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“Stop Designing Languages. Write Libraries Instead” (2016)

https://lbstanza.org/purpose_of_programming_languages.html
121•teleforce•2h ago•62 comments

A4 Paper Stories

https://susam.net/a4-paper-stories.html
85•blenderob•2h ago•38 comments

The Eric and Wendy Schmidt Observatory System

https://www.schmidtsciences.org/schmidt-observatory-system/
38•pppone•2h ago•28 comments

LaTeX Coffee Stains [pdf]

https://ctan.math.illinois.edu/graphics/pgf/contrib/coffeestains/coffeestains-en.pdf
6•zahrevsky•15m ago•0 comments

Show HN: KeelTest – AI-driven VS Code unit test generator with bug discovery

https://keelcode.dev/keeltest
13•bulba4aur•1h ago•4 comments

Formal methods only solve half my problems

https://brooker.co.za/blog/2022/06/02/formal.html
45•signa11•4d ago•14 comments

The first new compass since 1936

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eiDhbZ8-BZI
52•1970-01-01•5d ago•32 comments

Vector graphics on GPU

https://gasiulis.name/vector-graphics-on-gpu/
105•gsf_emergency_6•4d ago•18 comments

Everyone hates OneDrive, Microsofts cloud app that steals and deletes files

https://boingboing.net/2026/01/05/everyone-hates-onedrive-microsofts-cloud-app-that-steals-then-d...
26•mikecarlton•1h ago•10 comments

Stop Doom Scrolling, Start Doom Coding: Build via the terminal from your phone

https://github.com/rberg27/doom-coding
502•rbergamini27•19h ago•352 comments

Opus 4.5 is not the normal AI agent experience that I have had thus far

https://burkeholland.github.io/posts/opus-4-5-change-everything/
679•tbassetto•21h ago•961 comments

Optery (YC W22) Hiring a CISO and Web Scraping Engineers (Node) (US and Latam)

https://www.optery.com/careers/
1•beyondd•3h ago

Electronic nose for indoor mold detection and identification

https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adsr.202500124
155•PaulHoule•14h ago•87 comments

The creator of Claude Code's Claude setup

https://twitter.com/bcherny/status/2007179832300581177
490•KothuRoti•4d ago•319 comments

Show HN: SMTP Tunnel – A SOCKS5 proxy disguised as email traffic to bypass DPI

https://github.com/x011/smtp-tunnel-proxy
99•lobito25•14h ago•33 comments

A 30B Qwen model walks into a Raspberry Pi and runs in real time

https://byteshape.com/blogs/Qwen3-30B-A3B-Instruct-2507/
291•dataminer•18h ago•101 comments

Vietnam bans unskippable ads

https://saigoneer.com/vietnam-news/28652-vienam-bans-unskippable-ads,-requires-skip-button-to-app...
1468•hoherd•22h ago•747 comments

On the slow death of scaling

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5877662
96•sethbannon•11h ago•18 comments

I wanted a camera that doesn't exist, so I built it

https://medium.com/@cristi.baluta/i-wanted-a-camera-that-doesnt-exist-so-i-built-it-5f9864533eb7
421•cyrc•4d ago•131 comments

Show HN: Comet MCP – Give Claude Code a browser that can click

https://github.com/hanzili/comet-mcp
8•hanzili•3d ago•5 comments

Oral microbiome sequencing after taking probiotics

https://blog.booleanbiotech.com/oral-microbiome-biogaia
168•sethbannon•17h ago•71 comments

Investigating and fixing a nasty clone bug

https://kobzol.github.io/rust/2025/12/30/investigating-and-fixing-a-nasty-clone-bug.html
20•r4um•5d ago•0 comments

The ISEE Trajectories

https://www.drmindle.com/isee/
5•drmindle12358•2d ago•4 comments

We recreated Steve Jobs's 1975 Atari horoscope program

https://blog.adafruit.com/2026/01/06/we-recreated-steve-jobss-1975-atari-horoscope-program-and-yo...
86•ptorrone•14h ago•38 comments

What *is* code? (2015)

https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2015-paul-ford-what-is-code/
63•bblcla•5d ago•25 comments

CES 2026: Taking the Lids Off AMD's Venice and MI400 SoCs

https://chipsandcheese.com/p/ces-2026-taking-the-lids-off-amds
123•rbanffy•17h ago•70 comments

Calling All Hackers: How money works (2024)

https://phrack.org/issues/71/17
298•krrishd•18h ago•189 comments

Gnome dev gives fans of Linux's middle-click paste the middle finger

https://www.theregister.com/2026/01/07/gnome_middle_click_paste/
42•beardyw•1h ago•40 comments

Launch HN: Tamarind Bio (YC W24) – AI Inference Provider for Drug Discovery

74•denizkavi•21h ago•17 comments

Sergey Brin's Unretirement

https://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/google-co-founder-sergey-brins-unretirement-is-a-lesson-for-...
266•iancmceachern•6d ago•334 comments
Open in hackernews

Strange.website

https://strange.website/
210•abelanger•1d ago

Comments

PlunderBunny•1d ago
Also check out this guy's postings on Bluesky [0] - some comedy gold there:

"my cathedral-seeing eyes finally came in the mail, really excited to try these puppies out. oh holy shit"

0. https://bsky.app/profile/strange.website

patcon•1d ago
This is definitely inspired by the print book "house of leaves", a strange work of ergodic fiction: The subset box layouts with backward text, the coloring of a single word a bright color throughout ("house" and "Minotaur" in HoL)

It's a great book :)

yallpendantools•1d ago
Colophon:

> this site is built with Eleventy and Sass, and uses ~no JavaScript~ a very small amount of JavaScript for the House of Leaves post.

So, HoL confirmed.

lagniappe•1d ago
Zampano was here
omgmajk•1d ago
I laughed out loud when I saw computers in blue text, always fun to see a HoL reference.
Freebytes•1d ago
This reminds me of the way the Internet was in the past. And the random sites to which this site links. (If you have not seen Neocities, it is another similar place which is the predecessor of Geocities before Yahoo! bought it and killed it.)
AndrewStephens•1d ago
The world needs more idiosyncratic and opinionated hand crafted websites like this.
GaryBluto•1d ago
I was just thinking to myself about how much the internet was lacking in self-important esoteric gibberish. I am unsurprised to see it came from the same person as "A Website to Destroy All Websites".

I am especially befuddled by all the comments stating "This is how the web used to be!"; no it wasn't, and I can only imagine those who think so collate their view of web history purely through what others say on Mastodon and Twitter (who in turn probably constructed their view of the time from the twelfth or so chinese whisper down the line of various blogs and manifestos).

akoboldfrying•1d ago
Agree. It reads like something an LLM would generate in response to the prompt "Edgy dystopian gloom about the state of the modern web" if you kept replying "Edgier!" until it made everything lowercase.
TeMPOraL•1d ago
Nah, LLMs do a better job. This is clearly human.
vintagedave•1d ago
I feel this is a slightly cruel comment. It’s a website of creativity, very well executed. Also, if you read the text, it is right.

Some of the presentation (such as the inverted / mirrored square) is pure art. In an admirable sense: art.

While I get the commentary — that bit reminded me of House of Leaves which has been criticized for the same thing — there’s a real human behind this, who obviously cares deeply about the issues they’re communicating about (and has the skill to do so quite incredibly.) Sometimes I wonder, in the ease of critique, what it’s like for the anonymous person on the other end, and I don’t feel good here. I feel like your comment doesn’t quite account for the humanity of someone else, nor of someone doing something with passion.

boca_honey•1d ago
>someone doing something with passion.

I'd agree if the site covered some history, shared recipes, or even just ranted about the author's favorite movies. But this guy is just trash-talking the entire internet.

"the website has changed. it twists facts to fiction, reality to rubbish, gold into dirt." ... and so on.

If you're going to be cruel, you might get some cruel feedback.

derangedHorse•1d ago
> Sometimes I wonder, in the ease of critique, what it’s like for the anonymous person on the other end

Here's a better look at how the "anonymous person on the other end" sees things [1]:

> “i’m always polite to chat gpt so it remembers me later ” you are going to die from water-poison-related typhoid in the Great American Megadesert after a particularly nasty heat surge evaporates the rest of the drinkable rations. you will be buried in the sand.

[1] https://bsky.app/profile/strange.website/post/3m33mnmcyys2t

Biganon•1d ago
Yeah they do sound insufferable alright.
boca_honey•1d ago
Exactly. Have you noticed that most of these 'weird web' sites don't actually talk about anything besides the web itself? Every other 'indie web' site I stumble upon is just about the indie web.... or worse, just a list of links pointing to other similar sites.

There’s no real value here. No new info, no original content. Just clunky web design and rants about 'social media bad.'

That’s not how the web actually was. Everyone used to bring something to the table, instead of just talking in circles about the table itself.

GaryBluto•1d ago
You've captured my thoughts better than I could. It feels very much like these projects are cargo cults. The strange (and always off-feeling) attempts to recreate badly-written Geocities websites (out of all the aspects of the 2000s internet to recreate, why such a narrow and dull target?) that are posted here feel very much like how the Melanesians built fake airstrips and conducted pseudo-military drills to attract "cargo", which is in this case is a confused and distorted concept of the "old web".
peterldowns•1d ago
Haven't updated it in a while but here's my attempt at bringing something to the table, you might find it interesting. https://freezine.xyz/
manuelmoreale•1d ago
You are clearly not browsing enough of these “weird web” sites if that’s your take. Or the only ones you’re clicking on are the ones that are posted here on HN.

Try search something on https://wiby.me for example and then tell me if all you get are people writing about the web.

dandelionv1bes•1d ago
Haven’t seen Wiby before but it’s fantastic, thank you.
manuelmoreale•1d ago
My pleasure. Will throw a few more links your way, just in case you want to keep surfing:

[0] https://wildwild.directory [1] https://cloudhiker.net [2] https://theuselessweb.com

boca_honey•1d ago
You might be right. Almost all the 'weird web' stuff I’ve seen was through HN posts, so I got the idea that it was all just meta, edgy rejects with Bluesky accounts.

I spent a couple of hours on wiby.me browsing sites at random and it was amazing. Thank you for that.

However, 95% of the sites there haven't been updated in 15+ years. In fact, none of the 20+ sites I found through the 'surprise me' feature had any updates since the late 2000s (though I’m sure some out there have).

It gives me the impression that this 'let's get the web back' movement is mostly nostalgia. Culture happens where it happens, not where it should happen. Today, that place is unfortunately a walled garden controlled by corporations. I hope that changes, but judging by these websites, that change isn't happening yet.

manuelmoreale•1d ago
> It gives me the impression that this 'let's get the web back' movement is mostly nostalgia. Culture happens where it happens, not where it should happen. Today, that place is unfortunately a walled garden controlled by corporations. I hope that changes, but judging by these websites, that change isn't happening yet.

So I think the overall situation is a bit more nuanced than that. I am someone who's very much in the "let's bring the old-school web back" camp but I mean that in a conceptual sense. I strongly believe that the web would be, overall, a much better place if people were all tending to their own websites, interacting with each other via email or forums. It's a slower, more deliberate way to exist in this digital space.

But all that doesn't imply we also need to ditch modern tech and go back making sites with FrontPage and table layouts. And it also doesn't mean we can't have "modern looking" websites. The two things can coexist.

At the same time, there are people who like the 90s web aesthetics, but they also spend their time posting shit on Instagram. That's just nostalgia and personally I don't care about that part.

I do know for a fact that it's possible to get the good parts of the old web back. I know it because I experience it daily. I have a blog that's powered by a modern CMS. Yet it has no JS, no tracking, no fancy features. People can get my content via RSS (and a lot of people do), they can leave a message in my guestbook, they can poke around my blogroll and they can click around and be redirected to other blogs run by people who, like me, believe a better web is possible. I also get emailed daily by people who simply want to connect in a way that feels more authentic.

That's the part of the old school web I want back. But it's also a part that never went entirely away.

> Culture happens where it happens, not where it should happen. Today, that place is unfortunately a walled garden controlled by corporations.

You're right which is why I genuinely believe that in the context of the web, not having a presence on social media and having a personal site instead is today's counterculture. And we need more people to embrace that.

rchaud•13h ago
people have never posted weird shit on Instagram. Pinterest maybe, but not Instagram. I have been on it since the early days. It is either milquetoast "pics from my vacation" or influencer garbage. Even normal people do not post there anymore because Meta has flooded the feeds with a 100:1 ratio of ads and influencer material relative to friends' posts.
rchaud•21h ago
> However, 95% of the sites there haven't been updated in 15+ years.

You just explained why those sites are amazing. The pressure to update sites is what starts the slow descent into personal op-ed oblivion. These are sites, not blogs. The bloggification of the web is what made sites suck.

https://stackingthebricks.com/how-blogs-broke-the-web/

manuelmoreale•21h ago
Some people in 2026 are still updating sites the old school way: https://brisray.com

Ray's a great example, he even has a lovely page about webrings: https://brisray.com/utils/webrings.htm

Was very happy to have him as a guest on my series if you want to know more about the story of his site: https://manuelmoreale.com/interview/ray-thomas

That said, I don't entirely agree with the point of the article you linked.

What made the web suck was money imo. If the incentive is to keep posting to get views and those views are translated into money, then yeah, there's no incentive to keep things static. But on today's web, blogs aren't the only option. Plenty of people prefer to have digital gardens, which I think are a lot more close to old school sites.

iammjm•1d ago
It seems like literature suffers a similar fate: it feels like at least 50% of all non-fiction books are about writers trying and struggling to write their next book. Unable to create something interesting and/or worthwhile, we naturally fallback into some meta-bullshit
rozap•22h ago
Both things can be true. It's true there's a whole circle jerk around complaining about how the web used to be better, and the much of indie web movement is just talking in circles about this phenomenon.

It is also true that Facebook and its ilk did destroy huge swaths of the online community. Example: I'm a automotive tinkerer, and online forums used to be a rich source of information, community, crazy builds...people actually creating stuff for the sake of creating. All that is gone now and the purity of an open space to put creative pursuits has been infiltrated with perverse engagement incentives, ads, algorithmic curation and the like.

I get what you're saying, but it doesn't mean that OP is wrong even if you find it exhausting.

noduerme•1d ago
What's wrong with some retro-lite doom bait?

When I was a kid in the 80s there were fake 1950s diners everywhere, with jukeboxes and malt machines, bubble gum music and greasy hamburgers. They were a cheap nostalgic simulacrum of something not originally all that special. That was because there were still a lot of people alive who were teenagers in the 1950s and wanted to show their kids or grandkids something kinda-like the world they grew up in. It drifted further and further from reality along with the people who inhabited that world, who grew old and died. Now we just have faux 50s diners and a lot of old movies to look at.

supriyo-biswas•1d ago
Apart from the sibling comments that makes some excellent points, the commercial aspect of any endeavor will almost always coexist, or in some cases, overshadow the "artisanal" aspect that the "indieweb" people seem to be going for.

Even if we completely deleted the Internet and started from scratch, or any other technology for that matter, enterprising people will want to use the technology to deliver some sort of value to society in return for goods and services. This is both a good thing for the people in question, as they can be paid for something they love doing, addresses previously thought of use cases (such as online shopping or video streaming, in the case of the Internet) that people would be willing to pay for, and leads to commercial exchanges with many positive downstream effects (internet providers laying infrastructure, companies investing in software, and associated employment for many people).

Certainly, I owe all of my jobs and many of the friendships that I continue beyond their meatspace boundaries, precisely because the Internet and commercial services on top of it that enabled it to happen.

Without this aspect, the Internet would likely be left in a niche, which makes it far less useful to most. This is the primary reason why projects like Gemini, etc. will not have much success, because it is intentionally designed to be not useful to most people; and guess what? You can always make plain HTML/CSS websites and set up a Matrix server for your buddies to talk to; you don't need a new protocol and sing praises about the indieweb to make this happen.

asukachikaru•1d ago
His portfolio / blog site is aesthetically my favorite blog of all time out there.

https://henry.codes/

only-one1701•1d ago
I thought that "A Website to Destroy All Websites" as a bit precious but like this for the "I'm feeling lucky" logic alone. The author is right. The internet was good and now, I'm sorry to say, sucks. I'm worried something's gone for good.
adventured•1d ago
The Internet is fantastic. The Web sucks.

On the Internet: any movie I want to watch; any song I want to listen to; an endless parade of games to play via Steam et al.; about a zillion games I can play online with friends; numerous app store options, and an entire other world of smartphone games I can play alone or with friends; inexpensive LLMs I can do almost anything I want to with, wherever my imagination takes me; porn, a lot of porn; infinite social media; infinite videos on youtube; any skill I want to learn, there is - what might as well be - unlimited material on how to do it; any book I want to read; communications, email, instant messaging, tele-whatever; just about any kind of get-x-done software I could ask for, and if it doesn't exist an LLM will create it for me tonight; shopping, whatever you want to buy, you can shop for it, research it, look at it; want to start an LLC? Internet. Want to file a trademark? Internet. Want a passport? Internet. Book a flight/hotel/B&B/car rental? Internet. Plot a holiday? Internet. Have a hobby? Communities on one platform or another. And on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on.

urban_alien•1d ago
Care to elaborate on where you're drawing the line between The Internet and The Web? Your comment doesn't make it clear.
dmbche•1d ago
At a glance : the internet is the scaffolding/structure, the Web is what people are doing in it.

The structure allows for great things. People suck. Hell is other people and all that.

hunter2_•1d ago
I would qualify it ever so slightly:

The internet is the scaffolding/structure, the Web is what people are doing in a browser (i.e., over HTTP) in it.

Then there's also the stuff people do on the internet without a browser/HTTP. Nobody opens an IMAP/SSH/BitTorrent/IRC client or whatever and thinks of that as surfing the Web, because those aren't browsers nor are they primarily speaking HTTP.

bo1024•1d ago
The Internet is a computer network used to transmit information (as packets).

One system built on the Internet is the World Wide Web, which is just webpages served with the http/https protocol.

Other protocols that route over the Internet include email, ssh, Tor, torrents, apps, etc.

theraido•1d ago
Make Cyberspace Great Again!
etage3•1d ago
I'm not sure, but the grand-parent might be drawing from Hakim Bey's distinction between Net and Web. This is from TAZ, The Temporary Autonomous Zone (1991):

We’ve spoken of the Net, which can be defined as the totality of all information and communication transfer. Some of these transfers are privileged and limited to various elites, which gives the Net a hierarchic aspect. Other transactions are open to all — so the Net has a horizontal or non-hierarchic aspect as well. Military and Intelligence data are restricted, as are banking and currency information and the like. But for the most part the telephone, the postal system, public data banks, etc. are accessible to everyone and anyone. Thus within the Net there has begun to emerge a shadowy sort of counter-Net, which we will call the Web (as if the Net were a fishing-net and the Web were spider-webs woven through the interstices and broken sections of the Net). Generally we’ll use the term Web to refer to the alternate horizontal open structure of info-exchange, the non-hierarchic network, and reserve the term counter-Net to indicate clandestine illegal and rebellious use of the Web, including actual data-piracy and other forms of leeching off the Net itself. Net, Web, and counter-Net are all parts of the same whole pattern-complex — they blur into each other at innumerable points. The terms are not meant to define areas but to suggest tendencies.

https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/hakim-bey-t-a-z-the-...

PurpleRamen•1d ago
The Web is layer 7, the internet is layer 3 (and upward if you want to generalize).
toofy•1d ago
> The Internet is fantastic. The Web sucks.

did you really not understand what the author meant by “internet” in the colloquial sense or are you being needlessly pedantic?

d-us-vb•1d ago
I appreciate when "Woe is Me" style comments are knocked down a notch when they conveniently ignore half of the world. The activity surrounding the discussion is indeed using networked applications, of which the web is only one.

So I don't think they were being needlessly pedantic, nor do I think they didn't understand what the parent meant by internet in the colloquial.

Lots of different ways one could take this: maybe whom they were responding to is just being lazy, that the good parts of the internet are there for them to explore, but they are beholden to their web browser and their favorite loathed platforms that 'make the internet suck'.

Or maybe whom they were responding to really has gone the rounds and really has considered all the options and bemoans how difficult the non-web internet services are to use, and how inelegant they can be at times and what a pain they are to maintain if it isn't your full time job.

There can be so many ways to take written material on the internet; more often even pedantic comments at least let us ensure we aren't simply reaffirming our own biases.

toofy•8h ago
thanks for your input. im still curious to hear from them.
regenschutz•1d ago
This is why we all should just use hieroglyphs instead. You don't have to worry about where to put icons when everything is an icon!

/s, if it wasn't obvious...

nice_byte•1d ago
you might also like: myhouse.wad
catskull•1d ago
For something a bit more “substantive” (or perhaps earnest) but still reminiscent of the same aesthetic this evokes, I recommend spending a few minutes poking around big gulp supreme: https://biggulpsupreme.neocities.org/
tolerance•1d ago
The book that this website is inspired by...its plot seems to echo my impression of what these “Old/small web elegies” are becoming.

A man stumbles upon the idea of a thing that itself is borne off the account of someone else that never actually came to pass. Madness ensues. And madness perhaps precedes the event. ‘Weird and eerie’.

con•1d ago
I just made a pretty strange one myself: https://currentcondition.tv

I've added quite a few Easter eggs and a few old school games. Let me know what you think?

Blue dots are locations of previous visitors.. it all works well on desktop, the games need a bit more love to work well on mobile.

noduerme•1d ago
It's cool.
con•1d ago
Also just made it open source - https://github.com/consti/currentcondition
Barathkanna•1d ago
Love the UI!!
tarcon•1d ago
The 5000 loc index.html doesn't look too bad content wise, but I question if it's helpful to humans in its shape. I guess a proper project structure is just a prompt away though.
con•1d ago
Yup. I built a few more complex apps with more structure, like https://rauschstoff.com - fully vibe coded on the same platform. It has honestly been amazing the last few days :)
romperstomper•1d ago
It is cool but remember that not all the world uses Fahrenheit for temperature :)
reddalo•1d ago
I'd even say that a very small part of the world uses Fahrenheit for temperature :)
interloxia•1d ago
English speakers in Liberia and the Burmese will also have to stick with tyranny units according to the detection code. The rest of us should be fine.
con•1d ago
It tried to detect which one you'd prefer. Now I made it so you can toggle by clicking on it.
fifticon•1d ago
..yet
dekken_•1d ago
yer a wizard consti
holoduke•1d ago
Syndicate PC game vibes
rchaud•21h ago
Indeed. The first Syndicate game is still in my memory due to the UI alone. I don't remember getting very far in it though, too difficult.
evanjrowley•1d ago
That was the most time I've spent on any website linked here.
amiantos•1d ago
cool but everyone should just read house of leaves themselves
masswerk•1d ago
Curious detail: the button/widget icons of the browser chrome are composed of multi-layered box-shadows (i.e. one box-shadow definition per pixel or line, concatenated to a sting) of a `:before` pseudo element. (I don't think that I've seen anything alike before.)

Meaning: also no images.

manuelmoreale•1d ago
You want to check this one out then https://a.singlediv.com/
noduerme•1d ago
Am I the only one who sees this as a referential homage to Italo Calvino's "Invisible Cities"?
beepbooptheory•1d ago
Wow Yeah I definitely see that a lot in its larger structure. The House of Leaves stuff is kinda all on its sleeve, but the kind of serial structure of it feels so much like Invisible Cities now that you say this.
pekim•1d ago
As soon as I saw the scrolling "made by henry (from online)." at the bottom I thought "marquee" tag. Sure enough when I inspected the DOM it does use one.
twosdai•20h ago
Marquee is the greatest html tag of all.
xtiansimon•1d ago
If the world of vice coding brought us more strange websites, it’s 1996 all over again. Let the games begin!
Gormo•1d ago
"Vice coding" is an interesting Freudian slip.