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Danish supermarket chain is setting up "Emergency Stores"

https://swiss.social/@swaldorff/115186445638788782
149•sohkamyung•5h ago•84 comments

Fartscroll-Lid: An app that plays fart sounds when opening or closing a MacBook

https://github.com/iannuttall/fartscroll-lid
162•gaws•5h ago•40 comments

Top model scores may be skewed by Git history leaks in SWE-bench

https://github.com/SWE-bench/SWE-bench/issues/465
318•mustaphah•9h ago•108 comments

Nano Banana image examples

https://github.com/PicoTrex/Awesome-Nano-Banana-images/blob/main/README_en.md
280•SweetSoftPillow•7h ago•129 comments

Float Exposed

https://float.exposed/
41•SomaticPirate•3h ago•13 comments

The challenge of maintaining curl

https://lwn.net/Articles/1034966/
31•signa11•2h ago•7 comments

Claude's memory architecture is the opposite of ChatGPT's

https://www.shloked.com/writing/claude-memory
257•shloked•9h ago•124 comments

Why our website looks like an operating system

https://posthog.com/blog/why-os
93•bnc319•4h ago•50 comments

Doorbell prankster that tormented residents of apartments turns out to be a slug

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/sep/08/doorbell-prankster-that-tormented-residents-of-germ...
116•robin_reala•3d ago•26 comments

AirPods live translation blocked for EU users with EU Apple accounts

https://www.macrumors.com/2025/09/11/airpods-live-translation-eu-restricted/
244•thm•16h ago•285 comments

Toddlerbot: Open-Source Humanoid Robot

https://toddlerbot.github.io/
27•base698•3h ago•3 comments

Rails on SQLite: new ways to cause outages

https://andre.arko.net/2025/09/11/rails-on-sqlite-exciting-new-ways-to-cause-outages/
108•ingve•8h ago•32 comments

Differences between stal/IX and regular Linux

https://stal-ix.github.io/STALIX.html
4•lioeters•49m ago•1 comments

Building my childhood dream PC

https://fabiensanglard.net/2168/
79•joexbayer•3d ago•16 comments

Behind the scenes of Bun Install

https://bun.com/blog/behind-the-scenes-of-bun-install
341•Bogdanp•15h ago•116 comments

Bulletproof host Stark Industries evades EU sanctions

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/09/bulletproof-host-stark-industries-evades-eu-sanctions/
164•todsacerdoti•10h ago•51 comments

Backprompting: Leveraging synthetic production data for health advice guardrails

https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.18384
12•PaulHoule•3h ago•0 comments

The effects of algorithms on the public discourse

https://tekhne.dev/internet-resist/
133•Improvement•3h ago•66 comments

Full Moon: Seestar S50 vs. Samsung S25

https://www.4rknova.com//blog/2025/09/08/moon-photos
8•ibobev•3d ago•2 comments

NT OS Kernel Information Disclosure Vulnerability

https://www.crowdfense.com/nt-os-kernel-information-disclosure-vulnerability-cve-2025-53136/
113•voidsec•11h ago•25 comments

Samsung taking market share from Apple in U.S. as foldable phones gain momentum

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/08/16/samsungs-us-market-share-apple-rivalry-foldable-phones.html
177•mgh2•18h ago•235 comments

CRISPR offers new hope for treating diabetes

https://www.wired.com/story/no-more-injections-crispr-offers-new-hope-for-treating-diabetes/
181•manveerc•14h ago•48 comments

From burner phones to decks of cards: NYC teens adjusting to the smartphone ban

https://gothamist.com/news/from-burner-phones-to-decks-of-cards-nyc-teens-are-adjusting-to-the-sm...
186•geox•14h ago•160 comments

Adam (YC W25) Is Hiring to Build the Future of CAD

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/adam/jobs/q6td4uk-founding-engineer
1•HetengAaronLi•9h ago

Making io_uring pervasive in QEMU [pdf]

https://vmsplice.net/~stefan/stefanha-kvm-forum-2025.pdf
59•ingve•9h ago•7 comments

'Robber bees' invade apiarist's shop in attempted honey heist

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/robber-bees-terrace-bc-apiary-1.7627532
125•lemonberry•10h ago•66 comments

A Web Framework for Zig

https://www.jetzig.dev/
84•nivethan•10h ago•6 comments

Conway's Game of Life, but musical

https://www.hudsong.dev/digital-darwin
153•hudsongr•13h ago•30 comments

How Palantir is mapping the nation’s data

https://theconversation.com/when-the-government-can-see-everything-how-one-company-palantir-is-ma...
177•mdhb•7h ago•63 comments

Reshaped is now open source

https://reshaped.so/blog/reshaped-oss
263•michaelmior•18h ago•43 comments
Open in hackernews

Why our website looks like an operating system

https://posthog.com/blog/why-os
93•bnc319•4h ago

Comments

cramsession•2h ago
That's so fun! It brings back the excitement and nostalgia of home computing in the 90s. It's also pretty useful and I buy the justification for why it's helpful.
Twey•2h ago
I've always thought ‘multi-document interfaces’ as we used to call them are an anti-pattern. I have a perfectly good window manager; why does every app need its own incompatible, usually inferior window manager built in?

(Mind you on mobile I very much don't have a perfectly good window manager, and indeed can't even open multiple instances of most apps…)

cosmic_cheese•2h ago
As a long time Mac user, MDI has always felt like a stopgap to make up for the OS not having the ability to manage windows on a per-application basis (so for example, being able to hide all windows belonging to a particular application or move them all to another desktop/screen).

It also feels very foreign on macOS - Photoshop suddenly gained the MDI-type UI in like CS4 or something, after having let windows and palettes roam free on macs since Photoshop’s inception. I always turn it off, feels claustrophobic somehow.

Twey•2h ago
I think that's still a little too restrictive. Sometimes you really do want multiple groups of windows that may belong to the same (think multiple browser windows each with multiple tabs) or different applications (e.g. grouped by task). It's not hard to see how the application marketplace leads to every app doing everything including managing all the things it does, but it's not good for the user.
cosmic_cheese•1h ago
Custom groupings is a nice feature too, but that feature can live happily alongside app groups. In fact I think the two would compliment each other nicely.
boredtofears•1h ago
To throw gasoline on the fire: this how I’ve always felt about tmux. Why use an incomplete in terminal windowing system when I can just have multiple terminal windows open managed by the superior OS window system.

(That said I know tmux is sometimes the only option and then it makes sense to me)

kurisufag•1h ago
tmux (and screen) are incredible assets for remote sessions, both for continuity across dropped shells and multi-shell activities when the connection process is tedious (multiple jumphosts, proxies, etc.)
o11c•30m ago
The continuity benefit is much less than it used to be, now that we have systemd with `enable-linger` so we can make proper daemons.
Barrin92•1h ago
>why does every app need its own incompatible, usually inferior window manager built in?

You answered your own question, because a lot of applications work across multiple platforms, and if you want to have control over the experience because you don't know what capacities the OS's window manager has you need to abstract it away.

BobbyTables2•48m ago
Compared to the experience of something like “Gimp”, I prefer something contained to a single window.

Otherwise two or three such apps running at the same time becomes a game of “where’s my window”. I hate the idea of a toolbar being its own window to be managed.

egypturnash•2h ago
It looks like one but it doesn't work like one, the hitbox for the right-hand window resize area completely overlaps the hitbox for the scrollbar for me.
andrenotgiant•2h ago
I love the website. It stands out amongst a million vanilla SaaS marketing sites all using the same section stack template.

But nobody will actually use it the way they describe in this article. Nobody is going to use the site enough to learn and remember to use your site-specific window management when they need it.

jonahx•1h ago
This was my reaction.

Super impressive. Fun. Does a great job selling the company ethos.

But not actually that usable. I don't think this matters too much, though.

paddw•2h ago
It's all marketing. But it's good marketing.
jez•2h ago
Very neat! I was delighted to see that "drag to side of screen" tiled the window using that half of the screen. Then I opened a new window, and I was (unreasonably) surprised to see that there wasn't a tiling window manager that put my second window in the other half of the screen.
Gualdrapo•2h ago
Things like this makes me think that controls for stuff like content density (line height, text width...), per-page dark mode, "scroll to top" and cookie banners should be a task of the web browser/user agent, not of each website.
csomar•2h ago
If anyone here is using PostHog: Is it just me or their service is ridiculously slow? Like the simplest queries can take a dozen seconds or so.

Also, I seem to be losing a lot of screen recording for non-bot like traffic. There “not found” message is also not clear why the recording failed.

It would have been much better if they focused on their core product instead of making all these gimmicks.

giveita•2h ago
It seems a workaround. Browsers suck so let's make a browser ... hell ... a full blown OS UI inside a web page? One that is bespoke for our site.

I prefer the semantics of deep bookmarkable urls to open things in new tabs. HATEOAS! And using my OS tiling to handle things. Choosing my browser/plugins too for better tab management (maybe Arc can help here?)

keyle•2h ago
It's neat but it runs like a dog. I opened a couple of things and tried to move the window... I'd take a statically generated bunch of webpages over this. If you're going to make one of those multi window webpages looking thing, make it good.

To note, in the past, this was a big no-no because SEO was important. You had to have good SEO for search engines to index your content efficiently and show up well ranked in search results...

Now, well, that ship has sailed and sank somewhere off the west coast...

righthand•1h ago
SEO was about documents. Now days everyone wants to make games. How do you rank games?
keyle•1h ago
I think it's about user retention. If people have fun on your website, they'll stick around and they might even read some text!
phantomathkg•2h ago
This works, until you want to print the page (dead tree format or PDF format) and breaks everything.
theamk•2h ago
Looks neat, but also makes feels really slow in my browser. I'd take the regular windows at any time, especially since it's super simple to detach a tab from browser, check "Always on top", and put next to code editor or something.

Also there are non-removable bars on top and bottom of the page, even if window is "maximized".

aanet•2h ago
It's lovely. It's unique. and UX is just delightful.

For some easter eggs, click on the "Trash" icon, and click on any of the docs... Especially the "spicy.mov" :-)

Keep up the delight.

jacknews•2h ago
It looks great, but now we have tabs inside windows inside tabs in windows inside displays ...

This is all the job of the window manager. We need better window managers.

jackvalentine•1h ago
My bank 20 years ago had an “OS like” online banking system. I remember it fondly!
ronsor•1h ago
You wouldn't happen to have any (redacted) screenshots, by chance?
ronsor•1h ago
I wish my desktop environment looked like this
terpimost•1h ago
Posthog you are the best but left sidebar just with icons is not great. Please expand it on hover.
ChrisArchitect•1h ago
This is amazing work. But you ask what are we doing/can't we figure out a better way to consume content and my feel from this is what are we doing here - building AOL? Lost in the Posthog world here, never leaving, numerous windows and even an Outlook forum (is that a UI we think ppl want to be in?). It's an immersive experience for sure. But I'm not sure being in a posthog:keywords world instead of the web is somewhere I want to be.

Nonetheless, take an upvote. It's a heap of nostalgic freshness. And I'd hire you for the effort crafting/building it over that guy earlier vibecoding a Win 95 UI to show off his design skills.

tamimio•1h ago
I had my blog before in similar way with windows etc. the only issue was search engines hated it and even if I look up exactly something written there it still won’t show up, but that was around 10y ago so maybe things changed now.
gedy•1h ago
I'd love it if you could release this as a Gnome theme!
mbirth•1h ago
This reminds me of those virtual desktops/virtual “PC”s that popped up like 10-15 years ago. Which were very similar and had some basic tools for writing notes, calculator, managing files, etc. - all with web technologies.
blinger•1h ago
all great while there is hype. once the initial hype fades, so will the conversion rates.
Retr0id•1h ago
> Legally-required cookie banner

> PostHog.com doesn't use third-party cookies, only a single in-house cookie

You're legally required to let me opt out of that cookie. Unless it's essential to the site functionality, in which case you don't need the banner at all.

rmunn•14m ago
Considering they have a login system, I'm going to guess that the cookie includes your login (probably in JWT form), which automatically makes it essential to site functionality. Which means the banner is there just because if it was absent, someone would say "Hey, where's the cookie banner?"

In other words, it's not actually legally required in their case, but it's practically required, because it lets everyone know that the absence of the banner is not a violation of the law.

JoshTriplett•7m ago
It is not in any way required, and adding it just contributes to annoyance.
weird-eye-issue•1m ago
> it's practically required, because it lets everyone know that the absence of the banner is not a violation of the law.

Your "logic" is baffling

nine_k•1h ago
So, in short, this is because window management under macOS sucks big time (and under Windows, still leaves much to be desired), and because tabs in Chrome become indistinguishable if you open a couple dozen, since they are on top, instead of on the side (Firefox only recently gained an option to put tabs on the side). Watch legacy UI concepts that are so ingrained that people often don't notice how counterproductive they are.

The PostHog interface tries to somehow alleviate that, but still follows the Windows model a bit too faithfully. Also, bookmarking becomes... interesting.

lantry•1h ago
arrgggh, my affordances!!!
copypaper•57m ago
I'm curious how well this will do. Marketing websites are extremely important for first impressions (unless you're Berkshire Hathaway [1]). Although this is impressive and unique, it took me a minute to get over the "learning curve".

Reminds me of Jakob's Law, "Users spend most of their time on other sites. This means that users prefer your site to work the same way as all the other sites they already know" [2].

But given your target audience is developers, this might actually do well.

[1] https://www.berkshirehathaway.com/ [2] https://lawsofux.com/jakobs-law/

miiiiiike•57m ago
I just click off whenever I see a site like that.
alberth•42m ago
I’m really curious from the marketer angle on does this help or hurt convert to sales.

My gut is it’ll dramatically hurt. Since the call to action is way more challenging for users to find.

twalichiewicz•40m ago
If you leave the page idle long enough you'll even see a screensaver, fun touch.
paulmooreparks•29m ago
It doesn't look like an "operating system." It looks like a graphical shell. I guess those terms have become a bit interchangeable, and I'm being pedantic.
65•24m ago
The slight x overflow on the content container on mobile is maddening.
webprofusion•22m ago
It looks awesome but I clicked several bits and pieces and still have no idea what they do or what their product is.
aabhay•15m ago
But at least you clicked
resonious•12m ago
Man if you did open-in-new-window instead of open-in-new-tab, you would get all of this "for free".
willgax•5m ago
this is one one of the most unique web design i have come across