how you imagine you want to build your system. If the system is large enough, you can’t do it that often.
gherkinnn•1y ago
It is a mistake to believe that the code written is the only valuable artefact.

What you've learned along the way is so much more important.

eternityforest•1y ago
I usually find most of the learning happens a year later when I see if my approach is maintainable and handles new requirements.

When I'm actually coding, I'm usually not learning as much, because I'm generally intentionally choosing boring tech everyone already knows.

Most of the learning is less about deeply internalizing concepts and more about things like new features in the Python stdlib.

gitroom•1y ago
Ive got a million messy files saved up, honestly, even when I know just letting go could help me think clearer. Ever wonder if holding onto old stuff slows you down or actually helps you get smarter over time?
1dom•1y ago
I don't think the author is necessarily advocating the throwing away of code here, they're advocating the value of being able to rapidly prototype and move on from seemingly incomplete things.

The whole value proposition of the digital world is that we can store and manipulate it for virtually nothing: there isn't the same cost to having digital stuff, and so there isn't the same gains from throwing it away IMO.

athrowaway3z•1y ago
Create a ~/Archive and throw it in there.

A quick grep every blue moon can be faster than wrangling a LLM into place, and as an added bonus you can look back and laugh at how big of an idiot you were.

klabb3•1y ago
In my experience, if you have a medium sized task with multiple unknowns, it is best to prototype aggressively without a thought about quality, and then start a second iteration with quality in mind. The purpose of the prototyping is learning.

It’s faster (yes) than prototype-then-fixup. Why? Because the ”live refactor” is harder than the greenfield writing phase. The new knowledge often makes the impl straightforward.

It’s also better quality than design-then-build. The optimal architecture and modularization change with knowledge increase, which is best to get via experience. You can design fully upfront but it’s riddled with analysis paralysis - it’s notoriously hard (and slow) to predict unknowns.

Sounds like good advice? Well, the hardest part isn’t to follow it – it’s to know upfront what size of task it is. If it turns out to be easier, you waste a bit of work (prototype-fixup is faster). However, if it’s bigger than you thought – you’re in the best possible position to break down the new problem into subtasks, with no wasted work.

perrygeo•1y ago
If you could package this up in a motivational poster, it belongs in every company meeting room. Speed and quality are not two opposing forces to tradeoff. We can have both.

But we need to get rid of this silly, infantile, unwavering attachment to our source code files. Throw code away. All. the. time. The first version of code is, by definition, being built in the absence of critical information. Why on earth would we get so attached to that which was built in ignorance? In this case we're not "reusing code", we're throwing away knowledge!

Why would you discard everything valuable you learned in favor of a code artifact written before you learned it? Throw away the code instead! Surely the code written AFTER gaining the knoweldge will be both faster and better quality. (and more clear, less tech debt, etc)

dsabanin•1y ago
Very well said. This is such an important point.

I believe that if you truly accept what Hemingway said, that writing is rewriting, you get less attached to the idea of reaching the best design on the first try, and feel better when starting with a suboptimal solution.

Of course this sometimes conflicts with organizational pressures, where that quick and dirty solution may be deemed as enough by some and you won't get to finish with the proper design. For me the trick is to consider first version just an internal stage of work on a feature, not even communicated outwards most of the times, until the appropriate design is reached.

cadamsdotcom•1y ago
We need better words for the different code written for different purposes.

Code written to learn and explore a problem space? Sure.

Code written in response to a prompt, which could easily be rewritten - things like a throwaway “please tell me a story about the contents of this CSV for me and also write code to graph it”. Yep throw it away.

Or keep it as an example for a later model.

That’s very different to code written to high standards intended for others’ use.

We need different words for all of those 3 varieties of code.