frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Europe's next-generation weather satellite sends back first images

https://www.esa.int/Applications/Observing_the_Earth/Meteorological_missions/meteosat_third_gener...
34•saubeidl•1h ago•1 comments

Render Mermaid diagrams as SVGs or ASCII art

https://github.com/lukilabs/beautiful-mermaid
192•mellosouls•6h ago•28 comments

We can't send mail farther than 500 miles (2002)

https://web.mit.edu/jemorris/humor/500-miles
293•giancarlostoro•4h ago•32 comments

Maine’s ‘Lobster Lady’ who fished for nearly a century dies aged 105

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/28/maine-lobster-lady-dies-aged-105
122•NaOH•6h ago•7 comments

Apple to soon take up to 30% cut from all Patreon creators in iOS app

https://www.macrumors.com/2026/01/28/patreon-apple-tax/
253•pier25•11h ago•204 comments

Xmake: A cross-platform build utility based on Lua

https://xmake.io/
34•phmx•3d ago•7 comments

Mecha Comet – Open Modular Linux Handheld Computer

https://mecha.so/comet
109•Realman78•3d ago•34 comments

Decompiling Xbox games using PDB debug info

https://i686.me/blog/csplit/
10•orange_redditor•2d ago•0 comments

Putting Gemini to Work in Chrome

https://blog.google/products-and-platforms/products/chrome/gemini-3-auto-browse/
36•diwank•4h ago•36 comments

Airfoil (2024)

https://ciechanow.ski/airfoil/
437•brk•17h ago•51 comments

An Illustrated Guide to Hippo Castration (2014)

https://www.science.org/content/article/scienceshot-illustrated-guide-hippo-castration
48•joebig•4d ago•17 comments

Trinity large: An open 400B sparse MoE model

https://www.arcee.ai/blog/trinity-large
177•linolevan•1d ago•55 comments

DECwindows Motif

https://products.vmssoftware.com/decwindowsmotif
29•doener•5h ago•26 comments

Show HN: A MitM proxy to see what your LLM tools are sending

https://github.com/jmuncor/sherlock
157•jmuncor•13h ago•81 comments

Tesla ending Models S and X production

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/28/tesla-ending-model-s-x-production.html
263•keyboardJones•9h ago•433 comments

Questom (YC F25) is hiring an engineer

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/questom/jobs/UBebsyO-founding-engineer
1•ritanshu•4h ago

Did a celebrated researcher obscure a baby's poisoning?

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2026/02/02/did-a-celebrated-researcher-obscure-a-fatal-poisoning
142•littlexsparkee•1d ago•49 comments

Android's desktop interface leaks

https://9to5google.com/2026/01/27/android-desktop-leak/
225•thunderbong•1d ago•302 comments

Is it worth it? (2021)

https://griffin.com/blog/is-it-worth-it
8•todsacerdoti•3d ago•1 comments

Mousefood – Build embedded terminal UIs for microcontrollers

https://github.com/ratatui/mousefood
200•orhunp_•14h ago•44 comments

Satellites encased in wood are in the works

https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/01/21/satellites-encased-in-wood-are-in-the...
49•andsoitis•3d ago•26 comments

In a genre where spoilers are devastating, how do we talk about puzzle games?

https://thinkygames.com/features/in-a-genre-where-information-is-sacred-and-spoilers-are-devastat...
59•tobr•5d ago•50 comments

Oban, the job processing framework from Elixir, has come to Python

https://www.dimamik.com/posts/oban_py/
221•dimamik•15h ago•89 comments

How London became the rest of the world’s startup capital

https://www.economist.com/britain/2026/01/26/how-london-became-the-rest-of-the-worlds-startup-cap...
91•ellieh•1d ago•86 comments

Somebody used spoofed ADSB signals to raster the meme of JD Vance

https://alecmuffett.com/article/143548
474•wubin•10h ago•119 comments

Computer History Museum Launches Digital Portal to Its Collection

https://computerhistory.org/press-releases/computer-history-museum-launches-digital-portal-to-its...
147•ChrisArchitect•14h ago•26 comments

LM Studio 0.4

https://lmstudio.ai/blog/0.4.0
136•jiqiren•13h ago•71 comments

Bf-Tree: modern read-write-optimized concurrent larger-than-memory range index

https://github.com/microsoft/bf-tree
75•SchwKatze•10h ago•16 comments

Spinning around: Please don’t – Common problems with spin locks

https://www.siliceum.com/en/blog/post/spinning-around/
113•bdash•15h ago•46 comments

Hellenistic War-Elephants and the Use of Alcohol Before Battle

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/classical-quarterly/article/hellenistic-warelephants-and-...
53•perihelions•5d ago•23 comments
Open in hackernews

Putting Gemini to Work in Chrome

https://blog.google/products-and-platforms/products/chrome/gemini-3-auto-browse/
36•diwank•4h ago

Comments

ukuina•2h ago
This is a big deal, the highlight is Chrome autobrowse. Goes head-to-head with OpenAI Atlas.
ares623•1h ago
“Head to head” doing a lot of heavy lifting. How much market share does Atlas have I wonder.
tokioyoyo•1h ago
I actually think it has already been abandoned after very little adoption.
slfreference•15m ago
dont spread yourself too thin;or else river will dry; pick your battles.
hackyhacky•1h ago
Serious question, not snark: Does anyone actually want this? I honestly can't imagine a use for these features even among people tech savvy enough to understand them.
lmm•1h ago
Having a browser that works for me would be useful yeah. Stuff like skip the story and give me the recipe, or click through the pointless extra steps, or reformat my address into the bizarre format the website wants.

Of course the single biggest thing my browser can do to help me is blocking ads, which means it's curious to see this just after Google killed adblock in chrome.

LiamPowell•43m ago
Adblock continues to be just as effective as it ever was in Chrome.

Even before the removal of MV2, the claims that it would kill adblock were ridiculous as many adblockers had already switched to MV3 but it was at least understandable that people could be ignorant of that fact. Now that everything is on MV3 how can people still be claiming that Google killed adblock when Chrome users still have working adblockers?

saidinesh5•1h ago
In one of the previous companies i worked at, we were automating a very valid use case of a bunch of people crawling though a set of urls daily/weekly and find the pdfs and summarise the changes from the previous week. I'm guessing these features are geared towards them.
mogili1•1h ago
I use claude's chrome plugin all the time. As well Chatgpt's agent mode. I prefer Agent mode when I don't need to login but want it to do search.

However, Gemini in Chrome requires you to allow them to use your data to improve their model, which I won't consent to. Google workspace account seems exempt so I plan to try it out there.

captain_coffee•1h ago
Me personally: absolutely not - and I fundamentally do not understand the need for something like this. I would never use such a tool under any possible circumstance knowing what I know about the current technology underpinning these clankers.

These feels on par with Microsoft's push to shove Copilot down everyone's neck at every step possible whether we like/need it or not

walletdrainer•1h ago
I use AI-controlled browsers for everyday tasks like “Find me a Michelin starred restaurant in Paris with availability for 4 people at 8PM today”.

Also for things like locating a product available to pick up in a nearby store, it’s crazy how often Google fails at this particular task.

raincole•57m ago
If it skips ads many people would want it. But it's made by Google so I suspect it's goal is to skip non-Google ads only.
TheCapeGreek•54m ago
I've seen at least one decent use case from "normies" around me: Bypassing stupid company processes to achieve actual automated productivity in your rote processes instead of the theatre of it.

Sounds like a contrived situation, but there's a surprising amount of "thought leader" CEOs out there who make completely nonsensical decisions under the banner of "saving costs and automating things".

(Real-world example I know of) company pays for cheapest tier they can find of Gemini, tell everyone to use it. But won't pay for Asana seats, so every user in your 100-person startup is a guest, and can't use the connector in any AI app to TRULY do useful task management with AI.

Having some better access to AI in the browser would pave over that pain for someone who currently doesn't want to spend their own money on something like Claude for Cowork and the Chrome extension to drive the browser, or open a terminal to have Claude Code do it.

terhechte•31m ago
I like doing side projects, I don't like wasting a day of work potential on any of these web apps: Google Cloud, AWS, Azure, Appstore Connect, Google's Android App Store, RevenueCat, Stripe, etc

I dread having to log in to these systems and waste hours achieving the simplest tasks.

This is what I'm using Claude for. E.g. I log in to AppStore connect, tell it what I need (3 subscription tiers), it will do all the clicking and editing and Apple's stupid UI, then I will ask it to create a summary for RevenueCat, and use another Claude session in there to click all the buttons to configure based on what just happened in Appstore connect.

Or configuring S3 buckets or whatnot.

stingraycharles•2m ago
I like having AI in my browser, I use Claude quite a bit.

Examples: using my budgeting app directly to figure out why some forecasting event went wrong, or helping me correlate SOC2 tickets with GitHub pull requests and flagging all that are older than $date.

It’s surprisingly convenient for a narrow set of tasks.

firefoxd•1h ago
I must be using web browsers completely wrong. Like browsing a page isn't a problem for me. I can do it at the speed of my needs.

I'm having a hard time understanding why I will tell gemini to create an account on some website for me or send an email. Those are usually just a tab away. That's why I feel like I'm missing something here.

wolvoleo•1h ago
Yes. I like it for deep research, that kind of thing where I'd be wading though clickbait search results for hours.

But for regular browsing? I don't see the point.

lmm•1h ago
Maybe you're only using well-designed sites? Try making a booking with a Chinese airline and you'll quickly wish for an assistant to delegate it all to.
shakna•1h ago
If you struggle, then an agent will probably fail.
ares623•1h ago
Will it matter if you can’t tell?
samrus•58m ago
Yeah. Because you'll think you have a flight to beijing when you dont
ares623•48m ago
Oh yeah that bit lol
dzjkb•19m ago
funny you say that, I was literally just booking a flight with air china yesterday and the UX was 10x better than the average wizzair/ryanair experience - a clear, readable UI (with a great table comparison of prices +-3 days from the selected dates), no ads, no random services getting pushed in your face, no booking tabs automatically opening in the background
jsnell•1h ago
Basically none of their examples are just "browse a page"? They're multi-step tasks combining data from multiple pages.

Like the first example in the demo carousel (the Y2K party) starts from a photo and a prompt of roughly "buy the props needed for replicating this photo from Etsy". It first analyzes the image in the current tab, identifies a bunch of things to buy, searches for them on Etsy, customizes the orders, adds them to the shopping basket, and then asks for a confirmation to actually send an order.

The second one auto-fills a form with a couple of dozen fields from the data that's in a pdf in another tab. (And in the fiction of a demo, presumably a pdf that's you already had around, not one that you made just for the purposes of using it to auto-fill the form.)

I'm not the target market for this: automating a browser with my credentials is just too scary, but I can certainly see the utility. There's a huge amount of tasks taking a minute or two are not worth creating bespoke automation for but that are also pretty mechanical processes.

bandrami•1h ago
I feel that way about IDEs too, though. My text editor has snippets, my file manager shows me what files are where, and my terminal lets me run programs. Why it's important to people that these functions to be grafted into a single window escapes me.
__loam•41m ago
Allowing anyone to edit someone else's images from the browser with an AI model is deeply evil stuff.
7bit•38m ago
All I ever wanted my entire life. I feel whole again. Thank you Googool
omnifischer•35m ago
I wish this executive (author of that post) https://xcancel.com/laparisa?lang=en will show their browser in REAL LIFE everyday use. Really do they use it?
stingraycharles•56s ago
Looks like they may be using it to write their tweets?
dz0ny•34m ago
Only PMs at Google need this. They still don't get how AI is used...
testycool•32m ago
I do hope we get vertical tabs before that, though.
samhh•29m ago
It’s already available behind a flag IIRC.
rs_rs_rs_rs_rs•32m ago
Gee thanks, now I have a big Ask Google buttong in the url bar but only on Youtube for some reason, how can I disable it? Could not figure how to disable like the others.
ed_mercer•16m ago
> We’re also bringing the creative power of Nano Banana directly into Chrome, allowing you to transform images on the fly without needing to download and re-upload images or open another tab.

Are there really people who are like "Man, if only I could this straight in Chrome" ? Is this something worth bloating a browser (further) with?

sssilver•11m ago
I think Google PMs would respond by saying that nobody in 2007 was like "Man, if only I could get rid of the physical keyboard on my smartphone".

You know, the whole "faster horse" argument.

bob1029•15m ago
https://blog.google/products/ads-commerce/agentic-commerce-a...

I think the vision here is for your browser agent to spend money with google's partners on pointless consumer slop while you sleep.