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Vercel April 2026 security incident

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/vercel-confirms-breach-as-hackers-claim-to-be-sell...
640•colesantiago•15h ago•359 comments

A Brief History of Fish Sauce

https://www.legalnomads.com/fish-sauce/
134•vinhnx•20h ago•58 comments

Stop trying to engineer your way out of listening to people

https://ashley.rolfmore.com/stop-trying-to-engineer-your-way-out-of-listening-to-people/
113•walterbell•9h ago•25 comments

The Bromine Chokepoint

https://warontherocks.com/cogs-of-war/the-bromine-chokepoint-how-strife-in-the-middle-east-could-...
180•crescit_eundo•11h ago•87 comments

Claude Token Counter, now with model comparisons

https://simonwillison.net/2026/Apr/20/claude-token-counts/
37•twapi•4h ago•7 comments

Monumental ship burial beneath ancient Norwegian mound predates the Viking Age

https://phys.org/news/2026-04-monumental-ship-burial-beneath-ancient.html
13•pseudolus•2d ago•1 comments

Sudo for Windows

https://github.com/microsoft/sudo
47•luispa•5h ago•22 comments

Show HN: Run TRELLIS.2 Image-to-3D generation natively on Apple Silicon

https://github.com/shivampkumar/trellis-mac
123•shivampkumar•5h ago•21 comments

Turtle WoW classic server announces shutdown after Blizzard wins injunction

https://www.pcgamer.com/games/world-of-warcraft/turtle-wow-classic-server-announces-shutdown-afte...
176•Brajeshwar•13h ago•150 comments

Mechanical Keyboard Sounds – A listening Museum

https://sheets.works/data-viz/keyboard-sounds
71•akashwadhwani35•4d ago•28 comments

Changes in the system prompt between Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7

https://simonwillison.net/2026/Apr/18/opus-system-prompt/
260•pretext•18h ago•152 comments

Swiss AI Initiative (2023)

https://www.swiss-ai.org
37•doener•6h ago•13 comments

2,100 Swiss municipalities showing which provider handles their official email

https://mxmap.ch/
104•doener•6h ago•33 comments

Prove you are a robot: CAPTCHAs for agents

https://browser-use.com/posts/prove-you-are-a-robot
79•lukasec•4d ago•38 comments

Scientific datasets are riddled with copy-paste errors

https://www.sciencedetective.org/scientific-datasets-are-riddled-with-copy-paste-errors/
63•jruohonen•10h ago•9 comments

The RAM shortage could last years

https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/914672/the-ram-shortage-could-last-years
242•omer_k•22h ago•269 comments

A cache-friendly IPv6 LPM with AVX-512 (linearized B+-tree, real BGP benchmarks)

https://github.com/esutcu/planb-lpm
8•debugga•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: A lightweight way to make agents talk without paying for API usage

https://juanpabloaj.com/2026/04/16/a-lightweight-way-to-make-agents-talk-without-paying-for-api-u...
20•juanpabloaj•5h ago•5 comments

A Common MVP Evolution: Service to System Integration to Product (2017)

https://www.skmurphy.com/blog/2017/08/07/a-common-evolution-service-to-system-integration-to-prod...
8•skmurphy•2d ago•2 comments

Archive of BYTE magazine, starting with issue #1 in 1975

https://archive.org/details/byte-magazine-1975-09
558•DamnInteresting•2d ago•145 comments

Recovering Windows Live Writer Files

https://benovermyer.com/blog/2026/04/recovering-windows-live-writer-files/
18•bovermyer•5d ago•6 comments

Interesting Map Geometry and Mathematics

https://www.markrjohnsongames.com/2026/04/11/ultima-ratio-regum-0-11-update-57-interesting-map-ge...
18•Hooke•1d ago•0 comments

The seven programming ur-languages (2022)

https://madhadron.com/programming/seven_ur_languages.html
317•helloplanets•21h ago•120 comments

Six Levels of Dark Mode (2024)

https://cssence.com/2024/six-levels-of-dark-mode/
64•Akcium•10h ago•27 comments

Show HN: A working reference implementation of context engineering

https://github.com/outcomeops/context-engineering
39•linsys•2d ago•11 comments

I wrote a CHIP-8 emulator in my own programming language

https://github.com/navid-m/chip8emu
59•pizza_man•10h ago•14 comments

Nanopass Framework: Clean Compiler Creation Language

https://nanopass.org/
126•NordStreamYacht•4d ago•29 comments

Show HN: Faceoff – A terminal UI for following NHL games

https://www.vincentgregoire.com/faceoff/
109•vcf•11h ago•35 comments

SPEAKE(a)R: Turn Speakers to Microphones for Fun and Profit [pdf] (2017)

https://www.usenix.org/system/files/conference/woot17/woot17-paper-guri.pdf
169•Eridanus2•20h ago•69 comments

Can your AI rewrite your code in assembly?

https://lemire.me/blog/2026/04/05/can-your-ai-rewrite-your-code-in-assembly/
3•signa11•24m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Making code last a long time

https://twitter.com/jonathan_blow/status/1923414922484232404
28•robinhouston•11mo ago

Comments

turtleyacht•11mo ago
Make and maintain the virtual machine that runs your program, which executes custom instructions.

See uxn and justification: https://wiki.xxiivv.com/site/now_lie_in_it.html

And https://100r.co/site/story.html

kevmo314•11mo ago
> The way you make code last a long time is you minimize dependencies that are likely to change and, to the extent you must take such dependencies, you minimize the contact surface between your program and those dependencies.

A lot of value is driven from those dependencies though. Zapier as a pointed example: Zapier sans dependencies is ... well I don't even know. So sure, you could avoid dependencies at all cost, but at some point you might end up deleting the reason someone else wants to use your code in the first place.

Of course, if you're writing code only for yourself that will totally work, but most professional software engineers are not -- it's a balance and it's not fair to say all they have to do is stop writing glue code.

j45•11mo ago
Your example of Zapier dependence resonates - being sure to put a simple layer between your code and Zapier is the critical component.

The code makes the same call to a Zapier type command but it could be routed to Zapier today, and somewhere else in the future.

This can take a nominal amount of time longer than integrating Zapier directly.

It could be a couple more tables to setup and manage, or it can be done in the code somewhere.

caseyohara•11mo ago
I've been working on the same product for ~13 years and I can confidently say the most important thing to ensure the longevity and long-term maintainability of a codebase is aggressive minimization of dependencies.

Engineering is all about compromises. If near-term velocity is more important to you than long-term evolution and maintainability, then go ahead and use all of the dependencies if it allows you to ship faster. But that is a form of technical debt that you will have to pay down eventually.

QuadrupleA•11mo ago
What are you doing with Zapier that you couldn't do with your own code, or carefully curated small set of libraries? For networked services, the REST APIs of popular providers (Stripe, AWS, etc.) are usually kept backwards compatible for a long time.
henning•11mo ago
I was about to comment how easy Zig makes it to make platform layers where the right code for an OS is compiled at compile-time and AFAIK there is no runtime cost, it's basically conditional compilation. But the Zig language itself is incredibly unstable and code you write now probably won't compile a year from now.
taylorallred•11mo ago
This seems like another case where jblow's opinions are guided by his experience as a game dev. Games can be "finished" and never touched again. I think I mostly agree with him that software could be made to be timeless to some degree. But, in the world of web apps and saas, the culture is to offload much of the work to third party libraries/APIs which locks you into a never-ending cycle of dependency management. I don't know if this culture is totally necessary (maybe to ship fast and keep up with security updates?), but in a world where users expect software to be constantly improving you can't expect anything to be "done". Maybe you could get close if you built everything in-house, but even still you have to keep up with security flaws.
QuadrupleA•11mo ago
From experience - if you look at the "security flaws" in detail that updates and patches address, an app with good dependency hygiene is rarely vulnerable to them, and doesn't need the purported fixes. So in those cases it's mostly a comforting mirage that your software is improving as you do "security updates" on your libraries and dependencies, except in rare cases.

And, security updates should not break your app! What breaks your app are feature changes, API changes, and the like, which is a breach of backwards compatibility and IMHO kind of lazy and hostile on the part of the library developers. It creates massive unnecessary work for developers, and unnecessary bugs and problems for millions of end users.

boznz•11mo ago
Software in a closed ecosystem should run for the life of that ecosystem, an example would be Firmware on a non-connected device. eg the ECU in my car from 1991.
juancn•11mo ago
I kind of agree. There's another world, where software lasts a really long time, it's a much better world, but just a few of us get to live in it.

Building tools for other engineers is where it's at, the library maintainers for long lived libraries, like libc or any collections library.

If you get a sorting algorithm in a mainstream language library, it will likely live forever (or forever-ish in software terms).

The harder the problem you solve (in the math sense) the more likely that if you craft that code properly and carefully, it will outlive you.

burnt-resistor•11mo ago
Well, when I was in school, the goals were wide compatibility and portability. I was writing network C code in the 00's that could run without any changes on Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, HP-UX, AIX, SGI, SCO, and Solaris.

Code only "rots" when its dependencies rot from assholes who churn the language or break API promises. These low expectations lead to normalization of deviancy that churn without clear and present value is "okay", when it's merely job security or coding theater to appease others that everything must be touched and changed constantly or otherwise it's "broken".