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Longtime Mozilla Support Japanese Community Shuts Down over AI Translation Usage

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/forums/contributors/717446
88•phantomathkg•49m ago•15 comments

Solarpunk is happening in Africa

https://climatedrift.substack.com/p/why-solarpunk-is-already-happening
596•JoiDegn•7h ago•301 comments

Recursive macros in C, demystified (once the ugly crying stops)

https://h4x0r.org/big-mac-ro-attack/
31•eatonphil•2h ago•5 comments

Dillo, a multi-platform graphical web browser

https://github.com/dillo-browser/dillo
245•nazgulsenpai•8h ago•91 comments

ChatGPT terms disallow its use in providing legal and medical advice to others

https://www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/article/openai-updates-policies-so-chatgpt-wont-provide-medical-o...
235•randycupertino•9h ago•222 comments

FAA to cut flights by 10% at 40 major airports due to government shutdown

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/11/05/faa-cuts-flight-capacity-shutdown.html
45•mikhael•43m ago•23 comments

Firefox profiles: Private, focused spaces for all the ways you browse

https://blog.mozilla.org/en/firefox/profile-management/
149•darkwater•1w ago•69 comments

The state of SIMD in Rust in 2025

https://shnatsel.medium.com/the-state-of-simd-in-rust-in-2025-32c263e5f53d
168•ashvardanian•8h ago•85 comments

New gel restores dental enamel and could revolutionise tooth repair

https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/news/new-gel-restores-dental-enamel-and-could-revolutionise-tooth-re...
359•CGMthrowaway•7h ago•151 comments

Rust's TUI Revolution

https://ratatui.rs/showcase/apps/
3•AbuAssar•37m ago•0 comments

The Basic Laws of Human Stupidity (1987) [pdf]

https://gandalf.fee.urv.cat/professors/AntonioQuesada/Curs1920/Cipolla_laws.pdf
50•bookofjoe•4h ago•15 comments

Why aren't smart people happier?

https://www.theseedsofscience.pub/p/why-arent-smart-people-happier
214•zdw•10h ago•332 comments

Ruby and Its Neighbors: Smalltalk

https://noelrappin.com/blog/2025/11/ruby-and-its-neighbors-smalltalk/
176•jrochkind1•12h ago•98 comments

A Lost IBM PC/at Model? Analyzing a Newfound Old Bios

https://int10h.org/blog/2025/11/lost-ibm-at-model-bios-analysis/
63•TMWNN•6h ago•10 comments

Carice TC2 – A non-digital electric car

https://www.caricecars.com/
189•RubenvanE•13h ago•143 comments

Unicode Footguns in Python

https://pythonkoans.substack.com/p/koan-15-the-invisible-ink
29•meander_water•1w ago•8 comments

The shadows lurking in the equations

https://gods.art/articles/equation_shadows.html
258•calebm•13h ago•81 comments

NY school phone ban has made lunch loud again

https://gothamist.com/news/ny-smartphone-ban-has-made-lunch-loud-again
221•hrldcpr•14h ago•168 comments

Radiant Computer

https://radiant.computer
172•beardicus•14h ago•130 comments

Vacuum bricked after user blocks data collection – user mods it to run anyway

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/big-tech/manufacturer-issues-remote-kill-command-to-nu...
185•toomanyrichies•4d ago•58 comments

An eBPF Loophole: Using XDP for Egress Traffic

https://loopholelabs.io/blog/xdp-for-egress-traffic
210•loopholelabs•1d ago•69 comments

Timing Wheels

https://pncnmnp.github.io/blogs/timing-wheels.html
32•pncnmnp•4d ago•0 comments

I was right about dishwasher pods and now I can prove it [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAX2_mPr9W8
314•hnaccount_rng•1d ago•201 comments

I want a good parallel language [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-eViUyPwso
60•raphlinus•1d ago•33 comments

Absurd Workflows: Durable Execution with Just Postgres

https://lucumr.pocoo.org/2025/11/3/absurd-workflows/
105•ingve•2d ago•22 comments

App Store web has exposed all its source code

https://www.reddit.com/r/webdev/comments/1onnzlj/app_store_web_has_exposed_all_its_source_code/
188•redbell•2d ago•53 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/
235•og_kalu•6d ago•110 comments

Gloomth

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v47/n20/jon-day/gloomth
3•prismatic•6d ago•0 comments

Learning from failure to tackle hard problems

https://blog.ml.cmu.edu/2025/10/27/learning-from-failure-to-tackle-extremely-hard-problems/
104•djoldman•6d ago•22 comments

A P2P Vision for QUIC (2024)

https://seemann.io/posts/2024-10-26---p2p-quic/
88•mooreds•13h ago•40 comments
Open in hackernews

Photos: New Phoenix Microcenter is a 'tech-heaven' for geeks

https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/arts-culture/micro-center-in-phoenix-a-look-inside-the-new-tech-heaven-40618548/
34•tortilla•3h ago

Comments

coffee--•3h ago
Step in and replace the loss of our Frys Electronics stores[0], yay!

[0] https://www.kjzz.org/business/2025-08-27/fans-of-phoenix-fry...

kulahan•3h ago
Huh. I've never been in a Frys before, but boy is that a strange decor choice. Aztec stylings to sell brand new tech? I guess I see the juxtaposition, but still...
dylan604•3h ago
They tend to be themed. The store in Cambridge/Boston area is probably more to your expectations.
OkayPhysicist•3h ago
The one in Fremont had a bunch of Tesla coils, Jacob's ladders, and other high-voltage amusements. As a kid, it was the coolest thing.
stevenwoo•2h ago
I thought all the ones I got to visit were cool as an adult, fascinating combination of stuff for sale.
rewgs•1h ago
The one in Burbank was Area 51 themed. Huge UFO crashed into the front, aliens everywhere, etc. It was great and is sorely missed.
dylan604•3h ago
The death of Frys was one of those that took so much longer than it should. The last time I went into a Frys was a fluke as I had thought it was already out of business. Walking around inside was surreal as the inventory was sad with the vast majority of shelves empty. I remember taking pics at the time of just how much a shadow itself it really was. I just couldn't fathom why someone had allowed the stores to stay open that long.
toast0•2h ago
Because it wasn't private equity and leveraged to the moon, it was able to shamble into bankruptcy, inlike say circuit city that had a step change bankruptcy.
pureagave•2h ago
I went to the Renton, WA one during the death days. It was so odd. Mostly empty shelves and what few products were there had the famous Fry's return labels on them. I'm assuming Amazon killed them.
dylan604•1h ago
The store I was in had a lot of open box appliances all lined up like a close out store. The products that were new had the famous layer of Frys dust covering them.
fghorow•2h ago
I miss Frys...
kaladin-jasnah•3h ago
The Charlotte Micro Center opening was great, and was perfect timing since I was able to get some adapters I needed urgently without ordering online.

Got the free mug out of it too! I wonder if the mugs will become valuable collectibles in the future.

jakedata•3h ago
The Microcenter in Cambridge (MA) finally updated their sign to modernize the rainbow Apple logo a few years ago. I hope it's stashed somewhere, to me it's more iconic than the Citgo sign a few miles away. They have added some components and kits but it doesn't fill the yawning void left by You-Do-It Electronics shutting down a year ago, or Radio Shack's slow motion demise.
assimpleaspossi•3h ago
>>it doesn't fill the yawning void left by

Or Gateway Electronics in St Louis

bitwize•3h ago
There needs to be one on the Gulf Coast. I don't care much for having to go to Bezoscorp for my gear.
nosduco•3h ago
I live in Columbus near the original Microcenter. Still the GOAT store, it's not even close. Happy to see them expand more!
et1337•2h ago
My favorite place as a kid XD I still get excited thinking about it haha
bschwindHN•2h ago
I always wondered why my Ohio hometown had a Microcenter (grew up near Cincinnati), now it makes sense! I had no idea they started in Ohio.
nickthegreek•1h ago
their headquarters is here as well.
iFred•3h ago
I keep hoping for a Microcenter in either Portland or Seattle but alas, I get the "we're always looking for new locations" email from their team and a "why not just order it from Amazon" from nearly everyone else.
JCM9•2h ago
Microcenter feels like going back in time (in a good way). It has a very 90s vibe to it. The staff wear khakis and blue collared shirts. Even the signage uses serif fonts in a way that looks, comfortably, dated. I hope they don’t change.
bob1029•2h ago
The old Frys in Austin is turning into a Microcenter next year:

https://www.microcenter.com/site/stores/austin.aspx

ericmay•2h ago
I love Microcenter, though I haven't purchased anything from one in quite some time - I don't buy a lot of new electronics.

I remember as a teenager we would go on "road trips" to Microcenter - 25 minute drive tops and since none of us had any money we would just try and get someone to spend their paycheck on a new GPU or something so we could get second hand excitement from a purchase. It was also the first and only place I've ever seen BAWLS energy drinks.

caycep•2h ago
the American Akihabara, land of the khaki otakus
redwall_hp•2h ago
Yodobashi Camera is on my list of places I'd have to visit on a future Japan trip.

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

ericmay•2h ago
I’ve been to the one in Hiroshima. The volume and variety of products is jaw-dropping and fun. Though I was disappointed, although admittedly wasn’t looking to hard, to see the prices were comparable to American prices for the same products - at least for new lenses.

It was also great that it was basically attached to the rail line. Such a better development pattern for business and moving people than airlines and airports.

caycep•2h ago
can you buy a 5090 FE there though?
LTL_FTC•2h ago
5090's, yes. The one in Santa Clara has had them in stock for months. FE, no. Not sure if those are even produced anymore.
mrbluecoat•2h ago
Best Buy meets Costco - a place you can look at things you'll buy later online.
LgWoodenBadger•2h ago
Microcenter costs are often competitive, plus you don’t have to worry about counterfeits.

Where else would you be buying equivalents online anyway?

zamadatix•2h ago
I thought the same, then I ended up spending >$10k there this year because the pricing was great and I didn't have to wait for shipping. It really is a great place.

It's also great for items likely to be scalped. It doesn't guarantee they'll have stock, but it sure is easier to beat scalpers to checking the store that day than bots to an online cart. I even got a Switch 2 bundle the day after launch at MSRP while there for something else. Edit: shit, prices are worse all around now. Glad I didn't wait :D.

taude•2h ago
Waiting for one in RTP. Miss going to the Cambridge one. So much stuff there you don't know you need!
peteforde•2h ago
Can someone offer an explanation of why this is popular? I don't mean this in a crass way, I'm actually genuinely baffled to see geeks lining up for a Costco-like experience to get stuff that you can easily get online without needing to get into a car.

For me, big box stores just mean markups + staff that know less than most tech reviewers on YouTube. All in an introvert's nightmare. What's the upside?

bluedays•2h ago
It’s okay for you to not get everything. This one is simple, it’s just not for you. You don’t get it because it wasn’t built for you.
scubbo•2h ago
> Can someone offer an explanation...? I don't mean this in a crass way [...] What's the upside?

They weren't saying that it wasn't OK - they were just asking for an explanation from someone for whom it _was_ built

jedbrooke•2h ago
have you heard of the phase “like a kid in a candy store”?

there’s just something about the in store experience that’s different than online.

Microcenter is also known for having better prices than online retailers, but they don’t ship for many items

peteforde•1h ago
Applying Costco bulk purchasing leverage for geek items definitely makes sense.

Thanks.

OkayPhysicist•2h ago
Microcenter has a pretty good reputation for having knowledgeable enough staff. Plus, discovery tends to be a lot better in a curated brick and mortar than online. And sometimes you just want to see and buy cool stuff that you didn't know you wanted.
peteforde•1h ago
That's a very reasonably reply.

Except (?) that it's not like you can do more than look at shrink-wrapped boxes.

Even record stores generally let you play albums on a private turntable before you buy them.

It's just so weird to me that someone looking to buy a significant component for their desktop machine or whatever wouldn't do loads of research first. Buying a GPU, for example, during window shopping seems almost unhinged. But everyone's experience is different, and that's a good thing.

andreimackenzie•9m ago
The Cambridge, MA location still has an aisle of keyboards and mice outside of their packaging. It's very nice to be able to hold and feel those peripherals as part of the shopping experience.
mastazi•2h ago
Ironically the reason why it's popular is that it's got many items that otherwise you can only get online, which is also the reason why you find it useless since you prefer the online experience.

Speaking as an Australian, to me it would be a dream to be able to drive to a place like that and getting those things in store as opposed to ordering online then waiting days or sometimes weeks for delivery.

There is also the factor of being able to see the item in person, and perhaps hold it in your hands, might not be very relevant for something like RAM sticks, but it certainly is for something like a gaming controller for example.

peteforde•1h ago
If only you could actually hold things in your hands, though. To me, bringing a shrink-wrapped box to a checkout is like buying food at a grocery store to drive to a food bank, when you could just give them cash.

At least record stores let you listen to an album on headphones before you buy it.

Still, I appreciate your perspective. Different strokes for different folks.

Daub•2h ago
Online shopping of fashion items can never replace the experience of physical shopping, especially with friends. Geeks are no different... shopping can be a delightful experience if you are up for it. Part of which might be the thrill of discovering things you are not searching for.
peteforde•1h ago
I appreciate the analogy but respectfully I don't think it holds up 1:1.

Love or hate window shopping, the nature of shopping for fashion lends itself far more to in-person evaluation. Every item is slightly different, and so is every person wearing them. This is why you can try on clothes in the store!

Crate digging for vinyl is similar. There's a real joy of discovery, and turntables with headphones for auditioning purchases.

I have a hard time picturing the same dynamic with identical shrink-wrapped boxes.

brandon272•2h ago
> I'm actually genuinely baffled to see geeks lining up for a Costco-like experience to get stuff that you can easily get online without needing to get into a car.

"Why go to a fine restaurant when you can just stick something in the microwave? Why go to the park and fly a kite when you can just pop a pill?" - Kramer, Seinfeld

peteforde•1h ago
A big box electronics store is not a fine restaurant or a park. It's just a less-efficient way to purchase identical shrink-wrapped boxes that you should probably research extensively online before buying.
brandon272•1h ago
Not everything needs to be completely efficient, experienced through a computer or mobile phone screen, nor does it need to be "researched extensively". Some people prefer the option of a tactile, in-person, sometimes social experience of browsing physical objects.
peteforde•43m ago
If you're buying art, then yeah - go to a gallery.

If you're buying a shrink-wrapped GPU, then I think you're romanticizing what a big box store adds to that transaction.

brandon272•11m ago
Has nothing to do with whether it's art or a shrink-wrapped product, different people value different things. As an example, a vehicle may be an engineering wonder or a work of art to one person and a "silly mass-produced hunk of steel" to another.

And yes, I am romanticizing in-person experiences and interactions over the insistence that more and more things in life are best experienced through a phone or computer.

ostensible•2h ago
I agree. Microcenter seems to sell a lot of flashy shiny garbage and not enough or at all of what matters — like cables or adapters.

It’s more a best buy than fry’s electronics.

We had a recently opened one here in the Bay Area — I went there once, having heard good things. Never again. It’s a bullshit emporium.

throwanem•2h ago
It's the region, or maybe just the GM. The Parkville and Rockville stores aren't like that at all.
NoPicklez•2h ago
Looking at the photos its a shitload more than just cables and adapters
nickthegreek•1h ago
which microcenter could you even be referring to?
oppegard•2h ago
I bought a 3D printer from my Denver Microcenter a few weeks ago. It's not available on Amazon, and only ships from China (it's a BambuLab H2D). It gives peace of mind that if something goes wrong I can just return it locally rather than deal with shipping a 50 pound printer back to China. Same goes for a MinisForum NAS I bought a few months ago. Plus, whenever I need a one-off USB cable, thumb drive, or printer filament, it's a 15 minute drive.

Also: they're always packed on the weekends. There is definitely demand for a brick and mortar store that focuses on tech/geek hobbies.

peteforde•1h ago
Good reply, thanks.

Here in Canada, the BambuLab stuff seems to ship from local-ish warehouses... but I get it. Tariffs might also be a factor in this.

Amazon is a reprehensible company that I absolutely order from 3-4 times a week. That 15 minute drive requires a 15 minute drive back, plus a car + insurance + gas. It's 8:59pm local as I type this. If I need a thumb drive, I can order one that will be here by noon tomorrow with free shipping.

TL;DR that hour of your time plus driving surely cancels out any potential savings.

I guess it's good to have options, and late stage capitalism is happy to give them to us.

H2D looks like an amazing printer. I have a P1P and it's great for my needs, but the Bambu stuff is just on a different level from the others I've tried.

esseph•2h ago
This doesn't answer your question, but its an interesting fact:

Microcenter has enough swag to get their own exclusive CPU SKUs from AMD.

NoPicklez•2h ago
The upside is that if you need a particular thing, you can go buy it immediately, not only that you can actually see the product and potential try to a degree before buying it.

For me, its seeing cases in person and being able to see how they compare for size rather than trying to estimate online.

As someone in Australia where we have pretty poor computer electronics stores for PC parts, this place is like heaven on earth.

To you its an introverts nightmare, but clearly for many geeks its not who are lining up.

peteforde•1h ago
Case evaluation is a strong argument!

I generally think of myself as immune to impulse/window shopping, but if I walked by a Fractal North case for the first time, I would prove myself wrong.