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Hand: open-source Robot Hand

https://github.com/pollen-robotics/AmazingHand
102•vineethy•2h ago•21 comments

Writing a competitive BZip2 encoder in Ada from scratch in a few days (2024)

https://gautiersblog.blogspot.com/2024/11/writing-bzip2-encoder-in-ada-from.html
49•etrez•3d ago•7 comments

Archaeologists Discover Tomb of First King of Caracol

https://uh.edu/news-events/stories/2025/july/07102025-caracol-chase-discovery-maya-ruler.php
68•divbzero•3d ago•5 comments

Wttr: Console-oriented weather forecast service

https://github.com/chubin/wttr.in
172•saikatsg•8h ago•62 comments

My bank keeps on undermining anti-phishing education

http://moritz-mander.de/blog/my_bank_keeps_on_undermining_anti-phishing_education/
161•cheesepaint•2h ago•85 comments

Ex-Waymo engineers launch Bedrock Robotics to automate construction

https://techcrunch.com/2025/07/16/ex-waymo-engineers-launch-bedrock-robotics-with-80m-to-automate-construction/
422•boulos•22h ago•298 comments

“Reading Rainbow” was created to combat summer reading slumps

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/to-combat-summer-reading-slumps-this-timeless-childrens-television-show-tried-to-bridge-the-literacy-gap-with-the-magic-of-stories-180986984/
250•arbesman•14h ago•108 comments

ESA’s Moonlight programme: Pioneering the path for lunar exploration (2024)

https://www.esa.int/Applications/Connectivity_and_Secure_Communications/ESA_s_Moonlight_programme_Pioneering_the_path_for_lunar_exploration
61•nullhole•3d ago•13 comments

The rise of AI as a threat to the S&P 500 [pdf]

https://autonomy.work/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Sp-500-capital-at-risk_-3.pdf
39•seangrvs•2h ago•20 comments

I want an iPhone Mini-sized Android phone (2022)

https://smallandroidphone.com/
359•asimops•18h ago•504 comments

Rejoy Health (YC W21) Is Hiring

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/rejoy-health/jobs/DCsxNgv-software-engineer
1•rituraj_rhealth•3h ago

Upcoming coordinated security fix for all Matrix server implementations

https://matrix.org/blog/2025/07/security-predisclosure/
131•notpushkin•4h ago•40 comments

BB(6) Is Hard (Antihydra) (2024)

https://www.sligocki.com//2024/07/06/bb-6-2-is-hard.html
12•Fibra•3d ago•1 comments

Code Execution Through Email: How I Used Claude to Hack Itself

https://www.pynt.io/blog/llm-security-blogs/code-execution-through-email-how-i-used-claude-mcp-to-hack-itself
94•nonvibecoding•8h ago•45 comments

FOSS4G Europe 2025 live streaming [video]

https://2025.europe.foss4g.org/livestream/
68•altilunium•5h ago•8 comments

Altermagnets: The first new type of magnet in nearly a century

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2487013-weve-discovered-a-new-kind-of-magnetism-what-can-we-do-with-it/
376•Brajeshwar•23h ago•92 comments

NINA: Rebuilding the original AIM, AOL Desktop, Yahoo and ICQ platforms

https://nina.chat/
49•ecliptik•7h ago•21 comments

I was wrong about robots.txt

https://evgeniipendragon.com/posts/i-was-wrong-about-robots-txt/
131•EPendragon•14h ago•135 comments

Xbox Hacks: The A20 (2021)

https://connortumbleson.com/2021/07/19/the-xbox-and-a20-line/
81•mattweinberg•11h ago•14 comments

Metaflow: Build, Manage and Deploy AI/ML Systems

https://github.com/Netflix/metaflow
81•plokker•18h ago•9 comments

Inside the box: Everything I did with an Arduino starter kit

https://lopespm.com/hardware/2025/07/15/arduino.html
120•lopespm•2d ago•14 comments

Retro gaming YouTuber Once Were Nerd sued and raided by the Italian government

https://www.androidauthority.com/once-were-nerd-youtuber-copyright-lawsuit-3577995/
185•BallsInIt•3h ago•151 comments

A Tale of Two Red-Bearded Visionaries

https://nemanjatrifunovic.substack.com/p/a-tale-of-two-red-bearded-visionaries
19•whobre•3d ago•3 comments

Intel's retreat is unlike anything it's done before in Oregon

https://www.oregonlive.com/silicon-forest/2025/07/intels-retreat-is-unlike-anything-its-done-before-in-oregon.html
218•cbzbc•19h ago•325 comments

Pgactive: Postgres active-active replication extension

https://github.com/aws/pgactive
323•ForHackernews•1d ago•83 comments

Artisanal handcrafted Git repositories

https://drew.silcock.dev/blog/artisanal-git/
214•drewsberry•19h ago•49 comments

Show HN: A 'Choose Your Own Adventure' written in Emacs Org Mode

https://tendollaradventure.com/sample/
140•dskhatri•17h ago•18 comments

A 1960s schools experiment that created a new alphabet

https://www.theguardian.com/education/2025/jul/06/1960s-schools-experiment-created-new-alphabet-thousands-children-unable-to-spell
84•Hooke•1d ago•100 comments

Mistakes Microsoft made in the Xbox security system (2005)

https://xboxdevwiki.net/17_Mistakes_Microsoft_Made_in_the_Xbox_Security_System
85•davikr•14h ago•33 comments

Show HN: Improving search ranking with chess Elo scores

https://www.zeroentropy.dev/blog/improving-rag-with-elo-scores
169•ghita_•1d ago•55 comments
Open in hackernews

New battery has life so long you may never have to recharge

https://www.neowin.net/news/this-amazing-new-battery-has-life-so-long-you-may-never-have-to-recharge/
47•Bluestein•4h ago

Comments

pixelpoet•4h ago
Great, we can use them to store all that energy we'll get from our fusion reactors!
rbanffy•4h ago
Excellent for all those applications where you need... Almost no power at all.
RobotToaster•4h ago
I get your point, but there's a surprising number of those.
willvarfar•4h ago
The example given in the article was a pacemaker.

I'm guessing there _are_ applications where you don't need a lot of power, but you do want it over a long time and without needing to charge or replace batteries.

It's also easy to imagine places where, whilst power is available, there are manufacturing advantages in not needing to. For example it might make economic sense to have self-powered wirelessly-connected sensors on car bumpers just to avoid the manufacturing cost of wiring them all up?

Am4TIfIsER0ppos•4h ago
Wireless sensors? I'm sure the engineers will see the ether works fine in a lab but as soon as you try it in the real world it vanishes.
thebruce87m•3h ago
We already have wireless sensors in cars - tyre pressure monitors.
crinkly•4h ago
Pacemakers need a hell of a lot of power for a short amount of time occasionally. To do that you need to store it in something which can be discharged quickly and is low impedance. Which is a capacitor.

This thing generates so little power you couldn’t charge a capacitor up quickly enough or keep one charged with the leakage.

burnt-resistor•3h ago
You're nothing thinking this through. It could trickle charge a capacitor or supercapacitor that has a very low self-discharge rate. There's a circuit called a Joule Thief that can extract usable power from very low voltage sources. There are other tricks to do voltage multiplication like using diodes and capacitors, but there are also micropower switching boost converters too.
crinkly•2h ago
Yes I know this. I’m a qualified EE. Go do the numbers on a supercap with quoted leakage and a decent error margin.
robin_reala•3h ago
You’re talking about an implantable defibrilator, not a pacemaker?
crinkly•2h ago
No. The heart is relatively high impedance. You need a low impedance source to drive it even on a trivial basis.
shakna•3h ago
A lot of pacemakers on the market today are remote access. They can be dialled into by your doctor and adjusted, in concert with live alerts and logs. Thats not infintisimal power requirements. (Cellular is cheap, but not nothing.)

Whilst we do have long lasting applications in places, a pacemaker was a poor choice of the article.

Bluestein•3h ago
I shudder at the hackability potential of these things ...
willvarfar•4h ago
It is easy to imagine a future where tiny nano-electronics are embedded into pretty much everything everywhere. The plants in the field that call for treatment at the first sign of insects or infection, for example.
voidUpdate•4h ago
So what's the maximum voltage and current that you can pull from one?
shakna•3h ago
"an open-circuit voltage of 2.75 mV"
petard•4h ago
This reminds me of those break-through articles about using Scotch tape as mass storage medium.
HPsquared•4h ago
Just don't peel it, as the resulting X-rays will probably wipe it!

https://www.technologyreview.com/2008/10/23/217918/x-rays-ma...

burnt-resistor•3h ago
Directions unclear: made graphene instead - https://youtu.be/LwmxSjyd
bravesoul2•3h ago
Does this involve a sharpie
barbegal•4h ago
Not comparable to a real battery any time soon based on the paper https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2025/cc/d4cc0...

> The perovskite betavoltaic cell achieved impressive parameters, including a short-circuit current density of 15.01 nA cm−2, an open-circuit voltage of 2.75 mV, and an energy conversion efficiency of 1.83%, all of which represent significant improvements over previous works.

mr_mitm•4h ago
Will it ever be comparable to a "real" battery? The energy output has a clear upper limit. Are there materials that produce only beta particles at a high enough rate per gram that could power a cell phone with a half life of more than a few days?
barbegal•3h ago
Assuming you could get these to 10% efficiency (which is theoretically possible) and a phone needs 0.2W of energy to function then you would need a source capable of supplying 2W of energy (of which 1.8W would be dissipated as heat). The phone would be fairly hot all the time but 2W could be dissipated without it overheating in most environments. Strontium 90 generates 0.95 W/g so in theory a few grams of strontium 90 would be enough to power your phone for many decades (the half life is 28 years). But if someone were to accidentally put such a phone into an insulating material it might overheat and become a dangerous radioactive mess!
close04•3h ago
> and a phone needs 0.2W of energy to function

For an arbitrary definition of "function". I don't think a modern phone would achieve a meaningful function at that level. The cellular modem alone blows past that budget many times over. Even an old rotary phone went over 1W.

Apple's efficient 5G "C1" modem used in the iPhone 16e is still at ~0.7W. The Qualcomm models used in the iPhone 16 are 0.8-0.9W.

exe34•3h ago
It might charge a capacitor/"real battery" most of the day and then be available when needed.
close04•2h ago
At the end of the day if the phone draws more power than the power source provides, you're limited to bursts of activity until the capacitor is depleted and then the phone is dead while the capacitor recharges. 0.2W is barely enough to power an idling phone, let alone charge an extra capacitor.

Today we juggle with ~15+Wh batteries (the "capacitor") and 30+W fast chargers (the "power source") and still need better.

Filligree•3h ago
If you found such a material, would you want it in your pocket? Or someone else's pocket, where it could break in an accident?
devrandoom•3h ago
I think the tradition is someone else's pocket in some other country.
Archelaos•2h ago
You are right. They are definitely not ordinary consumer products. However, they might be useful where recharging or exchanging a battery is impossible or associated with serious disadvantages.

For example, in the past cardiac pacemakers had been used with nuclear batteries. However, there is a risk that the pacemaker will be “forgotten” after death, and something that is actually radioactive hazardous waste will be disposed of via crematoria or cemeteries.

Another area of application for nuclear batteries is space exploration.

habibur•4h ago
These batteries provide milliwatt level power. Enough to power, maybe a clock circuit without display.
bravesoul2•3h ago
Probably good for the dark, remote, lots of space applications. E.g. a radio beacon near the poles.
blueflow•3h ago
Maximum wattage of the battery would also be maximum wattage of the radio signal.
ColonelPhantom•3h ago
Wouldn't it be feasible to add a tiny battery or capacitor? Assuming the radio doesn't need to transmit continuously it can be powered via those which are then powered by the "forever battery".
bravesoul2•3h ago
Yeah you'd need a lot of them. Instead if a AA battery maybe you need a truck's worth of this. But if it means you dont need to go back for a while...
gpderetta•3h ago
RTGs (radioisotope thermoelectric generator) are already in use for both deeps space and remote applications. Not sure how this differ. Maybe better efficiency? Still, why is it called a battery instead of a generator?

Oh, maybe size as RTGs are bulky.

edit: there have been very small RTGs for use in pacemakers. The difference is really that these are not thermal but use the beta flux directly.

wongarsu•3h ago
The Soviet Union also had mass-produced RTGs for powering equipment in remote locations on earth, like light houses

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta-M

OneFriend2575•4h ago
This nuclear battery tech is wild. Tiny devices that could run for decades without a recharge changes the game for things like sensors, medical implants or space gear. Still early but if they improve the efficiency, it could seriously shift how we think about power.
blitzar•3h ago
Tech bros love reinventing things from the 70's

http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2015/ph241/degraw2/

adhamsalama•4h ago
I feel like I've been reading news like this for over years, yet these breakthroughs never make it to market.
cynicalsecurity•3h ago
Ctrl+F "nuclear"

Nope. I'm fine with recharging my batteries every day, thank you very much.

The least the society needs is nuclear waste thrown all over the place. People still didn't learn how to recycle regular batteries.

blueflow•3h ago
Except from the name ("radioactivity", "nuclear") its not the same thing that killed people in chernobyl.
nlitsme•3h ago
i don't think you can 'recharge' a nuclear battery.
blitzar•3h ago
Bombard it with radiation and transmute it to a decaying element
gagan2020•3h ago
The Thing that the heading missed,

"which could power small devices for decades"

sevensor•3h ago
How does a cell like this work? Is it directly turning the flux of electrons from beta decay into usable current?
incomingpain•3h ago
This one is beta, so yes direct conversion to current. ITs not a matter of alligator clips on left and right sides; and your internal wires need survive radiation and usually high heat.
gglanzani•3h ago
Unless you want to power a device with Microsoft Teams running on it
grishka•3h ago
Dear battery technology claimant,

Thank you for your submission of proposed new revolutionary battery technology. Your new technology claims to be superior to existing lithium-ion technology and is just around the corner from taking over the world. Unfortunately your technology will likely fail, because:

[ ] it is impractical to manufacture at scale.

[ ] it will be too expensive for users.

[ ] it suffers from too few recharge cycles.

[ ] it is incapable of delivering current at sufficient levels.

[ ] it lacks thermal stability at low or high temperatures.

[ ] it lacks the energy density to make it sufficiently portable.

[ ] it has too short of a lifetime.

[ ] its charge rate is too slow.

[ ] its materials are too toxic.

[ ] it is too likely to catch fire or explode.

[ ] it is too minimal of a step forward for anybody to care.

[ ] this was already done 20 years ago and didn't work then.

[ ] by this time it ships li-ion advances will match it.

[ ] your claims are lies

dinfinity•1m ago
Cute, but you're supposed to actually mark the applicable ones.

More importantly, there is no claim that it is better than li-ion. They're targeting low power devices used for very long times where replacement is impossible or undesirable.

giantg2•3h ago
My guess is these could have biomedical applications. Other than that, I doubt they would become widespread. The radioactive nature makes it unlikely to be used on the consumer market outside of maybe a few niches due to disposal concerns and the low power output limits it's possible applications.