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Show HN: Terminal UI for AWS

https://github.com/huseyinbabal/taws
217•huseyinbabal•7h ago•100 comments

Lessons from 14 Years at Google

https://addyosmani.com/blog/21-lessons/
923•cdrnsf•12h ago•419 comments

Why does a least squares fit appear to have a bias when applied to simple data?

https://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/674129/why-does-a-linear-least-squares-fit-appear-to-ha...
173•azeemba•7h ago•47 comments

During Helene, I just wanted a plain text website

https://sparkbox.com/foundry/helene_and_mobile_web_performance
43•CqtGLRGcukpy•1h ago•30 comments

The unbearable joy of sitting alone in a café

https://candost.blog/the-unbearable-joy-of-sitting-alone-in-a-cafe/
481•mooreds•13h ago•290 comments

Street Fighter II, the World Warrier (2021)

https://fabiensanglard.net/sf2_warrier/
330•birdculture•13h ago•57 comments

The Showa Hundred Year Problem

https://www.dampfkraft.com/showa-100.html
29•polm23•5d ago•8 comments

Linear Address Spaces: Unsafe at any speed (2022)

https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=3534854
126•nithssh•4d ago•87 comments

The year of the 3D printed miniature and other lies we tell ourselves

https://matduggan.com/the-year-of-the-3d-printed-miniature-and-other-lies-we-tell-ourselves/
121•sagacity•6d ago•77 comments

I charged $18k for a Static HTML Page (2019)

https://idiallo.com/blog/18000-dollars-static-web-page
187•caminanteblanco•2d ago•46 comments

Eurostar AI vulnerability: When a chatbot goes off the rails

https://www.pentestpartners.com/security-blog/eurostar-ai-vulnerability-when-a-chatbot-goes-off-t...
103•speckx•7h ago•30 comments

Ripple, a puzzle game about 2nd and 3rd order effects

https://ripplegame.app/
93•mooreds•10h ago•25 comments

Millennium Challenge: A corrupted military exercise and its legacy (2015)

https://warontherocks.com/2015/11/millennium-challenge-the-real-story-of-a-corrupted-military-exe...
25•lifeisstillgood•4h ago•21 comments

Show HN: An interactive guide to how browsers work

https://howbrowserswork.com/
188•krasun•13h ago•31 comments

Web development is fun again

https://ma.ttias.be/web-development-is-fun-again/
316•Mojah•13h ago•398 comments

Six Harmless Bugs Lead to Remote Code Execution

https://mehmetince.net/the-story-of-a-perfect-exploit-chain-six-bugs-that-looked-harmless-until-t...
32•ozirus•3d ago•3 comments

The baffling purple honey found only in North Carolina

https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20250417-the-baffling-purple-honey-found-only-in-north-carolina
14•rmason•4d ago•2 comments

Agentic Patterns

https://github.com/nibzard/awesome-agentic-patterns
87•PretzelFisch•8h ago•9 comments

Show HN: Hover – IDE style hover documentation on any webpage

https://github.com/Sampsoon/hover
42•sampsonj•9h ago•18 comments

Moiré Explorer

https://play.ertdfgcvb.xyz/#/src/demos/moire_explorer
136•Luc•15h ago•17 comments

The great shift of English prose

https://www.worksinprogress.news/p/english-prose-has-become-much-easier
38•dsubburam•4d ago•29 comments

Anti-aging injection regrows knee cartilage and prevents arthritis

https://scitechdaily.com/anti-aging-injection-regrows-knee-cartilage-and-prevents-arthritis/
221•nis0s•12h ago•79 comments

Bison return to Illinois' Kane County after 200 years

https://phys.org/news/2025-12-bison-illinois-kane-county-years.html
129•bikenaga•5d ago•39 comments

Show HN: An LLM-Powered PCB Schematic Checker (Major Update)

https://traceformer.io/
34•wafflesfreak•6h ago•15 comments

FreeBSD Home NAS, part 3: WireGuard VPN, routing, and Linux peers

https://rtfm.co.ua/en/freebsd-home-nas-part-3-wireguard-vpn-linux-peer-and-routing/
149•todsacerdoti•16h ago•8 comments

Claude Code On-the-Go

https://granda.org/en/2026/01/02/claude-code-on-the-go/
237•todsacerdoti•8h ago•164 comments

Trellis AI (YC W24) is hiring engineers to build AI agents for healthcare access

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/trellis-ai/jobs/ngvfeaq-member-of-technical-staff-full-time
1•macklinkachorn•11h ago

Using Hinge as a Command and Control Server

https://mattwie.se/hinge-command-control-c2
96•mattwiese•14h ago•46 comments

How I archived 10 years of memories using Spotify

https://notes.xdavidhu.me/notes/how-i-archived-10-years-of-memories-using-spotify
90•xdavidhu•12h ago•41 comments

Stop Forwarding Errors, Start Designing Them

https://fast.github.io/blog/stop-forwarding-errors-start-designing-them/
82•andylokandy•9h ago•47 comments
Open in hackernews

The Late Arrival of 16-Bit CP/M

https://nemanjatrifunovic.substack.com/p/the-late-arrival-of-16-bit-cpm
66•rbanffy•6d ago

Comments

flomo•22h ago
As an aside, most histories conclude that IBM "fucked up" and allowed a PC clone ecosystem to grow-up, so they only dominated PCs for 7 years or so, and after that it was too late to put the genie back in the bottle.

But if you look at the market for business PCs back in 1981, it was completely open anarchy surrounding the CP/M-80 "8-bit PC standard". There were hundreds of vendors, including some big names in the computer industry. (IBM certainly didn't care about Commodore and etc. And as the article mentions, this took tons of support time from understaffed DR.)

So I think IBM quite strategically wanted to define the "16-bit PC standard", which they controlled for most of the decade. And Microsoft was the most compliant vendor. (There were antitrust restrictions on IBM too...)

On a larger level, it sounds like DR thought 16-bit was just a repeat of the early 8-bit computer industry and didn't really understand what IBM was up to.

markus_zhang•19h ago
On the software end, after reading a couple of books about MSFT in that era (pre-Win 3.0), I think it is clearly manned by people who are smart and determined to be dominant in the business. I think they are more serious than a lot of their competitors.
Lio•18h ago
I think the key was that Microsoft could see the market was expanding exponentially. I think grasping the effects of exponential change is difficult for the human mind but I think Gates, et al grasped that.

Exchanging a smaller short term reward for control of something exponentially growing is obvious in hindsight but a brilliant insight at the time.

There other insight was to go for the business and not home market like so many, frankly, better products in the 80s. The difference being that businesses replace their equipment once it’s been written off. The cycle times for home and educational users being much longer.

markus_zhang•15h ago
Agreed. Now that I think about it, Gates' personality and insecurity also played a hand:

https://hardcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/019-billg-...

bitwize•19h ago
IBM themselves concluded that they fucked up with the PC. The PS/2 line was their second bite at the apple; the Micro Channel bus was proprietary. If they couldn't actually put the genie back in the bottle, it wasn't for lack of trying.
tristramb•13h ago
In 'Managing Technical People', 1997, page 199, Watts Humphrey says that, after several failed attempts to produce a PC by IBM procedures, they set up an independent team that could skip the procedures as necessary to get the job done. This worked in the short term but it had two side-effects that were catastrophic in the long term: they lost control of the operating system to Microsoft, and they also lost control of the chips to Intel. He says both of these side-effects would have been caught by the checks inherent in the normal IBM procedures.
cmrdporcupine•11h ago
They might have caught the mistakes but I think the resulting product would have been a flop.

If IBM hadn't done what it did somebody else would have dominated the market with a product to fit the same niche. Perhaps somebody "downmarket" in the more consumer space who managed to punch upwards -- maybe Apple who had some business success with the Apple II + VisiCalc, etc. or maybe Kaypro or somebody in the CP/M space. Or perhaps somebody else "upmarket" like DEC, who came too late the personal computer space with products that nobody really bought (DEC Rainbow, etc) but maybe they'd have had more success if IBM hadn't gotten in there.

The market wanted a relatively open product to innovate in. When the PS/2 came along a few years later with proprietary bus, etc and tried to put the genie back in the bottle, it flopped.

bitwize•9h ago
One of my favorite scenes from Pirates of Silicon Valley is when Steve Ballmer (played by John DiMaggio, yes, the voice of Bender) narrates an audience aside, positively giddy with Ballmer glee at how his clever friend Bill put one over on those stodgy fellows from IBM and got them to give away the golden goose. It was like harpooning the great white whale. While it was a telefilm and thus a fictionalization, near as I can tell things happened pretty much as described.
mjg59•18h ago
A meaningful gamble IBM made at the time was whether the BIOS was copyrightable - Williams v. Artic wasn't a thing until 1982, and it was really Apple v. Franklin in 1983 that left the industry concluding they couldn't just copy IBM's ROMs.