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VoidZero Is Joining Cloudflare

https://blog.cloudflare.com/voidzero-joins-cloudflare/
457•coloneltcb•6h ago•219 comments

Retro-Tech Parenting

https://havenweb.org/2026/05/28/retro-tech.html
139•mawise•3h ago•77 comments

Ian's Secure Shoelace Knot

https://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/secureknot.htm
371•mooreds•8h ago•149 comments

KVarN: Native vLLM backend for KV-cache quantization by Huawei

https://github.com/huawei-csl/KVarN
82•theanonymousone•4h ago•7 comments

When AI Builds Itself: Our progress toward recursive self-improvement

https://www.anthropic.com/institute/recursive-self-improvement
72•meetpateltech•3h ago•83 comments

They’re made out of weights

https://maxleiter.com/blog/weights
1285•MaxLeiter•20h ago•558 comments

Sum-product, unit distances, and number fields

https://www.erdosproblems.com/forum/thread/blog:6
35•robinhouston•3d ago•0 comments

Show HN: Cost.dev (YC W21) – making agents cost-aware and cheaper to call

https://cost.dev/
10•akh•8h ago•1 comments

The desperation of NYTimes

https://rozumem.xyz/posts/16
206•rozumem•2h ago•182 comments

Failing grades soar with AI usage, dwindling math skills in Berkeley CS classes

https://www.dailycal.org/news/campus/academics/failing-grades-soar-as-professors-see-greater-ai-u...
646•littlexsparkee•19h ago•606 comments

Zettascale (YC S24) Is Hiring Founding FPGA Engineers

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/zettascale/jobs/O9S1vqO-founding-engineer-fpga-rtl-asic-arc...
1•el_al•2h ago

Samurai City

https://worksinprogress.co/issue/samurai-city/
16•zdw•2d ago•1 comments

Making Debian or Fedora persistent live images

https://sigwait.org/~alex/blog/2026/05/28/smdBC8.html
17•henry_flower•3d ago•1 comments

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Bay Model

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Army_Corps_of_Engineers_Bay_Model
176•tosh•2d ago•46 comments

AI, Ashby Engineering, and the future

https://www.ashbyhq.com/blog/engineering/ai-ashby-engineering-and-the-future
10•fredley•4h ago•2 comments

Gaussian Point Splatting

https://momentsingraphics.de/Siggraph2026.html
153•ibobev•8h ago•57 comments

Show HN: Uruky (EU-based Kagi alternative) now has Image Search and URL Rewrites

https://uruky.com/?il=en
173•BrunoBernardino•10h ago•174 comments

3D-printed book turns its own G-code into raised lettering

https://www.designboom.com/design/3d-printed-book-manual-darius-ou-benson-chong/
53•surprisetalk•2d ago•24 comments

Elixir v1.20: Now a gradually typed language

https://elixir-lang.org/blog/2026/06/03/elixir-v1-20-0-released/
930•cloud8421•1d ago•371 comments

Wind and solar generated more power than gas globally in April 2026

https://electrek.co/2026/05/20/in-a-first-wind-solar-generated-more-power-than-gas-globally-april...
293•speckx•5h ago•259 comments

Gemma 4 12B: A unified, encoder-free multimodal model

https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/technology/developers-tools/introducing-gemma-4-12b/
990•rvz•1d ago•368 comments

Sagrada Família Lego set

https://www.lego.com/en-us/product/sagrada-familia-21065
141•speckx•3h ago•114 comments

French-Iranian author Marjane Satrapi, author of 'Persepolis', dies at 56

https://www.france24.com/en/culture/20260604-french-iranian-author-marjane-satrapi-author-of-pers...
360•fidotron•8h ago•110 comments

Artificial intelligence is not conscious – Ted Chiang

https://www.theatlantic.com/philosophy/2026/06/no-artificial-intelligence-is-not-conscious/687378/
685•lordleft•1d ago•1195 comments

Show HN: Prela – Purely Algebraic Relation Combinators

https://github.com/remysucre/prela
52•remywang•3d ago•13 comments

I built a vulnerable app and spent $1,500 seeing if LLMs could hack it

https://kasra.blog/blog/i-spent-1500-seeing-if-llms-could-hack-my-app/
354•jc4p•18h ago•185 comments

DNS is for people, not for IT infrastructure

https://louwrentius.com/dns-is-for-people-not-for-it-infrastructure.html
35•louwrentius•19h ago•57 comments

Under Notre Dame, a 'dig of the century' unearths 1,700 years of history

https://apnews.com/article/notre-dame-dig-treasures-paris-archaeology-roman-dae41f792c1402faf32a8...
149•cobbzilla•2d ago•37 comments

Kiki – a tiny homepage construction kit with a small footprint

https://tomotama.com/kiki
106•tobr•4d ago•65 comments

Ask HN: So what happened to Facebook "localhost" tracking?

57•juliusceasar•7h ago•65 comments
Open in hackernews

OpenEoX to Standardize End-of-Life (EOL) and End-of-Support (EOS) Information

https://openeox.org/
31•feldrim•1y ago

Comments

feldrim•1y ago
An SBOM-like approach to EOL/EOS issues is on the way.
rollcat•1y ago
I think the only large projects that presently take SBOMs seriously are Nix, Guix, and Go (non-cgo). Bootstrapping is non-trivial, but at least builds are reproducible and can be compared against existing binaries.

"Oh, just write plain C". Which compiler do you mean? GCC? LLVM/clang? On top of what OS/kernel? What firmware? Etc.

Arnavion•1y ago
Some distros packaging Rust software (OpenSUSE at least) also transparently set up CARGO=cargo-audit to get embedded SBOMs.
wallrat•1y ago
How does this relate to the OWASP/Ecma Common Lifecycle Enumeration Specification (https://tc54.org/cle/)?
wpollock•1y ago
In my experience, many software projects become abandoned and no notice is given. I don't see how this standard helps in such cases.
repelsteeltje•1y ago
I think it will take a while for people to realize this effort looked great, but wasn't the right approach. Or no silver bullet, at least.

The presentation with a simple diagram that combines this data with an sbom to yield "information" gives me navel gazing vibes of UML being the future of coding.

Just as architecture didn't equate to well designed and maintainable software, I fear this initiative won't fix horribly outdated and vulnerable deployments. Software life cycle, deprecation, abandonment, supply chains are mostly a process problem, standards and technology won't fix that.

Arnavion•1y ago
It doesn't force someone who already wasn't checking their dependencies for CVEs / maintained-ness to start doing that. It does make someone who *was* doing that be able to show they're doing that in some standard way.

In other words it doesn't force you to add an SBOM + EOX checker step to your CI pipeline. But if your compliance auditor wants you to check your dependencies, adding such a standardized step makes it easier to satisfy the auditor.

repelsteeltje•1y ago
I'm basing this mostly off first hand and anecdotal evidence - but through the years I've found that the major contribution of audits lies in having to think about the checkboxes every now and then. And what they mean in the context of my organization or project.

Rarely have I found that compliance to the goals was an issue in themselves. Or that making changes to tick a checkbox correlated to material improvements.

That is to say that if this leads to more efficiency and makes it easier for compliance audits and such, I fear is stream lining the least impactful part of its goals.

hiatus•1y ago
> Rarely have I found that compliance to the goals was an issue in themselves. Or that making changes to tick a checkbox correlated to material improvements.

I am confused when I hear people say stuff like this. I guess if you turn on a tool and never look at it again, it won't result in material improvements. But complying with regulations or a particular compliance regime should _absolutely_ result in at least _some_ material improvement to your security posture. Like you can implement segregation of duties just as a checkbox, or use the requirement to revisit the way you gate changes to production, as just one example.

T3OU-736•1y ago
Htm. So, how does this compare, and/or is different from https://endoflife.date?
Arnavion•1y ago
The standard is for software to report its own EOL / EOS status. The website you linked is the opposite direction - it's aggregating that status for a certain set of software.
T3OU-736•1y ago
Aha. Very good point. SW self-reporting requires buy-in, though, which seems like a pretty high barrier.

I am very much hoping the effort succeeds, but I am also mindful of the fact that the site to which I have linked is more successful by virtue of having better coverage.

captn3m0•1y ago
We (endoflife.date) are also excited about OpenEoX.
mud_dauber•1y ago
JEDEC has long maintained an EOL/EOS standard for semiconductors. This was a big part of a previous PM gig. Sounds boring, and it was. But having a process kept us out of serious hot water.
Hackbraten•1y ago
That EoX logo though.

Every organization or committee that designs a logo should be legally required to have at least one teenager on the board to prevent accidental goatse or other inadvertent blunders.

genter•1y ago
Goatse has been around long enough that the teenagers are now in their thirties.
repelsteeltje•1y ago
It depends on where you're coming from. Your code base, that is.

If it's already outstanding, you spend a lot of time revalidating what you already know and it's often a noisy process with many false positives.

If it's in a horrible state, however, the regulation often leaves a lot of wiggle room where you do some work to achieve, say, PCI compliance and then spend a lot of time arguing why this and that don't apply in your specific case.

So admitted, the is probably some improvement in the latter case but it's hardly proportional.

So IMHO, it doesn't help those of good will & expertise and does too little for the negligent. It adds noise and in the end quality still depends on factors other than compliance and certification.