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Made for People, Not Cars: Reclaiming European Cities

https://www.greeneuropeanjournal.eu/made-for-people-not-cars-reclaiming-european-cities/
145•robtherobber•2h ago•63 comments

Supabase OrioleDB Patent: now freely available to the Postgres community

https://supabase.com/blog/orioledb-patent-free
65•tosh•1h ago•27 comments

I replaced Animal Crossing's dialogue with a live LLM by hacking GameCube memory

https://joshfonseca.com/blogs/animal-crossing-llm
537•vuciv•9h ago•116 comments

iPhone Air

https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2025/09/introducing-iphone-air-a-powerful-new-iphone-with-a-breakt...
781•excerionsforte•18h ago•1597 comments

PKM apps need to get better at resurfacing information

https://ankursethi.com/blog/pkm-apps-need-to-get-better-at-resurfacing-information/
14•GeneralMaximus•3d ago•6 comments

Knowledge and Memory

https://www.robinsloan.com/lab/knowledge-and-memory/
34•zdw•3d ago•13 comments

E-paper display reaches the realm of LCD screens

https://spectrum.ieee.org/e-paper-display-modos
475•rbanffy•18h ago•150 comments

Infracost (YC W21) Is Hiring First Product Manager to Shift FinOps Left

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/infracost/jobs/ukwJ299-senior-product-manager
1•akh•46m ago

NASA finds Titan's lakes may be creating vesicles with primitive cell walls

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/08/250831112449.htm
177•Gaishan•12h ago•38 comments

Claude now has access to a server-side container environment

https://www.anthropic.com/news/create-files
577•meetpateltech•22h ago•307 comments

Children and young people's reading in 2025

https://literacytrust.org.uk/research-services/research-reports/children-and-young-peoples-readin...
39•GeoAtreides•5h ago•21 comments

US High school students' scores fall in reading and math

https://apnews.com/article/naep-reading-math-scores-12th-grade-c18d6e3fbc125f12948cc70cb85a520a
395•bikenaga•22h ago•660 comments

All clickwheel iPod games have now been preserved for posterity

https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2025/09/all-54-lost-clickwheel-ipod-games-have-now-been-preserved-...
139•CharlesW•1d ago•35 comments

We all dodged a bullet

https://xeiaso.net/notes/2025/we-dodged-a-bullet/
741•WhyNotHugo•21h ago•420 comments

Axial twist theory

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_twist_theory
156•lordnacho•3d ago•39 comments

R-Zero: Self-Evolving Reasoning LLM from Zero Data

https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.05004
61•lawrenceyan•10h ago•26 comments

YouTube is a mysterious monopoly

https://anderegg.ca/2025/09/08/youtube-is-a-mysterious-monopoly
277•geerlingguy•1d ago•363 comments

Hypervisor in 1k Lines

https://1000hv.seiya.me/en
97•lioeters•13h ago•7 comments

Semantic Line Breaks

https://sembr.org
30•Bogdanp•3d ago•23 comments

Memory Integrity Enforcement

https://security.apple.com/blog/memory-integrity-enforcement/
422•circuit•18h ago•199 comments

Show HN: Bottlefire – Build single-executable microVMs from Docker images

https://bottlefire.dev/
130•losfair•2d ago•18 comments

Rendering flame fractals with a compute shader

https://wrighter.xyz/blog/2023_08_17_flame_fractals_in_comp_shader
4•ibobev•2d ago•0 comments

Tomorrow's emoji today: Unicode 17.0

https://jenniferdaniel.substack.com/p/tomorrows-emoji-today-unicode-170
169•ChrisArchitect•18h ago•284 comments

Building a DOOM-like multiplayer shooter in pure SQL

https://cedardb.com/blog/doomql/
203•lvogel•21h ago•35 comments

A new experimental Go API for JSON

https://go.dev/blog/jsonv2-exp
234•darccio•21h ago•81 comments

Immunotherapy drug clinical trial results: half of tumors shrink or disappear

https://www.rockefeller.edu/news/38120-immunotherapy-drug-eliminates-aggressive-cancers-in-clinic...
417•marc__1•15h ago•83 comments

An attacker’s blunder gave us a look into their operations

https://www.huntress.com/blog/rare-look-inside-attacker-operation
167•mellosouls•21h ago•93 comments

Microsoft is officially sending employees back to the office

https://www.businessinsider.com/microsoft-send-employees-back-to-office-rto-remote-work-2025-9
375•alloyed•20h ago•762 comments

Interesting PEZY-SC4s

https://chipsandcheese.com/p/pezy-sc4s-at-hot-chips-2025
15•christkv•3d ago•1 comments

Show HN: Downloading a folder from a repo using rust

https://github.com/zikani03/git-down
8•sonderotis•3d ago•14 comments
Open in hackernews

Defense.gov Now Redirects to War.gov

https://defense.gov
38•o999•7h ago

Comments

OhMeadhbh•7h ago
Did congress declare war on someone while I was napping? Just sort of curious if we're officially at war or if this is one of those "War on Drugs" or "War on Poverty" things.
defrost•7h ago
It's part of the ongoing War on EDS (Epstein Derangement Syndrome).

So far that's going as well as the Wars on Drugs and Poverty did.

pjc50•3h ago
Russia escalated their incursions into NATO airspace with the result of several drone kills: https://news.sky.com/story/poland-scrambles-nato-defences-af...

Oh and Israel bombed Qatar with implicit US approval.

altacc•2h ago
Neither of these are something the US would ever react to diplomatically let alone militarily, except maybe to give Israel more weapons.
mcdonje•3h ago
Congress has been ceding power to the executive branch to greater and greater degrees over time. The president can effectively declare a war, even if not technically.

The founding fathers thought the different branches would want to keep their power. They didn't expect that feckless senators and representatives would want to hand off parts of their jobs so they could tell voters the bad happenings aren't their fault.

pbiggar•3h ago
They don't declare war anymore if they can avoid it. Being at war comes with obligations and consequences, so they prefer to drone strike Yemen and Gaza without declaring war
spuz•2h ago
You need to update your world model. Trump would very much like to officially declare war with Venezuela because it gives him certain wartime authorities (such as the Alien Enemies Act and the Insurrection Act) which he can use to to deport people without due process and deploy the armed forces domestically. This is why he ordered the destruction of a speedboat near Venezuela, has increased the bounty on the arrest of Venezuela's president Maduro and called him the head of the Cartel of the Suns. This is also why he is changing the department of defense to the department of war. He wants to use the pretense of war to subvert any checks against his power.

He likely does not want to actually invade anyone or do anything that brings actual war to the US but he does want the personal benefits that come with being at war.

https://edition.cnn.com/2025/09/09/americas/venezuela-yvan-g...

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cpwywjgynyxo

pbiggar•2h ago
Interesting. That does match what we've seen. Interesting his use of the word "terrorists" - they also use this word to describe the resistance against Israel's oppression. Truly a multi-faceted word that can be used to justify any crime against humanity!
krapp•2h ago
>He wants to use the pretense of war to subvert any checks against his power.

What checks to his power?

The US is already in a state of emergency, one magically extended into infinity by the legislative branch redefining what a "day" is. The Alien Enemies act has already been used to justify Trump's mass deportation program as a war against the "invasion" of the US by immigrants, and that continues despite pushback from the courts, because Trump has declared openly that he doesn't consider himself bound by the courts.

And given what he's already gotten away with, his thesis seems to be correct. He isn't going to seek the pretense because he knows he doesn't need to.

krapp•2h ago
Congress hasn't declared war since WW2. If you think that sort of formality is still relevant, you've been napping for a while.
ChrisArchitect•6h ago
That defense domain's been in use for like the whole mainstream history of the Internet probably right? That's a big one to just redirect all of a sudden. Is it just the public website redirected or every email address and whatever from history? Uggh
joelccr•3h ago
Most US military email is @mail.mil, if I recall correctly. Still a huge change!
dlcarrier•6h ago
I like this lack of euphemisms.

Can they change the ATF to the Department of Uncategorized Federal Overreach?

Also, NOAA should be called the Weather Force.

gilleain•3h ago
"Weather Force" sounds like a low-budget kids show. The characters? So there's 'Lightning' of course, who is generally angry. 'Sunshine', naturally - the happy one of the group. Also, uh, 'Drizzle'? hmmm. Could use some work.
jackvalentine•2h ago
This is just Captain Planet but lamer.
fehu22•3h ago
trump is planning world war three he may start it at any moment after he is space force comes into opera
bilekas•3h ago
It's okay, while he may start it he will then end it and look to claim a nobel peace prize.
whatsupdog•2h ago
How is grade 6 treating you so far?
edwinjm•3h ago
The Nobel Peace Prize, which he really wanted, isn't a priority anymore, is it?
Zealotux•3h ago
They gave it to Obama, anything is possible.
goku12•3h ago
‘War Is Peace. Freedom Is Slavery. Ignorance Is Strength.’
SanjayMehta•2h ago
If you look at some of the people who received the Nobel Peace Prize, you can’t fault him for thinking he should get one too.
dobladov•3h ago
It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail.
Yizahi•2h ago
Amnesia.gov
leventhan•2h ago
For once, reducing the budget for the war department doesn't sound bad
glimshe•2h ago
For those who don't know it, this is the name the department has had for most of its history: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Department_of_...

This is a good name even if you are against wars like I am.

Calling it "Defense" just gives the wrong impression that most of the money goes towards "defending" ourselves instead of attacking others. We should avoid euphemisms when naming government agencies.

altacc•2h ago
The history justification is moot given that the reason for the name wasn't clarifying an existing role (the US is already very aggressive militarily and happy to attack whenever and wherever it pleases) instead the justification that went with the naming is that the US should be even more aggressive. That, as well as not being necessary or wanted by the world, goes counter to Trump's pre-election promise not to involve the US in more foreign wars.
bbarnett•1h ago
the US is already very aggressive militarily and happy to attack whenever and wherever it pleases

Completely untrue, because a statement such as this requires counter examples, comparators.

Compare the US to any colonial power. Such countries were hell bent on ruling the world. The Brits had the largest empire the world has ever seen, boots on ground in dozens of colonies. And everyone in Europe was invading each other, their colonies endlessly and constantly.

Compared to the scale and scope of action those colonial powers undertook, the US is the most peaceful and benevolent country ever.

Modern comparisons show much the same. For example, Canada was more than a decade in Afghanistan. Canada is not war like, but does think stamping out oppressive regimes is a good idea. Canada also has blue hats in multiple countries.

Those sort of actions may turn out poorly, but the intentions are not to harm but help. And yes, I agree that is debatable except we're talking about the statement I quoted.

And when you look at truly aggressive nations, such as Russia, again no comparison. When recently has the US invaded a country, with the goal of taking it over and absorbing it? That's right, never in living memory.

If US truly did what it had the power to do, it could have easily taken over the world.

Has it? Did it invade everyone? No.

Yes, the US does deploy its military might. Yes, maybe it should less often.

No, it isn't aggressive, it's just very powerful.

I would very much argue it restrains its use of power mightily.

altacc•1h ago
If this was Reddit I'd ask you what you were smoking! ;)

Calling the U.S. ‘peaceful and benevolent’ overlooks the sheer volume, aims and consequences of its military actions. It may not colonize in the traditional sense but its interventions often reshape nations in the US' favour, often violently, without accountability and leaving the populace of those countries much worse off than before.

I think it's not wise to judge present day against history as we should be aiming for improvement over time but if we look at recent history the US has a history of destabilising governments, often democracies, in favour of a more US aligned government. Often these efforts fail and the country descends into chaos. In others it leads to a government that uses death squads to help US businesses (see the banana republics).

Russia's aims in Ukraine were mostly likely to install a Russian aligned leader. This is similar to the USA's history of installing or supporting anti-democratic leaders. So whilst the US might not be absorbing countries but that shouldn't be the only metric for control.

Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan was under UN mandates and I agree that peace keeping forces are often good but that is not comparable to US military interventions. The US often acts unilaterally, or with limited partners and lack of widespread support.

With 251 military interventions since 1991 [1] we can cherry pick the best and worse uses of force, and I agree that sometimes force is needed, but I see the long term trend that the intention is indeed to help but it is mostly to help US interests.

I'd argue that whilst the US could definitely not take over the world militarily (see how often it fails to take over a country) it already has in large part due to trade and culture and this is why it fears China so much, as China is now a rival for that power.

[1] https://towardfreedom.org/story/archives/americas/u-s-launch...

cyanydeez•2h ago
Yawn. "We really should be regrsssive cause of history"

Next youll tell us black people should really be slaves or go back to africa.

Thanks gyy

brainzap•2h ago
1$ of every iphone you buy goes to War
dghf•2h ago
> For those who don't know it, this is the name the department has had for most of its history

Not really. It's the old name of the Department of the Army. Except for the first nine years of the DoW's existence, the Navy had its own, independent department, as did the USAF once it was established as a separate branch.

The Department of Defense didn't exist until after WW2, and was called the National Military Establishment for the first couple of years.

You see a similar pattern in the UK, which had the War Office for the Army, the Admiralty for the Royal Navy and the Air Ministry for the RAF: after WW2, the Ministry of Defence was created, initially liaising and co-ordinating between the service ministries, and then fully absorbing and replacing them.

tl;dr the Department of War is the old name of the Department of the Army, not of the Department of Defense.

mynameyeff•1h ago
Precisely, it is Orwellian to attempt to misdirect people using language.
mrweasel•2h ago
Rebranding an entire department under the US government cannot be cheap. That does not sound like something a frugal government does without a very good reason.
altacc•2h ago
There's the best and most justifiable reason for doing anything: Dear Leader said so. /s
simonw•2h ago
I understand it's also something which takes an act of Congress, not that this administration seems to care about that at all. See also tariffs. And delaying the TikTok ban.
fabian2k•2h ago
Why would you assume the current government is frugal in any way?
whatsupdog•2h ago
This action might save trillions of dollars when the future generations will see all this money going to war, instead of "defense". And you are worried about a few million it might take to rebrand?
bbarnett•2h ago
I doubt it. People want to live with their heads in the sand.

After all, "War and Peace" had a working title "War, what is it good for" before his mistress insisted he change it.

andrewstuart2•2h ago
Maybe it's more obvious when named this way, but I don't think I've ever been under the impression that the DoD is focused on peaceful means of keeping the peace.
kypro•2h ago
Transparency might cost a government in a direct sense, but the liberal argument would be that a transparent government is a more democratic and accountable government therefore that cost should ultimately result in better governance which has lots of indirect benefits.

In reality the majority of the US military budget does not go to defence in the colloquial sense, it's far more about projecting US power globally (which isn't necessarily a bad thing if you think that the US is projecting it's power for good).

"War" is a better description and sounds less innocent than "defence" would imply, although I think you could argue that even this is a slightly misleading description.

senectus1•1h ago
he actually cant rename it, it takes an act of congress to do that.

he can start calling it by something else.... but its still the DOD.

motbus3•2h ago
Approving money for war is harder than approving money for defense. I don't think it was his intention. He wants to sound masculine and brave, like Putin seems to do for him.

I'm not sure at all about anything anyway. But right now, I have friends working for "Defense AI related" projects and knowing their interests in AI, I'm sure all the companies are doing is to stamp AI-ready label in the same missiles.

Remember that anyone can say that a linear model is AI.

voxadam•2h ago

   War is peace.
   Freedom is slavery.
   Ignorance is strength.
         ― George Orwell, 1984
detritus•2h ago
I doubt he wrote that then, given he'd been dead for 34 years at that point.
sertsa•2h ago
It’s from the book “1984”, published in 1949.
detritus•2h ago
Sadly you ignored the main takeaway from the quotation, "ignorance is strength".
rmonvfer•2h ago
I’m pretty sure he’s quoting the book
jhanschoo•1h ago
On the other hand, I think anyone who knows when Orwell died should know Noneteen-Eighty-Four, so the comment should be seen as a joke, though it helps to give a textual signal like /jk
SanjayMehta•2h ago
Well played. I’m stealing this.
hagbard_c•1h ago
From Orwell's "1984" which was published in 1949, the same year the Department of Defense was established out of what used to be the Department of War or "War Office". In 1947 The Department of War was split into three separate departments - Army, Navy and Air Force - which were gathered into the National Military Establishment which in turn was renamed to Department of Defense in 1949.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Wa...

varispeed•2h ago
Putin is having a laugh, having entire US administration dancing to his tune.
vim-guru•2h ago
What an ugly logo, and the kerning is all wrong. Man!
FjordWarden•2h ago
Wow there is so much spacing after the "of" that I read it as "U.S. Department of space war"
tempodox•7m ago
The “of” is in italics, while the surrounding text is not. Is war on typography part of the mission?
SanjayMehta•2h ago
Truth in advertising.
keyle•2h ago
It is true they're all about cutting waste, they just saved 4 bytes!
random_ind_dude•1h ago
Will defense contractors be known as war contractors from now on?
throw0101a•1h ago
From Tom Nichols (a now-retired prof at the US Naval War College):

> It is almost impossible to overstate the inanity of this move. The United States has a Department of Defense for a reason. It was called the “War” Department until 1947, when the dictates of a new and more dangerous world required the creation of a much larger military organization than any in American history. Harry Truman and the American leaders who destroyed the Axis, and who now were facing the Soviet empire, realized that national security had become a larger undertaking than the previous American tradition of moving, as needed, between discrete conditions of “war” and “peace.”

> These leaders understood that America could no longer afford the isolationist luxury of militarizing itself during times of threat and then making soldiers train with wooden sticks when the storm clouds passed. Now, they knew, the security of the country would be a daily undertaking, a matter of ongoing national defense, in which the actual exercise of military force would be only part of preserving the freedom and independence of the United States and its allies.

* https://archive.today/https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/arch...

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Nichols_(academic)

The current president seems to think that this change is important, but Nichols goes over some previous presidents:

> That name was good enough for Truman, who served in combat in World War I and dropped two nuclear bombs on Japan. And it was good enough for President Dwight Eisenhower, the former supreme allied commander, who oversaw the largest military operations ever undertaken in all of human history.

> It was also good enough for John F. Kennedy, who served his country as a naval officer and nearly got killed during World War II. It was good enough for Lyndon B. Johnson, who won the Silver Star for his military service, and then, as commander in chief, embroiled the United States in a decade-long war in Southeast Asia. It was good enough for Naval Reserve officer Richard Nixon, who took over Johnson’s war and unleashed the fury of American bombers overseas. It was good enough for Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, both former Navy officers. It was good enough for Ronald Reagan, a former Army officer who as president pushed through a huge program of military expansion and modernization. It was good enough for his successor, George H. W. Bush, a decorated naval aviator who was shot down during combat in the Pacific.

* Ibid

grigio•1h ago
thanks for saving 4 letters when i type it
tmdetect•1h ago
A top contender for “not the onion”.

> Hegseth concurred with Trump's contention.

> "We changed the name after World War II from the Department of War to the Department of Defense and … we haven't won a major war since," Hegseth said.

tempodox•27m ago
Marginally better than redirecting to `love.gov`.
ofrzeta•5m ago
Great. Now rename the Department of Health & Human Services.