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Claude Opus 4.6

https://www.anthropic.com/news/claude-opus-4-6
1174•HellsMaddy•4h ago•508 comments

GPT-5.3-Codex

https://openai.com/index/introducing-gpt-5-3-codex/
785•meetpateltech•3h ago•301 comments

My AI Adoption Journey

https://mitchellh.com/writing/my-ai-adoption-journey
137•anurag•2h ago•42 comments

We tasked Opus 4.6 using agent teams to build a C Compiler

https://www.anthropic.com/engineering/building-c-compiler
212•modeless•2h ago•177 comments

Orchestrate teams of Claude Code sessions

https://code.claude.com/docs/en/agent-teams
251•davidbarker•4h ago•115 comments

It's 2026, Just Use Postgres

https://www.tigerdata.com/blog/its-2026-just-use-postgres
17•turtles3•32m ago•0 comments

LinkedIn checks for 2953 browser extensions

https://github.com/mdp/linkedin-extension-fingerprinting
156•mdp•1h ago•81 comments

MenuetOS – a GUI OS that boots from a single floppy disk

https://www.menuetos.net/
48•pjerem•2d ago•6 comments

There Will Come Soft Rains (1950) [pdf]

https://www.btboces.org/Downloads/7_There%20Will%20Come%20Soft%20Rains%20by%20Ray%20Bradbury.pdf
92•wallflower•4d ago•22 comments

Claude Opus 4.6 extra usage promo

https://support.claude.com/en/articles/13613973-claude-opus-4-6-extra-usage-promo
27•rob•1h ago•8 comments

Don't rent the cloud, own instead

https://blog.comma.ai/datacenter/
1025•Torq_boi•16h ago•428 comments

Flock CEO calls Deflock a “terrorist organization” (2025) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-kZGrDz7PU
255•cdrnsf•2h ago•153 comments

A small, shared skill library by builders, for builders. (human and agent)

https://github.com/PsiACE/skills
37•recrush•3h ago•4 comments

Ardour 9.0 Released

https://ardour.org/whatsnew.html
164•PaulDavisThe1st•3h ago•28 comments

Review of 1984 by Isaac Asimov (1980)

https://www.newworker.org/ncptrory/1984.htm
4•doruk101•16m ago•1 comments

Maihem (YC W24): hiring senior robotics perception engineer (London, on-site)

https://jobs.ashbyhq.com/maihem/8da3fa8b-5544-45de-a99e-888021519758
1•mxrns•4h ago

Psychometric Jailbreaks Reveal Internal Conflict in Frontier Models

https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.04124
37•toomuchtodo•3h ago•33 comments

150 MB Minimal FreeBSD Installation

https://vermaden.wordpress.com/2026/02/01/150-mb-minimal-freebsd-installation/
111•vermaden•4d ago•17 comments

The New Collabora Office for Desktop

https://www.collaboraonline.com/collabora-office/
132•mfld•8h ago•80 comments

Company as Code

https://blog.42futures.com/p/company-as-code
197•ahamez•9h ago•99 comments

When internal hostnames are leaked to the clown

https://rachelbythebay.com/w/2026/02/03/badnas/
413•zdw•16h ago•219 comments

Advancing finance with Claude Opus 4.6

https://claude.com/blog/opus-4-6-finance
112•da_grift_shift•4h ago•25 comments

Nanobot: Ultra-Lightweight Alternative to OpenClaw

https://github.com/HKUDS/nanobot
189•ms7892•12h ago•102 comments

GB Renewables Map

https://renewables-map.robinhawkes.com/
115•RobinL•9h ago•45 comments

Hypernetworks: Neural Networks for Hierarchical Data

https://blog.sturdystatistics.com/posts/hnet_part_I/
7•mkmccjr•5h ago•1 comments

CIA suddenly stops publishing, removes archives of The World Factbook

https://simonwillison.net/2026/Feb/5/the-world-factbook/
260•ck2•7h ago•104 comments

A Broken Heart

https://allenpike.com/2026/a-broken-heart/
140•memalign•4d ago•38 comments

Fela Kuti First African to Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement Award

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/2/1/fela-kuti-becomes-first-african-to-get-grammys-lifetime-a...
107•defrost•4d ago•25 comments

Opus 4.6 uncovers 500 zero-day flaws in open-source code

https://www.axios.com/2026/02/05/anthropic-claude-opus-46-software-hunting
138•speckx•3h ago•88 comments

Programming Patterns: The Story of the Jacquard Loom (2019)

https://www.scienceandindustrymuseum.org.uk/objects-and-stories/jacquard-loom
72•andsoitis•4d ago•26 comments
Open in hackernews

The time I didn't meet Jeffrey Epstein

https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=9534
68•pfdietz•2h ago

Comments

JumpCrisscross•1h ago
> adding: “perhaps you will know Jeffrey and his background and situation."

This is the most-interesting bit. The introducer put this up front. Maybe it's Nigerian-prince scame logic? Or maybe there really is that much sympathy for pedophiles in Silicon Valley [1].

[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/05/business/epstein-investme...

gpm•1h ago
Reading more charitably than is likely deserved, it could be "his background and situation (of knowing tons of rich people who might also put funds into this)"
JumpCrisscross•1h ago
I'm struggling to read the word "situation" charitably in the context of an introduction.
1-more•57m ago
Best I can do is that the middleman took the sweetheart deal conviction for solicitation at face value, and did not know it was a plea down from crimes against children? IDK
sonofhans•55m ago
Because you’re not the audience. Clearly, in 2010, many people were still angling for Epstein introductions for the obvious reasons. The “warning” is a signal.
gpm•33m ago
I'm reading "situation" as "engaged in the occupation of networking, but it's not a job" in the above... but yeah that's one part of why it's an overly charitable reading.
SpicyLemonZest•45m ago
Epstein was not nearly as famous at the time, and the little contemporary coverage that did exist (e.g. https://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/01/business/01epstein.html) substantially downplayed his crimes. In hindsight, of course, we know to read past the headline that just says "prostitution", and scroll down to the sixteenth paragraph where he got a massage from a 14 year old. But it seems plausible that someone doing quick vetting in 2010 might not have read that far.

(Aaronson, if I read the source article correctly, made the wise decision that any involvement with any kind of sex work is disqualifying. I feel the same way, but even today not everyone agrees.)

notahacker•39m ago
Feels mostly like "if you're responding to this you're already compromised", a bit like "I take it you understand that our Family expects its favours to be returned".

I think it's pretty well established now that powerful people in and outside the Valley considered to think that Epstein was a useful contact knowing his "personal situation" rather well and sometimes explicitly referring to it. Suspect it's possible to have innocently accepted an introduction to him or even advice from him in the 2010s because he wasn't that famous at the time, but it seems like they were motivated to minimise that possibility. Even easier to add people to the list you can blackmail in future if you don't even have to arrange island visits for them

lifestyleguru•23m ago
> He has paid for college educations for personal employees and students from Rwanda, and spent millions on a project to develop a thinking and feeling computer and on music intended to alleviate depression.

Helping poor children from Africa, investing in AI, and burning CDs with dolphin sounds. A classic.

trhway•1h ago
>Scott Aaronson was born on May 21st, 1981. He will be 30 in 2011. The conference could follow a theme of: “hurry to think together with Scott Aaronson while he is still in his 20s and not yet a pitiful over-the-hill geezer in his 30s.” This offers another nice opportunity for celebration.

may be somebody would train a model on the Epstein and his associates emails/etc. which would allow to research the workings of the such psychopaths' minds

moralestapia•1h ago
Excerpt from one of the related emails (written by JE):

"great proposal„ however, it needs to be more around deception alice -bob. communication. virus hacking, battle between defense and infiltration.. computation is already looked at in various fields. camoflauge , mimickry, signal processing, and its non random nature, misinformation. ( the anti- truth - but right answer for the moment ).. computation does not involve defending against interception, a key area for biological systems, if a predator breaks the code, it usually can accumulate its preys free energy at a discount . self deception, ( necessary to prevent accidental disclosure of inate algorithms. WE need more hackers , also interested in biological hacking , security, etc."

Damn! I once worked with a guy that was exactly like this. Not just writing but his style of speech irl was like that, incoherent loosely bound ideas around one topic. Ironically, the harder he tried to appear smart the more idiotic were the things that spewed out of his mouth.

We were working with GPUs, trying to find ways to optimize GPU code, he called the team for an informal meeting and told us dead serious, "Why can't you just like, ..., remove the GPUs from the server, then crack them open, turn them outside out and put them back in to see if they perform better". :O

I don't know if this has a name, I just thought the guy had schizophrenia. So glad I moved on from that place.

EFreethought•1h ago
When he was alive a lot of people said Epstein was really smart.

But I have read some of his emails, and all of the ones I have seen are full of spelling, punctuation, grammar and capitalization errors. I would not gotten out of sixth grade if I wrote like that.

moralestapia•1h ago
I think that ... given one specific topic, few people understand it while the vast majority is completely oblivious to its workings.

So they then hear someone who speaks like that, with a fast cadence and Andrew Tate's "Confidence" TM, and are inclined to think "yeah, the guy looks like he knows what he's talking about".

But for people who have minimal knowledge about the thing, it's evident that said person is just stupid.

razingeden•1h ago
I like using “astute businessman” as a backhanded compliment sometimes.

Usually meaning the revenues and results are there .. although everything about their personal or professional ethos disgusts me.

Eh. From time to time you’ll have that one brilliant but grossly tangential asset on a team who leaves you wondering if they’re manic or cracked out from the weekend.

Who’s in infrastructure and hasn’t sent a few sleep-deprived and cringey status updates out at 6am :D

Okay okay okay fine, it’s an internet comment section I don’t have to be PC. I think this one’s coke.

palmotea•1h ago
> But I have read some of his emails, and all of the ones I have seen are full of spelling, punctuation, grammar and capitalization errors. I would not gotten out of sixth grade if I wrote like that.

I kinda assumed that was (at least partly) a "flex," basically doing something dumb to show you're such hot stuff you can get away with it. It's like Sam Altman writing in lowercase all the time.

lebca•1h ago
I used to know someone wealthy whose continued wealth relied on working with local and state governments. This person's public correspondence in lawsuits and with local government officials was purposefully littered with spelling, punctuation, grammar, and capitalization errors. When I asked them about it, their response was that it was on purpose so that they seemed less smart and thus less threatening, with the hope that they would get more favorable rulings and contracts by not seeming like "one of the big entities."

I'm not asking you to believe me on this, but sharing it more as an anecdote of: something on the surface is sometimes not the reality of what's underneath.

PlunderBunny•39m ago
I remember being told that many of the spelling/grammar mistakes in (English) menus for ethnic restaurants were deliberate to make the (English native speaking) customers feel superior.

(Also not saying I believe this at all, just relating an anecdote).

ddq•16m ago
In addition, it broadcasts that the sender is too busy with all their important work to spend time refining and proofreading, that you're getting their raw, unfiltered thoughts directly from them, not through an assistant, and that their time is more valuable than yours so the burden is on you to parse their stream of consciousness jumble for precious nuggets of their exclusive wisdom. The semiotics make sense, plus it's just easier and faster.
throwjefferey•40m ago
He was probably more impressive in-person.
andrewflnr•35m ago
I've found that problem solving intelligence and language skills are not that strongly correlated. He clearly had some kind of skill to keep his operation running, even before you consider the more cynical explanations in the other replies.
rawgabbit•1h ago
Pseudo-intellectual aka bullshitter. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/pseudo-intellectu...

computation does not involve defending against interception, a key area for biological systems,. He is confused about software/programming/hacking. Hacking absolutely involves intercepting messages e.g., man in the middle attack. I have no idea what he thinks biological systems is; does he think that bacteria/viruses intercept chemical messages that our brain sends to different organs in our body?

if a predator breaks the code, it usually can accumulate its preys free energy at a discount. Free energy -- yuck -- that is what happens when scientists give a terrible name to "usable work" or "usable energy". Free energy is about the usable work you can get out of a e.g., coal powered steam engine. He is mixing physics/thermodynamics with biology.

dnautics•1h ago
i don't think its schizophrenia?

i mean working in tech you haven't run into that CTO or vp eng who snowjobs the c-suite with a word salad of hot button technical terms that don't quite add up?

hell ive even interviewed developer candidates for positions who are like this.

moralestapia•1h ago
>i mean working in tech you haven't run into [...]

Yeah, it's on my comment.

lifestyleguru•1h ago
My brain farts are more cohesive, yet I'm never drunk enough while writing them down to use spaces before punctuation or after a bracket.
soperj•1h ago
> If only Bill Gates and Larry Summers had had my mom to go to for advice, they could’ve saved themselves a lot of grief.

Doubt it would have changed anything for Bill. There's a pattern there and this is just a piece of that pattern.

pixl97•1h ago
Turns out Bill is just actually a piece of shit through and through
decimalenough•1h ago
The kind of piece of shit who donates basically his entire fortune to charity? And actual charity at that, not Ellison style "Larry Ellison Research Foundation for Prolonging the Life of Larry Ellison and Getting Some Tax Breaks Along the Way".
lifestyleguru•1h ago
I'd prefer if rich simply paid their taxes and contributions instead of spending money on fighting poor children in Africa.
wrs•1h ago
That made some sense back when the government used to use the taxes to help poor children in Africa, or poor children in the US for that matter. As of 2025 it seems to just leave that sort of thing up to Bill.
refulgentis•35m ago
You're absolutely right in a cold logical sense, even if it makes other people emotionally react to the comment. This was a kind way to react to a lazy false dichotomy, that it's either taxes or donations.
mikepurvis•36m ago
One of Michael Shellenberger's central theses is, I think, that the government's ability to invest in "extras" like overseas aid, science, the environment, space exploration, etc is directly a function of how large and healthy the middle class is because that's where the political capital to do these things really comes from.

Basically the post-WWII period was a golden age for all of the above because the middle class of returning soldiers was there, and it was as power and wealth consolidated in the 80s and onward that there was less and less interest and agreement about spending on stuff other the essentials (which turned out to be mostly just defense).

So really it's a two pronged thing:

* the wealthy need to pay much more, and the government needs to invest that in services that benefit the middle class (education, health care, energy & transportation infrastructure) and also which keep people from falling out of the middle class (social safety net, consumer protections).

* eventually there's a critical mass of middle class people comfortable enough to look out their windows and feel concern about pollution, the poor, etc, and then you ultimately get a combination of individual action, NGOs, and government programmes that meet the very needs that are noticed and lobbied for.

But I think the issue is that many advocates want to jump directly from "more taxes on the rich" to "gov't spends directly on my pet issue", and if you miss the second step, you're never going to get the willpower to either raise the taxes or direct the money into environmental initiatives or whatever else.

lifestyleguru•31m ago
I mean literally taxing the literally rich. Most population by "taxing the rich" mean those earning >90k EUR/USD on employment contract. They see the real rich maybe few times in life from a distance on a yacht in Caribbean or Mediterranean but don't connect the dots.
SpicyLemonZest•22m ago
The fundamental problem with the strategy of "no, the real rich" is that there's no constraint on how high the threshold can go. You mention >90k EUR/USD, but we're already far past that; the previous US president set the threshold at 400k USD, promising that he would never raise taxes on anyone who makes less.

If we want to tax revenues to meaningfully rise, there's just no choice but broad-based taxation.

mikepurvis•12m ago
I don't have a magic answer for how to get people on board, but I can say that I make a lot more than that number, and my taxes (in Canada) are way too low.

I think some of it is the psychology that government is incompetent and will just waste the money anyway ("let Bill keep his money and build toilets in Africa himself, at least he'll get it done"), and the best way to fight that is probably what Carney is trying to do right now: kick off a bunch of ambitious programmes to build new things like pipelines, rail, airport expansions, etc on an accelerated timeline. Perhaps if people see visible progress they'll be more open to saying yeah okay, I'm all right with paying more to live in a country where we get stuff done.

lifestyleguru•8m ago
If government is so ineffective and incompetent then stop charging people in the lower band of salaries 35%-45% from their monthly payslips as well.
pfdietz•17m ago
The same Michael Shellenberger who assured us PV cells are made with rare earth elements?
mikepurvis•6m ago
I think you're referring to this piece: https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaelshellenberger/2018/05/23...

Yes, I don't love that he puts out hits like that on solar and wind in his effort to promote nuclear as a sole solution, but I still find his larger arguments around the dynamics of environmentalism as a movement persuasive.

stronglikedan•1h ago
Okay, a complete piece of shit with an undigested kernel of sweet corn stuck in it.
Lammy•58m ago
You don't get that rich in the first place without being a ruthless asshole.
sobkas•40m ago
>The kind of piece of shit who donates basically his entire fortune to charity?

So he is no longer a billionaire? And donating to what charity, The Gates Foundation? The one that he controls? The one that he uses to push his ideological stances and repeatedly fails to help anyone? Just look how successful his work on improving education system in America was. What a sacrifice it was for him...

com2kid•36m ago
They've admitted the US education work was a mistake. They are hardly alone in making that mistake, improving education in the US is hard.

Their work to clean water and cure diseases has saved millions of lives. They know what they are good at and they've decided to double down on that.

sobkas•22m ago
>They've admitted the US education work was a mistake. They are hardly alone in making that mistake, improving education in the US is hard.

It's only hard if you don't want to help anyone and your only goal is to push charter schools(by any other name) by any means necessary.

>Their work to clean water and cure diseases has saved millions of lives. They know what they are good at and they've decided to double down on that.

They helped so many people by not allowing them getting covid vaccine or by fighting generics? Also their "good" deeds weren't without negative consequences that could be avoided if someone actually listened to people they were "helping".

ceejayoz•39m ago
> The kind of piece of shit who donates basically his entire fortune to charity?

https://www.forbes.com/billionaires/ ranks him at #13 wealthiest in the world with $108B net worth.

He's donated about half his fortune, and 60% of that to his own org.

dakiol•37m ago
You can be both good and bad. Like, it's not an impossibility.
saalweachter•35m ago
Listen, billionaires just have to do three things to be beloved:

  1. Donate 5-10% of their fortune to random unobjectionable charities.
  2. Don't abuse children.
  3. Stay off Twitter.
It's not a high bar, we don't need to give a silver medal to those that fall short.
MengerSponge•2m ago
This was enough for Carnegie, and the fact that they're not pursuing similar public works simply illustrates that while they may want to be loved, they don't care if they're loved or not.

Because they don't want to be beloved, they want to turn people into dinosaurs. (to adapt the Spiderman quote)

mrguyorama•29m ago
Jeffrey Epstein ran a child sex slavery operation for rich people.

There is nothing at all you can do that could ever overcome the harm of helping that man, participating in his business, and calling him a friend.

I don't care if Jesus Christ himself comes down and says Bill Gates is solely responsible for the ending of all suffering.

Raping kids is Bad. Enslaving kids to rape is Bad. This is as clear as you can get in real human society to being The Bad Guy, and Bill Gates spent his precious, limited time on this earth helping him, legitimizing him, and participating in his influence peddling and child rape and slavery

Bill Gates is a piece of shit.

Insanity•1h ago
These binary distinctions (mostly) don't work for people in the real world. It's not a book or movie where people are clearly either good or bad, in reality all people are a mix of both.

He's still doing his work on philanthropy which is IMO a good thing.

The one counterexample to my point that I'd think of is Hitler. And _technically_ he did do good things for Germany as well, the bad just overwhelmingly outshines the good in this case.

_whiteCaps_•1h ago
You mean his philanthropy work that influences where public money goes, into companies like Monsanto and Cargill which his foundation profits from?
Insanity•56m ago
They work in healthcare, education, gender equality initiatives, green energy..

I’m not a fan of MSFT but there are worse uses of the money he made from the company.

I think it’s a bit unfair to categorize all of his contributions to charity as “not charitable”.

sobkas•18m ago
His "charitable" contributions are only in place to charity wash his awful actions in the past and now. And it worked, everyone thinks of Saint Bill and his supposed good deeds while forgetting what he actually did or doing right now.
jmcgough•26m ago
I don't think a healthy society has anything close to our level of wealth concentration, but even if he's made mistakes, he's saved many millions of lives.

Compare that to Elon Musk, who uses his Musk Foundation as a tax shelter, only spending from it for a private school for his children.

sobkas•7m ago
And how many people would have been saved if he didn't forcibly extracted that money from society to begin with?

Because it's almost impossible to not help someone if he just throw wads of money at random. What important is how many people weren't saved because he decided to be a middle man in all of it?

sobkas•32m ago
He uses philanthropy to force his ideology on everyone and his ideology doesn't work. His philanthropy makes things worse not better.

At some point it stops being a philanthropy when it makes lives of people he tries to "help" worse. Like his actions have a ulterior motives...

watwut•1h ago
Same with Summers. He had reputation beyond Epstein contacts.
martythemaniak•36m ago
> If only Bill Gates and Larry Summers had had my mom to go to for advice, they could’ve saved themselves a lot of grief.

The actual lesson is not "listen to your mom", but "character matters". It doesn't matter how much someone agrees with you, how smart they are, how rich they are, how many great ideas they have etc etc. A rotten character will eventually rot everything around it. Techines/nerds/geeks get so enamoured with ideas they tend to not even see the kind of people ideas come from.

niobe•26m ago
Guily by (lack of) association!