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The Mack Super Pumper was a locomotive engined fire fighter (2018)

https://bangshift.com/bangshiftxl/mack-super-pumper-system-locomotive-engine-powered-pumper-extin...
57•mstngl•1h ago•29 comments

AI's Dial-Up Era

https://www.wreflection.com/p/ai-dial-up-era
30•nowflux•1h ago•15 comments

Ask HN: Who is hiring? (November 2025)

258•whoishiring•6h ago•272 comments

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

https://needleful.net/blog/2024/01/arthur_whitney.html
191•gudzpoz•6h ago•75 comments

Gallery of wonderful drawings our little thermal printer received

https://guestbook.goodenough.us
55•busymom0•4h ago•19 comments

The MP3.com Rescue Barge Barge

https://blog.somnolescent.net/2025/09/mp3-com-rescue-barge-barge/
62•CharlesW•1w ago•17 comments

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

98•whoishiring•6h ago•207 comments

Tiny electric motor can produce more than 1,000 horsepower

https://supercarblondie.com/electric-motor-yasa-more-powerful-tesla-mercedes/
495•chris_overseas•13h ago•459 comments

S1130 – IBM 1130 Emulator in C#

https://github.com/semuhphor/S1130/tree/feature/web-frontend
18•rbanffy•1w ago•0 comments

The Case Against PGVector

https://alex-jacobs.com/posts/the-case-against-pgvector/
232•tacoooooooo•9h ago•93 comments

State of Terminal Emulators in 2025: The Errant Champions

https://www.jeffquast.com/post/state-of-terminal-emulation-2025/
119•SG-•7h ago•86 comments

</> Htmx – The Fetch()ening

https://htmx.org/essays/the-fetchening/
169•leephillips•2h ago•39 comments

A visualization of the RGB space covered by named colors

https://codepen.io/meodai/full/zdgXJj/
192•BlankCanvas•5d ago•45 comments

Agent-o-rama: build, trace, evaluate, and monitor LLM agents in Java or Clojure

https://blog.redplanetlabs.com/2025/11/03/introducing-agent-o-rama-build-trace-evaluate-and-monit...
16•yayitswei•4h ago•1 comments

WebAssembly (WASM) arch support for the Linux kernel

https://github.com/joelseverin/linux-wasm
202•marcodiego•2d ago•48 comments

Open-sourced game logic, art and Spine animations – SuperWEIRD Game Kit

https://ludenio.itch.io/superweird-game-kit
7•gamescodedogs•4d ago•2 comments

Why Nextcloud feels slow to use

https://ounapuu.ee/posts/2025/11/03/nextcloud-slow/
335•rpgbr•9h ago•260 comments

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

https://grim7reaper.github.io/blog/2023/01/09/the-hydronium-project/
72•ashergill•1w ago•25 comments

VimGraph

https://resources.wolframcloud.com/FunctionRepository/resources/VimGraph/
133•gdelfino01•8h ago•22 comments

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

https://skyfall-gs.jayinnn.dev/
88•ChrisArchitect•8h ago•25 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...
171•thunderbong•15h ago•160 comments

FreakWAN: A floor-routing WAN implementing a chat over bare-LoRa (no LoRaWAN)

https://github.com/antirez/freakwan
15•teleforce•3h ago•4 comments

Why we migrated from Python to Node.js

https://blog.yakkomajuri.com/blog/python-to-node
160•yakkomajuri•5h ago•147 comments

Robert Hooke's "Cyberpunk” Letter to Gottfried Leibniz

https://mynamelowercase.com/blog/robert-hookes-cyberpunk-letter-to-gottfried-leibniz/
62•Gormisdomai•6h ago•15 comments

Show HN: Tamagotchi P1 for FPGAs

https://github.com/agg23/fpga-tamagotchi
39•agg23•6d ago•3 comments

Why engineers can't be rational about programming languages

https://spf13.com/p/the-hidden-conversation/
58•spf13•5h ago•74 comments

Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System (1999)

https://donellameadows.org/archives/leverage-points-places-to-intervene-in-a-system/
9•Jtsummers•2h ago•2 comments

Measuring characteristics of TCP connections at Internet scale

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

The Case That A.I. Is Thinking

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/11/10/the-case-that-ai-is-thinking
101•ascertain•4h ago•270 comments

Big Tech Needs $2T in AI Revenue by 2030

https://www.wheresyoured.at/big-tech-2tr/
11•chilipepperhott•39m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Robert Hooke's "Cyberpunk” Letter to Gottfried Leibniz

https://mynamelowercase.com/blog/robert-hookes-cyberpunk-letter-to-gottfried-leibniz/
62•Gormisdomai•6h ago

Comments

TZubiri•5h ago
While it may be a bit old, this kind of crossover celebrity gossip I can get into

EDIT: Presumably this is Robert Hooke as in the author of Micrographia and an early microscope

the__alchemist•5h ago
Yes. In hindsight I'm more surprised we don't hear more about their interactions due to the common enemy pointed out in the article!
sevensor•4h ago
If you enjoy Hooke fanfic, he features prominently in Quicksilver.
KineticLensman•4h ago
As does Newton, very quirkily
zacwellmer•4h ago
highly recommend the entire baroque cycle!
jillesvangurp•45m ago
Yep. But with a slight warning though, it's a lot of pages. Even by Neal Stephenson's standards, it's a lot. Not everybody has the attention span for this one. It's a very dense plot, with lots of side plots, asides, etc. (which is kind of the whole point of Neal Stephenson's books) that spreads over 9 books that originally were published in 3 volumes of ~1200 pages each depending on font size and edition you would have gotten. I've worked my way through that more times than I'd like to admit because it's enjoyable to re-read. Most recently earlier this year. It usually takes me 1-2 months at least.
hinkley•3h ago
Hooke in Quicksilver kinda made me mad at my science and physics teachers. He’s just some dude who did things with lenses as far as they would have had me believe.

Some of this book is fantastical but the bones of it are historical fiction.

DiscourseFan•5h ago
I think this is a cool interpretation of the letter, but it does read a little like one of those books for middle schoolers about how historical figures were actually totally rad or something.
SilasX•5h ago
>It turns out that, aside from their common interest in antagonising Isaac Newton, Hooke and Leibniz also shared an interest in mechanising scientific reasoning through the invention of a universal language for science. Leibniz called his project the "Characteristica Universalis".

I'm surprised it doesn't mention Leibniz's famous "Let us calculate" quote:

>>In a 1679 letter to one of his patrons, Johann Friedrich, he described his project of the universal language as “the great instrument of reason, which will carry the forces of the mind further than the microscope has carried those of sight”. Later he wrote:

>>>The only way to rectify our reasonings is to make them as tangible as those of the Mathematicians, so that we can find our error at a glance, and when there are disputes among persons, we can simply say: Let us calculate, without further ado, to see who is right.[1]

I'm also kind of surprised that Hooke wrote the letter in English, since I assumed all academic communication across language barriers back then would have been in Latin. But ChatGPT tells me Leibniz was unusually multi-lingual.

[1] Sorry, ad-heavy site but I wanted one that gave context: https://publicdomainreview.org/essay/let-us-calculate-leibni...

dr_dshiv•4h ago
Leibniz invented binary — so he kind of succeeded in his quest.

He based it on the Chinese iching, interestingly enough…

SilasX•4h ago
He was ahead of his time, definitely, and binary logic is one critical step in getting there, but we're a long way from having a formal language to represent all claims that would ever arise in human argumentation to the point that it's simply a matter of calculation to resolve them.
zeroonetwothree•19m ago
He didn’t actually base it on the Yiching, he just noticed that it could be expressed neatly in binary. But he had come up with binary code before that.
dr_dshiv•4h ago
Hooke introduced the effects of cannabis (“an account of the plant”) to the Royal Society and sometimes I wonder about that. Consider this amazingly dramatic title:

“A General Scheme, or Idea of the Present State of Natural Philosophy, And how its Defects may be Remedied by a Methodical Proceeding in the Making Experiments and Collecting Observations whereby to Compile a Natural History, as the Solid Basis for the Superstructure of True Philosophy.”

(Try saying that title in one breath!)

When it comes to cybernetics— Hooke was a big fan of Cornelis Drebbel who designed and built the first cybernetic system (a self regulating oven) and a functional submarine (which produced oxygen by heating saltpetre), and a compound microscope, and chemical air conditioning, and the telescope that Galileo used to find the moons of Jupiter, and a perpetual motion machine based on harvesting barometric pressure changes, and…

darepublic•2h ago
Sorry for the dumb question.. where is the transcript? I only see the link to the scanned letter
forgetfulness•2h ago
The transcript doesn’t seem to be finished, the part that the author uses to support their thesis is this excerpt in the article

"...especially in all those subjects where use of [such a language] may be free and where interest and authority do not intercept, the regular exercise thereof which I conceive to be the great antagonists which may impede its progress..."

“Hooke had some proto-liberal views” would be a more grounded interpretation.