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Resizing windows on macOS Tahoe – the saga continues

https://noheger.at/blog/2026/02/12/resizing-windows-on-macos-tahoe-the-saga-continues/
477•erickhill•8h ago•205 comments

MMAcevedo aka Lena by qntm

https://qntm.org/mmacevedo
46•stickynotememo•2h ago•21 comments

GPT‑5.3‑Codex‑Spark

https://openai.com/index/introducing-gpt-5-3-codex-spark/
705•meetpateltech•14h ago•290 comments

Skip the Tips: A game to select "No Tip" but dark patterns try to stop you

https://skipthe.tips/
272•randycupertino•7h ago•166 comments

Gemini 3 Deep Think

https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/models-and-research/gemini-models/gemini-3-deep-think/
823•tosh•15h ago•522 comments

Ring owners are returning their cameras

https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/shopping/ring-owners-are-returning-their-cameras-here-s-how-m...
66•c420•1h ago•20 comments

An AI agent published a hit piece on me

https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/
1737•scottshambaugh•15h ago•710 comments

AWS Adds support for nested virtualization

https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/commit/3dca5e45d5ad05460b93410087833cbaa624754e
183•sitole•8h ago•62 comments

Asimov (YC W26) Is Hiring

1•lningthou•1h ago

Tell HN: Ralph Giles has died (Xiph.org| Rust@Mozilla | Ghostscript)

175•ffworld•9h ago•6 comments

We interfaced single-threaded C++ with multi-threaded Rust

https://antithesis.com/blog/2026/rust_cpp/
11•lukastyrychtr•5d ago•0 comments

Polis: Open-source platform for large-scale civic deliberation

https://pol.is/home2
239•mefengl•13h ago•86 comments

My Grandma Was a Fed – Lessons from Digitizing Hours of Childhood

https://sampatt.com/blog/2025-12-13-my-grandma-was-a-fed-lessons-from-digitizing-hundreds-of-hour...
122•SamPatt•4d ago•31 comments

Improving 15 LLMs at Coding in One Afternoon. Only the Harness Changed

http://blog.can.ac/2026/02/12/the-harness-problem/
654•kachapopopow•18h ago•249 comments

Ring cancels its partnership with Flock Safety after surveillance backlash

https://www.theverge.com/news/878447/ring-flock-partnership-canceled
380•c420•8h ago•199 comments

Japan's Dododo Land, the most irritating place on Earth

https://soranews24.com/2026/02/07/take-a-trip-to-japans-dododo-land-the-most-irritating-place-on-...
60•zdw•5d ago•14 comments

Beginning fully autonomous operations with the 6th-generation Waymo driver

https://waymo.com/blog/2026/02/ro-on-6th-gen-waymo-driver
201•ra7•16h ago•207 comments

Major European payment processor can't send email to Google Workspace users

https://atha.io/blog/2026-02-12-viva
503•thatha7777•17h ago•338 comments

Ruby Newbie Is Joining the Ruby Users Forum

https://www.rubyforum.org/tag/getting-started
3•jvrc•3d ago•1 comments

Launch HN: Omnara (YC S25) – Run Claude Code and Codex from anywhere

114•kmansm27•15h ago•135 comments

Apache Arrow is 10 years old

https://arrow.apache.org/blog/2026/02/12/arrow-anniversary/
213•tosh•19h ago•58 comments

The Nature of the Beast

https://cinemasojourns.com/2026/02/07/the-nature-of-the-beast/
6•jjgreen•4d ago•0 comments

Recoverable and Irrecoverable Decisions

https://herbertlui.net/recoverable-and-irrecoverable-decisions/
57•herbertl•9h ago•18 comments

Evaluating Multilingual, Context-Aware Guardrails: A Humanitarian LLM Use Case

https://blog.mozilla.ai/evaluating-multilingual-context-aware-guardrails-evidence-from-a-humanita...
15•benbreen•9h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Sol LeWitt-style instruction-based drawings in the browser

https://intervolz.com/sollewitt/
53•intervolz•2d ago•9 comments

How a cat debugged Stable Diffusion (2023)

https://blog.dwac.dev/posts/cat-debugging/
48•lukasgelbmann•4d ago•9 comments

New Nick Bostrom Paper: Optimal Timing for Superintelligence [pdf]

https://nickbostrom.com/optimal.pdf
50•uejfiweun•3h ago•45 comments

Mapping the Moon: The Apollo Transforming Printer

https://blogs.loc.gov/maps/2025/12/mapping-the-moon-the-apollo-transforming-printer/
13•bryanrasmussen•3d ago•1 comments

Synthesizer Cartridge for the Atari 2600

https://www.qotile.net/synth.html
23•harel•4d ago•4 comments

How to Have a Bad Career – David Patterson (2016) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rn1w4MRHIhc
78•rombr•13h ago•22 comments
Open in hackernews

MMAcevedo aka Lena by qntm

https://qntm.org/mmacevedo
46•stickynotememo•2h ago

Comments

lsb•1h ago
It’s named after the multi-decade data compression test image https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenna

Buy the book! https://qntm.org/vhitaos

xyzsparetimexyz•1h ago
That feels grossly inappropriate
nice_byte•1h ago
could you be more specific?
direwolf20•41m ago
Lena is no longer used as a test image because it's porn. It's banned from several journals because it's porn. As in they will reject any paper that uses Lena no matter the technical content.

The reasons usually given for choosing this image are all just rationalisations — Lena is used the most because it's porn and image compression researchers are all male. It belongs as part of a test set, sure, but there's no reason it should be the single most used image. Except because its porn.

simoncion•20m ago
> Lena is no longer used as a test image because it's porn.

The Lenna test image can be seen over the text "Click above for the original as a TIFF image." at [0]. If you consider that to be porn, then I find your opinion on what is and is not porn to be worthless.

The test image is a cropped portion of porn, but if a safe-for-work image would be porn but for what you can't see in the image, then any picture of any human ever is porn as we're all nude under our clothes.

For additional commentary (published in 1996) on the history and controversy about the image, see [1].

[0] <http://www.lenna.org/>

[1] <https://web.archive.org/web/20010414202400/http://www.nofile...>

toxik•19m ago
The woman herself says she never had a problem with it being famous. The actual test image is obviously not porn, either. But anything to look progressive, I guess.
pyrale•4m ago
If you read the original text, what happens in that story is also grossly inappropriate. Maybe that's the parallel.
matheist•1h ago
I remember being very taken with this story when I first read it, and it's striking how obsolete it reads now. At the time it was written, "simulated humans" seemed a fantastical suggestion for how a future society might do scaled intellectual labor, but not a ridiculous suggestion.

But now with modern LLMs it's just too impossible to take it seriously. It was a live possibility then; now, it's just a wrong turn down a garden path.

A high variance story! It could have been prescient, instead it's irrelevant.

cwillu•1h ago
“Irrelevant” feels a bit reductive while the practical question of what actually causes qualia remains unresolved.
rcoveson•1h ago
I think that's a little harsh. A lot of the most powerful bits are applicable to any intelligence that we could digitally (ergo casually) instantiate or extinguish.

While it may seem that the origin of those intelligences is more likely to be some kind of reinforcement-learning algorithm trained on diverse datasets instead of a simulation of a human brain, the way we might treat them isn't any less though provoking.

nice_byte•1h ago
when you read this and its follow-up "driver" as a commentary on how capitalism removes persons from their humanity, it's as relevant as it was on day one.

good sci fi is rarely about just the sci part.

sooheon•51m ago
This is a sad take, and a misunderstanding of what art is. Tech and tools go "obsolete". Literature poses questions to humans, and the value of art remains to be experienced by future readers, whatever branch of the tech tree we happen to occupy. I don't begrudge Clarke or Vonnegut or Asimov their dated sci-fi premises, because prediction isn't the point.

The role of speculative fiction isn't to accurately predict what future tech will be, or become obsolete.

jychang•40m ago
Yeah, that's like saying Romeo and Juliet by Shakespeare is obsolete because Romeo could have just sent Juliet a snapchat message.

You're kinda missing the entire point of the story.

peterlada•17m ago
100% agree, but I relish the works of Willam Gibson and Burroughs who pose those questions AND getting the future somewhat right.
penteract•50m ago
Lena isn't about uploading. https://qntm.org/uploading
andai•49m ago
Found the guy who didn't play SOMA ;)
matkoniecz•42m ago
I have not seen as prediction as actual technology, but mostly as a horror story.

And a warning, I guess, in unlikely case of brain uploading being a thing.

harperlee•33m ago
I actually think it was quite prescient and still raises important topics to consider - irrespective of whether weights are uploaded from an actual human, if you dig just a little bit under the surface details, you still get a story about ethical concerns of a purely digital sentience. Not that modern LLMs have that, but what if future architectures enable them to grow an emerging sense of self? It's a fascinating text.
Joeri•10m ago
That is the same categorical argument as what the story is about: scanned brains are not perceived as people so can be “tasked” without affording moral consideration. You are saying because we have LLMs, categorically not people, we would never enter the moral quandaries of using uploaded humans in that way since we can just use LLMs instead.

But… why are LLMs not worthy of any moral consideration? That question is a bit of a rabbit hole with a lot of motivated reasoning on either side of the argument, but the outcome is definitely not settled.

For me this story became even more relevant since the LLM revolution, because we could be making the exact mistake humanity made in the story.

Rastonbury•42m ago
Same person who wrote SCP Antimemetics Division which is great too
garretraziel•9m ago
qntm is really talented sci-fi writer. I have read Valuable Humans in Transit and There is no Antimemetics division and both were great, if short. Can only recommend.