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Open Source @Github

Save your disk, write files directly into RAM with /dev/shm

https://hiandrewquinn.github.io/til-site/posts/save-your-disk-write-files-directly-into-ram-with-dev-shm/
16•hiAndrewQuinn•40m ago•5 comments

AlphaGenome: AI for better understanding the genome

https://deepmind.google/discover/blog/alphagenome-ai-for-better-understanding-the-genome/
334•i_love_limes•9h ago•99 comments

Launch HN: Issen (YC F24) – Personal AI language tutor

213•mariano54•9h ago•191 comments

Kea 3.0, our first LTS version

https://www.isc.org/blogs/kea-3-0/
37•conductor•3h ago•16 comments

Alternative Layout System

https://alternativelayoutsystem.com/scripts/#same-sizer
80•smartmic•4h ago•9 comments

Robots that learn

https://openai.com/index/robots-that-learn/
67•ulrischa•3h ago•19 comments

The time is right for a DOM templating API

https://justinfagnani.com/2025/06/26/the-time-is-right-for-a-dom-templating-api/
60•mdhb•4h ago•29 comments

How much slower is random access, really?

https://samestep.com/blog/random-access/
26•sestep•3d ago•4 comments

Matrix v1.15

https://matrix.org/blog/2025/06/26/matrix-v1.15-release/
95•todsacerdoti•3h ago•28 comments

Show HN: Magnitude – Open-source AI browser automation framework

https://github.com/magnitudedev/magnitude
36•anerli•5h ago•14 comments

A Review of Aerospike Nozzles: Current Trends in Aerospace Applications

https://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/12/6/519
61•PaulHoule•8h ago•29 comments

Snow - Classic Macintosh emulator

https://snowemu.com/
188•ColinWright•14h ago•68 comments

Senators reintroduce App Store bill to rein in 'gatekeeper power'

https://9to5mac.com/2025/06/25/senators-reintroduce-app-store-bill-to-rein-in-gatekeeper-power-in-the-app-economy/
50•janandonly•2h ago•21 comments

SigNoz (YC W21, Open Source Datadog) Is Hiring DevRel Engineers (Remote)(US)

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/signoz/jobs/cPaxcxt-devrel-engineer-remote-us-time-zones
1•pranay01•5h ago

Show HN: I built an AI dataset generator

https://github.com/metabase/dataset-generator
114•matthewhefferon•8h ago•22 comments

"Why is the Rust compiler so slow?"

https://sharnoff.io/blog/why-rust-compiler-slow
132•Bogdanp•4h ago•140 comments

A new pyramid-like shape always lands the same side up

https://www.quantamagazine.org/a-new-pyramid-like-shape-always-lands-the-same-side-up-20250625/
611•robinhouston•1d ago•151 comments

Shifts in diatom and dinoflagellate biomass in the North Atlantic over 6 decades

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0323675
37•PaulHoule•6h ago•2 comments

Puerto Rico's Solar Microgrids Beat Blackout

https://spectrum.ieee.org/puerto-rico-solar-microgrids
335•ohjeez•1d ago•191 comments

Introducing Gemma 3n

https://developers.googleblog.com/en/introducing-gemma-3n-developer-guide/
254•bundie•6h ago•116 comments

Memory safety is table stakes

https://www.usenix.org/publications/loginonline/memory-safety-merely-table-stakes
56•comradelion•4h ago•47 comments

Lateralized sleeping positions in domestic cats

https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(25)00507-X?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS096098222500507X%3Fshowall%3Dtrue
89•EvgeniyZh•5h ago•44 comments

Typr – TUI typing test with a word selection algorithm inspired by keybr

https://github.com/Sakura-sx/typr
31•Sakura-sx•3d ago•18 comments

The Business of Betting on Catastrophe

https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the-business-of-betting-on-catastrophe/
60•anarbadalov•3d ago•27 comments

“My Malformed Bones” – Harry Crews’s Counterlives

https://harpers.org/archive/2025/07/my-malformed-bones-charlie-lee-harry-crews/
3•Caiero•3d ago•0 comments

Muvera: Making multi-vector retrieval as fast as single-vector search

https://research.google/blog/muvera-making-multi-vector-retrieval-as-fast-as-single-vector-search/
84•georgehill•13h ago•7 comments

Access BMC UART on Supermicro X11SSH

https://github.com/zarhus/zarhusbmc/discussions/3
54•pietrushnic•9h ago•9 comments

Ambient Garden

https://ambient.garden
288•fipar•3d ago•51 comments

US economy shrank 0.5% in the first quarter, worse than earlier estimates

https://apnews.com/article/economy-tariffs-trump-gdp-shrink-86d1f15e66c646ac4ce88ffc0a956942
275•Aloisius•4h ago•95 comments

Writing a basic Linux device driver when you know nothing about Linux drivers

https://crescentro.se/posts/writing-drivers/
413•sbt567•4d ago•58 comments
Open in hackernews

DeepSpeech Is Discontinued (2020)

https://github.com/mozilla/DeepSpeech
48•LorenDB•1d ago

Comments

dabinat•1d ago
It was discontinued 5 years ago - I’m not sure why it took so long to archive the repo.

https://discourse.mozilla.org/t/future-of-deepspeech-stt-aft...

HelloUsername•1d ago
Perhaps OP URL can be changed to https://www.phoronix.com/news/Mozilla-DeepSpeech-Discontinue...
LorenDB•1d ago
I'd change it, except this submission is past the edit window. Perhaps dang or tomhow will see this and change it for me :)
altairprime•1d ago
You should email them about that!
HelloUsername•1d ago
Then comments should be moved hither: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44380572
altairprime•1d ago
If you email that to the mods, they’ll do so :)
xeonmc•1d ago
Imagine an alternate timeline where Mozilla had named this project “FreeSpeech” instead as a free and open TTS solution.
totetsu•8h ago
We regret to announce that the freespeech project is now being transitioned to archive mode.

Thanks to everyone who contributed, submitted issues, suggested improvements, or simply forked in anger. I don’t really use it anymore, so I can’t really maintain it.

You might consider migrating to one of these thriving alternatives: • statevoice • echo-chamber.js

echelon•1d ago
My personal little conspiracy theory is that Google pays Mozilla as an antitrust shield.

A lot of us pretty much assume that much, but I think it goes much deeper.

I think Google pays and maintains a working relationship with the CEO of Mozilla (current and former) to purposely keep the organization rudderless, uncompetitive, and shrinking.

Mozilla spends its money building a 3D VR metaverse here, a bunch of AI models it later scraps over there, a web3 / distributed social program, etc. It scraps Rust, doesn't invest into Firefox. Just silly toys and experiments.

That nice CEO salary is hush money.

Just a fun little pet theory, totally not based on evidence.

Teever•1d ago
I don't know if there's a direct quid pro quo relationship between the CEO of Mozilla and Google but I feel quite confident that Google absolutely influences the organization in ways beyond just the cash injection to make it rudderless, uncompetitive and shrinking as you say.

It could be as simple as ex-Google employees at lower levels than CEO who are paid by Google take positions at Mozilla, or more subtle things like guiding the direction of the organization through standards boards.

It would be really fascinating to look at the org charts of Mozilla past and present and try and build the network between people who worked at Google or Google related organizations before, during, and after their time at Mozilla.

Because you're absolutely right that the organization is so absolutely dysfunctional that it can't just be incompetence, it has to be absolute malice.

Devorlon•1d ago
Yes simple things such as becoming employed at Mozilla to perform corporate espionage for Google.
riehwvfbk•22h ago
Corporate espionage targeting an open-source project?
Teever•17h ago
White collar crime is very much a real thing and some of the most successful organizations got that way because they broke the law.

We don't live in a meritocracy and nice guys finish last.

That's just how things are.

CamouflagedKiwi•1d ago
Has a nice sound to it but Hanlon's razor says: never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by incompetence. I'd be impressed if this was the case but I expect neither side is sufficiently competent or malicious to explain it.
nopelynopington•16h ago
Not heard of Hanlon's razor but I'll be quoting that
altairprime•1d ago
> “Towards the end of 2004 I sent a note to somebody I knew here and saying that I was interested in anything that they might have and it turned out that Google was interested in Firefox. They liked the product and they thought it would be good to support its development, so eventually they hired myself and several other people from the Mozilla community to continue development on it.”

https://mozillamemory.org/detailview.php%3Fid=977.html

Presumably then Google developed a competing browser so they could collect more data and not come into constant conflict with Mozilla’s insistence on client-side-only data processing — but, as the interview above notes, the initial engagement appears to be because a coder suggested Google pay for Firefox development.

nopelynopington•16h ago
Firefox is already an excellent and fast browser and people just don't use it. I think it's a marketing problem. Google, Microsoft, Brave, etc all put a lot of money and resources into promoting their browsers, pushing them at an OS level (with legal care), using ads etc. For Firefox to compete they'd need to spend a lot more of their money marketing and end up building far fewer fun toys and experiments, and they could still never achieve the same level as MS or Google.

I think I'd rather they keep innovating

ChrisNorstrom•14h ago
I was part of the first generation Mozilla FireFox fan. Yep, I had the "Get FireFox" T-Shirt and everything. I came over from Netscape Navigator. After all these years honestly, good riddance. The glitches, the bugs, the crashes, the instability, and it took years or was it decades for them to make it so that extentions don't break on every update. Too little too late. There's no reason for me to go back. We already have the bad memories, and firefox comes with a lot of bad emotions for it to feel new and fresh again. Imagine Mozilla saying "Okay guys we redid FireFox again this time, do you want to try it?" NO.
toss1•9h ago
>>I think I'd rather they keep innovating

Yes, but innovating and then killing the innovations, e.g., most recently Pocket, is not really innovating in any useful sense. When something like Pocket starts getting traction then gets killed for no apparent reason, it does seem like more circumstantial evidence to support the above thesis that Google is paying Mozilla just as an increasingly weak anti-trust shield

nopelynopington•3h ago
Was pocket getting traction? It's been around since 2007 and Wikipedia says it had 17 million users in 2015. In an internet of billions of users that's not many.

Google have often killed innovative and popular products (reader, picasa, chromecast, stadia, panoramio) but I doubt anyone would believe that's it's evidence of some kind of infiltrator sabotaging the company.

trod1234•2h ago
People stop using things which don't work or stop working on the regular.

Its not a marketing problem, its a market problem.

The only money in the current market is in ads/surveillance and that's basically a requirement to compete. They can't achieve the same level as MS or Google because of sabotage, and an adverse market.

In some circles its called tortuous interference of a contract, but the bar to prove it is impossibly high so companies can strategically make changes to dependencies that force costs on a competitor as a dominant market player.

Do you know how many times Firefox has had bug tickets opened for Google, and Cloudflare, and others where those companies basically broke the web for everyone on that browser because their silent internal changes to captcha's and other systems didn't play nice with competitors browsers which respect privacy more than others? Change management is a solved problem, so the only reason this happens is because of purposeful asymmetry here where FTC enforcement has failed.

These breakages happens a lot, every few months on the regular going back more than a decade.

How do you attract people's attention to use your browser and deal with the brokenness, when competitors constantly break it? These type of toy projects.

ipsum2•1d ago
I've been using Nvidia's parakeet model, it's been better than Whisper v3 large and smaller. Only supports English.

https://huggingface.co/nvidia/parakeet-tdt-0.6b-v2

nico•1d ago
Does it need a newer GPU? Or can it run on just CPU?

Would it run on a raspberry pi?

GaggiX•1d ago
Look up for faster whisper or distilled whisper models, smaller models run quite nicely but perform poorly outside of English, if you are interested in a different language it's better to finetune it (HuggingFace has a huge amount of finetuned Whisper models).
ipsum2•1d ago
If you want real-time, it requires a GPU, but can be underpowered. CPU is a little slower but works fine.
lupusreal•1d ago
Best CPU TTS that can run on something like a raspberry pi is Piper. It can do real time synthesis on a raspberry pi and on a real computer it runs several times faster with negligible performance cost. I use it for 'reading' ebooks when my eyes get tired. The quality is roughly on par with where Mac OS's TTS was ~10 years ago (the last time I used it.) You can tell it's TTS, but it's good enough that you can become accustomed to it fairly easily.

https://github.com/rhasspy/piper

GaggiX•1d ago
They are talking about STT, not TTS, but as a TTS piper is very good and works nicely on a raspberry pi, I agree.
dv35z•1d ago
What voices do you recommend? The ones I had checked out (about a year ago) - the voices were mostly european-sounding, and flat, and not so natural-sounding. Is Piper the best open-source text-to-speech engine out there?
haiku2077•23h ago
You can also try Kokoro and Sherpa.

If this is for personal use the best local TTS is to grab a Mac, set the system voice to one of the current Siri voice models, and then use the 'say' command in the terminal. Yes, really. The nonbinary voice #5 in particular does really well at technical terminology.

100xlong•1d ago
are there any linux/mac apps that allow people to use parakeet for daily dictation like SuperWhisper?
ipsum2•1d ago
Sort of, check out https://github.com/senstella/parakeet-mlx.
PeterStuer•16h ago
In my side by side testing of Whisper and Parakeet in transcribing Euro-English meeting recordings, Whisper produced the better result, but Parakeet was faster.

I'm sticking with Whisper as it is fast enough for my use case.

msgodel•1d ago
I still prefer festival, it's fast, it's in all the package repos, and I don't like automations having realistic voices.
i80and•1d ago
They're opposites: DeepSpeech is speech to text, where Festival is TTS
quentindanjou•1d ago
It seems that the team that used to work on DeepSpeech then worked on coqui-ai STT https://github.com/coqui-ai/STT and now recommends using OpenAI Whisper (https://github.com/openai/whisper)