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Mac history echoes in current Mac operating systems

http://tenfourfox.blogspot.com/2025/08/mac-history-echoes-in-mac-operating.html
41•classichasclass•1h ago•7 comments

Claude Code IDE integration for Emacs

https://github.com/manzaltu/claude-code-ide.el
588•kgwgk•14h ago•193 comments

Rules by Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small One (1773)

https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-20-02-0213
81•freediver•4h ago•27 comments

A Candidate Giant Planet Imaged in the Habitable Zone of α Cen A

https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.03814
26•pinewurst•2h ago•9 comments

Project Hyperion: Interstellar ship design competition

https://www.projecthyperion.org
163•codeulike•7h ago•136 comments

Litestar is worth a look

https://www.b-list.org/weblog/2025/aug/06/litestar/
201•todsacerdoti•8h ago•50 comments

More than two hard disks in DOS

https://www.os2museum.com/wp/more-than-two-hard-disks-in-dos/
7•userbinator•3d ago•0 comments

The Day MOOCs Died: Coursera's Preview Mode Kills Free Learning

https://www.classcentral.com/report/coursera-preview-mode-paywall/
36•deepakkarki•3d ago•21 comments

We'd be better off with 9-bit bytes

https://pavpanchekha.com/blog/9bit.html
103•luu•8h ago•192 comments

Jules, our asynchronous coding agent

https://blog.google/technology/google-labs/jules-now-available/
241•meetpateltech•11h ago•164 comments

Show HN: Kitten TTS – 25MB CPU-Only, Open-Source TTS Model

https://github.com/KittenML/KittenTTS
790•divamgupta•22h ago•322 comments

Writing a Rust GPU kernel driver: a brief introduction on how GPU drivers work

https://www.collabora.com/news-and-blog/blog/2025/08/06/writing-a-rust-gpu-kernel-driver-a-brief-introduction-on-how-gpu-drivers-work/
224•losgehts•12h ago•28 comments

You know more Finnish than you think

https://dannybate.com/2025/08/03/you-know-more-finnish-than-you-think/
62•infinate•2d ago•29 comments

A fast, growable array with stable pointers in C

https://danielchasehooper.com/posts/segment_array/
144•ibobev•9h ago•58 comments

Running GPT-OSS-120B at 500 tokens per second on Nvidia GPUs

https://www.baseten.co/blog/sota-performance-for-gpt-oss-120b-on-nvidia-gpus/
5•philipkiely•1h ago•0 comments

The Bluesky Dictionary

https://www.avibagla.com/blueskydictionary/
119•gaws•7h ago•41 comments

Apple increases US commitment to $600B, announces American Manufacturing Program

https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2025/08/apple-increases-us-commitment-to-600-billion-usd-announces-ambitious-program/
28•Zenbit_UX•4h ago•12 comments

301party.com: Intentionally open redirect

https://301party.com/
69•nahikoa•7h ago•13 comments

Multics

https://www.multicians.org/multics.html
102•unleaded•11h ago•21 comments

Out-Fibbing CPython with the Plush Interpreter

https://pointersgonewild.com/2025-08-06-out-fibbing-cpython-with-the-plush-interpreter/
23•Bogdanp•4h ago•0 comments

Comptime.ts: compile-time expressions for TypeScript

https://comptime.js.org/
104•excalo•3d ago•17 comments

Show HN: HMPL – Small Template Language for Rendering UI from Server to Client

https://github.com/hmpl-language/hmpl
7•aanthonymax•17h ago•5 comments

A Man Who Beat IBM

https://every.to/feeds/b0e329f3048258e8eeb7/the-man-who-beat-ibm
45•vinnyglennon•3d ago•15 comments

Breaking the sorting barrier for directed single-source shortest paths

https://www.quantamagazine.org/new-method-is-the-fastest-way-to-find-the-best-routes-20250806/
139•baruchel•13h ago•43 comments

The Inkhaven Blogging Residency

https://www.inkhaven.blog/
29•venkii•3h ago•29 comments

Zig Error Patterns

https://glfmn.io/posts/zig-error-patterns/
124•Bogdanp•12h ago•33 comments

Automerge 3.0

https://automerge.org/blog/automerge-3/
252•surprisetalk•3d ago•21 comments

303Gen – 303 acid loops generator

https://303-gen-06a668.netlify.app/
180•ankitg12•15h ago•62 comments

AI in Search is driving more queries and higher quality clicks

https://blog.google/products/search/ai-search-driving-more-queries-higher-quality-clicks/
46•thm•10h ago•61 comments

Rethinking DOM from first principles

https://acko.net/blog/html-is-dead-long-live-html/
192•puzzlingcaptcha•21h ago•171 comments
Open in hackernews

The Inkhaven Blogging Residency

https://www.inkhaven.blog/
29•venkii•3h ago

Comments

tenkabuto•2h ago
It'd be fun to join in from afar by pledging to do the same things, but for nowhere near the cost. (The place looks super neat, but I'm not paying that much, don't live near there, and need to report to my employer's office twice a week.)

I wonder if there'll be an aggregator of the blog posts written as post of this cohort (and others, if there's more cohorts).

paulcole•2h ago
> It'd be fun to join in from afar by pledging to do the same things

What’s stopping you besides the unsettling truth that it’s more fun to think that it’d be fun to join in from afar by pledging to do the same things than it is to actually do the same things from afar?

habryka•1h ago
> It'd be fun to join in from afar by pledging to do the same things, but for nowhere near the cost.

Yep, Bay Area rent and cost of living is a big pain. $1,500 for housing for a month is still below real estate costs on our side, and $2,000 in program fees is barely enough to pay for the staff costs and program supplies. We might barely break even, but my guess is we'll lose a bunch of money on the program (which is fine, we are doing this because it's good for the world, not to make money).

I feel like for a program like this it might make sense for someone to run it outside of one of the highest cost of living places in the world, but it's where we are located, so that's what we have to make work (I do think being in the Bay Area does also attract people and makes it more likely for people to participate, so it's not an obvious call even from first principles).

> I wonder if there'll be an aggregator of the blog posts written as post of this cohort (and others, if there's more cohorts).

We're definitely planning to do something like that! Not sure yet about the exact format, but we'll definitely make it easy to find what everyone is publishing as part of the residency somehow.

darknavi•1h ago
> It'd be fun to join in from afar by pledging to do the same things, but for nowhere near the cost.

I am not familiar with blogging or this sphere at all, but it's so funny to me that I was assuming the website said that the program would PAY the bloggers to be there for a month (including housing) and not the other way around.

I assumed this was one of those "We'll let you write a book while riding Amtrak for free" sort of thing. Not sure why I thought that, but it made me laugh after reading your comment.

throwanem•2h ago
500 words a day isn't much for $3,500! I've done that for free before. But given the weirdo cult this is designed to recruit naïve suckers as propagandists for, I suppose that all checks out: requiring a stupid amount of money right up front, for what amounts to a social entrée with some rich weirdos and hangers-on, both filters out the sensible and makes the sunk cost fallacy pretty easy to invoke.
defrost•2h ago
Back in the day it cost a round of drinks at the pub to be read and questioned about your work in progress:

  Until late 1949, Inklings readings and discussions were usually held on Thursday evenings in C. S. Lewis's rooms at Magdalen. The Inklings and friends also gathered informally on Tuesdays at midday at a local public house, The Eagle and Child, familiarly and alliteratively known in the Oxford community as The Bird and Baby, or simply The Bird.
~ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inklings
throwanem•2h ago
And admission to an Oxford college, of course.
defrost•2h ago
For that group of Inklings, sure.

University was free for, say, the likes of Greg Egan and others to study physics and math, with a nominal student union fee to be able to join / form clubs and apply for a base beer, wine, and cheese fund to lubricate weekly discussion.

netown•2h ago
interesting idea, kind of like the y-combinator of blogging except with upfront tuition being paid instead of a longer-term investment by the 'provider'--i wonder if that business model could work as well?
habryka•1h ago
We were thinking about whether there is any way to do some kind of income sharing agreement, but given how messy those tend to be (see all the Lambda school stuff as an example) we couldn't figure out a way to make it work.

Maybe if everyone was definitely starting a Substack we could take a small cut of Substack revenue for the next year or two, which would be straightforward enough.

If anyone has ideas, I would definitely be curious to hear them.

inhumantsar•1h ago
Maybe an Inkhaven substack that the writers agree to crosspost to for some length of time?
habryka•24m ago
Interesting idea. Some thoughts:

I think the volume would really be a lot. For the program we'll be dealing with 900 (!) blogposts (30 residents times 30 blogposts). I doubt something with that volume would actually end up with many subscribers

Also, I would feel bad about splitting the audience of the authors. I feel like you really want to build your own audience early on.

And last, I am worried it would push people towards homogeneity. My ideal outcome from the whole project is that we will have a bunch of really very different blogs and essay writers find traction who share little of an audience, but add some important perspective to the world.

dotcoma•7m ago
Do you envision a single writer writing largely on the same subject during the course of that month, or not?
tolerance•2h ago
"Inkhaven (business model: Uber for Yaddo) is..."

That's where my best impression of n-gate stops short at. Someone is welcome to fill in the rest.

benwerd•1h ago
It feels like there's a particular ideology uniting the bloggers involved that isn't actually declared on the page, centering on Lesswrong and the kinds of conversations hosted there. I think that's fine for that community; I'd love to see a version of this for people who buy into a more humanist version of the present and future.
habryka•1h ago
Definitely not trying to hide it!

I do want to not scare people who aren't into LessWrong and similar things, as I would really like this residency to be less opinionated about stuff than LessWrong and other projects we usually run, so I feel like putting a big LessWrong logo somewhere would have given the wrong impression.

I would also love to see other people run similar things (including in places that aren't the Bay Area and so where they can run it much more cheaply). I feel like it could be a cool model.

I also think an online-only version of this could be great. The original inspiration for this project came from seeing that the Nanowrimo charity had shut down, and realizing that I would love to do something like Nanowrimo but focused on blogging and essays instead of novels. I ended up registering Nablowrimo.com (National Blogging Writing Month) and might end up trying to make that a thing, or would be happy to give the URL to someone who is committed to make something happen here.

habryka•1h ago
Oh, hey HN! I run Lightcone Infrastructure which runs this residency (as well as LessWrong.com and the venue, Lighthaven.space).

Happy to answer questions if anyone has any. Ben (one of my co-founders) is more centrally in charge of it, but I should have enough context to answer really any question.

TimorousBestie•39m ago
Any sweetheart deals with a blogging platform yet? I expect the Nearly Free Speech folks or the bearblog dev would hear you out.
habryka•22m ago
Not yet! My guess is Substack is the best choice for most people, just because it's easy to set up, has a bunch of UI problems solved, and has a non-terrible way to get towards getting food on the table (even if you don't paywall anything).
dotcoma•17m ago
How do you earn money with Substack if you don’t paywall anything?
habryka•14m ago
You use it more like a Patreon. I don't think it's easy, but it works for at least some people like Scott at AstralCodexTen (who arguably has some paywalled essays, but it's extremely rare and I doubt it's the reason why almost anyone is subscribed to him).
dotcoma•2m ago
So content is free, and readers can make a donation?
TimorousBestie•10m ago
Substack? Talk about unfortunate connotations. Hopefully their drama dies down before November.
cosmicgadget•1h ago
I'd be interested to see the writing of folks that do this course.
TimorousBestie•1h ago
It’s a pity Gwern is saddled here with the two Scotts. It’s like if Umberto Eco shared the stage with Travis Baldree and Sarah Maas.
velcrovan•54m ago
Is Gwern known for being a great creative coach and advisor?
TimorousBestie•48m ago
He’s known for being a prolific blogger with multiple interests and excellent research skills.

The other two blog, yes, but now Scott flirts with race realism [1] and other Scott is hyperfixated on being pro-Israel at any cost. I can’t imagine they’re much fun at parties (or in communes, shtetl-optimized or not).

[1] https://www.stevesailer.net/p/scott-alexander-comes-out-of-t...

velcrovan•44m ago
Yes that’s what I know him for as well. It’s a very different skill set than that used by a good creative advisor.
velcrovan•1h ago
This is something I might otherwise consider, but Gwern being an advisor gives me pause. Awhile back I shared a blog design on Twitter in response to someone doing a “show me your cool stuff” kind of thing, someone replied and tagged gwern and then he replied with a bunch of very unconstructive crap-on criticism. I had looked up to him before that. Maybe he’s different in person but based on that interaction I have no desire to find out.

Edit: if someone can explain why this was instantly downvoted I would genuinely appreciate knowing where I went wrong here