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Ask HN: Who is hiring? (November 2025)

198•whoishiring•4h ago•217 comments

Learning to read Arthur Whitney's C to become smart (2024)

https://needleful.net/blog/2024/01/arthur_whitney.html
125•gudzpoz•3h ago•38 comments

Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (November 2025)

63•whoishiring•4h ago•131 comments

Gallery of wonderful drawings our little thermal printer received

https://guestbook.goodenough.us
25•busymom0•1h ago•10 comments

Tiny electric motor can produce more than 1,000 horsepower

https://supercarblondie.com/electric-motor-yasa-more-powerful-tesla-mercedes/
438•chris_overseas•10h ago•398 comments

The Case Against PGVector

https://alex-jacobs.com/posts/the-case-against-pgvector/
186•tacoooooooo•7h ago•76 comments

Why Engineers Can't Be Rational About Programming Languages

https://spf13.com/p/the-hidden-conversation/
33•spf13•2h ago•29 comments

A visualization of the RGB space covered by named colors

https://codepen.io/meodai/full/zdgXJj/
152•BlankCanvas•5d ago•36 comments

Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger Version of Uber H3 in Rust

https://grim7reaper.github.io/blog/2023/01/09/the-hydronium-project/
48•ashergill•1w ago•9 comments

WebAssembly (WASM) arch support for the Linux kernel

https://github.com/joelseverin/linux-wasm
174•marcodiego•2d ago•37 comments

State of Terminal Emulators in 2025: The Errant Champions

https://www.jeffquast.com/post/state-of-terminal-emulation-2025/
87•SG-•5h ago•46 comments

VimGraph

https://resources.wolframcloud.com/FunctionRepository/resources/VimGraph/
123•gdelfino01•6h ago•21 comments

Skyfall-GS – Synthesizing Immersive 3D Urban Scenes from Satellite Imagery

https://skyfall-gs.jayinnn.dev/
75•ChrisArchitect•6h ago•22 comments

The Case That A.I. Is Thinking

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/11/10/the-case-that-ai-is-thinking
68•ascertain•2h ago•142 comments

Robert Hooke's "Cyberpunk” Letter to Gottfried Leibniz

https://mynamelowercase.com/blog/robert-hookes-cyberpunk-letter-to-gottfried-leibniz/
47•Gormisdomai•4h ago•11 comments

First recording of a dying human brain shows waves similar to memory flashbacks

https://louisville.edu/medicine/news/first-ever-recording-of-a-dying-human-brain-shows-waves-simi...
130•thunderbong•13h ago•112 comments

An Illustrated Introduction to Linear Algebra, Chapter 2: The Dot Product

https://www.ducktyped.org/p/linear-algebra-chapter-2-the-dot
73•egonschiele•6h ago•37 comments

Show HN: Tamagotchi P1 for FPGAs

https://github.com/agg23/fpga-tamagotchi
16•agg23•6d ago•0 comments

No Socials November

https://bjhess.com/posts/no-socials-november
73•speckx•3h ago•100 comments

Show HN: a Rust ray tracer that runs on any GPU – even in the browser

https://github.com/tchauffi/rust-rasterizer
63•tchauffi•6h ago•18 comments

The Continual Learning Problem

https://jessylin.com/2025/10/20/continual-learning/
45•Bogdanp•1w ago•4 comments

Why We Migrated from Python to Node.js

https://blog.yakkomajuri.com/blog/python-to-node
143•yakkomajuri•3h ago•115 comments

Measuring characteristics of TCP connections at Internet scale

https://blog.cloudflare.com/measuring-network-connections-at-scale/
34•fleahunter•5d ago•0 comments

Why Nextcloud feels slow to use

https://ounapuu.ee/posts/2025/11/03/nextcloud-slow/
310•rpgbr•6h ago•238 comments

A collection of links that existed about Anguilla as of 2003

https://web.ai/
48•kjok•6h ago•13 comments

How the Mayans were able to accurately predict solar eclipses for centuries

https://phys.org/news/2025-10-mayans-accurately-solar-eclipses-centuries.html
106•pseudolus•1w ago•101 comments

Python Steering Council unanimously accepts "PEP 810, Explicit lazy imports"

https://discuss.python.org/t/pep-810-explicit-lazy-imports/104131?page=23
84•Redoubts•3h ago•28 comments

OpenAI signs $38B cloud computing deal with Amazon

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/03/technology/openai-amazon-cloud-computing.html
127•donohoe•5h ago•116 comments

Wikipedia row erupts as Jimmy Wales intervenes on 'Gaza genocide' page

https://www.thenational.scot/news/25591165.wikipedia-row-erupts-jimmy-wales-intervenes-gaza-genoc...
18•lehi•51m ago•8 comments

OSS Alternative to Open WebUI – ChatGPT-Like UI, API and CLI

https://github.com/ServiceStack/llms
72•mythz•7h ago•23 comments
Open in hackernews

A turn lane in Rhododendron

https://www.greentape.pub/p/a-turn-lane-in-rhododendron
32•apsec112•1w ago

Comments

geophph•5h ago
“No way this is about the Rhododendron on the way up to Mt. Hood”

…

Sure was.

oftenwrong•5h ago
Would a wider road not embolden drivers to increase their speed?
wredcoll•4h ago
I don't know, would it?
ineptech•2h ago
The issue isn't people going too fast, it's people turning left. 26 basically connects Portland on one end and Mt Hood recreation stuff on the other, and it used to be that there wasn't that much in between. Over the last few decades, a lot of development has gone up, meaning a lot more businesses and neighborhoods along both sides of 26, plus the highway has gotten a lot busier.
BigTTYGothGF•5h ago
I don't believe I've been on that stretch of road, but it seems to me that if the concern is safety there are other alternatives to adding a turn lane, the most obvious of which being a reduction in the speed limit.
hamdingers•3h ago
A reduction in design speed of the road has to accompany a reduction of speed limit for it to be effective. Narrower lanes, etc.

It sounds like the residents are opposed to, well, anything.

throwaway173738•14m ago
Actually many of the residents were in favor of changing the road. One person decided to fight the entire project on the basis of a cairn of rocks that 5 or 6 archaeologists agreed had no cultural significance.
onionisafruit•5h ago
In the picture the stone pillars look like a decorative feature marking a neighborhood entrance. Does anybody know their origin? I assume if they were installed in the past 100 years there would be some evidence to counter Mr Jones’ claims.
onionisafruit•5h ago
I clicked through looking for some novel civil engineering because I assumed a rhododendron is a geometric shape I hadn’t heard of. The actual story was a good read too.
seemaze•4h ago
rhododendron is a flower

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

fritzo•3h ago
The only grave being disturbed is Robert Moses' by his turning
libraryofbabel•3h ago
The larger issue, of course, is that eccentric individuals and niche special-interest groups are able to use the planning process and the legal system to jam up all sorts of infrastructure projects in America, from simple turn lanes all the way to high-speed rail. This is not the only reason America has trouble building infrastructure, but it is an important reason. See Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson‘s new book Abundance for a long-form analysis of this… or for a contrast with the US’s “lawyerly society” (and, of course, the disadvantages of leaning too much in the other direction) Dan Wang’s Breakneck: China's Quest to Engineer the Future that just came out.

Both are excellent books and will probably appeal to a lot of Hacker News folks with an engineering/builder mindset.

cholmon•2h ago
Freakonomics interviewed Dan Wang about his book Breakneck back in September, see episode #647. It's a very interesting lens through which to view both societies, worth a listen!
jauntywundrkind•3h ago
Found the rock pillars, FWIW. Gorgeous trees around this area! https://maps.app.goo.gl/7gBd3MuvnmscNLUr6

And you can go back to 2007 to see the old highway, https://maps.app.goo.gl/Qd9evKz7vUnxt1FQ6

bell-cot•2h ago
<sigh/> At what point do you assume that the still-objecting NIMBY's either have personality disorders, or are motivated by malicious self-aggrandizement?
threetonesun•2h ago
Four lane roads like this, in any context, or any part of America, are an absolute disaster of civil engineering. I get that in the 60s or whenever they were built you had a situation where some cars could barely accelerate up an incline but by the 70s they should have all been reworked.
jonah-archive•28m ago
Among the many reasons that stretch of 26 is dangerous is that the approach from Portland is essentially a freeway from Gresham through Sandy, and then turns into a rural highway until it begins the climb up to Hood. This is because of a remnant of the Mount Hood Freeway construction, which resulted in a lot of little oddities that linger in Portland to this day: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Hood_Freeway