frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Open in hackernews

Cargo plane crashes at Kentucky airport

https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c201kgq59qgt
61•hshdhdhehd•3h ago

Comments

gnabgib•3h ago
Discussion forming (25 points, 7 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45816963
tomhow•1h ago
Comments moved thither. Thanks!
xutopia•2h ago
Title needs to update... it is now 4.
nomel•2h ago
[flagged]
voidfunc•1h ago
Because nobody gives a shit about the ordinary.

Cargo planes dont usually fall put of the sky in blazing fireballs.

Its a spectacle, people like spectacles, good or bad.

cornstalks•1h ago
Even if no one died in this incident, its novelty is what makes it so interesting.
lern_too_spel•1h ago
For that matter, the massive nuclear reactions going on in the sun every second, the tiniest fraction of which fuels all the things that you mentioned earlier is even more important. "The same thing happened today that happened yesterday" isn't news. That's why the sun isn't the headline every day.
dghlsakjg•1h ago
Unusual things interest us. A plane crash is unusual. The other things you listed are not unusual.
voidhorse•1h ago
I think it has to do with scale and control.

The scale of the kinds of death you cited are typically personal. The actual act of the death has a local scope. It tends to be cordoned off and lacks spectacle in the sense that it doesn't produce tons of rampant collateral damage. Further, in most of those situations, there's some semblance of having autonomy and the possibility of personal choice and escape.

Not so with flight. Airplanes are a massive scale transportation system that has way more passengers than operators, and we rescind basically all control to those few operating experts to keep us safe. Couple that with the fact that, in most cases airplane accidents have breadth of collateral damage, and you have a perfect storm of human fear. Not only is it a system which we have no hope of controlling or escaping (in the case of accidents), it is super dramatic, comparatively rare, and thus eye catching.

People's fear of the lack of control is only second to their fear of the unknown.

jiggawatts•1h ago
This is a legitimate question and you shouldn't be getting voted down.

There's a"phase diagram" that can be used to model and estimate the "newsworthiness" of deaths.

Roughly speaking:

The sum of the value[1] of the individuals dying at one time[2] determines how newsworthy the incident[3] is.

[1] You can estimate the value of a person by summing the expected income for their remaining life. This may need some "tweaking" in some circumstances. For example, soldiers are an expense to governments, not a tax revenue stream. Alternatively, pretend their annual salary is interest payments on some asset. At, say, 5% this means multiplying their salary by 20x to estimate their "worth". This is why Israel exchanges hundreds of Palestinian prisoners for dozens of their citizens. This why you've never even heard of most civil wars in Africa, even though they often kill far more than, say, the war in Gaza or Ukraine.

[2] "At the same instant" is more newsworthy than a "statistic". One overturned bus killing a bunch of kids makes headlines, the greater number of traffic accidents nation-wide on the same day... not so much.

[3] A cause, especially an intelligent one such as murder, war, terrorisms, etc... is more newsworthy than air pollution, traffic, old age, bad diets, etc... People like to tell stories, they want to attribute things to an agent. Non-agentic things feel inevitable, even if they're actually easily fixed.

hansvm•1h ago
Part of it is that more concentrated events are easier to do something about.

By some way of contrast, fixing the diffuse deaths from car accidents requires re-licensing the entire population with stricter training, a metric f*$#-ton of road re-design, etc. Even if you could muster the political will to make it happen it'd be a colossally expensive endeavor. Plus, the fact that people are willing to to voluntarily engage with the roads as-is on a daily basis suggests that people are comfortable with that level of risk.

I personally think it's worth making our roads safer, but my opinions don't keep that from being a hard problem, and most of that hardness comes from its diffuse nature.

Contrast that with plane accidents. In some sense, we're lucky this was a cargo plane. This could have just as easily been 3 days worth of car accident deaths, and the only reason air travel is anywhere near as safe as the status quo is because of intense scrutiny of events like this, making the entire system safer over time.

ChrisArchitect•2h ago
[dupe] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45816963

Mr Tiff

https://inventingthefuture.ghost.io/mr-tiff/
331•speckx•6h ago•39 comments

Hypothesis: Property-Based Testing for Python

https://hypothesis.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
25•lwhsiao•1h ago•4 comments

Asus Announces October Availability of ProArt Display 8K PA32KCX

https://press.asus.com/news/press-releases/asus-proart-display-8k-pa32kcx-availability/
34•Roachma•1w ago•22 comments

RISC-V takes first step toward international ISO/IEC standardization

https://riscv.org/blog/risc-v-jtc1-pas-submitter/
63•jrepinc•5d ago•18 comments

Apple’s Persona technology uses Gaussian splatting to create 3D facial scans

https://www.cnet.com/tech/computing/apple-talks-to-me-about-vision-pro-personas-where-is-our-virt...
89•dmarcos•5d ago•26 comments

This Day in 1988, the Morris worm infected 10% of the Internet within 24 hours

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/cyber-security/on-this-day-in-1988-the-morris-worm-sli...
323•canucker2016•13h ago•155 comments

Direct File won't happen in 2026, IRS tells states

https://www.nextgov.com/digital-government/2025/11/direct-file-wont-happen-2026-irs-tells-states/...
108•jhatax•2h ago•30 comments

GM Deprecating In-Car App Store for Models as Recent as 2020

https://gmauthority.com/blog/2025/11/these-gm-vehicles-can-no-longer-download-apps-through-their-...
21•goopthink•2h ago•15 comments

Patching 68K Software – SimpleText

https://tinkerdifferent.com/threads/patching-68k-software-simpletext.4793/
76•mmoogle•6h ago•7 comments

Bluetui – A TUI for managing Bluetooth on Linux

https://github.com/pythops/bluetui
65•birdculture•5h ago•5 comments

Pg_lake: Postgres with Iceberg and data lake access

https://github.com/Snowflake-Labs/pg_lake
301•plaur782•12h ago•83 comments

Grayskull: A tiny computer vision library in C for embedded systems, etc.

https://github.com/zserge/grayskull
50•gurjeet•6h ago•2 comments

Vectorizing for Fun and Performance

https://www.ibm.com/support/pages/vectorizing-fun-and-performance
6•rinostroh•6d ago•0 comments

Show HN: A CSS-Only Terrain Generator

https://terra.layoutit.com
298•rofko•15h ago•77 comments

By the Power of Grayscale

https://zserge.com/posts/grayskull/
141•surprisetalk•4d ago•35 comments

Uncle Sam wants to scan your iris and collect your DNA, citizen or not

https://www.theregister.com/2025/11/04/dhs_wants_to_collect_biometric_data/
186•SanjayMehta•5h ago•97 comments

Whole Earth Index

https://wholeearth.info/
170•bookofjoe•1w ago•35 comments

Zohran Mamdani wins the New York mayoral race

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/new-york-city-mayor-election-winner-2025-race-rcna238909
321•jsheard•2h ago•264 comments

Codemaps: Understand Code, Before You Vibe It

https://cognition.ai/blog/codemaps
215•janpio•11h ago•74 comments

I took all my projects off the cloud, saving thousands of dollars

https://rameerez.com/send-this-article-to-your-friend-who-still-thinks-the-cloud-is-a-good-idea/
173•sebnun•7h ago•178 comments

Munich's surfers left stunned after famed river wave vanishes

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/nov/04/munichs-surfers-left-stunned-after-famed-river-wave...
58•c420•3h ago•14 comments

Google Removed 749M Anna's Archive URLs from Its Search Results

https://torrentfreak.com/google-removed-749-million-annas-archive-urls-from-its-search-results/
147•gslin•5h ago•60 comments

Singing bus horns in West Sumatra

https://www.auralarchipelago.com/auralarchipelago/kalason
57•Kaibeezy•1w ago•4 comments

Launch HN: Plexe (YC X25) – Build production-grade ML models from prompts

https://www.plexe.ai/
69•vaibhavdubey97•11h ago•28 comments

Building blobd: single-machine object store with sub-ms reads and 15 GB/s upload

https://blog.wilsonl.in/blobd/
14•charlieirish•17h ago•3 comments

Frozen String Literals: Past, Present, Future?

https://byroot.github.io/ruby/performance/2025/10/28/string-literals.html
41•Bogdanp•1w ago•8 comments

What Happened to Piracy? Copyright Enforcement Fades as AI Giants Rise

https://www.leefang.com/p/what-happened-to-piracy-copyright
33•walterbell•2h ago•5 comments

Epic vs. Google settlement: Opening up Android

https://twitter.com/TimSweeneyEpic/status/1985920786545123613
14•azhenley•53m ago•0 comments

Preventing Kubernetes from Pulling the Pause Image from the Internet

https://kyle.cascade.family/posts/preventing-kubernetes-from-pulling-the-pause-image-from-the-int...
4•meatmanek•2h ago•4 comments

NoLongerEvil-Thermostat – Nest Generation 1 and 2 Firmware

https://github.com/codykociemba/NoLongerEvil-Thermostat
338•mukti•11h ago•118 comments