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Mechanical Watch: Exploded View

https://fellerts.no/projects/epoch.html
185•fellerts•1h ago•29 comments

Git Notes: Git's coolest, most unloved­ feature (2022)

https://tylercipriani.com/blog/2022/11/19/git-notes-gits-coolest-most-unloved-feature/
169•Delgan•7h ago•51 comments

LibRedirect – Redirects popular sites to alternative privacy-friendly frontends

https://libredirect.github.io
277•riffraff•10h ago•72 comments

TPU Deep Dive

https://henryhmko.github.io/posts/tpu/tpu.html
293•transpute•14h ago•50 comments

Allocators Are Monkeys with Typewriters

https://tgmatos.github.io/allocators-are-for-monkeys-with-typewriters/
17•gilgamesh3•3d ago•6 comments

Low-Temperature Additive Manufacturing of Glass

https://www.ll.mit.edu/research-and-development/advanced-technology/microsystems-prototyping-foundry/low-temperature
58•LorenDB•4d ago•11 comments

Sound As Pure Form: Music Language Inspired by Supercollider, APL, and Forth

https://github.com/lfnoise/sapf
149•mindcrime•14h ago•31 comments

Mbake – A Makefile formatter and linter, that only took 50 years

https://github.com/EbodShojaei/bake
162•rainmans•2d ago•69 comments

P-Hacking in Startups

https://briefer.cloud/blog/posts/p-hacking/
240•thaisstein•4d ago•114 comments

Harry Brearley, the creator of stainless steel (2016)

https://nautil.us/the-father-of-modern-metal-235939/
51•bookofjoe•4h ago•13 comments

Largest Wildlife Bridge Spanning 10 Lanes of CA 101 Is Nearly Complete

https://www.thedrive.com/news/worlds-largest-wildlife-bridge-spanning-10-lanes-of-101-freeway-is-nearly-complete
79•PaulHoule•3d ago•31 comments

Show HN: I'm a doctor and built a responsive breathing app for anxiety and sleep

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/lungy-breathing-exercises/id1545223887
28•lukko•7h ago•10 comments

LaborBerlin: State-of-the-Art 16mm Projector

https://www.filmlabs.org/wiki/en/meetings_projects/spectral/laborberlin16mmprojector/start
190•audionerd•20h ago•34 comments

How fast are Linux pipes anyway?

https://mazzo.li/posts/fast-pipes.html
42•keepamovin•9h ago•3 comments

Type Inference Zoo

https://zoo.cuichen.cc/
137•mpweiher•4d ago•3 comments

The Great Egg Heist

https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/interactive/2025/eggs-prices-gouging-cal-maine-investigation/
18•tintinnabula•3d ago•8 comments

Denmark's Archaeology Experiment Is Paying Off in Gold and Knowledge

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/denmark-let-amateurs-dig-for-treasure-and-it-paid-off/
181•sohkamyung•4d ago•94 comments

Load Test GlassFlow for ClickHouse: Real-Time Dedup at Scale

https://www.glassflow.dev/blog/load-test-glass-flow-for-click-house-real-time-deduplication-at-scale
10•super_ar•3d ago•3 comments

Airpass – Easily overcome WiFi time limits

https://airpass.tiagoalves.me/
344•herbertl•4d ago•232 comments

uBlock Origin Lite Beta for Safari iOS

https://testflight.apple.com/join/JjTcThrV
330•Squarex•1d ago•93 comments

Requiem for a Solar Plant

https://7goldfish.com/articles/Requiem_for_a_solar_plant.php
94•akkartik•18h ago•85 comments

Phoenix.new – Remote AI Runtime for Phoenix

https://fly.io/blog/phoenix-new-the-remote-ai-runtime/
580•wut42•2d ago•252 comments

When Humans Learned to Live Everywhere

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/18/science/ancient-human-adaptation-environments.html
32•pepys•3d ago•12 comments

U.S. bombs Iranian nuclear sites

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/ckg3rzj8emjt
1019•mattcollins•16h ago•2988 comments

Delta Chat is a decentralized and secure messenger app

https://delta.chat/en/
278•Bluestein•1d ago•170 comments

Using Microsoft's New CLI Text Editor on Ubuntu

https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/06/microsoft-edit-text-editor-ubuntu
269•jandeboevrie•4d ago•281 comments

Scaling our observability platform by embracing wide events and replacing OTel

https://clickhouse.com/blog/scaling-observability-beyond-100pb-wide-events-replacing-otel
193•valyala•1d ago•95 comments

Unexpected security footguns in Go's parsers

https://blog.trailofbits.com/2025/06/17/unexpected-security-footguns-in-gos-parsers/
210•ingve•4d ago•118 comments

Tell HN: Beware confidentiality agreements that act as lifetime non competes

357•throwarayes•1d ago•225 comments

Show HN: Progressor – coach that breaks down big goals into actionable steps

https://progressor.me/
21•murahovsky•9h ago•13 comments
Open in hackernews

Low-Temperature Additive Manufacturing of Glass

https://www.ll.mit.edu/research-and-development/advanced-technology/microsystems-prototyping-foundry/low-temperature
58•LorenDB•4d ago

Comments

jiehong•3h ago
Very cool indeed!
giantg2•2h ago
Interesting. I wonder if this could be used to print telescope mirrors if you could get an "ink" that has high thermal stability, or if that would be in conflict with the low temperature printing.
hbrav•2h ago
That seems like it would be very difficult. For a telescope mirror you want a very good surface finish, and that's one thing that 3D printing does very poorly.
giantg2•2h ago
The polishing process could be done differently. If you could print the specific parabolic shape, that could save a lot of time hogging out. Although slumping might work better if surface ends up smoother. Im not sure of the annealing process might go.
taneq•1h ago
There's a few combined-process setups coming out these days that use 3D printing as a first pass and then machine the print in-place before sintering etc. which saves a ton of setup and fixturing time.
sheepscreek•1h ago
Yes! This is exactly what I had in mind. Sintering (thanks for the term) combined with this 3D printing technique could still make the process faster and lead to more consistent results.

Now that’s I think about it, one could in theory use the exact same process for plastic-polymer lenses too, albeit at lower temperatures (better).

bhickey•1h ago
The parabola of a telescope mirror generally deviates from a sphere by tens of micrometers at best. Figuring happens after grinding and after polishing. Slumping is neat, but I've heard from the grognards that they can shatter if the temperature changes too quickly.
sheepscreek•1h ago
Maybe with further augmentation to the process. The 3D printing seems to leave pretty big grooves on the glass - which can distort the passage of light. For any real optical application, that will have to be removed somehow. Such as baking the glass structure in a high heat oven with a centrifuge/fast spinning base and some kind of mould to put the initial piece on.

The high heat and spin action could, in theory, fuse the individual grooves for a more uniform dispersion of light, and the mould shape would further press on the glass to maintain or alter its shape to be closer to a lens.

Finish that off with fine “sanding” and/or polish, and that might do the trick?

Honestly, experimentation might be the only way to find out.

metalman•2h ago
this is a highly missleading "anouncement" about sodium silicate "glass"(ish),stuff

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_glass

but if you want to plqy with some, it is readily avail8ble as a "cement" used for attaching seals to wood stove doors, and countless other low teck applications the comon name of "water glass" refers to it's solubility, so.....

gsf_emergency_2•1h ago
https://patents.google.com/patent/US11499234B2/en

I wonder what the other inorganics ("functional additive, embodied in some cases by Silver flakes") are, exactly. In their flagship product.

And the size of the nozzle, why not the easier to remember 400 micrometers?

kragen•1h ago
So it sounds like a single-component process, no powder bed or vat of hardener liquid. "Silicate solution" presumably means waterglass rather than something like tetraethyl orthosilicate, and if it hardens rather than foaming up at 250°, it's either because they're doing the process under pressure or, more likely, the other inorganics they mention are donating polyvalent cations such as Ca⁺⁺, Mg⁺⁺, Al³⁺, or Fe⁺⁺ to crosslink the silicate residues.

Probably the polyvalent cations are bound up in a salt that has negligible solubility at room temperature, so the ink doesn't harden in the reservoir, but which can react with the silicate at 250°, maybe a hydroxide or carbonate. Calcium sulfate is probably too soluble.

Presumably the silica filler is amorphous and serves to strengthen the glass and reduce the TCE, though it probably raises the cost. Maybe it also makes the paste thixotropic without needing to include organics like carboxymethylcellulose which would be hard to remove later. And I guess maybe it could react directly with the waterglass to solidify it, in effect raising the waterglass's modulus out of the water-soluble region, without requiring any polyvalent cations. Silica fume is the most likely form of silica here.

If anyone digs up more details, I'd love to see them.

Hmm, I see gsf_emergency_2 found this patent from 02020: https://patents.google.com/patent/US11499234B2/en which is later than Dercuano but earlier than Derctuo and Dernocua. But its priority date is from a provisional patent application from 02019, so even Dercuano doesn't count as prior art, even if it anticipates some of the claims. Also, though, I don't see anything that anticipates this process in notes like https://dercuano.github.io/notes/flux-deposition.html and https://dercuano.github.io/notes/powder-bed-3d-printing.html, which suggests that it wasn't as obvious as it sounds.

The patent says, "curing the material to evolve gaseous water," which makes it sound like thick sections would foam up. (You have to heat it over a length of time quadratic in section thickness to permit water to diffuse through the nascent solid.) And supposedly that is the purpose of the heating, rather than provoking the other reactions I speculated about above.

There are some interesting notes in the patent about promising functional fillers.

It confirms that the silica is fumed silica, and suggests as alternatives fumed alumina (sapphire) or fumed titania (rutile or anatase), which are not products I had heard of, though titania nanoparticles are common as a white pigment in paint and in food. Waterglass can definitely crosslink with aluminate sources such as metakaolin, as used in "geopolymer cement". Titanate is news to me, if true.

It also confirms my inference that the fumed silica makes the ink thixotropic, at 15 wt%, though it uses the phrasing, "introduces a yield stress into the material".

I'm definitely going to use that phrase the next time I'm making mayonnaise.

"Why are you stirring that bowl of egg yolks and oil with a fork?"

"I'm introducing a yield stress into the material!"