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Hosting a website on a disposable vape

https://bogdanthegeek.github.io/blog/projects/vapeserver/
512•dmazin•3h ago•120 comments

Launch HN: Trigger.dev (YC W23) – Open-source platform to build reliable AI apps

45•eallam•1h ago•21 comments

PayPal to support Ethereum and Bitcoin

https://newsroom.paypal-corp.com/2025-09-15-PayPal-Ushers-in-a-New-Era-of-Peer-to-Peer-Payments,-...
109•DocFeind•2h ago•85 comments

CubeSats are fascinating learning tools for space

https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2025/cubesats-are-fascinating-learning-tools-space
81•warrenm•2h ago•16 comments

Programming Deflation

https://tidyfirst.substack.com/p/programming-deflation
55•dvcoolarun•2h ago•29 comments

How big a solar battery do I need to store all my home's electricity?

https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/09/how-big-a-solar-battery-do-i-need-to-store-all-my-homes-electric...
84•FromTheArchives•4h ago•122 comments

How to self-host a web font from Google Fonts

https://blog.velocifyer.com/Posts/3,0,0,2025-8-13,+how+to+self+host+a+font+from+google+fonts.html
39•Velocifyer•2h ago•51 comments

RustGPT: A pure-Rust transformer LLM built from scratch

https://github.com/tekaratzas/RustGPT
275•amazonhut•7h ago•125 comments

Removing newlines in FASTA file increases ZSTD compression ratio by 10x

https://log.bede.im/2025/09/12/zstandard-long-range-genomes.html
178•bede•3d ago•67 comments

Show HN: Daffodil – Open-Source Ecommerce Framework to connect to any platform

https://github.com/graycoreio/daffodil
26•damienwebdev•2h ago•2 comments

Apple has a private CSS property to add Liquid Glass effects to web content

https://alastair.is/apple-has-a-private-css-property-to-add-liquid-glass-effects-to-web-content/
151•_alastair•2h ago•80 comments

Folks, we have the best π

https://lcamtuf.substack.com/p/folks-we-have-the-best
249•fratellobigio•9h ago•70 comments

Microsoft to force install the Microsoft 365 Copilot app in October

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/microsoft/microsoft-to-force-install-the-microsoft-365-copi...
22•mikece•29m ago•5 comments

The Mac App Flea Market

https://blog.jim-nielsen.com/2025/mac-app-flea-market/
173•ingve•9h ago•89 comments

Meta bypassed Apple privacy protections, claims former employee

https://9to5mac.com/2025/08/21/meta-allegedly-bypassed-apple-privacy-measure-and-fired-employee-w...
76•latexr•1h ago•24 comments

Language Models Pack Billions of Concepts into 12k Dimensions

https://nickyoder.com/johnson-lindenstrauss/
305•lawrenceyan•12h ago•101 comments

A string formatting library in 65 lines of C++

https://riki.house/fmt
8•PaulHoule•1h ago•6 comments

Show HN: I reverse engineered macOS to allow custom Lock Screen wallpapers

https://cindori.com/backdrop
48•cindori•8h ago•32 comments

Creating a VGA Signal in Hubris

https://lasernoises.com/blog/hubris-vga/
11•lasernoises•1h ago•2 comments

Death to type classes

https://jappie.me/death-to-type-classes.html
78•zeepthee•3d ago•49 comments

Boring Work Needs Tension

https://iaziz786.com/blog/boring-work-needs-tension/
6•iaziz786•1h ago•0 comments

A qualitative analysis of pig-butchering scams

https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.20821
150•stmw•12h ago•83 comments

Which NPM package has the largest version number?

https://adamhl.dev/blog/largest-number-in-npm-package/
137•genshii•13h ago•56 comments

Show HN: Semlib – Semantic Data Processing

https://github.com/anishathalye/semlib
27•anishathalye•3h ago•9 comments

Pgstream: Postgres streaming logical replication with DDL changes

https://github.com/xataio/pgstream
39•fenn•4h ago•2 comments

Not all browsers perform revocation checking

https://revoked-isrgrootx1.letsencrypt.org/
79•sugarpimpdorsey•13h ago•62 comments

The Culture novels as a dystopia

https://www.boristhebrave.com/2025/09/14/the-culture-novels-as-a-dystopia/
39•ibobev•8h ago•66 comments

Grapevine canes can be converted into plastic-like material that will decompose

https://www.sdstate.edu/news/2025/08/can-grapevines-help-slow-plastic-waste-problem
374•westurner•18h ago•303 comments

The madness of SaaS chargebacks

https://medium.com/@citizenblr/the-10-payment-that-cost-me-43-95-the-madness-of-saas-chargebacks-...
51•evermike•5h ago•73 comments

NASA's Guardian Tsunami Detection Tech Catches Wave in Real Time

https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/nasas-guardian-tsunami-detection-tech-catches-wave-in-real-time/
126•geox•2d ago•20 comments
Open in hackernews

Cory Doctorow: "centaurs" and "reverse-centaurs"

https://locusmag.com/2025/09/commentary-cory-doctorow-reverse-centaurs/
73•thecosas•3d ago

Comments

furyofantares•1h ago
I'm sorry, but is producing 10 lists of 15 items each really 50 peoples' worth of work? The amount of effort this would take today without the use of a chatbot seems overblown. Or with the use of a chatbot, but fact-checked, for that matter.

edit: I'm not questioning how much work it was in the days of print. I think it's fairly false to paint it as if AI has much to do with the transition from high effort lists to low effort. I don't think it happened overnight that it went from 50 brains to 1, these lists have become easier to produce and far less valuable over the past few decades, I suspect the number of people involved had dwindled a lot before anyone used a chatbot to do it.

smithkl42•1h ago
I agree with Doctorow about the de-humanizing nature of this sort of work - but to your specific point about fact checking, it'd honestly be fastest to outsource that to a different LLM, maybe ChatGPT in "deep research" mode or something like that.
CamperBob2•1h ago
The other thing is that the missing books can be created on demand and published in a couple of hours, using the same tech that mistakenly added them to the list in the first place.

They'll suck, of course, but so do most of the books on any given "Summer Reading Guide."

throwway120385•1h ago
So it's a sort of "reverse memory hole" where things that never existed contemporaneously to the list can now be given life to invalidate fact checking.
CamperBob2•1h ago
Which just reminds us that the committee who awarded the Nobel Prize to Kissinger and Arafat is the same one that overlooked Borges and Eco.
addaon•1h ago
No. The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded by the Norwegian Nobel Committee, while the Literature prize and the other prizes defined by Nobel’s will are awarded by the Swedish Academy.
CamperBob2•58m ago
I see.
WolfeReader•1h ago
"Here's a technology which is known to be confidently wrong pretty frequently. I'm going to use it to fact check things."
CamperBob2•1h ago
It's a powerful tool that can be misused by the incompetent, like most other powerful tools.
lupusreal•37m ago
If you have tokens to burn, using new sessions to critique the work produced in other sessions greatly improves reliability. Asking the same question multiple different ways, and to more than one LLM, also helps a lot.
sleepybrett•26m ago
pay all the other 'ai's to crowdsource .. or maybe cloudsource, a truth boolean. Then when they all ingest each others answers slowly over time all the answers become the same, wether truthful or not.
smallnix•8m ago
Querying an LLM for 'facts' is dangerous. Using some IR technique and incorporating LLMs to gauge relevancy and semantic alignment is a viable approach.
dentemple•1h ago
It was 3 people who were replaced for the making of a list.

The number 50 was what Doctorow presumed was the entirety of the department that could potentially have been replaced by AI, of which the making of this list had been only one of that department's overall tasks.

At 3 interns per article, having 30 interns working on 10 simultaneous articles at any given time seems like reasonable output for an online zine.

throwway120385•1h ago
In the days of print media, before you could google "top 10" X, the newspaper might well be your only source of "listicles." They took that responsibility seriously.

Top 10 lists are garbage nowadays because the format is used to flood search engines with Amazon Affiliate links for things like fartely brand leggings.

furyofantares•1h ago
Right, which is why I asked if it's that much work _today_.

I don't think they went from this going through 50 brains to it going through 1 overnight because chatbots exist. They gradually got there as these lists both became easier to produce and less valuable.

rtkwe•1h ago
That wouldn't have been their full time jobs but that list would have passed through quite a few people's hands; from gathering all the events/books/activities, picking out some that seem fun for several different 'types' of people, compiling, writing, reviewing/editing, fact checking and formatting.
xjm•48m ago
> Thatcher told us, “There is no alternative.” In 1982, Bill Gibson refuted her thus: “The street finds its own uses for things.” > I know which prophet I’m gonna follow.

> Thanks to a free AI model that ran on my modest laptop, in the background while I was doing other work, I was able to write [an accurate quote]

He's right, but it sure sounds like a long fight made of small actions.

melon_tusk•31m ago
I have a hard time taking extremists seriously, regardless what side they're on.
GMoromisato•21m ago
I love watching Star Trek. At its best, it both entertains and expands your mind. As Doctorow says, it explores the impact of technology on society and individuals, and it helps us see our current world in a different light.

But here's the thing: just as I would never try to learn physics from Star Trek, I would never take its ideas as prescriptions for how to run society. There's an episode in which Kirk almost triggers a nuclear war because he gambles that once faced with that possibility, the two sides will make peace instead. This is MAD theory on steroids.

Even the concept that there is no money in the Star Trek future is non-sensical. It is the economic equivalent of "Heisenberg compensators" or "inertial dampeners".

I feel the same way about Cory Doctorow. I enjoy reading him because he expands my mind. But I can't take him seriously.

Like Star Trek, Doctorow espouses simple themes in which there are good guys and bad guys. He envisions a utopia in which all his needs are met, and when the world falls short, he trots out the usual villains to blame, billionaires instead of Klingons. And he does it in an entertaining and clever way.

Reality is far more complicated, of course.

My father had a theory that the Industrial Revolution happened, not because of a technological change, but because the Bank of England invented fractional reserve banking. With fractional reserve lending, a bank can lend more money than it has on its books. And as long as that money is put to productive uses, the economy will grow faster than if the money supply were limited.

Instead of a central authority deciding what we should invest in, there is a distributed system that tries various things, some of which succeed and some of which fail. And with fractional reserve banking, there is more money for experiments, allowing for more shots-on-goal.

If I were to try to simplify things as Star Trek or Doctorow do, I might say that every material benefit that you have today, from electric lights to Uber, happened because someone decided to invest in an idea. In my morality tale, investors and founders are not "tech hucksters" but an essential cog in a complex, and almost miraculous machine that has made the world of 2025 almost unrecognizably better than the filthy, poor London of 1760.

I love watching Star Trek and reading Doctorow. But I find reality much more fascinating.

hn_throw_250915•8m ago
This comment reminds me of the one time when a critic said to Arnold how he wouldn’t want to look like him.

Arnold replied back, “don’t worry, you never will”.

cptroot•7m ago
I'm curious. Aside from this general criticism of Doctorow, do you have any specific criticisms of TFA's contents?

Any thoughts about whether reverse-centaurs are something that should continue to exist? Perhaps something about how the AI boom is going to produce miracles, as opposed to making us all babysitters forced to keep up with supersonic idiotic toddlers?