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274•47thpresident•3h ago•63 comments

Daft Punk Easter Egg in the BPM Tempo of Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger?

https://www.madebywindmill.com/tempi/blog/hbfs-bpm/
123•simonw•2h ago•18 comments

Unix v4 (1973) – Live Terminal

https://unixv4.dev/
103•pjmlp•4h ago•40 comments

Clicks Communicator

https://www.clicksphone.com/en/communicator
229•microflash•6h ago•163 comments

Ask HN: Who is hiring? (January 2026)

241•whoishiring•7h ago•141 comments

Linux kernel security work

http://www.kroah.com/log/blog/2026/01/02/linux-kernel-security-work/
32•chmaynard•2h ago•9 comments

FracturedJson

https://github.com/j-brooke/FracturedJson/wiki
481•PretzelFisch•10h ago•126 comments

TinyTinyTPU: 2×2 systolic-array TPU-style matrix-multiply unit deployed on FPGA

https://github.com/Alanma23/tinytinyTPU-co
74•Xenograph•4h ago•33 comments

IPv6 just turned 30 and still hasn't taken over the world

https://www.theregister.com/2025/12/31/ipv6_at_30/
204•Brajeshwar•8h ago•417 comments

Fighting Fire with Fire: Scalable Oral Exams

https://www.behind-the-enemy-lines.com/2025/12/fighting-fire-with-fire-scalable-oral.html
100•sethbannon•5h ago•134 comments

Jank Lang Hit Alpha

https://github.com/jank-lang/jank
66•makemethrowaway•3h ago•12 comments

Uxn32: Uxn Emulator for Windows and Wine

https://github.com/randrew/uxn32
24•ibobev•5d ago•2 comments

10 years of personal finances in plain text files

https://sgoel.dev/posts/10-years-of-personal-finances-in-plain-text-files/
406•wrxd•12h ago•164 comments

Punkt. Unveils MC03 Smartphone

https://www.punkt.ch/blogs/news/punkt-unveils-mc03
116•ChrisArchitect•7h ago•102 comments

Accounting for Computer Scientists (2011)

https://martin.kleppmann.com/2011/03/07/accounting-for-computer-scientists.html
47•tosh•5h ago•9 comments

What you need to know before touching a video file

https://gist.github.com/arch1t3cht/b5b9552633567fa7658deee5aec60453/
259•qbow883•6d ago•159 comments

Standard Ebooks: Public Domain Day 2026 in Literature

https://standardebooks.org/blog/public-domain-day-2026
327•WithinReason•14h ago•53 comments

C –> Java != Java –> LLM

http://www.observationalhazard.com/2025/12/c-java-java-llm.html
38•WoodenChair•5d ago•39 comments

Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (January 2026)

82•whoishiring•7h ago•151 comments

I wrote a batch script to keep my 2011 ThinkPad alive for 24/7 streaming

https://github.com/patrick48001/ThinkPad-Stream-Sentinel-VLC-Video-Source-reset-disable-stream-sh...
17•techenthuziast•4h ago•2 comments

Assorted less(1) tips

https://blog.thechases.com/posts/assorted-less-tips/
159•todsacerdoti•11h ago•34 comments

The rsync algorithm (1996) [pdf]

https://www.andrew.cmu.edu/course/15-749/READINGS/required/cas/tridgell96.pdf
63•vortex_ape•6h ago•3 comments

List, inspect and explore OCI container images, their layers and contents

https://github.com/bschaatsbergen/lix
20•bschaatsbergen•5d ago•5 comments

39th Chaos Communication Congress Videos

https://media.ccc.de/b/congress/2025
355•Jommi•10h ago•70 comments

HPV vaccination reduces oncogenic HPV16/18 prevalence from 16% to <1% in Denmark

https://www.eurosurveillance.org/content/10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2025.30.27.2400820
475•stared•13h ago•248 comments

Global software engineering job postings outlook – 2026

https://jobswithgpt.com/blog/global_software-engineering_jobs_january_2026/
14•sp1982•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: Neural Net Flies Navigate through a maze

https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/4c5465b6-c384-4c9f-8a92-a4f840367ec2
5•logicallee•5d ago•1 comments

ThingsBoard: Open-Source IoT Platform

https://github.com/thingsboard/thingsboard
56•pretext•5d ago•5 comments

Miri: Practical Undefined Behavior Detection for Rust [pdf]

https://research.ralfj.de/papers/2026-popl-miri.pdf
61•ingve•5d ago•9 comments

A small collection of text-only websites

https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/12/a-small-collection-of-text-only-websites/
119•danielfalbo•12h ago•51 comments
Open in hackernews

Ask HN: What tech job would let me get away with the least real work possible?

52•makemethrowaway•3h ago
Same as the popular question from 2021: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26721951 I'm asking again as a lot has changed in the past few years especially w.r.t LLMs, coding agents etc.

copy pasting from the op: "I'm an average developer looking for ways to work as little as humanely possible."

- I really don't care about the product I work on. I just want to do some task/project and checkout. - Fully remote will be ideal. - Salary can be on the low end. - I feel the world currently is too hyper-capitalistic and I don't think I fit in well. On top of that my country has a billion+ people and everything seems like battle for scraps.

Unless I hit home with some indie hacking/side project, I don't think this will be possible. I believe there must some niche apps/plugin/extension/ssydev roles for some crm/cms etc that might fit the bill.

Few point to note: - No, I'm not that depressed. I'm just deeply unhappy with the current state of things. - No, I'm not giving up on life. - It may look like I'm not be good fit for tech/programming jobs. But I still like tech and solving tech problems. I just dont want my life to revolve around it. - It could be that im not challenged well in my job. But I'm not sure whether I'd like to be drowned in work as well.

Thanks for any advice or hostile/dismissive comments you provide I appreciate it.

Comments

eimrine•2h ago
webcam/drugselling if IT-related, pentesting if the real IT.
isk517•1h ago
You may want to adjust your view of the world if you think making a living wage webcamming or selling drugs doesn't involve hard work.
xenospn•2h ago
State schools is what you want. Strict 9-5, no overtime, no expectations, insane bureaucracy that makes everything slow down to a crawl. You can spend years there without doing anything at all.
zerr•2h ago
"Part-time" is the keyword you are looking for. Besides coding, if you want to get into bullshit jobs, become an agile coach, scrum master, product owner, etc...
c0balt•2h ago
If you like tech (sw dev in particular based on the roles) enough to do it but can't motivate yourself to do it for a job, consider making it a hobby and changing careers. Don't ruin your passion by making it a chore.

Jobs that are "low effort" are rare, usually you need one of:

- time: job is time consuming (think monitoring cameras for N hours a day)

- physical: job requires physical work (think sorting boxes in a warehouse or janitorial work)

- skilled: job requires certification/skill (think electrician or engineering)

- social: job requires interacting with humans (think customer support or sales)

Depending on you skillset/preferences select one or two and search for vocations/jobs. Jobs usually have a mix of them (and there are likely some more categories). Jobs always require effort, that's why people are paying for it. If you want to reduce time look for "part time" jobs.

If you are fine with mid-low pay, take a look at jobs in public institutions (Education, Government). They tend to have rather good long term working conditions and are commonly open to people changing careers into public service.

lm28469•2h ago
Find a smallish company that exists for 15+ years and isn't acting like they're about to solve the biggest problem in human history or boasting about 12 gigabillion percent of growth in the last year. There are plenty of them but they easily fly under the radar, especially in older industries (real estate, newspapers, banking, &c.). You can try working for a governmental or non profit thing too
technothrasher•1h ago
Yep. There are plenty of small manufacturing companies that have embedded programming projects that aren't sexy or cutting edge, but are just little STM32 or similar chips running bare metal no-OS code for all kinds of simple little devices for different industries. I've been doing that work for the past twenty years. It scratches my engineering itch, but also lets me work pretty independently, put in my mostly stress free 40 hours a week, and then go home and not think about it.
bigfatkitten•2h ago
Defense industry. You get paid reasonably well to work at the pace of your government customers, who are almost never in a hurry.
i_love_retros•1h ago
But you'd essentially be making things to kill people. And those people are often innocent civilians.
readthenotes1•1h ago
"I really don't care about the product I work on. "

Literally the first sub-qualification

dmoy•1h ago
In the US, I guess, maybe, depending on the specific defense contractor? I dunno if I'd classify it as the type of low effort OP is looking for.

Also it sounds like OP is in India or China. In China, that is definitely not how defense industry work works. Idk about India.

ekropotin•2h ago
Scrum Master or Project Manager. However, I'd assume in the current market these jobs are not easy to find.
i_love_retros•2h ago
I feel exactly the same as you my friend.
yunnpp•2h ago
I suppose I am on a similar boat wrt job satisfaction and the direction things have gone and are going in this industry. I am also one step ahead of you, from the sound of it, in a job that doesn't require me to devote my life to it and gives me time for personal projects, gym, and just figuring out shit in life. This is not to boast, but to give you a heads-up: I haven't figured out much of anything just yet, and I am not strictly sure my current position is significantly better than what was before it. Perhaps slightly better, with more time to think, and having somewhat detached myself emotionally from the job. Which is to say, if you can take a break altogether with somebody else supporting you financially, I'd do that and really consider things as an "outsider" to your own life. Also talk to people to get more perspective. Otherwise, I think I concur with the other suggestions given here.
cicko•1h ago
<3
userbinator•1h ago
Government-related jobs.
singpolyma3•1h ago
Literally any job in big tech
zackb•1h ago
This is what I kept thinking as well. In my experience big companies can't get things done and people fly under the radar all the time not doing anything.
singpolyma3•1h ago
Yup. I've worked for several different big tech companies and the majority of people there did very little and no one really cared.
dystopiandevel•1h ago
This is not my experience whatsoever and someone who works 50+ weeks for big tech. Especially with decreased value for the human element in favor of AI there are now more demands than ever. Engineers have become much more expendable.
captainkrtek•38m ago
50+ weeks? so a year?

I've been in big tech for 12+ years now. The first handful of years are definitely a grind to earn your spot, get a couple promos. After that though, it can become quite a bit easier to coast if that's what you're looking for. People know you, know you're probably valuable cause you're "senior" or "staff" and still here, and likely leave you alone. But yeah, as a newer engineer these days, it still requires the initial commitment to earn the privilege of coasting in a big tech company.

alphazard•1h ago
Entire roles have been created for people to do this, in exchange the headcount makes your manager look more important. In tech alone there exists: product managers, scrum masters, middle managers of all kinds.

If you want to stay in tech, look for roles that can be filled by someone who doesn't know how to build or sell the product. Every business has to deal with supply and demand, the further you are from those things, the more likely the job is bullshit, and not doing it will be unnoticeable.

jere•1h ago
Government jobs. But my experience tells me that getting away with doing nothing is very corrosive to the soul and will be regretted later.
JumpCrisscross•1h ago
State or local. They’re hard workers federally.
ifidishshbsba•34m ago
lol
JumpCrisscross•3m ago
Do you know any federal tech workers? They are almost always trading down from what they could—or did—earn in the private sector.
guywithahat•1h ago
I agree on both points; government work can involve very little real work with no real stress of being fired. Similarly, doing meaningless work will destroy your soul and will make you hate your time in the office even more. I'd even go so far as to say caring deeply about your profession is a western value, and trying to work as little as possible is going to be difficult in a western country
subsection1h•33m ago
> doing meaningless work will destroy your soul

You think commercial software is meaningful? You think web apps, mobile apps, etc. are meaningful? If so, you are very lucky!

guywithahat•18m ago
I do satellites now but when I worked in insurance the work we did was meaningful. People need insurance, their policies are stored as data, and the company had to manage millions of policies.

Increasing click-through rates may not feel meaningful, but writing unit tests for a satellite which has already launched and been decommissioned will eat your soul, and you likely won't become a better developer because of it since you won't be given a budget to improve things or try new tech.

nesk_•1h ago
I've been working part-time for two years, works great for me! It's not easy to negotiate—and not with every company—but feasible.
guntis_dev•1h ago
A colleague of mine is developing an internal tool nobody needs in a large IT corporation. Since it's not client facing, there's no rush from project managers. It's dragged on so long that other internal tools have already implemented most of the needed functionality - so there's no good value proposition now. The only argument keeping it alive is sunk cost fallacy. Colleague works minimal required 3 day weeks, spends maybe 2 hours in the office drinking coffee, and tells me how he enjoys life with lots of hikes and outdoor activities.
ashleyn•1h ago
This accurately describes many tech jobs outside of FAANG or the startup scene. Lay low, close your tickets, and invest aggressively into the S&P 500. You'll be done in about 12 years. Most you'll need to worry about are fudging annual "goals" that have nothing to do with the actual work.

Really this sounds like apathy and disillusionment with the state of the mainstream, a sentiment i understand perfectly. I would encourage you to consider web contracting for local businesses or communities you're a part of. You'll have to take ownership of what you do and care about it, but consider that will be much easier to do when you actually do value what you're a part of and what you're doing. When it's not making gambling apps, slop generators, or DRM for juice presses, you might be surprised at how your outlook on work changes.

FabioBertone•1h ago
I would aim... Away from the glare of the software world.

There are plenty of smallish companies that just bob along. If you pinch your nose for long enough you quickly become indispensable, and your productivity will rarely be very challenged.

But... Be aware. "Bullshit jobs" can be enjoyed only by the right mind. Most people find them miserable anyway, it doesn't really matter if they are easy, or low effort. (This means also that I disagree with recommending to become Project or Product Manager - when those roles are properly useless... They are also soul crushing, with layers of stress on top)

mknbvcxz•1h ago
I had one of these. Comfortable income; not big tech but well over USA median. Remote. Put in 5-15 hours a week.

Strongly recommend against it.

What I would recommend instead is have a hard look at what's causing pain in your current situation. Try and get as concrete as possible. Try going one level deeper from 'world is hyper capitalistic' to what hurts. When I talk to people that express similar views there is usually some other deep hurt that is going unaddressed. ie 'im not being valued for my work', 'I have a deep fear I will not be able to provide or be valued', 'I like tech, but the current structure of tech employers doesnt fit well with me(weird noises in offices are deeply uncomfortable)' etc.

It's almost counterintuitive but 60 hard hours / week at something you enjoy and thrive in will be easier and feel better like 5 hours at something you hate. Most everyone has a desire to feel valued and needed, so look for what that can be for you. Note prestige of impact != internal satisfaction. If you enjoy serving tea, then doing that for little money (and lots of time) will feel better in the long run than doing a few hours of tech work you despise.

Also... strongly recommend tuning out from the internet / news / social media. Sensationalist headlines can obscure our felt experience of life.

Reading between the lines of your post, Im not sure if what you want is a job with low hours or to solve your deep unhappiness? If I told you I had a job that paid well but you would still be happy would you take it?

frizlab•1h ago
idk… If I had a job where I could put 5 to 15 hours a week and get a pay, I’d fill all my time with something else! (Side projects, sports, etc.)
austinjp•1h ago
Agreed. I walked past a high-end fashion store in a major European city recently. The big glass door was locked, with a sign explaining that the shop was open, the door was locked to prevent theft. There was one young woman inside staffing the shop, sitting behind a counter. I envied her, I could happily take minimum wage for a year or so, sitting at a desk all day with very occasional interruption, while I tap at a laptop working on personal projects. Unfortunately I'm not a glamorous 20-something European woman.
ifidishshbsba•28m ago
Go on disability
mknbvcxz•59m ago
That's what I did. Hobbies & Side work. Traveling!

The key is to set boundaries, learn which 5 hours of work are important and manage expectations well. Im convinced you get most of your work done in the first 20 hours of the week and there's diminishing returns after that. Manual labor scales pretty linearly with time. Software development not so much.

markus_zhang•1h ago
That's like a dream job for me. I'm going to use the rest of the time to hack on OS kernels instead of losing sleep over it. The thing is, people rarely get to work on what they are passionate about. At least I literally have seen none, after spending so many years in 5+ companies, none of my team is very passionate about the job, which is understandable.
MrMember•1h ago
Find a role at a large "non-tech" comapny in a large department on a mid sized team. I had several jobs like that and the amount of effort required in the average day was minimal. Probably less than an hour a day of actual meaningful work. You'll hate your job but it's extremely easy and pays decent.
hbogert•59m ago
I can understand you are like this. Just be upfront about it during interviews. You might be surprised there are companies which are absolutely fine with that.

I'm on the other end, I do think your life should revolve around the thing that you are doing 8+ hours a day. I currently have colleagues which are the same like you and it feels I have to pull them through the mud. Just be upfront about it and find a good fit ( I too should find a better fit 8) )