frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

There were BGP anomalies during the Venezuela blackout

https://loworbitsecurity.com/radar/radar16/
489•illithid0•5h ago•263 comments

Donut Lab’s all-solid-state battery delivers 400 Wh/kg of energy density

https://www.donutlab.com/ces-battery-announcement/
140•aeonfox•4h ago•79 comments

I/O is no longer the bottleneck? (2022)

https://stoppels.ch/2022/11/27/io-is-no-longer-the-bottleneck.html
53•benhoyt•2h ago•9 comments

Six-decade math puzzle solved by Korean mathematician

https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10648326
90•mikhael•1d ago•14 comments

Try to take my position: The best promotion advice I ever got

https://andrew.grahamyooll.com/blog/Try-to-Take-My-Position/
268•yuppiepuppie•3d ago•137 comments

Strange.website

https://strange.website/
61•abelanger•3h ago•12 comments

How Y Combinator made it smart to trust founders

https://elbowgreasegames.substack.com/p/when-good-actors-can-trust-each-other
95•spacemarine1•9h ago•71 comments

Adding insular script like it's 1626

https://www.djmurphy.net/blog/clo-gaelach/
42•sollewitt•1d ago•1 comments

The Lottery Ticket Hypothesis: finding sparse trainable NNs with 90% less params

https://arxiv.org/abs/1803.03635
56•felineflock•3d ago•9 comments

Google broke my heart

https://perishablepress.com/google-broke-my-heart/
285•ingve•4h ago•122 comments

It's hard to justify Tahoe icons

https://tonsky.me/blog/tahoe-icons/
2203•lylejantzi3rd•14h ago•864 comments

Show HN: Tailsnitch – A security auditor for Tailscale

https://github.com/Adversis/tailsnitch
211•thesubtlety•9h ago•20 comments

Dealing with abandonware (2024)

https://blog.hris.to/./dealing-with-abandonware.html
45•mondobe•11h ago•6 comments

Brave overhauled its Rust adblock engine with FlatBuffers, cutting memory 75%

https://brave.com/privacy-updates/36-adblock-memory-reduction/
201•skaul•8h ago•92 comments

Scientific production in the era of large language models [pdf]

https://gwern.net/doc/science/2025-kusumegi.pdf
12•nkko•4h ago•1 comments

Show HN: DoNotNotify – Log and intelligently block notifications on Android

https://donotnotify.com/
284•awaaz•11h ago•122 comments

I switched from VSCode to Zed

https://tenthousandmeters.com/blog/i-switched-from-vscode-to-zed/
263•r4victor•12h ago•252 comments

Pipe Dreams – The life and times of Yahoo Pipes (2023)

https://retool.com/pipes
104•twalichiewicz•7h ago•19 comments

Pebble Round 2

https://repebble.com/blog/pebble-round-2-the-most-stylish-pebble-ever
334•jackwilsdon•3d ago•169 comments

Show HN: OSS sustain guard – Sustainability signals for OSS dependencies

https://onukura.github.io/oss-sustain-guard/
4•onukura•12h ago•1 comments

Sega co-founder David Rosen has died

https://www.theguardian.com/games/2026/jan/05/sega-co-founder-david-rosen-dies
195•n1b0m•8h ago•30 comments

Welcome to Gas Town

https://steve-yegge.medium.com/welcome-to-gas-town-4f25ee16dd04
177•gmays•4d ago•76 comments

Databases in 2025: A Year in Review

https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~pavlo/blog/2026/01/2025-databases-retrospective.html
542•viveknathani_•19h ago•150 comments

Keeping Syria connected during war: Surviving ISIS and Intelligence

https://syriauntold.com/2025/12/27/keeping-syria-connected-during-war/
45•oavioklein•4h ago•6 comments

LocalFirst: You Keep Using That Word

https://www.deobald.ca/essays/2026-01-01-localfirst-you-keep-using-that-word/
17•deobald•2h ago•5 comments

Migrating cells and the new science of microchimerism

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-04102-4
23•Marceltan•4h ago•0 comments

What to Do When the Trisector Comes (1983) [pdf]

https://www.ufv.ca/media/faculty/gregschlitt/information/WhatToDoWhenTrisectorComes.pdf
34•robertvc•1w ago•4 comments

So, you want to chunk really fast?

https://minha.sh/posts/so,-you-want-to-chunk-really-fast
121•snyy•9h ago•35 comments

Sandboxing Untrusted Python

https://gist.github.com/mavdol/2c68acb408686f1e038bf89e5705b28c
38•mavdol04•10h ago•31 comments

The Kimwolf botnet is stalking your local network

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2026/01/the-kimwolf-botnet-is-stalking-your-local-network/
129•SamValYlieRcHE2•3d ago•35 comments
Open in hackernews

Baffling purple honey found only in North Carolina

https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20250417-the-baffling-purple-honey-found-only-in-north-carolina
144•rmason•5d ago

Comments

Borrible•4d ago
Nice, looks tasty!

So, Kudzu?

Or Industrial waste like in France around 2012?

https://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyle/blue-and-green-hon...

https://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyle/blue-and-green-hon...

And on Banggi, a Malaysian island, there is supposedly green honey!

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/361629042_Physicoch...

cainxinth•13h ago
In NYC, they found red honey which was coming from bees drinking at a maraschino cherry factory:

https://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/30/nyregion/30bigcity.html

Unrelated, but that led to the police finding a marijuana grow operation in the basement:

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/27/nyregion/secret-marijuana...

pama•12h ago
Perhaps this was not unrelated after all, as the bee detectives might have sensed the smell of the flowers.
Rebelgecko•9h ago
The New Yorker article about it also has some additional details: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/04/23/the-maraschino...
js2•9h ago
An NC state professor previously determined it's aluminum reacting with acid in the bees' stomachs:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46501058

dabluecaboose•22h ago
Reminds me of the "discovery" of synchronous fireflies in 1990:

>Scientists got wise to the presence of synchronous fireflies in the U.S. in the 1990’s, thanks to the efforts of Faust, a citizen naturalist. “Growing up in east Tennessee, we called them lightning bugs. They're just part of summer,” she says.

In the early 1990’s, Faust read an article in a science news magazine that said there were no synchronous fireflies in the Western Hemisphere. “I thought, ‘Ours are synchronous – who do I tell this to?’” she recalls.

She wrote a letter to researchers, who came to Tennessee and studied those fireflies for the next twenty years.

[src] https://www.npr.org/2024/05/24/g-s1-935/synchronous-fireflie...

There's a lot of stuff in the world that's unique and special, but isn't common knowledge on the internet. I think more people should go out and look around for themselves!

taeric•22h ago
I didn't realize all fireflies didn't tend to synchronized. Fun read. Fireflies are one of the only "bugs" from the south that I miss. Cicadas, I suppose, have a bit of a soft spot with me. Everything else... nope.
tonyarkles•20h ago
Cicadas are so bizarre. A couple of summers ago I was around Des Moines and Ames, IA and was completely baffled by the strange noise that seemed to be everywhere and yet impossible to localize. After a few days I heard someone talking about the cicadas and learned something new!
mc3301•18h ago
Come visit Japan in August; the cicadas are so loud throughout most of the country that you have to raise your voice to be heard.
petters•16h ago
Then one day they suddenly stop. I hear a big noise but outside is completely silent to my mother.
iszomer•15h ago
Be careful standing underneath a tree involved in ._cicida rain_.
tonyarkles•6h ago
Hahahaha no one warned me about this but luckily didn't get to _experience it_. :D
foobarian•13h ago
As I always tell my kids, aren't you glad they are the size they are instead of the size of a car!
1234letshaveatw•10h ago
what area are you located in now? We have fireflies in Michigan, cicadas as well
taeric•10h ago
Pacific Northwest. And fair, I should have said east coast, not just south.
Matticus_Rex•10h ago
There are fireflies in every state except Hawaii. There are more east of the Mississippi and in the south generally, but anywhere with water has some (including river valleys in arid states).
taeric•9h ago
I had to google this. If you count non-flashing bugs as fireflies, sure. Nothing like the typical experience in my backyard when I lived in Alabama. They are very different bugs.

Still, neat, to be sure. Indeed, my point in the original post was that I find the wildlife out here in the PNW to be very fun and I like all of the wildlife we have. Banana slugs, as a fun example.

SAI_Peregrinus•10h ago
How far north are you? We get them around Albany, NY. The big thing is having a forest-meadow boundary, where fallen leaves aren't removed. If you're surrounded by grass lawns & concrete where people rake & remove the leaves fireflies could lay their eggs in, you won't get fireflies.
taeric•9h ago
Fair, it is not "north" that is my limiting factor. It is being in the Pacific North West. As another poster has said, we have some glowing bugs. Nothing like fireflies, though.

And I hasten to add, plenty of other amazing creatures.

ceejayoz•11h ago
Same deal when we "discover" new ruins in the Central American rainforests; the locals are often very aware of their existence.
chasil•22h ago
These effects can arise from much more mundane sources.

https://www.npr.org/2012/10/05/162347192/the-last-word-in-bu...

rcyeh•21h ago
Similarly: "The Mystery of the Red Bees of Red Hook"

https://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/30/nyregion/30bigcity.html

https://archive.ph/vQkwl

Two4•22h ago
any soft drink plants in the area? A bottler near where I used to stay got caught dumping out expired flavourant packs when honey in the area started turning red.
senectus1•21h ago
oh great... grape flavored honey...
RobotToaster•20h ago
From the article

>Flavour-wise, she says, "to my untrained palate, the honey really does taste purple, in a grape-y sort of way".

Oh no

TheAdamist•14h ago
Kudzu flowers supposedly have a grape like flavor. I just had a beer made with them from fonta flora in NC and you could vaguely taste it. Although unsure if it was my imagination.

Kudzu flowers were listed as one of the possibilities in the article.

potato3732842•13h ago
It could still be placebo effect and/or whatever makes purple/red grapes their deep color having an influence on the flavor and this being common to both purples rather than spilled Fanta. The article mentions kudzu which is also purple and allegedly vaguely grape like.

Basically "this bloody mary sure does have a hint of pizza to it" but one level lower (chemical level rather than the tomato ingredient level).

Two4•21h ago
A bit of digging, and it turns out there's a Coca-cola bottler in Aberdeen, the same area as Dees Bees Apiary. I'm willing to bet that purple honey coincides with grape Fanta spills or dumps
lostlogin•18h ago
This famously happened with M&Ms

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/121011-bl...

During the peak of the Manuka honey bubble, people were supposedly spiking competitors honey by putting out coloured sugar water here in New Zealand.

Unsure if that’s true or just a rumour.

miladyincontrol•21h ago
Yep, same happened near me before. Local beekeepers got some real dark colored rootbeer honey.
HarHarVeryFunny•12h ago
I seem to recall another story about colored honey (blue?) where the bees had been feeding on antifreeze - not recommended for eating.
paulorlando•21h ago
Reminds me of the story about the red (and not great tasting) honey bees were making in Brooklyn... from sipping up liquid from the local maraschino cherry factory.
searine•10h ago
Which led to the discovery of a marijuana grow operation below the factory.

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/27/nyregion/secret-marijuana...

Herodotus38•20h ago
There’s a hopefully unrelated concept called purple urine bag syndrome I have seen. Not completely understood either but this paper thinks due to a combination of dietary tryptophan breakdown from constipation and colonic E coli load, urinary bacteria, and reaction with the plastic tubing of the catheter and bag.

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3894016/

ricardobeat•19h ago
Why hasn’t the honey been tested, if this has happened for such a long time?

I’d bet on some kind of contamination as others have already mentioned.

jey•19h ago
Yeah maybe time to send a sample to the “mass spec everything” guy
ljsprague•19h ago
This guy, yeah?: https://www.youtube.com/@MassSpecEverything
jerf•11h ago
The press love to write this "gee whiz" sort of story where nobody knows anything and everyone is baffled about everything isn't that just so amazing, but I'm sure the reason why the honey itself is purple is not a mystery and someone has tested it. The question is how the purple got into the honey, not what it is. It doesn't fit into the mystery storyline they want to write.

Any sort of science reporting is shot through with this sort of thing.

js2•9h ago
An NC State professor figured it out in the 1970s[^1]:

> At N.C. State University, Professor John Ambrose, an entomologist and assistant vice provost of undergraduate affairs and director of N.C. State’s First Year College program, performed a series of tests in the 1970s to pinpoint the source of the blue honey. The result: nothing is what it seems. [...]

> Ambrose concluded that some of that aluminum ended up in the flowers’ nectar, was transferred to the hive, then added to the bees’ acidic digestive fluid to make blue honey.

Unfortunately no one believes him and he's no longer around to defend himself:

> This story appeared in the April 2010 issue of Our State. Professor John Ambrose died in January 2015 after a short battle with brain cancer.

[^1]: https://www.ourstate.com/blue-honey/

toxicwaste•19h ago
And bees can also make radioactive honey:

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/23/honey-nuclea...

FlamingMoe•15h ago
Fun fact about North Carolina: Venus Fly Traps only grow naturally within about a 75-mile radius around Wilmington, NC.
unnamed76ri•14h ago
Just a couple days ago I was able to try white honey from Montana. I don’t believe there is any rarity to it but it was new to me and tasted great.
truenfel•13h ago
Funny story: I came across some money and instead of buying Bitcoin (which at the time was selling for ~$30) I bought 6 big pails of honey from a local farm. Honey never goes bad, and during an economic collapse it would easily have the same value as Bitcoin.

I ended up eating all of it in a year instead.

onychomys•11h ago
I like honey pretty well, but I have no idea how I'd go through 6 pails of it a year. Did you use it in your coffee and also put it on toast every morning or something?
js2•13h ago
Here's an article from 2010 I submitted a few years ago along with other links I was able to dig up at the time:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32810786

adamgordonbell•12h ago
The book "All the Colors of the Dark" has a plot line around rare purple honey being a sort of treasure map to a place in North Carolina. I thought it was an odd made-up plot point.

I guess it turns out it was not.

Despite not liking that part of the plot, it was a beautifully written book, that permanently changed some of my reading habit's.

NoSalt•10h ago
Is there an M&M plant nearby???

https://www.npr.org/2012/10/05/162347192/the-last-word-in-bu...

snitzr•10h ago
If it's in North Carolina, maybe it's Cheerwine.
xg15•4h ago
Wasn't there also drug honey a few weeks ago?

Edit: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45803097

We also got blue honey ( https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32801032 ) and cannabis honey ( https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11221651 )