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Claude Sonnet 5

https://www.anthropic.com/news/claude-sonnet-5
524•marinesebastian•2h ago•272 comments

Claude Code is steganographically marking requests

https://thereallo.dev/blog/claude-code-prompt-steganography
915•kirushik•4h ago•250 comments

Claude Science

https://claude.com/product/claude-science
205•lebovic•3h ago•80 comments

Nano Banana 2 Lite

https://deepmind.google/models/gemini-image/flash-lite/
185•minimaxir•3h ago•66 comments

I built a mmWave material classification radar

https://gauthier-lechevalier.com/radar
70•GL26•2h ago•24 comments

County with 37 Data Centers Asks Schools to 'Conserve Electricity'

https://www.404media.co/henrico-virginia-datacenter-energy-cost-email/
298•01-_-•4h ago•141 comments

Matrix URIs, a URL syntax from Tim Berners-Lee that never shipped (1996)

https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/MatrixURIs.html
19•napolux•4d ago•11 comments

Knoppix

https://www.knopper.net/knoppix/index-en.html
177•hoangvmpc•7h ago•81 comments

Don't Make Gates Optional, Make Them Flexible

https://wakamoleguy.com/p/flexible-gates
33•wakamoleguy•3d ago•3 comments

Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (1852)

https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/24518
136•lstodd•7h ago•39 comments

Open Source Low Tech

https://opensourcelowtech.org/
585•grep_it•4d ago•120 comments

Tell HN: Installing Cursor on iOS irreversibly changes your privacy settings

92•zkldi•1h ago•15 comments

Building a custom octocopter from scratch with no prior hardware experience

https://karolina.mgdubiel.com/drone/
277•noleary•2d ago•58 comments

Crypto firms have spent $189M so far on 2026 US election, report says

https://www.reuters.com/world/crypto-firms-have-spent-189-million-so-far-2026-us-election-report-...
158•tartoran•3h ago•64 comments

Qwen 3.6 27B is the sweet spot for local development

https://quesma.com/blog/qwen-36-is-awesome/
1121•stared•1d ago•699 comments

Zluda 6 release (run unmodified CUDA applications on non-Nvidia GPUs)

https://vosen.github.io/ZLUDA/blog/zluda-update-q1q2-2026/
122•Tiberium•9h ago•12 comments

LongCat-2.0, a large-scale MoE model with 1.6T total and 48B Active

https://longcat.chat/blog/longcat-2.0/
258•benjiro29•19h ago•76 comments

Factorio 2.1 Experimental Release

https://factorio.com/blog/post/fff-444
108•ibobev•3d ago•63 comments

Looking Ahead to Postgres 19

https://www.snowflake.com/en/blog/engineering/postgresql-19-features-beta/
196•thinkingemote•5h ago•114 comments

Show HN: I made a heatmap of 3400 VCs who are open to cold emails

https://apparent.social/heat-map
18•west_subject•1h ago•10 comments

Mathematics: Its Content, Methods and Meaning

https://old.maa.org/press/maa-reviews/mathematics-its-content-methods-and-meaning
60•teleforce•3d ago•17 comments

Supreme Court upholds broad conception of birthright citizenship

https://apnews.com/live/birthright-citizenship-decision-supreme-court-updates-06-30-2026
98•toomuchtodo•5h ago•209 comments

.self: A new top-level domain designed to support self-hosting

https://hccf.onmy.cloud/2026/06/21/reclaiming-our-digital-selves-hccfs-vision-for-a-human-centere...
649•HumanCCF•1d ago•361 comments

Free the Icons

https://weblog.rogueamoeba.com/2026/06/26/free-the-icons/
648•zdw•3d ago•239 comments

Amazon Seller Reveals Rare Glimpse of Shadow Bribery Market

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-24/inside-the-shadow-market-selling-access-to-ama...
41•petethomas•1h ago•19 comments

Exercise intensity influences body composition in healthy older adults (2025)

https://www.maturitas.org/article/S0378-5122(25)00571-7/fulltext
184•bookofjoe•9h ago•153 comments

I'm building a Space Cadet Pinball Machine! [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHQ8c8i42VE
81•skibz•4d ago•15 comments

Xsnow "protestware" in Debian

https://lwn.net/SubscriberLink/1079385/3d7a57da58b41aa9/
101•6581•3h ago•87 comments

Memory Safe Context Switching

https://fil-c.org/context_switches
198•modeless•19h ago•30 comments

The labor share of income in the US is at its lowest post-war level

https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2026/06/the-post-covid-decline-in-the-labor-share/
422•loughnane•4h ago•437 comments
Open in hackernews

Vircadia, a Bun and PostgreSQL-powered reactivity layer for games

https://vircadia.com/
12•kaliqt•1y ago

Comments

kaliqt•1y ago
We gave Vircadia a full Gen 2 overhaul (big thanks to our sponsors such as Linux Professional Institute, Deutsche Telekom, etc. for enabling this), aiming to cut down on code bloat and boost performance. The main shift is swapping out our custom backend infrastructure for a battle-tested, high-performance system like PostgreSQL with Bun wrapping and managing every end of it.

It's kind of unheard of to do this for things like game dev (preferring custom solutions), but it works and makes things way easier to manage. The shape of the data in a database affects how well it works for a use case, and that model scales well for virtually every kind of software ever, the same should apply here!

Feel free to prototype some game ideas you might have been tossing around, our priority is DX for the project as a whole to enable more developers with less resources to build bigger worlds, so please do share feedback here and/or in GH issues!

Our roadmap is for more SDKs, and cutting down on bloat where possible, with the express goal of giving devs more cycles in the day to focus on the actual gameplay instead of tooling.

porridgeraisin•1y ago
Interested to know why Deutsche telekom sponsored this
nand_gate•1y ago
My guess is money laundering, given that the product is pretty vapourware-y (as a game dev in a past life: Vircadia looks more like 'how a web dev thinks multiplayer games work' aka basically unusable in a serious title).
kaliqt•1y ago
I think you fundamentally misunderstand the stack. Their main usage of the platform has to do with a E2E solution with avatars, audio, etc. all synced without issue. These features ship with the client and other private repositories wrapping the core.

However, for usage to HN users they would be (likely) more interested in the SDK, the core, the underlying system, and how it can fit their use cases.

If you want to understand a small part of the scale of this project, you are welcome to check out:

https://github.com/vircadia/vircadia-web https://github.com/vircadia/vircadia-web-sdk https://github.com/vircadia/vircadia-native-core

kaliqt•1y ago
For an E2E worlds solution, so this https://github.com/vircadia/vircadia-web and this https://github.com/vircadia/vircadia-native-core except heavily condensed so it's easier to modify/upgrade for each new bespoke use case.

Our old system, being very monolithic, while extremely performant and capable, was nearly impossible to adapt and change. So what we have now is much more dynamic but also still a work in progress, a more complete example will be published in the coming weeks.

ricardobeat•1y ago
The example shows using it to update player positions. Doesn’t Postgres add significant latency considering a 16-33ms budget for state updates? How well does this scale?
andyferris•1y ago
Generally client games optimistically carry on a few frames (and sometimes much more!) ahead of the what the server has responded with as accepted.

This is because gamers require low latency to effectively play, but things can be slightly out of sync and logic can be complex, and anti cheat can be hard to implement server side only (which is why eg fortnite and valarant install fancy client side anti cheat software too).

For a friendly game of stardew valley or turn based strategy you can afford to wait for transactions to complete and causality to be enforced.

kaliqt•1y ago
We CAN submit the change to the DB and not listen to the message on if it succeeded or not! The message will arrive eventually, it's just not necessary to await it, so you have options.
jasonjmcghee•1y ago
I had a similar reaction / question. Why not use KV store and get sub millisecond latency?
kaliqt•1y ago
So it's a bit of tradeoffs, we may add a second DB to the compose by the time we reach v1.0, but, if we had to pick the convergence of simplicity and flexibility to start, PostgreSQL is it.

We prototyped SQLite as well. It just wasn't working in the stack like we had needed.

The idea is simple: use as few components as possible to achieve the outcome. Better to have less than more initially, because we can simply add the more and extend the API, but ripping everything out and trying to trim it down is damn near impossible, especially when the platform garners widespread usage.

The decision to do the less then more instead of more then less approach was spurred by us (the wider project) always having way too much bulk and then finding it impossible to turn the ship when we needed to (https://github.com/vircadia/vircadia-native-core).

We need to be agile to reach the milestones we have set out, hence the differed approach using off the shelf parts and only adding what we need, when we need it.

koakuma-chan•1y ago
I love that you use Bun.
kaliqt•1y ago
We have to cut bloat where we can if this is to work for higher up revision games, so Bun is the only answer that balances speed and simplicity (TypeScript native).
Drakim•1y ago
How does the system separate between state changes that must be confirmed by backed compared to state changes that can be updated locally (by prediction) to give the user more snappy experience?
reedf1•1y ago
I would love to get into some game design - and something like this seems intuitive enough from my perspective as a software engineer. Forgive me if this is a naive question, but is the use case for this single-player games or multiplayer games?
kaliqt•1y ago
Definitely multiplayer games, you wouldn't really need a syncing networking layer if you're doing single player as you can store state in any method you desire, something as simple as serializing JSON to the disk for example, or up to your server. But even then, a traditional setup like Supabase might be simpler to wrap your head around if you're just handing "user" data and not "player" data in a shared world.
kaliqt•1y ago
Postgres finishes its updates sub-ms in a reasonably sized DB if optimized correctly. In terms of upper-scale (>1000 players in a somewhat real-world scenario), we're working out benchmarks to test that.

Postgres is not slow by any stretch of the imagination, but it depends on how the schema is setup and what layers you have between the user and the DB, naturally any game developer will want to tweak the client+schema before going live. The layers between we manage to make it as minimal as possible, so that shouldn't be touched, if it's too slow for a reasonable use case, it means we have more optimization to do!