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Willingness to look stupid

https://sharif.io/looking-stupid
227•Samin100•3d ago•82 comments

Executing programs inside transformers with exponentially faster inference

https://www.percepta.ai/blog/can-llms-be-computers
23•u1hcw9nx•22h ago•3 comments

Malus – Clean Room as a Service

https://malus.sh
1216•microflash•18h ago•445 comments

Vite 8.0 Is Out

https://vite.dev/blog/announcing-vite8
195•kothariji•3h ago•33 comments

“This is not the computer for you”

https://samhenri.gold/blog/20260312-this-is-not-the-computer-for-you/
342•MBCook•6h ago•142 comments

Hyperlinks in Terminal Emulators

https://gist.github.com/egmontkob/eb114294efbcd5adb1944c9f3cb5feda
38•nvahalik•4h ago•24 comments

Prefix sums at gigabytes per second with ARM NEON

https://lemire.me/blog/2026/03/08/prefix-sums-at-tens-of-gigabytes-per-second-with-arm-neon/
22•mfiguiere•4d ago•2 comments

Bubble Sorted Amen Break

https://parametricavocado.itch.io/amen-sorting
316•eieio•14h ago•96 comments

Shall I implement it? No

https://gist.github.com/bretonium/291f4388e2de89a43b25c135b44e41f0
1197•breton•11h ago•452 comments

ATMs didn’t kill bank teller jobs, but the iPhone did

https://davidoks.blog/p/why-the-atm-didnt-kill-bank-teller
399•colinprince•17h ago•426 comments

Understanding the Go Runtime: The Scheduler

https://internals-for-interns.com/posts/go-runtime-scheduler/
95•valyala•3d ago•7 comments

Reversing memory loss via gut-brain communication

https://med.stanford.edu/news/all-news/2026/03/gut-brain-cognitive-decline.html
296•mustaphah•15h ago•117 comments

Celebrating Interesting Flickr Technologies

https://medium.com/@brightcarvings/celebrating-flickr-technology-3c93c8ddecc2
30•steerpike•23h ago•6 comments

IMG_0416 (2024)

https://ben-mini.com/2024/img-0416
70•TigerUniversity•3d ago•12 comments

The Met releases high-def 3D scans of 140 famous art objects

https://www.openculture.com/2026/03/the-met-releases-high-definition-3d-scans-of-140-famous-art-o...
274•coloneltcb•16h ago•51 comments

Document poisoning in RAG systems: How attackers corrupt AI's sources

https://aminrj.com/posts/rag-document-poisoning/
112•aminerj•18h ago•41 comments

US private credit defaults hit record 9.2% in 2025, Fitch says

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/us-private-credit-defaults-hit-record-9-2-in-2025-fitch-says-...
345•JumpCrisscross•19h ago•402 comments

Never Snooze a Future

https://jacko.io/snooze.html
4•vinhnx•4d ago•0 comments

Bringing Chrome to ARM64 Linux Devices

https://blog.chromium.org/2026/03/bringing-chrome-to-arm64-linux-devices.html
98•ingve•11h ago•44 comments

Grief and the AI split

https://blog.lmorchard.com/2026/03/11/grief-and-the-ai-split/
132•avernet•9h ago•197 comments

Can you instruct a robot to make a PBJ sandwich?

https://pbj.deliberateinc.com/
24•mooreds•4h ago•26 comments

Innocent woman jailed after being misidentified using AI facial recognition

https://www.grandforksherald.com/news/north-dakota/ai-error-jails-innocent-grandmother-for-months...
578•rectang•11h ago•296 comments

Big data on the cheapest MacBook

https://duckdb.org/2026/03/11/big-data-on-the-cheapest-macbook
346•bcye•20h ago•278 comments

WolfIP: Lightweight TCP/IP stack with no dynamic memory allocations

https://github.com/wolfssl/wolfip
123•789c789c789c•16h ago•19 comments

Are LLM merge rates not getting better?

https://entropicthoughts.com/no-swe-bench-improvement
142•4diii•20h ago•128 comments

Launch HN: IonRouter (YC W26) – High-throughput, low-cost inference

https://ionrouter.io
62•vshah1016•13h ago•25 comments

The Unpredicted vs. the Over-Expected

https://kevinkelly.substack.com/p/the-unpredicted-vs-the-over-expected
12•surprisetalk•2d ago•1 comments

Show HN: Axe – A 12MB binary that replaces your AI framework

https://github.com/jrswab/axe
183•jrswab•18h ago•102 comments

Show HN: OneCLI – Vault for AI Agents in Rust

https://github.com/onecli/onecli
142•guyb3•15h ago•41 comments

Long overlooked as crucial to life, fungi start to get their due

https://e360.yale.edu/features/fungi-kingdom
129•speckx•18h ago•39 comments
Open in hackernews

Why Technology Makes Us More Productive but Not Richer

https://www.fullstackpm.tech/blog/productivity-paradox-capital-lockup
24•harshakcheruku•2h ago

Comments

harshakcheruku•2h ago
Author here. Happy to answer questions or discuss the data sources. The labor share shift is the part I found most surprising when I dug into the BLS numbers.
wood_spirit•1h ago
Does this apply to the 17 and 1800s too? Or was there an inflexion point when consumption plateaued and technology is about carving it up not increasing it? And how does it apply to other counties?

My hunch is that this is a recent half century thing for the US and other countries are still earlier in the curve with lots of room to grow still

why_only_15•1h ago
Why did you post an AI generated article (against HN rules)? https://www.pangram.com/history/0943da35-d51a-4d81-8207-fae7...
titzer•2h ago
In short, it's the oligarchy.
prakhar897•1h ago
The article has grand total of 27 em dashes.
measurablefunc•1h ago
The entire site is AI slop. Just flag it & move on.
applfanboysbgon•1h ago
Looks LLM-generated. Was already disinclined to read it based on hatred for that style of writing alone, but it is also just extremely vapid as far as I got before giving up at this line:

> Technology redistributes the existing pie. It doesn’t reliably grow it.

Technology is the reason there are 8 billion humans on this planet. It is the reason that you can pick from hundreds of different foods at the supermarket. It is the reason everyone can buy cute or cool clothes and 10 pairs of shoes. It is the reason why everyone can have a machine that cools their food, three machines that heat their food, a machine that washes their clothes, and a machine that performs billions~trillions of calculations per second to do magic. It is the reason a significant portion of the labor force in technologically-developed countries does work that involves standing around and talking to people or sitting at a desk instead of working their asses off in the fields.

Maybe the article gets into making some point about wealth distribution later, but it is before then making factually incorrect statements about technology so any conclusions based on that are probably faulty anyways.

asmor•1h ago
There is a point where the increase in diversity of products is not real economic growth, it's compensating for lack of demand. We even invented the entire discipline of marketing to manufacture demand so the line can keep going up.

Is it nice we all can have cheap technology and knowledge-based jobs? Sure, to the point where you don't squeeze basic living necessities like housing or alienate me so hard from my cozy job that i literally don't give a shit (which is really unhealthy in a society that keeps telling us to define our worth based on our work output). I think we're well past that point.

cicko•33m ago
Not sure your argument stands. The same technology exists today, yet one can't get Russian gas or oil out of the Gulf. Technology is not everything.
creddit•1h ago
> Consumer spending as a share of US GDP moved from roughly 61% in 1980 to about 68% today. That’s a modest rise over four decades — and it has essentially plateaued since 2010.

> This matters because it tells us something important: technology is not meaningfully expanding the total amount humans consume. It’s redistributing how we consume, and who profits from it.

This is mathematically illiterate and appears to be central to the point.

ricksunny•1h ago
Haven't opened the article yet, but surprised the comments so far are generally in the framework of "oh, economy produces more X, but too much more of a proportion of X is going to [the fortunate few] and too little to [the unfortunate many]." where is X is some kind of fungible consumable. Rather what I see are asset holders and liabilities holders (same spectrum, some enjoy the positive side, some struggle on the negative side). Goods (the consumable, fungible sort) flow in, around, between, and all throughout them. But the only ledger that matters, the one that makes some stressed out and others feel empowered & satisfied, is the asset-liability spectrum.

Update:

And now I've read at the article. Decent, it might sa well be the GPT of "Update Das Kapital for the 21st century". (GPT here being a figure speech, i.e. irrespective of whether an LLM helped in composing the piece). Article still fixates too much on differential parceling out the flow of economic product, and not the asset-liability ledger which everyone is jostling around with each other on. (It almost touches on it in "Mechanism #3", but not quite).

why_only_15•1h ago
This seems like a really poorly thought out article. You should take more care on making sure your understanding is correct before publishing in the future.

Taking the Amazon example in Part 2:

For e-books (simpler), Amazon gets 30% for running the store, doing advertising, etc. and then authors get 70% [1].

For print books, I'm a little less clear but it appears Amazon buys the books for roughly 50% of list[2] which for Hachette in 2025 is $26.50 so Amazon pays $13.25 to the publisher and then Amazon retails the book for $14.84. So for $100 of books sold on Amazon, $89 goes to the publisher and $11 goes to Amazon. It appears that the cost to produce these books is maybe $2/book (though I'm very unsure on this, this is a guesstimate from public data) and then the rest flows back to authors, advances, etc.

Amazon.com (not AWS) has a 7% profit margin in North America (FY25), so of that $11 they get in revenue they get $0.77 in operating profit.

Ok and this also annoyed me: you say $1.7T/y is $10.5k/worker, which is accurate. but then you say for the average household it's $26k/y. This is not true. There are 134m households in the US [3] so it's $12.6k/y for the average household. Maybe you meant something else like the median household but it seems more likely you just said ~2.6 people/household and multiplied the number of people/household by cost/worker. This is obviously wrong and you should have caught errors like that earlier.

[1]: https://kdp.amazon.com/en_US/help/topic/G200644210 [2]: https://www.readersfirst.org/publisher-price-watch [3]: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/TTLHH