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Screenshots from developers: 2002 vs. 2015 (2015)

https://anders.unix.se/2015/12/10/screenshots-from-developers--2002-vs.-2015/
74•turrini•2h ago•21 comments

Zebra-Llama: Towards Efficient Hybrid Models

https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.17272
64•mirrir•4h ago•30 comments

GrapheneOS is the only Android OS providing full security patches

https://grapheneos.social/@GrapheneOS/115647408229616018
418•akyuu•10h ago•173 comments

United States Antarctic Program Field Manual (2024) [pdf]

https://www.usap.gov/usapgov/travelAndDeployment/documents/Continental-Field-Manual-2024.pdf
19•SheinhardtWigCo•1h ago•1 comments

Kilauea erupts, destroying webcam [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TK2N99BDw7A
21•zdw•37m ago•2 comments

Tiny Core Linux: a 23 MB Linux distro with graphical desktop

http://www.tinycorelinux.net/
334•LorenDB•9h ago•159 comments

OMSCS Open Courseware

https://sites.gatech.edu/omscsopencourseware/
108•kerim-ca•5h ago•36 comments

Coffee linked to slower biological ageing among those with severe mental illness

https://www.kcl.ac.uk/news/coffee-linked-to-slower-biological-ageing-among-those-with-severe-ment...
68•bookofjoe•2h ago•43 comments

Z-Image: Powerful and highly efficient image generation model with 6B parameters

https://github.com/Tongyi-MAI/Z-Image
218•doener•6d ago•83 comments

Bikeshedding, or why I want to build a laptop

https://geohot.github.io//blog/jekyll/update/2025/11/29/bikeshedding-or-laptop.html
21•cspags•5d ago•2 comments

HTML as an Accessible Format for Papers

https://info.arxiv.org/about/accessible_HTML.html
192•el3ctron•9h ago•102 comments

Saving Japan's exceptionally rare 'snow monsters'

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20251203-japans-disappearing-snow-monsters
8•1659447091•1h ago•0 comments

Mathematics Without Numbers (1959)

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20026529?seq=1
20•measurablefunc•4d ago•2 comments

Show HN: FuseCells – a handcrafted logic puzzle game with 2,500 levels

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/fusecells-logic-grid-puzzle/id6754704139
3•keini•25m ago•1 comments

PatchworkOS: An OS for x86_64, built from scratch in C and assembly

https://github.com/KaiNorberg/PatchworkOS
6•pykello•43m ago•1 comments

Autism's confusing cousins

https://www.psychiatrymargins.com/p/autisms-confusing-cousins
210•Anon84•12h ago•216 comments

Show HN: Tascli, a command line based (human) task and record manager

https://github.com/Aperocky/tascli
20•Aperocky•3h ago•4 comments

Wave of (Open Street Map) Vandalism in South Korea

https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/KennyDap/diary/407844
41•shortrounddev2•1h ago•3 comments

Catala – Law to Code

https://catala-lang.org
16•Grognak•2h ago•3 comments

Infisical (YC W23) Is Hiring Engineers to Build the Modern OSS Security Stack

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/infisical/jobs/2pwGcK9-senior-full-stack-engineer-us-canada
1•vmatsiiako•7h ago

Abstract Interpretation in the Toy Optimizer

https://bernsteinbear.com/blog/toy-abstract-interpretation/
31•ChadNauseam•2d ago•5 comments

Touching the Elephant – TPUs

https://considerthebulldog.com/tte-tpu/
148•giuliomagnifico•11h ago•44 comments

Finding Gene Cernan's Missing Moon Camera

https://www.spacecamera.co/articles/2020/3/3/gene-cernans-missing-lunar-surface-camera
61•theodorespeaks•4d ago•6 comments

Term-keys – Lossless keyboard input for Emacs

https://github.com/CyberShadow/term-keys
13•harryday•6d ago•4 comments

The unexpected effectiveness of one-shot decompilation with Claude

https://blog.chrislewis.au/the-unexpected-effectiveness-of-one-shot-decompilation-with-claude/
167•knackers•1w ago•92 comments

Copy-Item is 27% slower than File Explorer

https://til.andrew-quinn.me/posts/copy-item-is-27-percent-slower-than-file-explorer-drag-and-drop...
47•hiAndrewQuinn•2h ago•36 comments

Kids who ran away to 1960s San Francisco

https://www.fieldnotes.nautilus.quest/p/the-kids-who-ran-away-to-1960s-san
129•zackoverflow•4d ago•24 comments

Running Claude Code in a loop to mirror human development practices

https://anandchowdhary.com/blog/2025/running-claude-code-in-a-loop
19•Kerrick•5h ago•1 comments

Linux Instal Fest Belgrade

https://dmz.rs/lif2025_en
147•ubavic•13h ago•20 comments

Nook Browser

https://browsewithnook.com
99•ray__•20h ago•79 comments
Open in hackernews

The past was not that cute

https://juliawise.net/the-past-was-not-that-cute/
31•mhb•2h ago

Comments

Swizec•1h ago
Having grown up less-well-to-do and post-communist/socialist, my favorite thing to remind people is that working class women always worked. The idealized past of stay-at-home moms never happened for a large majority of families.

Sure sure my great grandma was “stay-at-home”. That meant feeding an army of ~8 kids and any additional farm workers every day for 60+ years. She wasn’t stay at home, she ran a cantine. And worked the farm during peak harvest season.

I’ll never forget a quote from a BBC documentary (Ruth Goodman I think): ”While victorian science cautioned that weight lifting is bad for women, the women working their kitchens tossed around 100lb pots every day”

nonceNonsense•1h ago
...post-fascism labeled communism/socialism to scare people...

Fixed.

tolerance•36m ago
> I’ll never forget a quote from a BBC documentary (Ruth Goodman I think): ”While victorian science cautioned that weight lifting is bad for women, the women working their kitchens tossed around 100lb pots every day”

What would the modern day iteration of that quote be like?

A woman on a brisk walk through the park mid-afternoon staying on top of the tracked metrics stored on her Apple Watch to offset the time spent sitting at her desk job while another woman lives relatively stationery sitting in traffic at the off-ramp waiting to pull into Erewhon to fulfill the walking woman’s Instacart order.

techblueberry•1h ago
I will pre-empt this by saying I most certainly look to the past with rose colored glasses, and some of this is for sure childhood nostalgia, but one thing I appreciate about the aesthetics of the past is they felt more… Honest; for lack of a better term. Things made out of wood and metal were actually made out of hardwood and metal. Not so many composites that fall apart instead of wear ala wabi-sabi. So I think there’s something to the fact that the past was kind of “cute”, just not in all storybook way.

Theres a lake I visit in the summer that I’ve been visiting since the 80’s, and the houses used to all be wood cottages with no fences, now they’re all mansions, many walled off. Sure the houses weren’t insulated, and you would be crammed in there together, but it felt way more…. Human? Communal?

samdoesnothing•1h ago
I wonder why it is that the past seems more real and the present dishonest and fake? Is it simply that it is?
margalabargala•1h ago
It has a lot to do with the way our memories form and what memories our brains choose to construct from experiences.

The past was not more "real" than present day reality.

vacuity•1h ago
At the same time, it's arguable that certain observations such as "commercialization and commoditization have become stronger" are true. We're certainly living in an era where a lot can change in a few decades.
pixl97•29m ago
>living in an era where a lot can change in a few decades

So were people in 1910. You could say the printing press set up the following industrial revolution and things have been accelerating ever since. People talk that in the future there will be a technological singularity that things will go so fast people won't be able to keep up, but really in many ways we've been in it for a while already and it's still accelerating.

techblueberry•1h ago
I mean - to one extent, concretely in the aesthetic ways I’m talking it was technologically we just had simpler materials. Cars had knobs and levers instead of touchscreens.

Like, so much of what I do today happens online instead of the real world, so I do think you can describe ways in which life or the world really has gotten more “fake”.

Though some of this is funny too? I remember things from the say 50’s to the 80’w as being more “real” and that’s also the like rise of TV dinners and everything eaten out of a can, rather than “real” ingredients.

pixl97•26m ago
>50’s to the 80’w as being more “real”

Yea, people really are out of touch with what was going on around them. Naugahyde, for example was invented in 1914. Fake wood on cars started in the 1940s! It is very likely people remembering the 'real' stuff were quite often talking about objects that were far older.

andy99•48m ago
Part of it is nostalgia, I’d argue that we’ve also been through a step change due to the internet that basically destroyed everyone’s innocence and ruined the idea of authentic new experiences.

Most of what’s interesting about discovering things has been arbitraged out and monetized.

sublinear•46m ago
People focus too much on the new and not enough on the rest. Of course what's new is going to seem fake because it is. Nobody has figured it out yet. The rest never changed or has improved significantly.

Anyone older than about 30 who takes a few minutes to reflect on all the little details of daily life could probably come up with a surprisingly long list of annoying little inconveniences they no longer have to deal with. Beyond that we've had decades worth of casually raising the bar for what is considered common sense and polite. These are the "real" things we take for granted.

imgabe•30m ago
It's just focusing on different things. Sure they had wood and metal tools, but they also had literal snake oil, watered stock, and people selling you the Brooklyn Bridge.
stephen_g•12m ago
Modern manufacturing and materials science let us create imitation materials at huge quantity and low cost that wasn’t possible before about the ‘50s-60s.

So you just used to use real materials out of necessity

supportengineer•1h ago
A great place to feel this is the USS Hornet in Alameda. This actual ship that you are on, made of steel and loaded with analog electronics, sailed to the far side of the Pacific and back. So much metal, steel, hydraulics, and electrical systems. It made it out and back. Not all the ships did. Mighty ships just like this one, with people like you, did not make it back.
gerdesj•20m ago
You could also try HMS Victory in the UK or the Vasa in Sweden (other really old ships are available and some are still sailing).

You might also note that the inhabitants of Hawaii had to have got there somehow and its 2000 odd miles to what is now the US mainland and still quite a long way from anywhere else, eg Tahiti.

andrewvc•54m ago
Maybe, but really consumerism wasn’t a thing for most of history because almost no one had the money to decorate intentionally in the way we do today. The very wealthy did to varying extents. When we look at the past we always imagine ourselves to be the ones in Downton Abbey, but most people were lucky to inherit some furniture.

I would argue that the reverence for real wood and craft you espoused (and I share) is in part possible due to living in a consumerist society. For what it’s worth it is still possible to buy those same quality goods today, and certainly at lower cost . However, I would balk at paying the historical fraction of my income (or multiple if we go back to the 1700s), for a new bed.

In short cheap dishonest crap is what we ultimately want. It lets us focus our time and resources elsewhere

directevolve•50m ago
A good depiction of the gritty realities and the meaning of material striving for the very poor in turn of the century farm life is the novel Independent People, by Halldor Laxness, an Icelandic nobel laureate.
williamDafoe•1h ago
My wife is obsessed with a woman in Scandinavia who makes videos glorifying cottage life in the wilderness in Scandinavia ... I guess this is similar ...
gyomu•46m ago
I love how people in those videos always have impeccable clothing/hair/skin/etc.

When I go back to my rural hometown, the people working the earth, growing the food, and managing the livestock don’t look as… prim.

tinkelenberg•1h ago
A lot of what appeals to people about the past isn’t so much about returning to a golden age but recapturing authenticity. We rarely get the real thing nowadays.
pixl97•23m ago
>We rarely get the real thing nowadays.

I'd say it a bit different....

We can't afford it, or at least don't want to pay for it. And quite often, attempting to give a significant fraction of the 9 billionish people on earth something authentic of the past would be an ecological disaster.

venturecruelty•15m ago
I mean, it's not like everyone having a personal automobile and AC set to 68 isn't an ecological disaster... I don't want to return us all to subsistence farming, but unless we do something, we won't really get to make that choice ourselves anyway.
pixl97•2m ago
>isn't an ecological disaster

I don't disagree, but at the same time, building the same cars we did in 1960 now would ensure the atmosphere would be incandescent in the next few years.

If you look at things like US energy consumption per capita it leveled off in the 1970s and has decreased since, so it is possible, but we're not getting those thing we had during the days of insane energy usage.

Atlas667•1h ago
We need this for the Romephiles who definitely don't think they would have been slaves during the Roman Empire.

In the same vein, a racist meme shared around the internet is that supposedly some black people, while remembering their shattered ancestry, say "We were kings" [in Africa]. But a lot of white people will genuinely believe they were kings or at least related to kings.

And these erroneous class beliefs are very very common.

It even goes so far as to be used to widely support racism in the "my people" argument. Sir, sit down, statistically you were a illiterate or barely-literate peasant like the rest of us!

This is what happens when you use history as a political tool. This is how the powers that be erase class consciousness from peoples brains. They keep showing us a flawed history that almost always sides with the rulers and we adopt it. They make us forget what we are and where we come from so we side with the oppressors.

A_D_E_P_T•45m ago
That's not how population genetics work.

Almost every European-descended person has ancestry from Kings and peasants alike. Even the very recent Oliver Cromwell has way more than 20k living descendants in the UK. If you have any substantial English ancestry, there is a Plantagenet somewhere in your family tree to a mathematical certainty.

On the continent, and in other aristocratic societies like Dynastic-era China, things are much the same. If Qin Shihuang's progeny weren't all put to the sword, just about every Han Chinese person is descended from Qin Shihuang.

Read about the "identical ancestors point". Past that point, every individual alive is either: (1) ancestor of everyone alive today, or (2) ancestor of no one alive today.

Atlas667•39m ago
I'm definitely aware of this.

This is a very very far stretch from saying your family was royalty. Though i do guess you are technically correct. Forgive me, your highness. lol

Let me add that you've delineated a technicality with no real consequence to my argument. If anything supporting my argument by suggesting that makes anyone proper royalty.

antonvs•23m ago
> If anything supporting my argument by suggesting that makes anyone proper royalty.

This could potentially be a good argument for more democratic systems.

My grandmother was very proud of the fact that we were descendants of King James (one of them, I couldn't tell you which one, probably the one that abdicated!)

What she didn't understand is that something similar was true of almost everyone she knew.

IshKebab•57m ago
> My own version of this mistake was thinking that people’s personalities were different in the past.

It's slightly surprising to me how many people think this. Like they think that boomers are selfish because that generation are more selfish people. No, people are inherently selfish.

Or old people think young people are lazier than their generation. No, pretty much everyone is and always has been lazy.

readthenotes1•53m ago
I agree; however, I also disagree: the culture and systems in which people live do affect their behavior, and the boomers moved their youth in a different world than the youth of today and that did affect them as a group and how they could express their natural pride, greed, lust, anger, gluttony, envy, and sloth
lysace•56m ago
Problematic. There's that code word again.

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/10/problem-wi...

(https://archive.ph/XKBZr)

mystraline•48m ago
Elaborate what you mean.

What is "problematic" a code word for?

sertsa•22m ago
Its generally code for: "Thinks different than I do". What generally follows is a value judgment that lets someone believe they hold a moral high ground that someone else does not.
venturecruelty•14m ago
Mm but that's not what you're doing, no. You're being "fair and balanced" and very much neutral and objective.
api•44m ago
Romanticizing the past is hot again right now, and kind of comes in two political flavors: trads and neo-monarchists on the right, and greens and anarcho-primitivists on the left (whom I consider to be left-trads).

It’s always important to repeat the PSA that this is always survivorship bias and mythologizing. The past was very often much harder and worse than the present. When it wasn’t worse, it was just different. People back then faced existential angst, fear about the future, depression, and alienation just like we do. There were wars, crazy or idiotic politicians, popular delusions, plagues, depressions, atrocities, and all the rest.

That’s not to say that all things always get better, or that they get better in a straight line or in an orderly fashion. History is a mess. I’m talking about romanticizing the past to the point of imagining a lost golden age. That is bullshit.

themafia•7m ago
> Romanticizing the past is hot again right now

It would be better to understand _why_ rather than _who_. Since this same sentiment has arrived in previous eras it seems like a human phenomenon rather than a political one.

> I’m talking about romanticizing the past to the point of imagining a lost golden age.

Or perhaps they're just attempting to avoid thinking about their bleak future.

KaiserPro•39m ago
The author raises valid points, to which I agree.

Something I would add is that when we look back at how _rich_ people lived, looking at the lavish parties with fancy clothes, we miss the huge amount of labour that was needed to make that happen (and thus why only the billionaires of the day could afford to ponce about in new clothes and have fine food like ice cream on demand in summer.)

However we don't have those constraints of requiring a team of 40, plus 90 hectares of land, an ice house and town of artisans to hold a house party with a four course meal, chocolate, fresh fruit, the best cuts of meat and fresh lettuce in winter.

_we_ can have that luxury, to the point where it is mundane.

look at the kitchens needed to service henry the 8th:

https://www.nakedkitchens.com/blog/henry-viiis-55-room-kitch...

and compare that to the kitchens needed to service something like an office block (for example Meta's london office serves 3 meals a day for ~2k people, fits in 100m2)

delichon•38m ago
Back in 2025 before cheap bots, our grandparents endured lives of servitude. They spent an enormous amount of time doing simple chores like folding clothes, driving, programming, washing and dusting, grooming themselves. They had to walk their own dogs and play with their own children. They sometimes even had to cook their own food, directly over fire. "Hygiene" was a primitive joke. A full day's work usually wasn't even enough to buy a single new car. They wrote checks to the government, rather than the other way around. Life was brutal, desperate and short.
johnfn•24m ago
This comment is a real rollercoaster. I can’t tell which side you’re arguing for.
DaiPlusPlus•6m ago
Clearly advocating for the continued use of paper checks
tolerance•24m ago
For whatever reason I am reminded of this HN comment after reading this blog post:

> Folk music is mostly dialectic materialist conspiracy theorists singing hymns to their oppressors.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35274237

Especially towards the end of it.

The past was not “cute” and neither is the present. But in spite of its edges the past afforded one a greater sense of whatever abstract phenomena is related to the word “cute” that escapes the present.

constantcrying•23m ago
Yes, the past definitely wasn't that cute, but outright denying that it was not very different is just as absurd.

The definition of "normal" has drastically changed, even over the last few decades. A hundred years ago much of the societal structures still revolved around farming (which it had for thousands of years before that), something which now only involves a small minority of people.

People love to look at the past, not as it existed, but superpositioned over reality as it exists now.

themafia•9m ago
Farming has always been seasonal and before gasoline engines drastically changed their efficiency they often involved horses and oxen. There was a larger number of people living rurally but most of them weren't spending the majority of their year actually working on any farm.

The other nitpick of the post is, yes, of course, people in work clothes of any generation do not look particularly elegant. People didn't wear their work clothes all day and would have had nicer sets for special functions like church or weddings.

bluedino•12m ago
> The food was extremely good. . . . everything was fresh from the garden.

Was it this, or was it that your mother/grandmother was a great cook? I hear a lot of older people talk about how awful their food was, limited ingredients, everything was boiled...

Food also probably tastes better when you're actually hungry, and not able to Doordash whatever you want to eat at any time of day.

venturecruelty•11m ago
No, the past was not "cute", but it also wasn't entirely a Dickensian disaster, either. There are parts about the past we can miss: shared public spaces, authenticity, quality goods and services, ritual, deeper connectedness to each other. Why does it have to be this dichotomy? Why can't we have both now? In fact, we ought to have both. It's not like it's impossible. We just have to user the power we have to build that world. It won't be easy, but it isn't a choice between "Little House on the Prairie" and "Bladerunner".