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Supabase MCP can leak your entire SQL database

https://www.generalanalysis.com/blog/supabase-mcp-blog
465•rexpository•6h ago•224 comments

Breaking Git with a carriage return and cloning RCE

https://dgl.cx/2025/07/git-clone-submodule-cve-2025-48384
248•dgl•6h ago•86 comments

Bootstrapping a side project into a profitable seven-figure business

https://projectionlab.com/blog/we-reached-1m-arr-with-zero-funding
177•jonkuipers•1d ago•35 comments

The Day You Became a Better Writer (2007)

https://dilbertblog.typepad.com/the_dilbert_blog/2007/06/the_day_you_bec.html
14•santiviquez•1d ago•2 comments

Smollm3: Smol, multilingual, long-context reasoner LLM

https://huggingface.co/blog/smollm3
206•kashifr•7h ago•37 comments

Radium Music Editor

http://users.notam02.no/~kjetism/radium/
136•ofalkaed•6h ago•26 comments

Dynamical origin of Theia, the last giant impactor on Earth

https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.01826
61•bikenaga•5h ago•17 comments

Brut: A New Web Framework for Ruby

https://naildrivin5.com/blog/2025/07/08/brut-a-new-web-framework-for-ruby.html
110•onnnon•6h ago•43 comments

Plants monitor the integrity of their barrier by sensing gas diffusion

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09223-4
48•Bluestein•3d ago•15 comments

Taking over 60k spyware user accounts with SQL injection

https://ericdaigle.ca/posts/taking-over-60k-spyware-user-accounts/
143•mtlynch•5d ago•44 comments

Show HN: OffChess – Offline chess puzzles app

https://offchess.com
291•avadhesh18•15h ago•112 comments

Xenharmlib: A music theory library that supports non-western harmonic systems

https://xenharmlib.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
8•retooth•1h ago•0 comments

Can an email go 500 miles in 2025?

https://flak.tedunangst.com/post/can-an-email-go-500-miles-in-2025
255•zdw•4d ago•99 comments

Ask HN: What are some cool or underrated tech companies based in Canada?

69•pedrodelfino•3h ago•37 comments

Show HN: A rain Pomodoro with brown noise, ASMR, and Middle Eastern music

https://forgetoolz.com/rain-pomodoro
39•ShadowUnknown•6h ago•25 comments

The Tradeoffs of SSMs and Transformers

https://goombalab.github.io/blog/2025/tradeoffs/
35•jxmorris12•4h ago•5 comments

GlobalFoundries to Acquire MIPS

https://mips.com/press-releases/gf-mips/
146•mshockwave•7h ago•99 comments

Ceramic: A cross-platform and open-source 2D framework in Haxe

https://ceramic-engine.com/
43•-yukari•3d ago•3 comments

Show HN: Jukebox – Free, Open Source Group Playlist with Fair Queueing

https://www.jukeboxhq.com/
89•skeptrune•8h ago•33 comments

Inertial forces (indirect terms) in problems with a central body

https://astro.theoj.org/article/141682-on-inertial-forces-indirect-terms-in-problems-with-a-central-body
9•raattgift•3d ago•0 comments

On The Meaning of Ritual

https://alicemaz.substack.com/p/on-the-meaning-of-ritual
56•jger15•3d ago•50 comments

Particle Lenia Deluxe Edition

https://www.craftlinks.art/Notebook/particle-lenia/
25•CraftingLinks•3d ago•4 comments

Blind to Disruption – The CEOs Who Missed the Future

https://steveblank.com/2025/07/08/blind-to-disruption-the-ceos-who-missed-the-future/
62•ArmageddonIt•10h ago•72 comments

New sphere-packing record stems from an unexpected source

https://www.quantamagazine.org/new-sphere-packing-record-stems-from-an-unexpected-source-20250707/
406•pseudolus•1d ago•204 comments

SVGs that feel like GIFs

https://koaning.io/posts/svg-gifs/
366•cantdutchthis•15h ago•97 comments

Mercury: Ultra-fast language models based on diffusion

https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.17298
553•PaulHoule•1d ago•229 comments

I used o3 to profile myself from my saved Pocket links

https://noperator.dev/posts/o3-pocket-profile/
497•noperator•1d ago•190 comments

Berry Script: lightweight embedded scripting language for microcontrollers

https://berry-lang.github.io/
92•hasheddan•3d ago•42 comments

Attimet (YC F24) – Quant Trading Research Lab – Is Hiring Founding Researcher

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/attimet/jobs/6LaQIc5-founding-researcher-quant
1•kbanothu•12h ago

Epanet-JS

https://macwright.com/2025/07/03/epanet-placemark
201•surprisetalk•4d ago•22 comments
Open in hackernews

Dynamical origin of Theia, the last giant impactor on Earth

https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.01826
61•bikenaga•5h ago

Comments

echelon•4h ago
Imagine if life had evolved on Earth or Theia prior to impact. Imagine if it was intelligent and played witness to the giant cataclysm.

Given that intelligence took an awfully long time to emerge from LUCA, that seems implausible. But it's fun to imagine pre-Theia "Silurians". That sort of impact would have scorched earth of any trace or remnant of their existence. It feels as though there must be sufficiently advanced civilizations out there witnessing this exact scenario play out without the necessary technology to stop it. Though that fate would be horrifying.

Another thing to think about is that shortly after the Big Bang (if there was one, Lamda-CDM or similar models holding up), was that shortly after the Big Bang the temperature of the early universe was uniformly 0-100 degrees Celsius. It may have been possible for life to originated in this primordial interstellar medium without even so much as needing a host planet or star! Just life coalescing in space itself.

That early primordial soup, if it existed, could have seeded the whole universe. Most aliens might have matching molecules and chirality if those decisions predate our galaxy.

hbrav•3h ago
That second idea (cosmic primordial soup causing universal similarity / compatibility of life) could be a great component of a sci-fi story.
MarkusQ•3h ago
That early warm interval would have been a soup of 75% H, 25% He, and 0.0000000% or so Li, with nothing heavier.

Not much to start life with.

echelon•45m ago
No metals whatsoever. That's unfortunate.
GuB-42•22m ago
Metal and hard rock are essential for life.
belinder•2h ago
Temperature on its own wouldn't be enough for life would it? Isn't everything moving around way too fast after the Big bang and therefore too far apart for whatever life there would be to find food (or whatever equivalent source of energy)
kulahan•20m ago
Temperature isn’t even close to being enough. If we didn’t have a moon, despite everything else being so good for life, we may have been stuck at the bacterial phase if we didn’t have tides, or life may have never formed at all due to minerals not being recycled, tide pools not concentrating amino acids, and constant wet-dry phases driving evolutionary pushes.

Edit: beyond that, there’s the need for a stable orbit, a stable axial tilt, a stable star (few mega flares), some kind of galactic shield a la Jupiter, and more.

andrewflnr•2h ago
> It feels as though there must be sufficiently advanced civilizations out there witnessing this exact scenario play out without the necessary technology to stop it. Though that fate would be horrifying.

I suspect this is not actually that common. Giant impacts are more common in early solar systems; things eventually settle into nice circular orbits like we have now. Whereas intelligent life does seem to take a while to evolve, so probably more common later in a solar system's life cycle.

echelon•38m ago
Uncommon for sure.

Our sun and earth won't last long enough, but Mercury's orbit is potentially unstable.

A red dwarf might harbor live bearing planets long enough to see its long-lived orbits eventually destabilize. Or perhaps witness the even rarer interstellar collision or destabilization from rogue planets, etc.

somanyphotons•2h ago
This animation makes it appear that proto-Earth was very comprehensibly torn apart, stunningly so

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theia_(hypothetical_planet)#Co...

shadowgovt•1h ago
I remember there being some modeling done to determine whether the Theia impact blew a chunk off Earth or basically re-liquified the planet. If I recall correctly, the resulting hypothesis was that the thermal load would have re-melted at least the crust (evidence for this was stacking of density in the moon, suggesting it formed out of a basically completely-liquified ball, which would have implied the crust was also liquified).

There is some interesting evidence suggesting the deeper layers remained intact, in the form of a region under the Pacific that might be the impact scar. It's an inexplicably-dense zone that causes hot-spots at its corners resulting in increased surface volcanism, like how the edges of a leaf burn before the middle in a fire.

... but on the surface? Yeah, no hiding place.

whycome•1h ago
Would oceans have remained at all?
shadowgovt•1h ago
No; I don't remember the article saying specifically but I would assume if there is no solid land left, there is no liquid water left either. Water molecules would have been blasted into the "crust soup" and eventually re-condensed into gaseous water and eventually liquid water via atmospheric regeneration after the surface settled down a bit (because the chemicals that could be gaseous would have tended to float to the top of the soup as it settled down).
nntwozz•1h ago
The pre-Theia "Silurians" as you call them, depending on technological level could have left traces in the solar system like our Parker Solar Probe or something in the Lagrange points.

Then again, how well do we know of stuff in these spaces today? It seems to me we barely have a clue of the space junk we ourselves sent up orbiting in our backyard.

readthenotes1•3h ago
The moon has 1.2% the mass of earth, so earth still got embiggened
kridsdale1•3h ago
What an epically cromulent day it was.
shadowgovt•1h ago
So the boil-down on this is "Here's a theory that says about 5-10% of Earth's mass was mostly carbon and came all at once, like if Theia was mostly carbon and we got hit by it, so we did some simulation and the idea Theia was mostly carbon isn't ruled out by our current understanding of how our solar system might have formed?"

If so, cool. It's a wise step to check the hypothesis to make sure it isn't immediately contradicting what we already understand.