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Qwen3-Coder: Agentic coding in the world

https://qwenlm.github.io/blog/qwen3-coder/
315•danielhanchen•5h ago•114 comments

Why you can't color calibrate deep space photos

https://maurycyz.com/misc/cc/
57•LorenDB•2h ago•36 comments

More than you wanted to know about how Game Boy cartridges work

https://abc.decontextualize.com/more-than-you-wanted-to-know/
201•todsacerdoti•7h ago•19 comments

Algorithms for Modern Processor Architectures

https://lemire.github.io/talks/2025/sea/sea2025.html
71•matt_d•3h ago•5 comments

Android Earthquake Alerts: A global system for early warning

https://research.google/blog/android-earthquake-alerts-a-global-system-for-early-warning/
192•michaefe•8h ago•64 comments

Swift-erlang-actor-system

https://forums.swift.org/t/introducing-swift-erlang-actor-system/81248
230•todsacerdoti•7h ago•45 comments

We built an air-gapped Jira alternative for regulated industries

https://plane.so/blog/everything-you-need-to-know-about-plane-air-gapped
157•viharkurama•7h ago•96 comments

TapTrap: Animation‑Driven Tapjacking on Android

https://taptrap.click/
30•Bogdanp•3h ago•1 comments

Don't animate height

https://www.granola.ai/blog/dont-animate-height
296•birdculture•3d ago•166 comments

Subliminal learning: Models transmit behaviors via hidden signals in data

https://alignment.anthropic.com/2025/subliminal-learning/
129•treebrained•8h ago•31 comments

TODOs aren't for doing

https://sophiebits.com/2025/07/21/todos-arent-for-doing
280•todsacerdoti•13h ago•167 comments

A media company demanded a license fee for an Open Graph image I used

https://alistairshepherd.uk/writing/open-graph-licensing/
99•cheeaun•2h ago•35 comments

Comparing the Glove80 and Maltron Keyboards

https://tratt.net/laurie/blog/2025/comparing_the_glove80_and_maltron_keyboards.html
38•ltratt•4h ago•18 comments

Gemini North telescope discovers long-predicted stellar companion of Betelgeuse

https://www.science.org/content/article/betelgeuse-s-long-predicted-stellar-companion-may-have-been-found-last
106•layer8•10h ago•27 comments

Show HN: Phind.design – Image editor & design tool powered by 4o / custom models

https://phind.design
36•rushingcreek•9h ago•12 comments

Hegel Dust

https://www.bookforum.com/print/3201/hegel-dust-62209
13•pepys•1d ago•2 comments

I watched Gemini CLI hallucinate and delete my files

https://anuraag2601.github.io/gemini_cli_disaster.html
89•anuraag2601•8h ago•106 comments

Firebender (YC W24) Is Hiring

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/firebender/jobs/yisDXr5-founding-engineer-generalist
1•kevo1ution•5h ago

Show HN: benchmark code snippets perf improvements with multiple llm's

https://github.com/thomasdavis/llm-benchmark/blob/main/tutorial.md
3•thomasfromcdnjs•2d ago•1 comments

CAMARA: Open-source API for telecom and 5G networks

https://www.gsma.com/solutions-and-impact/technologies/networks/operator-platform-hp/camara-2/
7•teleforce•2h ago•1 comments

Font Comparison: Atkinson Hyperlegible Mono vs. JetBrains Mono and Fira Code

https://www.anthes.is/font-comparison-review-atkinson-hyperlegible-mono.html
182•maybebyte•12h ago•121 comments

Tiny Code Reader: a $7 QR code sensor

https://excamera.substack.com/p/tiny-code-reader-a-7-qr-code-sensor
116•jamesbowman•10h ago•36 comments

Show HN: Compass CNC – Open-source handheld CNC router

https://www.compassrouter.com
114•camchaney•3d ago•25 comments

Fun with gzip bombs and email clients

https://www.grepular.com/Fun_with_Gzip_Bombs_and_Email_Clients
113•bundie•7h ago•36 comments

My favourite German word

https://vurt.org/articles/my-favourite-german-word/
62•taubek•3d ago•56 comments

Many lung cancers are now in nonsmokers

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/22/well/lung-cancer-nonsmokers.html
110•alexcos•11h ago•139 comments

OSS Rebuild: open-source, rebuilt to last

https://security.googleblog.com/2025/07/introducing-oss-rebuild-open-source.html
140•tasn•13h ago•48 comments

Gitea Private, Fast, Reliable DevOps Platform

https://about.gitea.com/
31•Bluestein•2d ago•31 comments

First Hubble telescope images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

https://bsky.app/profile/astrafoxen.bsky.social/post/3luiwnar3j22o
91•jandrewrogers•10h ago•20 comments

The Perils of an .xyz Domain

https://www.spotvirtual.com/blog/the-perils-of-an-xyz-domain
7•PaulHoule•1h ago•3 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: A word of the day that doesn't suck

34•jsomers•15h ago
I’ve long thought that the Word of the Day was a wasted genre. The goal should be to give you words you can use; to enrich your understanding of words you already know; or at least to use words to tell you something neat about the world.

Instead, what you usually get is words that will never be used in conversation, held up as curios. Some examples from Dictionary.com’s daily email: thewless, balladmonger, vagility, contextomy. These words are... not useful.

I’ve always thought I could do better. My friend Ben recently created a daily puzzle game, called Bracket City, launched here on HN [1], which I like because it takes about the same amount of time as Wordle but has some of the variety and artistry of a good crossword.

Ben agreed to let me write a word of the day for the game’s audience. We’ve collected them all here: https://bracket.city/words. It’s such a joy to write -- every day, I pay homage to a word I love or use or have newly discovered. I find myself paying more attention to words I encounter, thinking if they deserve a place.

It’s also fun for another reason. Many years ago I wrote a blog post, "You’re probably using the wrong dictionary" [2], that made the rounds and actually still finds new readers today. It was about how the modern-day dictionaries we find by default on our iPhones and web browsers are actually kind of bureaucratic and lifeless. Through a writer I love, John McPhee, I rediscovered Webster’s 1913 dictionary, which feels like it was written by a thinking person who loved words. I still consult it all the time. Writing a word of the day has reminded me just how delightful and useful Webster’s old dictionary is -- and reacquainted me with the OED, which I now look to every day, and which I discovered you can access with your library card.

Some of my favorite entries so far: sophisticated, twee, gravitas, blockbuster, meteorologist, send, bid. There are more than 175 now -- and more coming once a day, every day, for as long as Bracket City stands.

To sign up to see each word of the day as it’s published, go to https://bracket.city/words.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43622719

[2] https://jsomers.net/blog/dictionary

Comments

dang•10h ago
Related:

Thank HN: The puzzle game I posted here 6 weeks ago got licensed by The Atlantic - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43622719 - April 2025 (169 comments)

Show HN: Bracket City – A daily, exploded (?) crossword puzzle - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43160542 - Feb 2025 (53 comments)

Y_Y•10h ago
No cap, but the first ten-ish were already well known to me. Might be worth mentioning you're pitching below not-particularly-well-read this guy.
wahnfrieden•10h ago
With entries like "marketing" the point must be in the elaboration and not in the introduction of the word
Dilettante_•10h ago
Bruh said "no cap" on HN
janfoeh•9h ago
> Bruh

Those who live in glass houses should not attempt to hang paintings, methinks.

1attice•9h ago
They could use those little sticky velcro 'Commander' strips and it would work out ok
janfoeh•9h ago
Point well taken.
Dilettante_•8h ago
Could it be at all possible that I did that on purpose? Perchance I chose to make the exact "mistake" the GP made, and call him out for it at the same time because the irony of it would be funny?

You must think other people are deeply, abysmally, troglodytically stupid if you thought one could make that comment without self-awareness.

janfoeh•5h ago
Maybe you did, maybe you didn't. If you did, then maybe you did not do a very good job of communicating that? I mean, until telepathy over TCP finally arrives, all we have to go on is basically ASCII.

> You must think other people are deeply, abysmally, troglodytically stupid if you thought one could make that comment without self-awareness.

I suspect you inhabit a different part of the Internet than me. I envy you.

xnx•10h ago
https://wordsmith.org/words/today.html doesn't suck
wnc3141•10h ago
I think it would be interesting to incorporate loan words or phrases. Often these words become loan words because there's no good English equivalents so loan words/phrases sort of expand our ability to grapple these concepts.
InspGadget4343•7h ago
how very entrepreneurial of you
seabass•10h ago
When it comes to getting a deeper understanding of words you already know, two of my favorite resources are Etymonline [1] and the 1913 edition of Webster’s dictionary [2]. And if you’re curious why 1913 specifically, this post [3] gives a great overview.

[1] https://www.etymonline.com/

[2] https://www.websters1913.com/

[3] https://jsomers.net/blog/dictionary

rjh29•2h ago
The 3rd post was written by the OP!
fsckboy•7h ago
what would make a "word of the day" stream compelling to me would be a word that reflected recent news. William Safire did this to some extent in his weekly column in the NY Times and it was usually pretty interesting.

a way to increase the discovery of relevance could be looking up the etymologies of words that pop up, I'm always fascinated by how complex and interesting etymologies are

deepzn•3h ago
Nice, anoter James Somers blog post/project, I like. Love your articles, dude. And have a bunch on my reading list to catch up on.