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Veo 3 and Imagen 4, and a new tool for filmmaking called Flow

https://blog.google/technology/ai/generative-media-models-io-2025/
634•youssefarizk•16h ago•373 comments

Overview of the Ada Computer Language Competition (1979)

https://iment.com/maida/computer/redref/
41•transpute•4h ago•5 comments

Convolutions, Polynomials and Flipped Kernels

https://eli.thegreenplace.net/2025/convolutions-polynomials-and-flipped-kernels/
54•mfrw•5h ago•4 comments

Building my own solar power system

https://medium.com/@joe_5312/pg-e-sucks-or-how-i-learned-to-stop-worrying-and-love-building-my-own-solar-system-acf0c9f03f3b
161•JKCalhoun•2d ago•112 comments

Gemma 3n preview: Mobile-first AI

https://developers.googleblog.com/en/introducing-gemma-3n/
335•meetpateltech•16h ago•115 comments

Clojuring the web application stack: Meditation One

https://www.evalapply.org/posts/clojure-web-app-from-scratch/index.html
100•adityaathalye•21h ago•25 comments

“ZLinq”, a Zero-Allocation LINQ Library for .NET

https://neuecc.medium.com/zlinq-a-zero-allocation-linq-library-for-net-1bb0a3e5c749
174•cempaka•11h ago•59 comments

Litestream: Revamped

https://fly.io/blog/litestream-revamped/
324•usrme•14h ago•74 comments

Withnail and I (2001)

https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/122-withnail-and-i
41•dcminter•3d ago•9 comments

What makes a good engineer also makes a good engineering organization (2024)

https://moxie.org/2024/09/23/a-good-engineer.html
192•kiyanwang•2d ago•53 comments

Writing into Uninitialized Buffers in Rust

https://blog.sunfishcode.online/writingintouninitializedbuffersinrust/
79•luu•1d ago•71 comments

Using unwrap() in Rust is Okay (2022)

https://burntsushi.net/unwrap/
6•pierremenard•2d ago•2 comments

The NSA Selector

https://github.com/wenzellabs/the_NSA_selector
250•anigbrowl•15h ago•68 comments

Deep Learning Is Applied Topology

https://theahura.substack.com/p/deep-learning-is-applied-topology
424•theahura•20h ago•168 comments

AI's energy footprint

https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/05/20/1116327/ai-energy-usage-climate-footprint-big-tech/
201•pseudolus•1d ago•194 comments

My favourite fonts to use with LaTeX (2022)

https://www.lfe.pt/latex/fonts/typography/2022/11/21/latex-fonts-part1.html
133•todsacerdoti•4d ago•38 comments

Red Programming Language

https://www.red-lang.org/p/about.html
162•hotpocket777•16h ago•86 comments

Taito-tastic: Kiki Kaikai and its Hardware

https://nicole.express/2025/pocky-but-wheres-rocky.html
29•ingve•2d ago•2 comments

Show HN: 90s.dev – Game maker that runs on the web

https://90s.dev/blog/finally-releasing-90s-dev.html
272•90s_dev•19h ago•96 comments

Why does the U.S. always run a trade deficit?

https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2025/05/why-does-the-u-s-always-run-a-trade-deficit/
235•jnord•22h ago•565 comments

A Secret Trove of Rare Guitars Heads to the Met

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/05/26/a-secret-trove-of-rare-guitars-heads-to-the-met
58•bookofjoe•8h ago•20 comments

Life before the web – Running a Startup in the 1980's (2016)

https://blog.zamzar.com/2016/07/13/life-before-the-web-running-a-startup-in-the-1980s/
43•gscott•4d ago•8 comments

Show HN: A Tiling Window Manager for Windows, Written in Janet

https://agent-kilo.github.io/jwno/
240•agentkilo•19h ago•83 comments

Linguists find proof of sweeping language pattern once deemed a 'hoax'

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/linguists-find-proof-of-sweeping-language-pattern-once-deemed-a-hoax/
96•bryanrasmussen•2d ago•99 comments

OpenAI Codex hands-on review

https://zackproser.com/blog/openai-codex-review
128•fragmede•19h ago•90 comments

Semantic search engine for ArXiv, biorxiv and medrxiv

https://arxivxplorer.com/
118•0101111101•12h ago•20 comments

Robin: A multi-agent system for automating scientific discovery

https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.13400
137•nopinsight•18h ago•18 comments

The Dawn of Nvidia's Technology

https://blog.dshr.org/2025/05/the-dawn-of-nvidias-technology.html
157•wmf•17h ago•56 comments

A simple search engine from scratch

https://bernsteinbear.com/blog/simple-search/
258•bertman•1d ago•53 comments

Gail Wellington, former Commodore executive, has died

https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/name/gail-wellington-obituary?id=58418580
95•erickhill•3d ago•39 comments
Open in hackernews

Magnus Carlsen forced into a draw by more than 143000 people playing against him

https://apnews.com/article/chess-magnus-carlsen-match-world-freestyle-grandmaster-963a977765fa02d05a14d701666dfcd7
45•namanyayg•7h ago

Comments

sfblah•7h ago
Presumably "the world" used enough engine help to do this.
somenameforme•5h ago
This is interesting! I assumed the same thing, so I just skimmed through the game with an engine. The world, on average, was definitely not cheating. As early as move 7 Magnus was outright winning!

But there's an interesting meta in that Magnus played far more passively than he normally would. And so I think he also expected he was probably playing an engine by proxy, and wanted to keep the position completely under control. If he knew the world was legit, they probably would have lost!

I'm still trying to reconcile how it came to be that the world didn't cheat though. Lowest common denominator amongst 140k+ people paired with inevitable chatter of 'Hey best engine move is blah' seems unavoidable.

Scarblac•4h ago
Maybe the non cheaters lost interest when he was winning and the cheaters held the draw?
rthnbgrredf•4h ago
I think the assumption that more than 50% of people are cheating in online chess is not correct. Another Grandmaster and ex-world champion Anand recently also did a match against 70k people and won.
somenameforme•3h ago
That's not the assumption at all. The percent of cheaters in online chess is approaching an asymptotic 0 (as a percent of all players) simply because the sites, and chess.com in particular, have gotten very good at culling them.

But things like this are social. I didn't follow this (or even know it was going on somehow) but it seems very safe to assume that somebody and probably multiple somebodies were regularly pointing out and discussing engine moves.

So my only real assumption is that a significant chunk of people would end up deferring to the engine moves rather than their own preference. Of course my implied assumption there is also that a significant chunk of people were involved in the social aspects of this, but I think that's also a fairly reasonable assumption.

squigz•2h ago
Based on a quick skim of the article, I don't think this was, for example, Twitch Chat picking moves, which might enable the social aspect you're referring to - although I'd like to point out the difficulty inherent to being in a room with many thousands of people, all spamming chess moves, and trying to find the one engine move :P
somenameforme•2h ago
It was a correspondence event, played a move a day time control on chess.com. Chat would've probably been mostly on X and other such places.
squigz•55m ago
In that case, I definitely don't believe a majority of people interested in this sort of thing would be intentionally setting out to cheat.
drewbitt•6h ago
95 percent accuracy by the world. They traded most everything and played 99 percent accurate in the second half.
globular-toast•3h ago
I wonder how many people playing legit got bored and signed off leaving it to the people using engines?
EnPissant•6h ago
Magnus Carlsen would get crushed by an engine running on an iPhone 1. Meanwhile the world has access to iPhone 16s. The entire concept is flawed. I'm guessing someone made money off it, though.
esseph•6h ago
The proper question might be: Why is this one iPhone stalemating 140k other iPhones in this particular task?

iPhone/computer/machine/etc

unsupp0rted•5h ago
Better heuristics. Even 1% better heuristics is enough of an edge in a zero-sum game.
analog31•6h ago
I don't know enough about chess, and will take your word for it. What it suggests to me is a deeper question: How do you get 143000 people to all fall in line behind a single machine, or person, making the best decision for them?
EnPissant•5h ago
If you had a military-like organization and turned 143000 people into calculators led by one (talented) person or a hierarchy, then yes, they would crush Magnus.
ars•5h ago
No they would not. If you imagine running a computer chess engine on 143,000 humans, it's not even remotely close to the amount of compute you need to win.

Humans don't win by calculation the way computers do. When you have multiple humans working together on chess they don't add up to an ultra-smart human. You are simply as smart as the smartest human in your crew, and that's it.

EnPissant•5h ago
You could absolutely form a system to harness the power of that many people. It would not happen spontaneously, but it is possible given enough effort. Calculation and memoirzation plays a huge role in chess.
brador•1h ago
Now I want to see a YouTuber hire 1000s of humans to make a human CPU. Each human can do a single simple task like a redstone block. What would their equivalent CPU clock speed be?

Could you play doom on humans?

bad_haircut72•6h ago
Cheating obviously does happen but on the whole chess is kept alive by people who do it for fun. What would be the point of beating Magnus with a computer? Would anyone get satisfaction from that?
whythre•6h ago
I mean, with Carlsen facing this sort of aggregate, large number of ‘opponents,’ yeah, I imagine quite a lot of them are cheaters.
olalonde•6h ago
Oh, sweet summer child.
Marsymars•6h ago
> Magnus Carlsen would get crushed by an engine running on an iPhone 1.

Did a quick sanity check here - this seems about right - Carlsen might be at least competitive with Pocket Fritz 4 at similar hardware performance to the iPhone 1, but that discounts the software improvements chess engines have seen over the past couple decades.

hnposter•6h ago
Reminds me of Gary Kasparov vs. The World on MSN Gaming Zone.
tedunangst•6h ago
How many people voted in complete accordance?
nurettin•6h ago
This means the world (or most of it) was not cheating!

What makes it funny is: when 143000 chess players merge, they basically become Anish Giri.

voxl•6h ago
It might be natural to jump to immediately think the majority was cheating, but as you rightly point out if they were cheating Magnus would have lost. Human players cannot compete with even a couple hours compute on stockfish let alone 24 hours.
selcuka•6h ago
It's impressive that Magnus might have won if The World hadn't forced a stalemate.

> In the Chess.com virtual chat this week, players appeared split on whether to force the draw — and claim the glory — or to keep playing against Carlsen, even if it ultimately meant a loss.

cluckindan•1h ago
It was not a stalemate, it was a threefold repetition.
gangelov•3h ago
There is the full game with some more details here: https://www.chess.com/news/view/the-world-forces-draw-in-his...
gcbill•3h ago
Perhaps it is worth considering that this was Freestyle chess and not classical chess. Which means the traditional book moves with which chess engines are trained goes out of window. I am not saying Stockfish cant beat Magnus in Freestyle chess but it makes sense to believe that Chess engines are better at classical chess when compared to freestyle.

But then again, with 24 hour time to brute force every possible combination, I guess chess engines may be better at freestyle when compared to classical chess, due to the sheer amount of creativity and calculation involved.

throwawayyy86•35m ago
It's actually the opposite. Humans fare much worse at freestyle chess because they don't have any opening theory and are unfamiliar with the patterns that arise from nonstandard opening positions. Engines don't care much about opening theory one way or another

Source: am rated 2000 fide (partly because I struggle with openings)