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ASML staffing changes could result in a net reduction of around 1700 positions

https://www.asml.com/en/news/press-releases/2026/strengthening-focus-on-engineering-and-innovation
207•dep_b•2h ago•172 comments

There's only one Woz, but we can all learn from him

https://www.fastcompany.com/91477114/steve-wozniak-woz-apple-the-tech-interactive-humanitarian-award
111•coloneltcb•4d ago•39 comments

SVG Path Editor

https://yqnn.github.io/svg-path-editor/
91•gurjeet•5d ago•7 comments

Prism

https://openai.com/index/introducing-prism
656•meetpateltech•16h ago•383 comments

A few random notes from Claude coding quite a bit last few weeks

https://twitter.com/karpathy/status/2015883857489522876
634•bigwheels•1d ago•512 comments

Rust at Scale: An Added Layer of Security for WhatsApp

https://engineering.fb.com/2026/01/27/security/rust-at-scale-security-whatsapp/
45•ubj•4h ago•6 comments

Thirty Years of the Square Kilometre Array

https://physicsworld.com/a/thirty-years-of-the-square-kilometre-array-heres-what-the-worlds-large...
13•mooreds•2d ago•1 comments

Golden Ratio using an equilateral triangle inscribed in a circle

https://geometrycode.com/free/how-to-graphically-derive-the-golden-ratio-using-an-equilateral-tri...
82•peter_d_sherman•4d ago•21 comments

Make.ts

https://matklad.github.io/2026/01/27/make-ts.html
76•ingve•3h ago•42 comments

430k-year-old well-preserved wooden tools are the oldest ever found

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/26/science/archaeology-neanderthals-tools.html
425•bookofjoe•19h ago•223 comments

Rust’s Standard Library on the GPU

https://www.vectorware.com/blog/rust-std-on-gpu/
181•justaboutanyone•4d ago•30 comments

Pandas 3.0

https://pandas.pydata.org/community/blog/pandas-3.0.html
30•jonbaer•4d ago•0 comments

Parametric CAD in Rust

https://campedersen.com/vcad
173•ecto•14h ago•114 comments

Doing the thing is doing the thing

https://www.softwaredesign.ing/blog/doing-the-thing-is-doing-the-thing
404•prakhar897•1d ago•129 comments

Lennart Poettering, Christian Brauner founded a new company

https://amutable.com/about
303•hornedhob•15h ago•443 comments

Xfwl4 – The Roadmap for a Xfce Wayland Compositor

https://alexxcons.github.io/blogpost_15.html
321•pantalaimon•21h ago•242 comments

Time Station Emulator

https://github.com/kangtastic/timestation
178•FriedPickles•14h ago•42 comments

Amazon closing its Fresh and Go stores

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/amazon-closing-fresh-grocery-convenience-150437789.html
237•trenning•19h ago•450 comments

AI2: Open Coding Agents

https://allenai.org/blog/open-coding-agents
194•publicmatt•17h ago•30 comments

Show HN: One Human + One Agent = One Browser From Scratch in 20K LOC

https://emsh.cat/one-human-one-agent-one-browser/
247•embedding-shape•21h ago•115 comments

Devuan – Debian Without Systemd

https://www.devuan.org/
4•smartmic•1h ago•3 comments

FBI is investigating Minnesota Signal chats tracking ICE

https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/internet/fbi-investigating-minnesota-signal-minneapolis-group-ice-pa...
767•duxup•17h ago•1041 comments

SoundCloud Data Breach Now on HaveIBeenPwned

https://haveibeenpwned.com/Breach/SoundCloud
180•gnabgib•17h ago•94 comments

I found the perfect yearly calendar (for me)

https://blog.notmyhostna.me/posts/i-found-the-perfect-yearly-calendar-for-me
68•dewey•4d ago•27 comments

Notes on starting to use Django

https://jvns.ca/blog/2026/01/27/some-notes-on-starting-to-use-django/
95•ingve•11h ago•37 comments

Extremophile molds are invading art museums

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-extremophile-molds-are-destroying-museum-artifacts/
108•sohkamyung•4d ago•52 comments

AISLE’s autonomous analyzer found all CVEs in the January OpenSSL release

https://aisle.com/blog/aisle-discovered-12-out-of-12-openssl-vulnerabilities
163•mmsc•9h ago•120 comments

Show HN: LemonSlice – Upgrade your voice agents to real-time video

99•lcolucci•16h ago•100 comments

Try text scaling support in Chrome Canary

https://www.joshtumath.uk/posts/2026-01-27-try-text-scaling-support-in-chrome-canary/
103•linolevan•15h ago•35 comments

Bridging the Gap Between PLECS and SPICE

https://erickschulz.dev/posts/plecs-spice/
38•eschu•3d ago•15 comments
Open in hackernews

I Stopped Following the News

https://mertbulan.com/2026/01/28/why-i-stopped-following-the-news/
84•mertbio•2h ago

Comments

voidUpdate•1h ago
My entire existence is politically controversial. I pretty much have to at least be aware of recent political developments since they could affect my ability to live as myself
M95D•1h ago
Then why read news and not directly read the new laws and regulations that were voted and passed, or new proposed laws under discussion?

https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/better-regulation/have-your-sa...

goncalo-r•1h ago
News gives you a heads up on what could be coming before laws were passed, or overall sentiment of the population or the politicians. Sometimes it's not about new laws, but about new interpretations, enforcements, court rulings etc.
Arainach•1h ago
There's way too much going on to follow all of it, and most of the important stuff isn't written down. By the time the text of bills is available, the politicians and influencers have been discussing things for a long time and the opportunity to do anything about it is nearly gone.

Perhaps we could pay people to follow important topics, politicians, important lobbyists and see what they're doing and claiming they want to do. They could send us summaries to save us time.

We could call those people journalists.

Deklomalo•1h ago
Because it doesn't give you the Zeitgeist?
Ralfp•1h ago
Because not everything is done as EU law. Frequently its an executive order or a directive passed down from national minister or other govt official to their branch or other branches to make their base happy at expense of people currently blamed for govt’s failures.

Eg. no law in Poland regulates legal gender change process. But there is a series of directves for courts on how this should be addressed issued by whoever is in the govt at the moment. One govt issued a directive that those are low prority, other that spouse and children should have a power to veto, another that actually those are high priority and then govt-appointed judges in the supreme court decided to veto the veto and implement new procedure altogether. And none of this is in the law - just directives for judges from pliticans and higher judges.

PurpleRamen•1h ago
Threats are not necessarily originating from laws or their execution. And not everyone has the time to read all laws, or is able to fully understand them and their impact on your well-being.
voidUpdate•51m ago
Because I live in the UK, and we aren't part of the EU anymore
StefanBatory•48m ago
Anti-LGBT zones in Poland were not officially introduced via state law.

Neither were out bishops speaking about rainbow disease and calling us all ideology, not people.

You are privileged if you can afford to only rely on official sources.

croisillon•1h ago
i agree, it's probably comfortable to "not read the news" or "not be into politics" or whatever, except when politics is into you
b65e8bee43c2ed0•34m ago
there are thousands of terminally political folx over at r/politics, foaming at the mouth every single day since 2015. have they achieved anything?
berrycan•1h ago
Your entire existence? That sounds kind of hyperbolic, unless you're being targeted by genocide.
voidUpdate•52m ago
I'm trans. I live in the UK. I know it's not as bad as some middle eastern countries, but I'm still being actively legislated against
StefanBatory•48m ago
Tell me you're in majority without saying you're in majority.
jjav•5m ago
> Your entire existence? That sounds kind of hyperbolic

In the USA today (and many other places, but I'm in the US), anyone of any kind of minority is the target of beatings, kidnappings and possibly public executions by the government right now. Not exactly something you can ignore.

thinkingemote•1h ago
The news is what's new, uncommon, strange, interesting. Shiny, attractive, shocking, raging: dopamine raising and cortisol antagonising. The news doesn't describe our actual lives. But the news does sometimes contain information relevant to our lives!

I find I will hear about the relevant things from people and events around me, whether or not I follow the news. The news doesn't have any actual bearing on my life but the news does have a few stories that do have bearing.

So theres no downside of not following the news. I will hear what I need to and want to hear about from people around me or other sources.

Some think that in not consuming what they think I should consume, that this is a morally wrong thing to do. They will be personally offended, how can they ignore my story? There is a case that if we all stopped following the news then how can the other sources inform us, so there would still be a benefit to reporting...

Consider two anthropologists examining a culture. One only has remote access to every news source the culture produces for itself, the other can only talk face to face with people. Which one will understand the people more?

sjw987•1h ago
I think it's important to keep reading the news occasionally.

Personally, I, as a programmer, read the news in the same way as my grandad who was a farmer. I read a printed weekly publication (in my case The Economist) on Sunday morning. Outside of Sunday morning I don't read the news at all.

I prefer printed news to media-supported news, because I think the imagery (I acknowledge The Economist still has images) and presentation of news, especially on TV detracts from the message it's trying to convey a lot of the time. After reading some of Neil Postman's books (notably Amusing Ourselves to Death), I find it strange to watch televised news whereby one minute I'm watching footage of a disaster, then the next minute I'm seeing sports news updates or an advert. Just like normal learning, I think news demands longer form content for proper understanding.

Reading the news on a low frequency basis also gives time for news stories to properly develop. Breaking news can be filled with speculation and incorrect details, which even if you keep up with, you can miss later corrections or crucial details. Not to mention the stress involved in it. Chances are if some real breaking news happens, like a natural disaster or war, I'll hear somebody else tell me.

Deanallen•1h ago
Wouldn’t print newspapers also show you disaster on one page and sports on the next?

I just began reading amusing ourselves to death.

sjw987•1h ago
Depends on the publication.

I read The Economist, which doesn't cover sports at all.

It's mostly 1-2 page long articles for each story, blocked into categories (UK, Europe, US, The Americas, Asia, China, Business, Finance, Tech, Culture at the end).

conductr•1h ago
Older men in my family jokingly called it “the history” instead of “the news” and I feel it’s much more preferable than trying to keep a real time pulse in everything going on in the world
sjw987•1h ago
Good point. My grandad used to call it the history as well!
pendenthistory•1h ago
I would like a weekly physical Sunday paper with some general news and printed substack articles tailored to me.
appplication•52m ago
I’ve been kicking around an idea for a while now that’s basically a no-headlines, curated (generally long-form) media aggregation site. No algorithm, no personalization, no AI. Just topics you can choose to follow.

The basic idea is you get one article at a time fed to you (no headline scrolling like Reddit or HN), and doesn’t let you proceed to the next article until you’ve scrolled through at least x% of the current article or spent a minimum time threshold reading it. Maybe allow a limited number of “skips” per day if the content really isn’t for you. Basically the idea is to force you to slow down and actually engage with the content by removing mechanisms that promote mindless scrolling and dopamine rush.

duskdozer•45m ago
I don't use it, but I saw this similar idea on here before https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35795388
SSLy•21m ago
the closest thing is doing that to an epub to be sent to your e-paper device.
james-bcn•1h ago
The Economist rocks. They also have a wonderful daily summary of the news that takes five mins to read.
tmcz26•52m ago
Would that be this? Just checking:

https://www.economist.com/the-world-in-brief

fransje26•56m ago
> The Economist

Speaking of an anger-inducing publication..

keyringlight•43m ago
I think it's worth keeping something like the serenity prayer in mind, there's a wide range in how relevant different types of news are to each of us, and how it affects us or we affect it. Between the various types 24 hour news they seem to encourage a mindset that you need to stay on the firehose and be informed, which stepping back a bit any profession will try to highlight what they offer is of utmost importance. What underlies that and makes me uncomfortable is news as entertainment, even if it's in the background as opposed to something like music, the constant drip feed of negativity or hazard.
anigbrowl•1h ago
This is a reasonable choice, but of course also one that is only people who can be pretty confident of not being personally affected by newsworthy events.
VBprogrammer•1h ago
I've recently been trying to avoid news. Particularly US political news. Sadly for some reason blocking sites on my Eero router doesn't seem to work. Thankfully Facebook recently put up a modal dialog asking me to subscribe or accept personalised ads (pretty sure the GDPR explicitly forbids that but whatever, everyone is doing it), it's doing a good job of preventing me seeing the usual feed of news there. At some point I'll put PiHole on my NAS and take care of Reddit etc.
GardenLetter27•1h ago
Don't worry about things you can't change.

That said, you do notice it when the currency crashes.

nhatcher•1h ago
Aaron Swartz has a nice blog post about it[1].

It's been discussed several times on HN[2]. I had periods I go through without news. It's been harder to do that lately.

[1]: http://www.aaronsw.com/weblog/hatethenews

[2]: https://hn.algolia.com/?q=i+hate+the+news

danmaz74•1h ago
I completely understand why, but on the other hand democracy relies on citizens being informed about what's happening. The risk is that one day, you wake up and there is no democracy any more.
keiferski•1h ago
The fact that this is downvoted really says it all. "I don't read the news" is pretty much dependent on one's profession being insulated from changing events. Which is not surprising why it's a popular opinion amongst technocrats that would rather not have democracy in the first place.
ben_w•1h ago
Excerpt from link:

  For the rest of the news, I am considering subscribing to a magazine that covers important events in Germany, the EU, or the world every few months. This kind of format filters out short-term noise and fear-driven stories.
Elections happen even less frequently than this. If your democracy disintegrates with less than a few months of warning, you were probably invaded and noticed even without the news; At this point, that would probably lead to a civil emergency notification on your phone, and by design that happens even without any apps installed.

As we said in the UK in my childhood, "Today’s news is tomorrow’s chip* paper".

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_and_chips

keiferski•1h ago
Just because news orgs are incentivized to be controversial and attention-seeking doesn’t mean that the world isn’t changing rapidly.

Personally I think once a week magazines / reviews are a good compromise. I’m not sure how useful reading 3 month old news will be.

oridentity•37m ago
> on one's profession being insulated

Even this is privilege. Try "one's identity".

Last year, legal immigrants were fine. Today, their kids are kidnapped and used as bait to take them to Alcatraz. And that's not even the identity I'm mostly referring to.

Very cool stance OOP, thank you for identifying yourself as the type of centrist heaven will reject at the gate and angels will never get tired of the reaction to the shrug.

fransje26•44m ago
> I completely understand why, but on the other hand democracy relies on citizens being informed about what's happening.

The point being made by the author is that "following the news" nowadays has nothing to do with being informed. Instead, it became about being constantly bombarded by a barrage of noise and nonsense to constantly grab your attention.

So instead, by finding a monthly publication giving him an overview of the local, European and world news, the author is looking for a filter removing all the unnecessary noise. And the month granularity should be more than enough to allow him to be informed about important changes.

jwarden•43m ago
Reading the news and being informed are two separate things. Being an informed citizen, the kind that democracies need to survive, also requires 1) being informed of history and 2) understanding issues in depth.

People who consume a lot of news tend to have very shallow understanding of a broad range of current events. Worse they tend to be passive receivers of news instead of active seekers of information with intent to understand the world.

As a result, they are very susceptible to manipulation through selection of what makes the news they tend to consume. They become passive pawns in political power struggles.

jofzar•42m ago
I feel like this, I honestly wish newspapers weren't bunk and there was a good "week in review" way to get the news. I find myself Doom scrolling to much.
gregjor•37m ago
You mangled Jefferson a bit. He wrote about education, not news. He didn't imagine the the non-stop firehose of slop and advertising and propaganda we endure and call news. What passes for news today describes the opposite of critical thinking and education.

No evidence supports your sentiment. Find an example of democracy that arose from citizens "being informed about what's happening." The Athenians limited democratic participation to a small educated elite. The American Founders had the same instinct, excluding more people than they included.

Demoracy dies in front of our eyes right now, in the USA, the most media-saturated culture in history. You might blame that on an ignorant and uncritical population. You might call them uninformed, or misinformed. As Jefferson understood the problem doesn't come from people not reading the news, but rather people not educated enough to understand, think critically, or even care.

c16•1h ago
I've done somewhat similar for the same reasons.

I realised that if I exclusively read business news I can avoid a good amount of the fluff and sensationalism. I made a browser extension which pushes the headlines from Bloomberg, Financial times Euronews Business and a few others on to my new tab from their RSS, and it's more than enough to give me a nugget of what's going on in the world without being overloaded. 1 item per new tab.

End result is: I don't read the news, but I still know what's going on without the need for Social Media's hot take.

EffrafaxOfWug•29m ago
Sounds very interesting. Have you published this extension (or the source code)? I think I would like to try it out.
c16•9m ago
Yeah, it's available here https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/start-screen-a-busi....

Can't say it's the best extension in the world, but it scratches my own itch and I'm happy with it. Sometimes that's good enough.

paraknight•1h ago
I came to a similar realisation about world news a few years ago and live a much less stressful life now. Especially since most of the news was about the US, and I don't even live there and there's nothing I can do about it. If something really important happens, eventually I find out from friends or family.

Same when it comes to staying on top of tech news -- almost everything is a flash in the pan. I used to bookmark cool new products, never revisit them, and then a year later realise half of the links are now dead.

One thing I realised though is I still need to mindlessly browse an endless feed every once in a while for some downtime. One way or another I'll want to fill that time with something, so it's a question of being mindful what goes in it. So my drugs of choice are Hacker News, and carefully curated YouTube subscriptions.

keiferski•1h ago
The news is one of those markets where the following is true:

1) a large number of people are dissatisfied with the current product

2) but aren’t willing to pay for an alternative which solves the problem in the ideal way (for them)

There have been dozens of attempts at weekly news summary newsletters, minimal news sites, etc. over the years. None ever seem to go anywhere because no one wants to pay for something they are deliberately deciding has little value.

It makes me think of budget airlines: constantly critiqued for being uncomfortable and using dark patterns to get every last dollar - yet people consistently just book the cheapest flight possible.

kornaki•1h ago
I’ve had similar experiences. These days I only visit Hacker News to read some tech-related stuff. For me, not reading the news to the point where I ask my mom to turn off the TV when I visit is important, because I want to avoid hearing anything about wars, etc. As someone who lives in Poland, I followed so much news about the war in Ukraine in 2022 and 2023, and it was really bad for my well-being and my behavior. A few examples come to mind: not being proactive and creative when it comes to taking care of my house and family, not being present when playing with my son, being less productive at work, and literally feeling angry after consuming news — like the feeling after eating fast food and having bloating. But I’m grateful for the people who do follow the news, read it, protest against the bullshit, and participate more in the democratic process than I do.
nicbou•47m ago
It’s unfortunate that American news slip into the HN feed, and that Americans get indignant when it gets flagged. I took so much flak for saying that I already know where to hear about US politics, and don’t need it forced into every unrelated forum.
popalchemist•40m ago
I sympathize, and the attitude may be annoying, but you've got to realize you can not bury your head in the sand about the global rise in fascism, nor the fact that what happens in America affects the entire world. Imagine if you were to transfer your comment back to WWII era, perhaps you're French and you're saying that you're tired of hearing about this little kerfuffle between Germany and Austria... well, clearly the disinterest did not pay off.
defrost•38m ago
I read their comment and at no point did I get the impression they were burying their head in the sand.

They explicitly stated they knew where to read / hear about US politics and did not see the need to have that news domain echoed across every forum.

popalchemist•33m ago
They may be aware of it, but others who frequent this particular forum may have HN as THEIR source. When someone like the above commenter tries to gatekeep areas where discussion, particularly of things like fascism or other forms of oppression, takes place, it only serves and furthers the goals of the oppressor. There is no domain of life which is not intrinsically political. When we act like there is -- such as when we pretend politics should be off the table for discussion -- we are simply ceding ground, casting away our part in the story, and abdicating our responsibility to take that part seriously.
72deluxe•21m ago
Do you also believe you should discuss every other topic under the sun in the belief that not discussing it is "ceding ground" to a viewpoint or action of others?

It would seem that in your view, we should be discussing all things at all times due to this "oppressor" mindset.

This simply cannot be true.

gyanchawdhary•17m ago
“global rise in fascism” implies a baseline ... when was fascism declining exactly? curious what point you're measuring this rise from
bryanrasmussen•27m ago
OK well, it's been my experience that even well informed people from around the world do not understand a lot of American news, so cutting down on it probably doesn't help the nuance building. Aside from that there are a lot of Americans on HN, it's reasonable that they expect to be able to discuss what effects them.

I haven't really noticed politics of other countries get flagged that much, does it? Other than stuff that looks like propaganda from one country against another, that seems to get quickly flagged.

Finally I don't know what makes you think that HN is an unrelated to American politics forum, given that the guidelines of what the forum is for is quite lax.

ozlikethewizard•18m ago
Do you think maybe people from around the world dont necessarily care? The USA is not the center of the universe. If its tech related cool, otherwise let people find it somewhere else if they want it? Personally as a brit it does impact me quite a lot, so I try to keep up to date, but expecting the world to care about US news is kind of egomaniacal.
relaxing•25m ago
I thought the question was about you reading the news, not about you preventing everyone else from reading the news.

Surely the answer is, when you see news related keywords in an article title, to simply not click through. Same as when there’s so bit of technology or corporation that doesn’t interest you.

gigatexal•40m ago
> But I’m grateful for the people who do follow the news, read it, protest against the bullshit, and participate more in the democratic process than I do.

This is a completely human response to the horrible things happening the world both domestic and abroad.

It’s also history repeating itself: doing nothing when bad things are happening in our communities is what allows them to happen.

Think what the villages around the concentration camps must have known and yet did nothing.

Sure you could just focus on tech. You alone can’t stop Donald Trump or Stephen Miller from their racist move toward autocracy usurping norms and the world order … but you can join in with others who are trying to make a difference.

Apathy is a human emotion to such dire things. But we are better than that.

popalchemist•39m ago
When the world is on fire and people are suffering, we have a moral obligation to be aware of it and take part in the healing. To turn off your access to the media is a temporary solution that may well be justified in the short term, but you do not have the luxury of forgoing your part in this world, because if you do, it will burn all the way to your doorstep.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AXgWZyb_HgE

jaapz•24m ago
You can still be a proponent of change and discuss these changes with local politicians and what not without being on a 24 hour news IV.

However, looking at the current political climate in my own country, I too have lost faith in them solving local and global issues. When the people I can vote for don't actually solve pressing societal problems, then what's the point? Now factor in the influence of people in large countries that are in power that I can't even vote for...

There is a glimmer of hope that the EU now seems to have finally found some balls somewhere though, with their response to the Greenland situation. Maybe they've finally learned that a strategy of appeasement does not work for strongmen in power (hey, that sounds familiar...)

gyanchawdhary•15m ago
you sound like an NPC's NPC
BoredPositron•1h ago
Like an ostrich in an 80s comic.
stringsandchars•1h ago
I think the only wise thing Elon Musk ever said was "Generally newspapers seem to try to answer the question, 'What is the worst thing that happened on the Earth today?'"
zabzonk•34m ago
probably him
jeffwass•1h ago
At my cousin’s company there are TV’s in the lobby.

They used to show news channels.

He said clients would come in all stressed out. So they changed to a home improvement channel.

ivolimmen•52m ago
The one featuring Tim Allen? Or is there an actual channel with home improvements in the USA?
acuozzo•32m ago
https://www.hgtv.com/shows/tv-schedule

"Home & Garden Television". Lots of shows about flipping houses, etc.

It used to be far more instructional (Julia Child-esque) before it and Food Network got swept up in the reality TV craze. It still has the "bones" of its former self though.

PieTime•1h ago
I think it’s not news that’s the problem. It’s the sources of news are often biased and spend very little time explaining events in context. I much prefer an hour long news program or multi-page article that details events and perspectives going years into the past. We have a surprising large amount of influence on events around the world. Everything from the companies you support to your politics can vastly change world events.

I really dislike the notion that events outside of your country are somehow not important.

cjs_ac•1h ago
Traditionally, the news industry has been divided into tabloids, which were more sensationalist and aimed at a less sophisticated readership, and broadsheets, which were more analytical and aimed at a more sophisticated readership. From a business perspective, the articles and opinion pieces were just bait to draw in a particular class of reader; the real money came from advertising to those particular classes of reader.

The web has destroyed that business model, because the news industry now controls far less advertising space, so there is no longer enough advertising revenue to support quality journalism. The broadsheets are in real financial trouble, and most have turned to tabloid-style articles (albeit ones that promote more sophisticated worldviews) in order to pull in those social-media clicks.

I find myself increasingly interested in publications like The Economist and The Financial Times, simply because their readerships have financial interest in actually knowing what's going on in the world, and so they can charge a subscription price that supports quality journalism.

mountainb•45m ago
The WSJ effectively became a lifestyle tabloid. Its devolution has been shocking.
walthamstow•1h ago
> I am considering subscribing to a magazine that covers important events in Germany, the EU, or the world every few months

I've posted the same message so many time I could get banned but if you live in the UK then Private Eye is what you want here. It's every fortnight, very funny and a bastion of genuine journalism (see the Paul Foot Award they give out each year)

berrycan•1h ago
I used to have a subscription to Private Eye but cancelled it as it got so depressing from being too aware of all the corruption. Worse than browsing the news.
gyanchawdhary•1h ago
I think if the news feels unbearable, the problem may not be the information but the fact that reality is moving against the assumpftions on which the person has anchored their happiness ... environemt, relgion, polticial views etc etc ..
Havoc•1h ago
I’ve been focusing more on filtered news.

In particular LLM summaries are great for this. Introduces risk of hallucinations which is not awesome, but it does tend to neutralise the rage bait tone and tricks that are pervasive these days. Tradeoff but one that has been working for me

smcl•1h ago
I think if it's stressing you out then it's fair to step back from reading the news for a bit. It's still worth at least trying to form an understanding and an opinion on various issues - whether local, regional or international - if you're going to be voting or even just talking about them with friends and family.
zhisme•1h ago
it is just noise that does not really matter for your life (and mine too). This is pretty-well described in "Antifragile" by Nassim Taleb, consider reading.
Klaster_1•42m ago
Different people have different levels of what matters. If I didn't read the news, I wouldn't know that my country would search my phone at airport and prosecute for acts it didn't like. Or which countries are safe for get together with family. Or that I may lose the chance to renew my passport in third country and have to urgently renew it, otherwise risking a trip to hostile homeland and potential residency permit issues.
fredley•1h ago
Once you start noticing how often you see content that references e.g. anything that's happening in the US right now (I'm in the UK), you realise how 'news' is everywhere.

If you go on reddit, unless you've curated your subreddits and never touch /all or /popular, it's very heavy with 'news'. The Google app, a left-swipe by default on your Android phone is all 'news'. Twxtter/Bluesky/etc. are full of news. Avoiding news entirely is almost impossible on today's internet.

I have had success with this approach too, but key to all this is being careful about where you go online to minimise exposure. These days I don't use any 'social media' platforms, but I do visit HN and BBC news (both of which are of higher quality than most places, and crucially only have a few stories on a typical day - the rate of new content is low). This way I stay informed without falling down rabbit holes about every twist and turn of every (mostly awful/depressing) thing happening in the World.

tpoacher•57m ago
As that famous Mark Twain quote goes, "If you don't read the news, you're uninformed; if you do read the news, you're misinformed."

And these days, you're misinformed with a good dose of dramatic Hans-Zimmer-like soundtrack and visuals designed to evoke fear and outrage.

crnkofe•56m ago
I also joined the club recently. Global newsfeeds from social media have become infested with AI slop, near constant Trump/ICE BS spam in addition to existing clickbait vids and ads. News media front pages are essentially Trump outlets and this guy puts out an insane amount of BS thrash that only ennervates and creates discord. There's not that much happening so blank pages are just filled with something to make it look like news. I'm no longer informed from all of this. It just feels like being a living spam folder.
nialv7•55m ago
What a privilege, what a luxury, to be able to turn a blind eye to all the injustice that's currently happening in the world...

Sure, do what you want, ignore news if that makes you feel better, but do realise for many, they are not afforded this kind of luxury.

josfredo•47m ago
The consequences are exactly the same, unless you hold an enormously influential platform.
alserio•27m ago
Maybe, but some groups are banking on you having "news fatigue". So maybe they don't feel that way. And doing it in spite of them is something that balances out my anxiety for me.
nicbou•45m ago
What good is awareness without action?
Buttons840•45m ago
I hear you, but spending an hour to research every name on the ballot come election time will make you better informed than most people.

If you want to do more, you can find some protests to participate in. Or do something other than protest like clean a local park or feed hungry people.

If I spend 3 hours on a random Tuesday consuming the news, that doesn't help anyone. It does the opposite; it makes me less able to focus, and makes me have less personal power and discipline to affect change in the world.

nicbou•43m ago
What good is awareness without action? Things happening across the ocean are just out of scope.
burnt-resistor•25m ago
Billionaires and/or other oligarchic dictators love it when the zone is flooded, consent is manufactured, the people are divided and conquered, and the people no longer pay attention to meaningful signals nor travesties. This gives them maximum power when the people ignore everything and obey in advance or suffer from learned helplessness.
dandanua•54m ago
How timely
StefanBatory•47m ago
I wonder what one agenda in posting that right now would be, ehh?

And to think Americans used to take pride in being nation of freedom.

throwaway315314•52m ago
I don't think mainstream news is news anymore, its just become pseudo high brow reality tv with various organizations panhandling for your attention with whatever outrageous thing they can. There is that exercise of looking at the headlines from a month ago and realizing that most of them didn't matter at all or had very little effect on ones daily life. Its no wonder things are getting more extreme when every news outlet is falling over each other to farm that engagement.
duskdozer•50m ago
Well, good thing for him that it's only other people who will be affected by the things reported on in the news! And they don't add much value to his life, anyway.
mkirsten•42m ago
I tried the same. 2 weeks after I started I attended a party where people mentioned that it was sad that Michael Jackson had died. I thought they were joking, but turned out they didn’t. It was in late June 2009. I started reading the news again.

But today I read them differently. I read news site, with some curation (e.g., settings for threshold for articles that comes up in various fields) together with a few favorite sites (e.g., HN)

yomismoaqui•29m ago
We don't walk on the street picking random things from the ground and putting them in our mouth, right?

So we shouldn't do the same with things we read on the internet and our brain.

card_zero•12m ago
I walk around the streets picking up any folding currency I see, so I do the same as I go around the internet picking up any intriguing news stories.
72deluxe•17m ago
I have set up ntfy on a Pi at home, and use it to send me Android notifications of headlines every morning.

This is by a bash script in a cron job that reads RSS feeds and grabs the headlines and links to articles, so I can get a flurry of tech news and general news headlines without having to go into detail on each topic (which in news terms is typically slanted with some sort of bias).

So I can stay up to date on general happenings, speedily. It is fairly simple to set up - a LLM will write a suitable bash script to parse RSS XML and grab links and headlines in moments.

Olmhinlu•14m ago
"I have watched TV twice in my life. I am frankly not terribly interested in TV anyway. Certainly I do not pretend that by simply refusing to keep up with the latest news I am therefore unaffected by what goes on, or free of it all. Certainly events happen and they effect me as they do other people. It is important for me to know about them too: but I refrain from trying to know them in their fresh condition as "news." When they reach me they have become slightly stale. I eat the same tragedies as others, but in the form of tasteless crusts. The news reaches me in the long run through books and magazines, and no longer as a stimulant. Living without news is like living without cigarettes (another peculiarity of the monastic life). The need for this habitual indulgence quickly disappears. So, when you hear news without the "need" to hear it, it treats you differently. And you treat it differently too." - Thomas Merton