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We intercepted the White House app's traffic. 77% of requests go to 3rd parties

https://www.atomic.computer/blog/white-house-app-network-traffic-analysis/
29•donutpepperoni•49m ago•8 comments

The Claude Code Source Leak: fake tools, frustration regexes, undercover mode

https://alex000kim.com/posts/2026-03-31-claude-code-source-leak/
864•alex000kim•13h ago•349 comments

TinyLoRA – Learning to Reason in 13 Parameters

https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.04118
81•sorenjan•4d ago•8 comments

TruffleRuby

https://chrisseaton.com/truffleruby/
42•tosh•3d ago•3 comments

A dot a day keeps the clutter away

https://scottlawsonbc.com/post/dot-system
170•scottlawson•5h ago•58 comments

Ministack (Replacement for LocalStack)

https://ministack.org/
150•kerblang•5h ago•29 comments

Show HN: 1-Bit Bonsai, the First Commercially Viable 1-Bit LLMs

https://prismml.com/
119•PrismML•5h ago•49 comments

OpenAI closes funding round at an $852B valuation

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/31/openai-funding-round-ipo.html
342•surprisetalk•6h ago•299 comments

U.S. exempts oil industry from protecting Gulf animals, for 'national security'

https://www.npr.org/2026/03/30/nx-s1-5745926/endangered-species-committee-hegseth-security
109•Jimmc414•1h ago•40 comments

4D Doom

https://github.com/danieldugas/HYPERHELL
138•chronolitus•4d ago•30 comments

Ordinary Lab Gloves May Have Skewed Microplastic Data

https://nautil.us/ordinary-lab-gloves-may-have-skewed-microplastic-data-1279386
63•WaitWaitWha•5h ago•16 comments

Slop is not necessarily the future

https://www.greptile.com/blog/ai-slopware-future
186•dakshgupta•12h ago•335 comments

Open source CAD in the browser (Solvespace)

https://solvespace.com/webver.pl
295•phkahler•13h ago•97 comments

Back to FreeBSD – Part 2 – Jails

https://hypha.pub/back-to-freebsd-part-2
50•vermaden•4d ago•8 comments

Teenage Engineering's PO-32 acoustic modem and synth implementation

https://github.com/ericlewis/libpo32
89•ericlewis•4d ago•22 comments

Learn Something Old Every Day, Part XVIII: How Does FPU Detection Work?

https://www.os2museum.com/wp/learn-something-old-every-day-part-xviii-how-does-fpu-detection-work/
28•kencausey•3d ago•2 comments

Inside the 'self-driving' lab revolution

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00974-2
9•salkahfi•1d ago•1 comments

Cohere Transcribe: Speech Recognition

https://cohere.com/blog/transcribe
162•gmays•10h ago•53 comments

I Traced My Traffic Through a Home Tailscale Exit Node

https://tech.stonecharioteer.com/posts/2026/tailscale-exit-nodes/
83•stonecharioteer•7h ago•37 comments

OkCupid gave 3M dating-app photos to facial recognition firm, FTC says

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2026/03/okcupid-match-pay-no-fine-for-sharing-user-photos-wit...
381•whiteboardr•8h ago•80 comments

Neanderthals survived on a knife's edge for 350k years

https://www.science.org/content/article/neanderthals-survived-knife-s-edge-350-000-years
7•Hooke•1h ago•0 comments

Why the US Navy won't blast the Iranians and 'open' Strait of Hormuz

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/iran-strait-of-hormuz/
196•KoftaBob•17h ago•520 comments

Show HN: Forkrun – NUMA-aware shell parallelizer (50×–400× faster than parallel)

https://github.com/jkool702/forkrun
120•jkool702•4d ago•30 comments

Show HN: Postgres extension for BM25 relevance-ranked full-text search

https://github.com/timescale/pg_textsearch
105•tjgreen•10h ago•34 comments

Axios compromised on NPM – Malicious versions drop remote access trojan

https://www.stepsecurity.io/blog/axios-compromised-on-npm-malicious-versions-drop-remote-access-t...
1783•mtud•23h ago•726 comments

From 300KB to 69KB per Token: How LLM Architectures Solve the KV Cache Problem

https://news.future-shock.ai/the-weight-of-remembering/
90•future-shock-ai•3d ago•6 comments

GitHub's Historic Uptime

https://damrnelson.github.io/github-historical-uptime/
412•todsacerdoti•7h ago•105 comments

Audio tapes reveal mass rule-breaking in Milgram's obedience experiments

https://www.psypost.org/audio-tapes-reveal-mass-rule-breaking-in-milgram-s-obedience-experiments-...
209•lentoutcry•3d ago•128 comments

Nematophagous Fungus

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nematophagous_fungus
39•lordgilman•4d ago•6 comments

A Primer on Long-Duration Life Support

https://mceglowski.substack.com/p/a-primer-on-long-duration-life-support
81•zdw•5d ago•21 comments
Open in hackernews

A Taxonomy of Bugs

https://ruby0x1.github.io/machinery_blog_archive/post/a-taxonomy-of-bugs/index.html
52•lissine•10mo ago

Comments

mannykannot•10mo ago
Here's a step 0 for your debugging strategy: spend a few minutes thinking about what could account for the bug. Prior to its occurrence, you are thinking about what could go wrong, but now you are thinking about what did go wrong, which is a much less open-ended question.
marginalia_nu•10mo ago
I've had large success by treating the bug as a binary search problem as soon as I identify an initial state that's correct and a terminal state that's incorrect. It seems like a lot of work, but that's underestimating just how fast binary searches are.

Depends of course on the nature of the bug whether it's a good strategy.

readthenotes1•10mo ago
I was such a bad developer that I realized I had to automate the re-running of parts of the system to find the bugs.

Of course, the code I wrote to exercise the code I wrote had bugs, but usually I wouldn't make offsetting errors.

It didn't fix all the problems I made, but it helped. And it helped to have the humility when trying to fix code to realize I wouldn't get it the first time, so should automate replication

bheadmaster•10mo ago
> I had to automate the re-running of parts of the system to find the bugs

Congratz, you've independently invented integration tests.

tough•10mo ago
I don't always test but adding a lil test after finding and fixing a bug so you don't end up there again a second time is a great practice
bheadmaster•10mo ago
Congratz, you've invented regression tests.
quantadev•10mo ago
Congrats, you've found someone who failed to invoke a buzzword that you know.

EDIT: But Acktshally `the code I wrote to exercise the code I wrote` is a description of "Unit Testing", not integration testing.

bheadmaster•10mo ago
Unit/integration tests are anything but a buzzword. And my intentions were not to belittle, but to praise.

Some actions simply make so much sense to do, that any sensible person (unaware of the concept) will start doing them given enough practice, and in process they "reinvent" a common method.

keybored•10mo ago
> And my intentions were not to belittle, but to praise.

With the stock eyeroll dismissal phrase.

quantadev•10mo ago
As far as you knew that guy was aware what Unit Testing was since well before you were born. lol. I'm sure he appreciates all your nice compliments.
bheadmaster•10mo ago
Good thing he has knights in shining armor like you to defend him from my nasty insults.
quantadev•10mo ago
Good thing you can admit what you were doing.
bheadmaster•10mo ago
Good thing you can understand sarcasm.
quantadev•10mo ago
but your sarcasm was truthful.
bheadmaster•10mo ago
but it wasn't.
quantadev•10mo ago
Well in that case...Congratz, you've invented sarcasm.
bheadmaster•10mo ago
Congratz, you've invented obnoxiousness.
quantadev•10mo ago
Not "independently reinvented" ?
readthenotes1•10mo ago
I was aware of unit testing before it had a name ... Desperation is the mother of intervention
quantadev•10mo ago
Yep, I "independently reinvent" the wheel every day I guess, because I, ya know...use wheels.
alilleybrinker•10mo ago
There's also the Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE), a long-running taxonomy of software weaknesses (meaning types of bugs).

https://cwe.mitre.org/

Animats•10mo ago
The Third-Party Bug

Is the party responsible for the bug bigger than you? If yes, it's your problem. If no, it's their problem.

marginalia_nu•10mo ago
A subcategory of the design flaw I find quite a lot is the case where the code works exactly as intended, it's just not having the desired effect because of some erroneous premise.
djmips•10mo ago
John Carmack uses a debugger