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I regret building this $3000 Pi AI cluster

https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2025/i-regret-building-3000-pi-ai-cluster
44•speckx•23m ago•16 comments

Ruby Central's Attack on RubyGems [pdf]

https://pup-e.com/goodbye-rubygems.pdf
280•jolux•6h ago•61 comments

Want to piss off your IT department? Are the links not malicious looking enough?

https://phishyurl.com/
863•jordigh•16h ago•246 comments

Statistical Physics with R: Ising Model with Monte Carlo

https://github.com/msuzen/isingLenzMC
66•northlondoner•5h ago•37 comments

Show the Physics

https://interactivetextbooks.tudelft.nl/showthephysics/Introduction/About.html
18•pillars•2d ago•2 comments

Internet Archive's big battle with music publishers ends in settlement

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/09/internet-archives-big-battle-with-music-publishers-en...
38•coloneltcb•3d ago•16 comments

Ask HN: Does anyone else notice YouTube causing 100% CPU usage and stattering?

63•NooneAtAll3•1h ago•57 comments

The sordid reality of retirement villages: Residents are being milked for profit

https://unherd.com/2025/09/the-sordid-truth-about-retriement-villages/
43•johngabbar•1h ago•29 comments

The Ruliology of Lambdas

https://writings.stephenwolfram.com/2025/09/the-ruliology-of-lambdas/
69•marvinborner•3d ago•17 comments

Help Us Raise $200k to Free JavaScript from Oracle

https://deno.com/blog/javascript-tm-gofundme
298•kaladin-jasnah•13h ago•148 comments

Dynamo AI (YC W22) Is Hiring a Senior Kubernetes Engineer

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/dynamo-ai/jobs/fU1oC9q-senior-kubernetes-engineer
1•DynamoFL•2h ago

Rules for creating good-looking user interfaces, from a developer

https://weberdominik.com/blog/rules-user-interfaces/
249•domysee•3d ago•134 comments

Leatherman (vagabond)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leatherman_(vagabond)
185•redbell•4d ago•80 comments

The Sagrada Família takes its final shape

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/09/22/is-the-sagrada-familia-a-masterpiece-or-kitsch
324•pseudolus•3d ago•169 comments

Intel Arc Celestial dGPU seems to be first casualty of Nvidia partnership

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-Arc-Celestial-dGPU-seems-to-be-first-casualty-of-Nvidia-partn...
16•LorenDB•1h ago•1 comments

Apple: SSH and FileVault

https://keith.github.io/xcode-man-pages/apple_ssh_and_filevault.7.html
446•ingve•18h ago•156 comments

U.S. already has the critical minerals it needs, according to new analysis

https://www.minesnewsroom.com/news/us-already-has-critical-minerals-it-needs-theyre-being-thrown-...
214•giuliomagnifico•19h ago•275 comments

David Lynch LA House

https://www.wallpaper.com/design-interiors/david-lynch-house-los-angeles-for-sale
213•ewf•14h ago•88 comments

The Fisherman and His Wife (1857)

https://sites.pitt.edu/~dash/grimm019.html
62•andsoitis•2d ago•41 comments

Gemini in Chrome

https://gemini.google/overview/gemini-in-chrome/
234•angst•12h ago•199 comments

As Android developer verification gets ready to go, a new reason to be worried

https://www.androidauthority.com/android-sideload-offline-3598988/
15•josephcsible•44m ago•6 comments

This map is not upside down

https://www.maps.com/this-map-is-not-upside-down/
312•aagha•21h ago•447 comments

JIT-ing a stack machine (with SLJIT)

https://bullno1.com/blog/jiting-a-stack-machine
24•bullno1•3d ago•5 comments

Tracking trust with Rust in the kernel

https://lwn.net/Articles/1034603/
122•pykello•4d ago•38 comments

AI tools are making the world look weird

https://strat7.com/blogs/weird-in-weird-out/
165•gaaz•16h ago•148 comments

Grief gets an expiration date, just like us

https://bessstillman.substack.com/p/oh-fuck-youre-still-sad
413•LaurenSerino•1d ago•192 comments

Playing “Minecraft” without Minecraft (2024)

https://lenowo.org/viewtopic.php?t=5
132•coolcoder613•12h ago•58 comments

Court lets NSF keep swinging axe at $1B in research grants

https://www.theregister.com/2025/09/19/court_lets_nsf_keep_swinging/
7•rntn•52m ago•1 comments

Slack has raised our charges by $195k per year

https://skyfall.dev/posts/slack
3120•JustSkyfall•1d ago•1362 comments

Llama-Factory: Unified, Efficient Fine-Tuning for 100 Open LLMs

https://github.com/hiyouga/LLaMA-Factory
108•jinqueeny•15h ago•15 comments
Open in hackernews

Burnend alive inside a Tesla as rescuers fail to open the car's door

https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/electric-cars/man-and-two-children-burn-alive-inside-a-tesla-with-rescuers-unable-to-open-the-car-s-door/ar-AA1MPAol
62•dsego•4h ago

Comments

jeffrallen•2h ago
How to use the manual latches:

https://insideevs.com/news/507202/how-escape-from-tesla-emer...

And Tesla plans to change them because they are too hard to use:

https://insideevs.com/news/772636/tesla-door-handle-fix-fran...

_rm•2h ago
I clicked the article and now I feel fucking angry that there's a detailed manual on how to open these cars' doors.

"Open the door" is a standalone manual, as a sentence. If that's not the case, no doubt there's some Aspergers tech nerd involved.

I'd like to see stuff like this elevated to conspiracy to murder through tech-shit means.

smileybarry•2h ago
From the original post:

> According to the German Automobile Association, manual opening is only possible from the inside, which complicates rescue attempts for emergency services.

The issue, other than complicated internal release, was the lack of an external way to manually open the doors. (e.g.: driver is unconscious with small kids who haven't read the manual)

jackvalentine•2h ago
I’m not an expert at this but I’m pretty annoyed that I now have to think about something as simple as door handles on a car?

I thought this was a solved problem.

_rm•2h ago
As a tech person I've been in enough meetings where some tech nerd was aggressively driving forward a dementedly overcomplicated and perspective lacking solution to know that the last thing these types want is a solved problem.

To them, a wheel is detestable -because it's simple and easy to use, and they've got some idea of a superior complex polyhedron that's of course better and everyone else is dumb for not using it.

It would be good if we could trace whatever technical dog shit killed these poor little kids back to whoever was involved, and... "offer them a non-technical solution to the causal factors".

politelemon•2h ago
I'm now imagining a developer telling a room of product managers that the car needs to run react on kubernetes and everyone just nodding along because they've heard those words before.
ahartmetz•2h ago
I wouldn't be surprised if there were a bunch of Docker containers running in some current cars.
_rm•1h ago
I guess your imagination isn't as dark as mine.

I imagine the nerd confidently standing up in meeting room, his eyes wide with a psychotic look of conviction, stating with vehement certainly: "they wouldn't be dead if we'd written it in Rust!".

But yeah, the 50 something checked out MBAs - just waiting for the end to the farce that was their "career" - would be nodding along.

franktankbank•1h ago
This sounds like an idea forced on dev by some dumb shit who had to "make impact".
Mistletoe•2h ago
Elon like to think he innovates when he just changes stuff for no reason that carmakers figured out a century ago. Anyone that has used the turn signals or wipers in a Tesla understands how stupid it is.
anonymars•1h ago
Guaranteed every Tesla owner (Model 3/Y at least, I haven't seen the others) has had to explain to new passengers how to properly open the door and to use the button to exit and NOT the obvious handle.

Meanwhile how many times in one's life as a non-Tesla-owner have you had to explain to someone how to open a car door?

They do say they're a tech company and not a car company, eh?

tolerance•1h ago
There’s a Neil Postman talk from the late 90s where he voiced his disdain for and resistance against automatic windows while purchasing a new car. He was on to something.
rchaud•1h ago
The age old advice of "just buy Toyota or Honda" still applies.
floydnoel•1h ago
Unfortunately not, I used that advice for three brand-new purchased Honda’s: a Fit, a Cr-V, and an Odyssey Touring Elite Minivan. The CRV was the last Honda I will ever buy. Honda stuffed too many computers into the car and it would kill the battery after one day. This is when I was traveling for work, making the vehicle useless. Honda dealer said “that’s how they all are now, because of the electronics the battery dies every few days” and they even claimed that they go around charging up all the vehicles on the lot with a portable battery charger every day because of it! Absolutely a lemon brand now. These companies just have a huge disrespect for software and quality in technology.
colpabar•6m ago
or subaru!
metalman•2h ago
in aircraft design there is something called the "failure mode", and every last possible thing is considered and reviewed from all possible scenarios and accident reviews. so things like wing bolts are obvious, but the door handles are also approved, and how the carpet is held down, as if it comes loose, and rumpples up under the rudder pedals, you die, and on and on and on. recently been a spate of helicopter accidents where loose objects (personal kit), have jammed controls, and the problem becomes, do you ban (shift blame) loose objects, or go all in and test and design for unjammable controlls.....which will require a slightly larger cabin with greater clearances, and controlls that are fully covered and therefor a bit heavier and harder to service.....which comes with it's own risks
freetonik•2h ago
I drive a VW ID.3, and while it has traditional door handles, there is a feature that drives me crazy: it auto-locks the doors when you start driving. There is no way to turn this off. In case of a crash, the doors won't open from the outside. But they will also not open from the inside in case the electronics related to the central locking is damaged in the crash. I don't understand how this is considered a safety feature.

In every single other car I'd driven there was a way to permanently disable such feature. Not in ID.3.

gpderetta•2h ago
There are crash sensors to trigger air bags, pre-tension seatbelts, cut off the fuel pump and so on. You would think that some engineer must have thought about auto-unlocking doors!
siva7•2h ago
Only after the user story has been written in blood.
dfox•2h ago
The reasoning behind the auto-locking feature is that when the doors are locked it adds to rigidity of the car and thus decreases the likelyhood of the passanger cabin collapsing on the occupants. Auto unlocking the doors would completely defeat the reason for that feature.

The actual mechanism of how the door works as kind of "configurable deformation zone" usually involves somewhat thick steel rod running down the middle of the door that on hinge side abbuts similar strength member in the chasis and on the latch side connects to the latch. The latch has two distinct positions depending on whether the door is just latched or locked and the only latched position is not strong enough to hold the potential impact forces..

alwa•1h ago
Huh! Autolocking behavior has bothered me for as long as I remember seeing it, and I’d love to believe that it improves safety against crashes (rather than notional “bad guys trying to open the door on your journey” or something). It’s only ever inconvenienced me, never helped.

I’m having trouble finding more formal explanations for what you’re describing, though. I see a lot of talk about how the latching behavior links the door’s steel into the rest of the body, but very little about the structural aspects of the locks that link the handles to the latch’s release mechanism.

I’m the farthest thing from a car engineer, but I wonder if you’d know of anyplace I could read more about this structural aspect of locking design? Every time I accidentally lock out a passenger, I get frustrated: I’d find grace and patience easier to muster if I understood how someday it might save both our lives :)

Timshel•1h ago
They have, from the owner manual (page 106 https://ownersmanuals2.com/d/101316/volkswagen-id3-2025-owne...)

Automatic unlocking (Auto Unlock) All vehicle doors and the boot lid are automatically unlocked if one of the following conditions applies:

— In an accident, when airbags have triggered.

— Or: the electronic parking brake is engaged and the ignition is switched off.

—Or: the door release lever has been operated. This applies at speeds up to around 15 km/h(around 9 mph).

gpderetta•52m ago
This makes sense! But see your the sibling comment.
rightbyte•2h ago
> But they will also not open from the inside in case the electronics related to the central locking is damaged in the crash.

Are you sure? Wont the internal handle unlock the door by mechanical means?

freetonik•2h ago
I am not sure. The driver's door handle unlocks all 4 doors, so at least that path is electronic. But I hope yes, each door's handle can also unlock the corresponding door's lock mechanically.
magnetometer•2h ago
The doors of an ID.3 will unlock automatically when the airbags are deployed. It's described in the AutoLock section of the owners manual.
freetonik•2h ago
Thanks! I stand corrected, I have missed that part in the manual.
3D30497420•1h ago
This is part of the Euro NCAP standard:

> Automatic Door Locking (ADL): System in the vehicle whereby the door latches automatically lock once the vehicle has reached a certain speed. They should also automatically unlock in the event of an accident, post impact.

https://cdn.euroncap.com/media/43396/euro-ncap-rescue-extric...

They also have a section for electric retractable door handles (5.3), including

> It is assumed that by design the door handles will extend outwards ready for use when the SRS system deploys any airbag/detects a severe impact or the door handle remains in its retracted position but can be grabbed nevertheless by the first responder without any tool.

I wonder if Tesla's don't do this? Or if it didn't in this case?

TheCraiggers•1h ago
That, presumably, is an electronic/computerized feature, not mechanical. So if the car is damaged enough to not have electricity, or that board was damaged in whatever caused the airbags to deploy, then the doors won't automatically unlock.

Given the kinds of things that could make an airbag go off, I wouldn't bet on that feature working when needed.

seszett•2h ago
All modern cars have been locking the doors for the last 20 years or so, as far as I know. At least here in Western Europe.

The door handles still work from the inside, they mechanically unlock the door unconditionally, meaning nobody can be trapped inside even by manually locking the doors.

The exception is if you flip the "child safety" switch which disconnects the inside door handle of the rear doors.

freetonik•2h ago
>All modern cars have been locking the doors for the last 20 years or so, as far as I know.

Yeah, and I would always disable that feature. Perhaps that was wrong to do, and now that I don't have a choice it's actually safer for me and my passengers.

piker•1h ago
I hate this "feature". Was there a rash of children jumping out of cars that lead to its creation? It just seems like such a narrow set of facts where a child is big and smart enough to open the door but dumb enough to jump out and get seriously hurt. Opening a moving car door is presumably quite difficult given the aerodynamic pressure on the body. So the car would have to be moving rather slow and yet turning and moving fast enough that the child couldn't avoid disaster.
pmg101•1h ago
I always assumed it to was prevent carjacking?
seszett•1h ago
If you're talking about the child safety, it's unrelated to door locking.

It prevents children from exiting the car before an adult can ensure it is safe to do so. Mostly to prevent the child getting run over by a passing car, or dooring a passing bicycle. If you don't like it you can just not enable it.

ehnto•1h ago
You may be on to something. I drove a BMW that, when the electric window position sensors went bad, the whole car went into limp mode and didn't let you accelerate over a certain speed. I imagine the rationale being out could not verify the windows were not down? Crazy still... the first and only BMW. I should have stuck to old Nissans
mattmanser•1h ago
Things go wrong on cars, it doesn't mean they're bad as a brand. I loved my BMW. Have a Volvo now and apart from the slightly crap entertainment software I love it. They're replaced the software with carplay in the newer models, and updated older models, but alas they can't update my model due to a hardware mismatch.

It's the cars where things constantly go wrong that you should avoid. Jags + Land Rovers have those reputations in the UK.

Zak•1m ago
It's fine that a window position sensor might eventually fail on a car. It's not fine that a window position sensor causes the car to limit its maximum speed.
gwbas1c•1h ago
> Was there a rash of children jumping out of cars that lead to its creation?

No, there was a rash of carjackings in the 1990s. It was where someone would walk up to a car stopped at an intersection and open the door.

moepstar•1h ago
> Opening a moving car door is presumably quite difficult given the aerodynamic pressure on the body. So the car would have to be moving rather slow

Actually, no - at least not slow by my definition.

You’d have to drive over 130km/h, this is when you need some serious force to open the door more than maybe 10-20cm - but anything slower than that, it’s still pretty easy, certainly easy enough for a kid to open the door wide enough to fall out or get in serious trouble..

Source: 18 year old stupid me and buddies, doing stuff like opening driving cars doors, going over 100km/h

EForEndeavour•1h ago
> It just seems like such a narrow set of facts where a child is big and smart enough to open the door but dumb enough to jump out and get seriously hurt.

I had to guess, I'd guess you aren't a parent or spend much time interacting with children :)

Also, auto-lock reduces theft and carjacking risk, which is nice.

dsego•32m ago
A friend's 3 year old absolutely opened the door last year while we were driving. Luckily she was strapped in her car seat, but otherwise could've easily fallen out.
RandomBacon•1h ago
I'm renting a 2025 Chevy Malibu sedan in the U.S. right now, and for the driver door, I have to pull the handle twice. The first pull unlocks it, the second pull opens it. I think it is digital and not mechanical.

There is no mechanical lock I can pull on, just a push button with a light to indicate that the door is locked. I hate this car.

MarkusWandel•1h ago
I thought that about my car (a Honda) as well, having not RTFM. In this case at least, there's a touch sensor on the inside of the handle. Lay hand on it, wait half a second to unlock, pull. No double pull needed.
tpm•1h ago
I've got a 2012 Toyota Avensis and it does not lock the doors automatically.
TheChaplain•44m ago
> All modern cars have been locking the doors for the last 20 years or so, as far as I know.

No? My Honda Civic from 2016 certainly does not.

SirFatty•2h ago
It's been a long time since I've had a vehicle (car or truck) that didn't auto-lock the doors.
freetonik•1h ago
I didn't say it's a new feature. I said the inability to disable it is.
Ccecil•1h ago
IIRC...on my older VW there is a way to set this to disable but it requires using OBDeleven/VCDS (or similar) via the CANBUS.

Typically, there are a few different options of things you can enable/disable that have no other menu options. OBDeleven has "one touch apps" that makes this easy...but there is also other ways to do things using the adaptations or long coding.

If you do any work on your own car having something like OBDeleven is pretty much required. You can't even change the rear brake pads without it.

ajross•2h ago
I know this will be buried and likely flagged, but someone needs to call out the hysteria angle here:

Car doors jam shut in major collisions. All of them do. It's not about handle design. No handle is going to open a door that was crushed around the latch. This is a surprisingly common way to die after a serious accident.

People want their priors to be confirmed so they see "Tesla" and "door" together and figure it must be the same issue. It's almost certainly not.

(Also note that it's not even about the interior door handles! The contention in the article was about the rescuers being unable to use the external handles.)

OK, flag away.

chasd00•2h ago
No flag from me, situations like what you described are why the “jaws of life” were invented. It allows rescuers to cut through a crushed car to reach the crash victims.
tcbawo•2h ago
How often are all doors of a car inoperable after a crash? Getting out the other side of a burning vehicle is an option I want
ajross•1h ago
I don't have numbers for you, but the answer is likely of the order "almost always after a rollover". The cage will protect the occupants from being crushed, not the high-tolerance door and hinge clearances. And rollovers are common.

Again, the confirmation of priors effect is extremely strong here. People are leaping from "Tesla manual door handles are difficult to open from inside the cabin" to "All Tesla accidents are the fault of the interior door handles".

orwin•1h ago
Of course you can very often open doors after a rollover, maybe it's very different in US cars but here we have complete stress and collision tests, and if doors can't be opened after a rollover, your car won't pass and won't be sold on the European market (unless you get an exemption for collection/luxury vehicles, but Tesla won't qualify).
RandomBacon•1h ago
> I know this will be buried and likely flagged

> OK, flag away.

Fallacy unlocked.

"If I get downvoted or flagged, it proves my point and can't be because I'm wrong or breaking the rules!"

kgwxd•1h ago
In the cases cited in the English article, the driver doors were supposedly not crushed, and someone on the inside would have been able to open it, had the handles worked as expected.

Defending deadly design is a really weird hill to die on. Your false idol is actually just an idiot, and I know it stings the pride to admit you fell for it, but doubling down isn't the way forward.

Zak•2h ago
When I have driven cars with electronic door poppers, I found them to be a downgrade from traditional mechanical door handles. It's even possible to make the latter sit flush, and cars have been doing it since at least the 1960s.

I'm all for trying new things in the hope that there might be a better way, but make sure it's actually better before putting it into a volume product where it has safety implications.

dsego•48m ago
Right, aren't the old style flap type handlers aerodynamic enough? It doesn't have the handle sticking out.
isuckatcoding•2h ago
Which model???
ourmandave•2h ago
At least the cybertruck comes with breakable windows. /s
jccc•1h ago
Why is this issue not caught by regulators? There must be something I don’t know about how that kind of regulatory approval happens.
orwin•1h ago
Regulation in Europe mandate that doors have to unlock when airbags are triggered. If the model involved was legal in the EU, it was either a mechanical issue or an electronic one, and maybe not exclusively Tesla's fault, but it was caused by their poor engineering/assembly practices.

If it's in the US and they have no regulations on this, I don't want to be cavalier but they should reflect on their anti-regulation culture, and Tesla does not deserve to be scapegoated (not a fan of the brand, but I try to be consistent).

josefritzishere•1h ago
Teslas are plastic death traps. I'd rather drive a Kia.
OutOfHere•1h ago
It is why I have asked those in my family to never enter a Tesla. If I ever get a Tesla for Uber/Lyft, I immediately cancel it. Also, if Tesla's cars are this bad, its robots could only be worse.
seltzered_•1h ago
Related articles on electronic door handles and issues with emergency opening: https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2025-tesla-dangerous-door... ( Dana Hull for Bloomberg , via https://bsky.app/profile/danahull.bsky.social/post/3lz67zsyu... )
dvh•1h ago
Joerg Sprave from Slingshot channel designed and is selling new type of glass breaking hammer that has foldable car glass saw.
reaperducer•46m ago
Joerg Sprave from Slingshot channel designed and is selling new type of glass breaking hammer that has foldable car glass saw.

Sounds like the same window hammer what my uncle had in the glove box of his 1971 Cadillac, next to his cigarettes and his gun. He said each was for use in different types of emergencies.

Just because it's on YouTube doesn't make it new.

tedggh•1h ago
Despite how horrific this is it doesn’t tell us what really happened. Doors can get stuck in any car after an accident. Teslas are very controversial today for obvious reasons so every time there’s some tragic news the brand has to be mentioned. Like recently they found a dismembered body of a woman and of course it was found inside a Tesla. In any case the lack of handles should not be a problem as there’s a latch inside which is easy to access and operate. It’s up to each car user to get familiar with the car to drive it safely.
gwbas1c•1h ago
The article doesn't mention which vehicle.

The Model S and X have truly retractable door handles. The Model 3 and Y have flush door handles that you need to push in to get the latch to pull out. As far as I know, the 3/Y handles should work with the power disconnected; although many people who haven't ridden in one don't know that you need to push, then pull, the handle. (And probably won't figure it out when panicking.)

I don't know if there's a way to bypass the S/X handles. My Ioniq 9 has retractable handles, and if you push on one corner of the driver's door handle you can work it out. I don't know about the other doors, and I don't think someone could figure it out if panicking.

Driver8•1h ago
The Model 3 and Y handles do not work with the power disconnected. The article says that it was a Model Y that they were unable to open. My Model 3 had a power issue and the doors would not open.

More instances: https://www.msn.com/en-ca/autos/electric-cars/tesla-under-in...

prmph•1h ago
The windows could not be broken?

A small nit: It's "burnt", not "burnend"

ndsipa_pomu•1h ago
Why does the title have "Burnend"? As far as I can tell, there's a Burnend distillery that produces Scotch Whisky, but I fail to see the connection with Teslas.
raffael_de•1h ago
"crashed into a tree"

People have been trapped in burning cars due to impact and deformation since cars exist. Such tragedies are not specific to Teslas.

zenethian•1h ago
Article deleted?
bananapub•23m ago
good example of where regulation is useful - there's zero reason for idiots to be making things like this worse, no matter what dumb justification they have. people shouldn't have to bear in mind "is this the one that burns you alive if the door power goes out or they ship a door software bug?" when shopping.