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Show HN: I spent 6 years building a ridiculous wooden pixel display

https://benholmen.com/blog/kilopixel/
175•benholmen•1h ago•44 comments

I Asked Four Former Friends Why We Stopped Speaking-Here's What I Learned (2023)

https://www.vogue.com/article/reconnecting-with-ex-friends
32•mooreds•50m ago•4 comments

Part 1: A Deep Dive into Rust and C Memory Interoperability

https://notashes.me/blog/part-1-memory-management/
85•hyperbrainer•2h ago•36 comments

Open IP Camera Firmware

https://openipc.org/à
111•zakki•3d ago•58 comments

Facts will not Save You - AI, History and Soviet Sci-Fi

https://hegemon.substack.com/p/facts-will-not-save-you
68•veqq•2d ago•25 comments

Gigabyte removes PCIe 5.0 support from B650 motherboards in latest BIOS update

https://videocardz.com/newz/gigabyte-removes-unofficial-pcie-5-0-support-from-b650-motherboards-in-latest-bios-update
55•josephcsible•1d ago•24 comments

Perplexity is using stealth, undeclared crawlers to evade no-crawl directives

https://blog.cloudflare.com/perplexity-is-using-stealth-undeclared-crawlers-to-evade-website-no-crawl-directives/
665•rrampage•4h ago•357 comments

Job-seekers are dodging AI interviewers

https://fortune.com/2025/08/03/ai-interviewers-job-seekers-unemployment-hiring-hr-teams/
302•robtherobber•10h ago•473 comments

My Ideal Array Language

https://www.ashermancinelli.com/csblog/2025-7-20-Ideal-Array-Language.html
79•bobajeff•5h ago•27 comments

Century-Old Stone “Tsunami Stones” Dot Japan's Coastline (2015)

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/century-old-warnings-against-tsunamis-dot-japans-coastline-180956448/
95•deegles•5h ago•29 comments

Show HN: Tiny logic and number games I built for my kids

https://quizmathgenius.com/
31•min2bro•2h ago•14 comments

How we built Bluey’s world

https://www.itsnicethat.com/features/how-we-built-bluey-s-world-cartoon-background-scenery-art-director-catriona-drummond-animation-090725
189•skrebbel•3d ago•103 comments

Scientists shine a laser through a human head

https://spectrum.ieee.org/optical-brain-imaging
73•sohkamyung•5h ago•27 comments

Show HN: Kimu – Open-Source Video Editor

https://www.trykimu.com/
15•robinroy03•1h ago•1 comments

GHz spiking neuromorphic photonic chip with in-situ training

https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.14272
96•juanviera23•6h ago•11 comments

Lidar-based GIS map of New Hampshire stone walls

https://nhgranit.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=25930044fe2b4d8fb5cab3ec07565e83
23•rob•3h ago•3 comments

Drawafish.com Postmortem: Whoops

https://aldenhallak.com/blog/posts/draw-a-fish-postmortem.html
77•hallak•5h ago•18 comments

Perfecting anti-aliasing on signed distance functions

https://blog.pkh.me/p/44-perfecting-anti-aliasing-on-signed-distance-functions.html
75•ibobev•7h ago•19 comments

Show HN: Mathpad – Physical keypad for typing 100+ math symbols anywhere

https://www.crowdsupply.com/summa-cogni/mathpad
11•MagneLauritzen•1d ago•9 comments

The Toyota Corolla of programming

https://deprogrammaticaipsum.com/the-toyota-corolla-of-programming/
116•secstate•4h ago•106 comments

ScreenCoder: An intelligent UI-to-code generation system

https://github.com/leigest519/ScreenCoder
30•Dowwie•4h ago•9 comments

Customizing tmux and making it less dreadful

https://evgeniipendragon.com/posts/customizing-tmux-and-making-it-less-dreadful/
8•EPendragon•2h ago•4 comments

Do LLMs identify fonts?

https://maxhalford.github.io/blog/llm-font-identification/
43•alexmolas•4d ago•21 comments

Mastercard deflects blame for NSFW games being taken down

https://www.pcgamer.com/games/mastercard-deflects-blame-for-nsfw-games-being-taken-down-but-valve-says-payment-processors-specifically-cited-a-mastercard-rule-about-damaging-the-brand/
461•croes•8h ago•450 comments

Genetic correlates of social stratification in Great Britain (2019) [pdf]

https://research.vu.nl/ws/portalfiles/portal/127420931/Genetic_correlates_of_social_stratification_in_Great_Britain.pdf
50•djoldman•5h ago•38 comments

So you want to parse a PDF?

https://eliot-jones.com/2025/8/pdf-parsing-xref
365•UglyToad•19h ago•196 comments

New quantum state of matter found at interface of exotic materials

https://phys.org/news/2025-07-quantum-state-interface-exotic-materials.html
130•janandonly•3d ago•24 comments

Writing a good design document

https://grantslatton.com/how-to-design-document
502•kiyanwang•21h ago•128 comments

Every Visual Workflow Tool Is Just Excel for Developers Who Gave Up

https://medium.com/@mohamedalibenothmen1/every-visual-workflow-tool-is-just-excel-for-developers-who-gave-up-f7261090fbc8
48•dalibenothmen•2h ago•23 comments

Tesla withheld data, lied, misdirected police to avoid blame in Autopilot crash

https://electrek.co/2025/08/04/tesla-withheld-data-lied-misdirected-police-plaintiffs-avoid-blame-autopilot-crash/
297•Hamuko•2h ago•97 comments
Open in hackernews

Every Visual Workflow Tool Is Just Excel for Developers Who Gave Up

https://medium.com/@mohamedalibenothmen1/every-visual-workflow-tool-is-just-excel-for-developers-who-gave-up-f7261090fbc8
48•dalibenothmen•2h ago

Comments

taeric•2h ago
I'm super sympathetic to this. Used to cynically point out that Excel was the most popular "notebook like" interface for computers.

That said, there are a few points against this as a complaint. First, is the incredibly important point that many many tools are people rediscovering pivot tables. There was a fun rant a while back about "your startup is just a pivot table." Hilarious read.

After that, visual workflows are clearly easier for people to understand. Just look at the directions you get with any "self assembled" furniture. Some of that, I'm sure, is to avoid having to translate a lot? Hard not to argue that it is still probably the more effective way to communicate things.

My final caveat is that the symbolic nature of program code is one that is largely lost on people. Specifically, people seem to think the software is independent of the execution environment that is necessary to understand in the language they are using.

diflartle•1h ago
> There was a fun rant a while back about "your startup is just a pivot table." Hilarious read.

I'd love to read this, but can't seem to find it. Any idea where I could find it at?

Something1234•1h ago
I think it’s an outtake from the “You suck at excel talk” by Joel Spoelsky
taeric•49m ago
I can't find where I thought I read this. I'm assuming I must have seen a transcript of this speech, once? Regardless, I'm fairly confident this is what I was remembering. Thanks!
daft_pink•2h ago
I feel the real problem with excel is that it’s not reusable.

Otherwise it’s a decent tool, but the fact that you write your code in a cell that is so tied to other cells with non-useful names that it’s impractical to reuse is a reason why it sucks.

Whereas many of these visual worksflow tools at least can export to json and be manipulated programatically in a useful way.

skydhash•59m ago
Excel is high level assembly. Immediately executable, worthless on other platforms without reverse engineering.
daft_pink•21m ago
I don't mean reusing excel formulas on other platforms.

I mean if you write a really long formula in a cell, it's not really practical to use that formula in another workbook that doesn't have the exact same structure.

If you compare that to say a Jupyter notebook which is cell based, you can at least reuse your function in another notebook or cell within any other jupyter notebook rapidly and quickly if you wrote it correctly. Excel not so much.

sas224dbm•44m ago
of course it's re-usable .. most passionate excel jockeys would agree, as long it's their VBA that gets reused
throwforfeds•1h ago
In my experience orgs choose these low code tools because good engineers are expensive and many don't fundamentally understand the process of software development.

I've seen business-side product owners complain "why can't you just make it do XYZ this week, Excel can do that" without realizing the application is being built by like three people and if they want the feature roadmap to be on time -- that they themselves planned months ago -- doing something seemingly trivial might be a non-trivial refactor. Trying to keep them focused on the long term is like dealing with a toddler's attention span.

So then they get impatient and the business goes out and buys Salesforce, because it "does everything for cheap", and then they quickly realize if you want to do some non-trivial thing -- which their custom application of course needs to do -- they're shit out of luck or have to buy Marc Benioff a new island.

hobs•7m ago
Yup, but this time its their choice that one upped the supposed experts, so they cling to buying Marc island for at least 5 years.
wiradikusuma•1h ago
Weird, my fellow developers usually don't advocate visual tools like Zapier, but instead roll their own solution (non-visual). Which, to be honest, comes with its own problems.
ajcp•1h ago
I believe the writer is comparing local visual workflow programs against local Excel workbooks, that is: personal productivity tools run on a users local machine. This is a very important distinction.

The value prop of these "Low-Code No-Code" platforms has absolutely 0 to do with the actual "user/developer" experience being better/easier/more powerful and everything to do with the orchestration, inheritability, visibility, management, and security capabilities that these platforms provide. If I have 5 artisanal, bespoke Excel workbooks that my "developer" accountant runs locally to complete a part of a critical business process (and they invariably do) then I have 5 ways my business can come to a grinding halt when any number of things happens to that accountant or their computer. I would take 50 less powerful, rickety RPA workflows that I can at least see in a control room over those 5 Excel workbooks any day of the week.

eawgewag•55m ago
Yes, absolutely.

The reason why my startup uses Zapier isn't because we prefer to use no-code to orchestrate this specific workflow. It's because it's faster than building out all the webhooks, routers, integrations, tables, etc necessary to make this workflow work, stuff that Zapier already natively supports

nyeah•1h ago
It would be neat if we could divide programming into (a) software development; (b) other labor-saving automation that's less serious.

When a tool crosses from (b) into (a), we'd have to acknowledge that too. (Or ignore it and invite a blizzard of problems, which are now inexplicable because "it was done".)

Every thinking person already in fact does differentiate between (a) and (b) in their own work. So admitting it out loud and just talking about it may not be the apocalypse that many expect. But ymmv.

haswell•1h ago
In a past life, I ran a tools/operations team at a big company for years and later was the product manager for a visual workflow/integration product for a number of years. I've been the IT department trying to manage the crazy things people in the org build, and later worked with hundreds of customers who wanted visual workflow tools for a long list of reasons that have very little to do with what this blog post describes.

I don't think the author understands why these tools exist or why people find them valuable, and there are a number of major issues with their position.

> Excel and visual workflow tools are fundamentally the same: point-and-click interfaces that let people build complex logic without understanding what they’re actually building. Excel uses cells and formulas, visual workflows use boxes and connectors, but the principle is identical. Both promise to make hard things easy.

While I sort of understand the point they're trying to make, I think it's problematic to call these "fundamentally the same" but then compare them on abstract characteristics. By this logic, a car and a bus are fundamentally the same because they both promise to get us from Point A to Point B. This of course misses out on a myriad of reasons cars and busses are quite different in practice.

> Visual workflow tools aren’t succeeding because they’re better, they’re succeeding because we’ve gotten lazy and scared.

These tools are succeeding because:

- They enable teams and individuals to build things they otherwise couldn't without involving central IT or some dev team

- They provide structure and promise to solve a host of operational/management issues associated with keeping an automation running in perpetuity

- They can often be charged to an expense card vs. requiring headcount, existing resource allocation, new budget, etc.

Is the result also a monstrosity? Possibly. But It's a monstrosity that is making something happen that otherwise wouldn't be happening.

And it's possible that the monstrosity will eventually need to be adopted/fixed by a real dev team, but again, that's a team that would never have gotten involved to begin with if someone hadn't built something that now needs to be "fixed". The team doing the fixing sees this as a problem, but the team who built the monstrosity got something built and into production and see it as a win.

It's entirely possible that a "proper" solution built by a dev team would have been superior. But that ultimately doesn't matter if the only way a thing sees the light of day is through the Excel/Visual Workflow Tool pipeline.

These products are not targeted at people who have the ability to build things from scratch the "right" way. And the reasons people/companies buy them usually fall into a few categories: resource constraints, politics, and managers/directors wanting to gain autonomy to build things for their teams without fighting for budget/prioritization with central dev/IT.

jdauriemma•50m ago
Excel is one of the most successful pieces of software of all time, so it's an odd choice for a punching bag. Plus, the tone of this article is (unintentionally, I'm sure) off-putting, particularly:

> You know what happens with Excel. Karen from accounting builds a “simple” spreadsheet to track expenses. Six months later, it’s a 47-sheet monster with circular references and VLOOKUP formulas that would make a mathematician weep. The company depends on it, nobody understands it...

It sounds like Karen did a valuable service to the company. She combined a technical skill set with her domain knowledge to create a system that was so successful that the company now depends on it. Cleaning up the technical debt seems like a task that's well worth the cost.

> ...And when it breaks (not if, when), guess who gets called to fix it?

I'm not sure, honestly. It depends on whether you want the fix being done by a resource you consider to be a cost center or a value center. The former will do the cleanup job for bottom dollar. The latter would team up with Karen to amplify the project's impact while cleaning it up.

For these reasons I think your analogy is not effective. I don't disagree with your thesis, though; I prefer code in almost all cases. But that's just me. I know for certain, though, that if I had stock options in that company in this hypothetical scenario I'd rather keep Karen around than whoever fixes the VLOOKUP syntax. And if visual tools are what empowers Karen... well, there you go.

0cf8612b2e1e•37m ago
I too never get the Excel hate. Without Excel-what do you expect non programmers to do? They sit in front of a computer all day long-would you prefer they use paper? Official IT resources are a joke and will never deliver something so understandable and malleable as Excel. Sure, the official IT app may be done the right way, but it will quickly become outdated as business processes change and the maintenance budget disappears.
antisthenes•13m ago
> It sounds like Karen did a valuable service to the company. She combined a technical skill set with her domain knowledge to create a system that was so successful that the company now depends on it. Cleaning up the technical debt seems like a task that's well worth the cost.

The technical debt here was solved by creating a complex Excel worksheet. The sheet is the solution.

For small companies where these Excel monsters get created, it is the #1 best way (read - cheapest) to solve technical debt, which, before Excel, was probably a bunch of arcane manual processes that took 5x as long with worse accuracy.

jdauriemma•6m ago
Good point, though not all spreadsheets are not created equal. Some get quite unmanageable, and that can be a productivity bottleneck over time (unless you're not really adding new use cases)
Ezhik•25m ago
If anything we need more Excels. Excel is coding for people who don't even know they're coding.

Karen from accounting made an entire app even though she's not a "software developer" by trade and people think that's a bad thing?

timr•22m ago
Visual workflow tools have nothing to do with developers [1] -- they're better-than-Excel workarounds for developers.

Software developers really need to internalize that, unless they're working at a company that sells software, they're not the critical path for the business [2]. They're a cost center, and people are going to route around that cost center if it becomes an obstacle.

If it takes months of work to build an urgent back-office tool, then yeah, the back-office / operations / sales / legal / finance / compliance / whatever staff are going to use whatever they have available to get the job done sooner. And no-code tools are strictly better than Excel for many of those use cases. Karen from accounting isn't going to delay the quarterly numbers because you need to do system design.

[1] except in the sense that developers are too slow and expensive.

[2] And even at software companies, a lot of software developers are not critical for the business, but don't seem to understand this.

mont_tag•5m ago
A notable exception is MS Access. It was a huge productivity win. It did not work well with version control but otherwise, it let developers rapidly develop and maintain moderate sized solutions to common business problems. It was also extensible with plain text code when needed.
mont_tag•3m ago
One place where Visual development tools almost always win is in problem domains that are intrinsically visual (think CAD, form designers, etc)