frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

SailfishOS: A Linux-based European alternative to dominant mobile OSes

https://sailfishos.org/info/
146•ForHackernews•2h ago•72 comments

OS maintained by a single developer since 1997: Visopsys

https://visopsys.org/
96•kome•2h ago•9 comments

Updated practice for review articles and position papers in ArXiv CS category

https://blog.arxiv.org/2025/10/31/attention-authors-updated-practice-for-review-articles-and-posi...
405•dw64•9h ago•195 comments

Policy, privacy and post-quantum: anonymous credentials for everyone

https://blog.cloudflare.com/private-rate-limiting/
4•eleye•8m ago•0 comments

Claude Code Can Debug Low-Level Cryptography

https://words.filippo.io/claude-debugging/
178•Bogdanp•6h ago•104 comments

GHC now runs in the browser

https://discourse.haskell.org/t/ghc-now-runs-in-your-browser/13169
239•kaycebasques•8h ago•66 comments

Pomelli

https://labs.google.com/pomelli/about/
22•birriel•1h ago•6 comments

Show HN: Why write code if the LLM can just do the thing? (web app experiment)

https://github.com/samrolken/nokode
205•samrolken•7h ago•163 comments

Beginner-friendly, unofficial documentation for Helix text editor

https://helix-editor.vercel.app/start-here/basics/
86•Curiositry•5h ago•29 comments

SQLite concurrency and why you should care about it

https://jellyfin.org/posts/SQLite-locking/
247•HunOL•11h ago•110 comments

The Smol Training Playbook: The Secrets to Building World-Class LLMs

https://huggingface.co/spaces/HuggingFaceTB/smol-training-playbook
122•kashifr•2d ago•6 comments

OpenDesk by the Centre for Digital Sovereignty

https://www.opendesk.eu/en/product
20•athousandsteps•2h ago•3 comments

RegEx Crossword

https://jimbly.github.io/regex-crossword/
12•a022311•4d ago•2 comments

The hardest program I've ever written (2015)

https://journal.stuffwithstuff.com/2015/09/08/the-hardest-program-ive-ever-written/
52•jacobedawson•3d ago•35 comments

Show HN: KeyLeak Detector – Scan websites for exposed API keys and secrets

https://github.com/Amal-David/keyleak-detector
8•amaldavid•2h ago•0 comments

Austria: Pylons as sculpture for public acceptance of expanding electrification

https://www.goodgoodgood.co/articles/austrian-power-giants-power-line-animals
86•Geekette•4d ago•39 comments

Chat Control proposal fails again after public opposition

https://andreafortuna.org/2025/11/01/chat-control-proposal-fails-again-after-massive-public-oppos...
432•speckx•8h ago•114 comments

Word2vec-style vector arithmetic on docs embeddings

https://technicalwriting.dev/embeddings/arithmetic/index.html
43•kaycebasques•5h ago•11 comments

CharlotteOS – An Experimental Modern Operating System

https://github.com/charlotte-os/Catten
147•ementally•11h ago•64 comments

Hard Rust requirements from May onward

https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2025/10/msg00285.html
313•rkta•17h ago•547 comments

Visible from space, Sudan's bloodied sands expose a massacre of thousands

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2025/10/28/sudan-bloodied-sands-massacre-thousands/
241•wslh•7h ago•86 comments

3M Diskette Reference Manual (1983) [pdf]

https://retrocmp.de/fdd/diskette/3M_Diskette_Reference_Manual_May83.pdf
5•susam•5d ago•1 comments

From 400 Mbps to 1.7 Gbps: A WiFi 7 Debugging Journey

https://blog.tymscar.com/posts/wifi7speedhunt/
60•tymscar•5h ago•50 comments

Ask HN: Where to begin with "modern" Emacs?

99•weakfish•7h ago•63 comments

I built my own CityMapper

https://asherfalcon.com/blog/posts/5
110•ashfn•5d ago•14 comments

Studies increasingly find links between air pollutants and dementia

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/01/health/alzheimers-dementia-air-pollution.html
140•quapster•7h ago•86 comments

NJVL: Nim's New Intermediate Representation

https://github.com/nim-lang/nimony/blob/master/doc/njvl-spec.md
51•generichuman•2d ago•8 comments

Czech police forced to turn off facial recognition cameras at the Prague airport

https://edri.org/our-work/czech-police-forced-to-turn-off-facial-recognition-cameras-at-the-pragu...
112•campuscodi•6h ago•22 comments

Open-Source Ada: From Gateware to Application

https://blog.adacore.com/open-source-ada-from-gateware-to-application
50•Bogdanp•9h ago•9 comments

Reconfigurable Analog Computers

https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.25942
19•gidellav•6h ago•5 comments
Open in hackernews

QueryLeaf: SQL for Mongo

https://github.com/beekeeper-studio/queryleaf
23•tilt•5mo ago

Comments

ttfkam•5mo ago
Would much rather have "Mongo" for SQL like this:

https://github.com/microsoft/documentdb

I am skeptical that SQL with Mongo backing it would be at all performant except in the most trivial cases. On the flip side, Postgres's jsonb indexing makes the inverse very doable.

Zambyte•5mo ago
https://www.ferretdb.com/
VWWHFSfQ•5mo ago
We're seeing a convergence of document DBs adding relational features, and relational DBs adding document features. At this point I find the best of both worlds to simply be PG with JSONB.

    create table document (
      id uuid primary key default gen_random_uuid(),
      doc jsonb
    );

This alone will give you a huge number of the features that Mongo provides, but also the full power of Postgres for everything else.
victor106•5mo ago
this makes so much sense.

I also wonder if there are some specific capabilities of MongoDB that this pattern does not support?

etse•5mo ago
Maybe not capabilities, but I'm wondering if Postgres has gotten any easier to scale horizontally. The administrative overhead of scaling and maintenance with MongoDB seemed lower to Postgres to me.

Would love to hear from others with more Postgres than I.

ttfkam•5mo ago
Excluding conversations about MongoDB compatibility, PG16 added bidirectional replication for multiple writers and there are Postgres-compatible options out there for a distributed database including Citus, EDB Postgres Distributed, Yugabyte, CockroachDB, Aurora Limitless, etc.

The choices require some nuance to figure out a best fit, but then again so does any MongoDB installation (despite the marketing hype to the contrary as there are no free lunches).

You might be surprised how far most folks can typically scale with just read replica(s) on a reasonably sized writer. Add in bidirectional replication for multiple writers, and you can go even further. Beyond that, even vanilla Postgres can do it, but you'll need to do some combinations of partitioning and foreign tables.

zareith•5mo ago
Curious if there is something similar that works with sqlite.
maxbond•5mo ago
As of 3.38 (or 3.45 if you meant a binary JSON structure specifically) https://sqlite.org/json1.html
zareith•5mo ago
We can use json type, but the dx around directly using that is not comparable to mongodb. Which is why I was looking for a similar abstraction.
aleksi•5mo ago
There is FerretDB v1, which provides MongoDB protocol for SQLite. See https://github.com/FerretDB/FerretDB/tree/main-v1
zareith•5mo ago
They seemed to have moved away from that.

From https://docs.ferretdb.io/migration/migrating-from-v1

> Unlike v1.x that provides options for PostgreSQL and SQLite as backend, FerretDB v2.x requires a PostgreSQL with DocumentDB extension as the backend

aleksi•5mo ago
FerretDB v2 is built on top of this extension. See https://github.com/FerretDB/FerretDB
gavinray•5mo ago
It's somewhat of a secret, but AWS's JDBC driver for DocumentDB supports Mongo as well

Let's you interact with Mongo as if it were a regular SQL JDBC database

https://github.com/aws/amazon-documentdb-jdbc-driver

bdcravens•5mo ago
That driver is read-only
gitroom•5mo ago
Honestly, putting Mongo and SQL together always confuses me a bit. I'm way more comfy with Postgres and jsonb. Anyone else feel like scaling Postgres is still kinda a pain?
sparky_•5mo ago
I can appreciate the technical aspect of a translation layer, but I struggle to understand the use case for a tool like this. If your data is inherently relational, then you should be using a relational store anyway. And if it isn't, trying to hammer it on-demand into something that looks relational is going to eat you with performance implications. Unless I'm missing something.