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Mr TIFF

https://inventingthefuture.ghost.io/mr-tiff/
651•speckx•12h ago•86 comments

SPy: An interpreter and compiler for a fast statically typed variant of Python

https://antocuni.eu/2025/10/29/inside-spy-part-1-motivations-and-goals/
59•og_kalu•5d ago•19 comments

Hypothesis: Property-Based Testing for Python

https://hypothesis.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
119•lwhsiao•8h ago•77 comments

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

https://riscv.org/blog/risc-v-jtc1-pas-submitter/
156•jrepinc•5d ago•59 comments

This week in 1988, Robert Morris unleashed his eponymous worm

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/cyber-security/on-this-day-in-1988-the-morris-worm-sli...
391•canucker2016•20h ago•170 comments

Asus Announces October Availability of ProArt Display 8K PA32KCX

https://press.asus.com/news/press-releases/asus-proart-display-8k-pa32kcx-availability/
99•Roachma•1w ago•118 comments

Intervaltree with Rust Back End

https://github.com/Athe-kunal/intervaltree_rs
14•athekunal•3d ago•7 comments

Bluetui – A TUI for managing Bluetooth on Linux

https://github.com/pythops/bluetui
167•birdculture•12h ago•46 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...
150•dmarcos•5d ago•56 comments

The Microsoft SoftCard for the Apple II: Getting two processors to share memory

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20251104-00/?p=111758
41•zdw•8h ago•11 comments

Pg_lake: Postgres with Iceberg and data lake access

https://github.com/Snowflake-Labs/pg_lake
339•plaur782•19h ago•101 comments

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

https://github.com/zserge/grayskull
112•gurjeet•13h ago•8 comments

UPS plane crashes near Louisville airport

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ups-plane-crash-louisville-kentucky/
132•jnsaff2•12h ago•120 comments

Moving tables across PostgreSQL instances

https://ananthakumaran.in/2025/11/02/moving-tables-across-postgres-instances.html
17•ananthakumaran•3d ago•0 comments

The Hackers Manifesto (The Conscience of a Hacker) (1986)

https://phrack.org/issues/7/3
42•OuterVale•3h ago•18 comments

Patching 68K Software – SimpleText

https://tinkerdifferent.com/threads/patching-68k-software-simpletext.4793/
90•mmoogle•12h ago•10 comments

By the Power of Grayscale

https://zserge.com/posts/grayskull/
220•surprisetalk•4d ago•39 comments

Codemaps: Understand Code, Before You Vibe It

https://cognition.ai/blog/codemaps
268•janpio•17h ago•96 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/...
226•jhatax•9h ago•128 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/
309•sebnun•14h ago•260 comments

Whole Earth Index

https://wholeearth.info/
220•bookofjoe•1w ago•46 comments

FDD – Diskettes

https://retrocmp.de/fdd/diskette/diskette.htm
20•susam•1w ago•3 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/
293•SanjayMehta•12h ago•184 comments

Vectorizing for Fun and Performance

https://www.ibm.com/support/pages/vectorizing-fun-and-performance
36•rinostroh•6d ago•2 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...
47•meatmanek•8h ago•33 comments

Frozen String Literals: Past, Present, Future?

https://byroot.github.io/ruby/performance/2025/10/28/string-literals.html
60•Bogdanp•1w ago•22 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/
276•gslin•12h ago•114 comments

Inside an Isotemp OCXO107-10 Oven Controlled Crystal Oscillator

https://tomverbeure.github.io/2025/10/26/Inside-an-Isotemp-OCXO107-10.html
37•zdw•1w ago•1 comments

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

https://www.plexe.ai/
76•vaibhavdubey97•18h ago•28 comments

Singing bus horns in West Sumatra

https://www.auralarchipelago.com/auralarchipelago/kalason
81•Kaibeezy•1w ago•10 comments
Open in hackernews

The Hackers Manifesto (The Conscience of a Hacker) (1986)

https://phrack.org/issues/7/3
42•OuterVale•3h ago

Comments

internet_points•2h ago
and then 4chan happened, and "hackers" started looking like https://krebsonsecurity.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/bogac... and running underpaid botfarms in Cambodia and this just feels hopelessly romantic and naive. What do kids like this do today, with constant internet access and no phone lines to tie up?
keepamovin•1h ago
your username, comment and worldivew are perfectly in sync, cynic. i pray you discover something meaningful and share it
jackdoe•2h ago
Reminder to rewatch the 1995 movie Hackers :)

I used to read it quite often when I was 15, now that I am in my 40s, I think the manifesto is quite weak, even though its romantic in its attempt to celebrate curiosity and claim a new home for some.

Now I align more with Bunnie's [1] way: when you look at a thing as a thing, strip it from its social weight, a program is just a program, you can study it, understand its machinery and mechanisms, and make it do what you want. You can understand things.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyYsVeYzbik

PS: I still think phrack 49/14 was the most iconic article I have read, and has changed the way I look at programs ever since.

zorked•1h ago
Indeed, "Smashing The Stack For Fun And Profit" changed my life, even though I work nowhere near security. It's about perspectives.
7222aafdcf68cfe•1h ago
Then go watch Sneakers after :)
jackdoe•1h ago
I usually watch WarGames after :)
gcanyon•1m ago
[delayed]
tasn•26m ago
I (re)watched Hackers on the big screen a month or so ago (it was the 30th anniversary), and it was an absolute pleasure. You should definitely rewatch it!

As for the hacker's manifesto: we are now old. Teenage rebellion content doesn't resonate as much. I reread it after watching Hackers and agree it's not as great as I remembered. Though I also reread it multiple times as a teenager. It really resonated back then, and I'm forever grateful for it.

fouc•1h ago

            I made a discovery today.  I found a computer.  Wait a second, this is
    cool.  It does what I want it to.  If it makes a mistake, it's because I
    screwed it up.  Not because it doesn't like me...
                    Or feels threatened by me...
                    Or thinks I'm a smart ass...
keepamovin•1h ago
This should have a permanent home on the hacker news site: https://news.ycombinator.com/manifesto.txt :)
dysphoracle•1h ago
Most, if not all, of the efnet era #2600 heros turned out to be complete parodies of themselves, or total sellouts. One need not look further than the recent Defcons.
adim86•1h ago
This is so nostalgic for me. In 1999, I watched a couple of movies, and I decided I wanted to be a hacker. I watched the movie Hackers, Swordfish and let's not forget The Matrix. These were all influntial to me, I went down a rabbit hole and found the Hacker Manifesto, which I resonated with. I slurped up all the information I could find (There wasn't much), and then came a realization that changed everything for me. Hacking was as hard as writing software to me, one was creating and inventing things and the other was tearing down what others had made...not to mention it was also illegal (White hat was not really big at the time). I was like, if I was gonna do one, I'd rather develop software and make things that made people's day and got praised for than ruin people's day and possibly go to jail. Hence my origin story as a software developer :)
gjvc•1h ago
Sneakers (1992) also worth a look
JuniperMesos•1h ago
There is definitely some naivety about this manifesto - mostly about what computers would end up looking like in practice once the hardware and software industries figured out how to build them so they could be marketed to the petty authoritarians who administer schools, as well as the smart rebellious kids, and every other sort of person including ones who were never at +++The Mentor+++'s high school. It's net-good if the average normie has access to the incredibly powerful computers and networked systems of the present day, but that will necessarily dilute the number of people interested in deeply exploring computer systems as a percentage of total internet users, which indeed is what actually happened. Not to mention all of the other complicated social consequences of the widespread adoption of networked computers that occurred in the decades after this essay - I suspect the author would like some and dislike others, depending on their other values in life.

Nonetheless, I can't help but admire the rebellious spirit in this article. A lot of human social systems really are conformist and oppressive - high school absolutely included - and I have some respect for people who chafe against it.

I guess it would be good to ask, what specifically was +++The Mentor+++ arrested for, and is that law good or bad?

tetris11•1h ago
I like to think that Serial Lain Experiments picks up on this 1990s vibe of where computers were going (whilst going off the rails just a bit), along with the strange parity of Hacker culture with emerging EDM scene (Cyberia comes to mind)
hunterpayne•1h ago
Peak Gen X culture
anthk•47m ago
The original hackers are the ones from the Lisp Machines and ITS/WAIS under the PDP10.

The rest of these are just PC wannabes.

Actual hacker knownledge: http://www.inwap.com/pdp10/hbaker/hakmem/hakmem.html

Under PC's, today, great hackers should be the guy behing https://t3x.org, the one behind EForth running under Subleq, reverse engineers, people reusing DNS' connections for tunnels such as the folks from Iodine, people reusing AWK+netcat (or plain GAWK) and awk+openssl to create Gopher and Gemini clients, Goerzen from https://complete.org creating NNCP and a bunch of nice tools...

And OFC Fabrice Bellard, which is on par with people from the MIT/SAIL and ITS/WAIS who created and expanded TECO Emacs, LISP, primordial AI, first networked environements, AI grounds...

StarGrit•28m ago
Maybe I am too dismissive/cynical, but my impression is that people who write stuff like this really want to think they are the main character in a movie.

The way it is written is a bit like the the Navy Seal, GNU-Linux copy-pastas.

If you go back and read these after knowing what happened over the last 30 years. It is difficult to take seriously. I feel similarly when reading "A declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace".