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US SEC preparing to scrap quarterly reporting requirement

https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/us-sec-preparing-eliminate-quarterly-reporting-requireme...
364•djoldman•3h ago•183 comments

Leanstral: Open-source agent for trustworthy coding and formal proof engineering

https://mistral.ai/news/leanstral
350•Poudlardo•6h ago•68 comments

Meta’s renewed commitment to jemalloc

https://engineering.fb.com/2026/03/02/data-infrastructure/investing-in-infrastructure-metas-renew...
369•hahahacorn•9h ago•156 comments

The “small web” is bigger than you might think

https://kevinboone.me/small_web_is_big.html
340•speckx•10h ago•141 comments

The American Healthcare Conundrum

https://github.com/rexrodeo/american-healthcare-conundrum
274•rexroad•10h ago•227 comments

My Journey to a reliable and enjoyable locally hosted voice assistant (2025)

https://community.home-assistant.io/t/my-journey-to-a-reliable-and-enjoyable-locally-hosted-voice...
336•Vaslo•14h ago•100 comments

Show HN: Oxyde – Pydantic-native async ORM with a Rust core

https://github.com/mr-fatalyst/oxyde
86•mr_Fatalyst•3d ago•43 comments

Beyond has dropped “meat” from its name and expanded its high-protein drink line

https://plantbasednews.org/news/alternative-protein/beyond-meat-not-the-moment-rebrand/
74•rmason•6h ago•117 comments

In space, no one can hear you kernel panic (2020)

https://increment.com/software-architecture/in-space-no-one-can-hear-you-kernel-panic/
40•p0u4a•4d ago•2 comments

Why I love FreeBSD

https://it-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/16/why-i-love-freebsd/
378•enz•16h ago•184 comments

Show HN: Thermal Receipt Printers – Markdown and Web UI

https://github.com/sadreck/ThermalMarky
48•howlett•3d ago•13 comments

Show HN: GitClassic.com, a fast, lightweight GitHub thin client (pages <14KB)

https://gitclassic.com
24•heythisischris•4d ago•11 comments

Canopy Height Maps v2

https://ai.meta.com/blog/world-resources-institute-dino-canopy-height-maps-v2/?_fb_noscript=1
18•tzury•4d ago•5 comments

Starlink Mini as a failover

https://www.jackpearce.co.uk/posts/starlink-failover/
219•jkpe•19h ago•169 comments

AirPods Max 2

https://www.apple.com/airpods-max/
231•ssijak•14h ago•410 comments

Polymarket gamblers threaten to kill me over Iran missile story

https://www.timesofisrael.com/gamblers-trying-to-win-a-bet-on-polymarket-are-vowing-to-kill-me-if...
1386•defly•15h ago•894 comments

Language model teams as distributed systems

https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12229
76•jryio•10h ago•33 comments

AnswerThis (YC F25) Is Hiring

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/answerthis/jobs/CNdatw5-founding-engineering-lead
1•ayush4921•6h ago

Pyodide: a Python distribution based on WebAssembly

https://github.com/pyodide/pyodide
12•tosh•3d ago•3 comments

Launch HN: Voygr (YC W26) – A better maps API for agents and AI apps

71•ymarkov•11h ago•51 comments

Home Assistant waters my plants

https://finnian.io/blog/home-assistant-waters-my-plants/
259•finniananderson•4d ago•134 comments

The bureaucracy blocking the chance at a cure

https://www.writingruxandrabio.com/p/the-bureaucracy-blocking-the-chance
106•item•1d ago•127 comments

Show HN: Claude Code skills that build complete Godot games

https://github.com/htdt/godogen
192•htdt•11h ago•122 comments

Apideck CLI – An AI-agent interface with much lower context consumption than MCP

https://www.apideck.com/blog/mcp-server-eating-context-window-cli-alternative
126•gertjandewilde•12h ago•107 comments

Lies I was told about collaborative editing, Part 2: Why we don't use Yjs

https://www.moment.dev/blog/lies-i-was-told-pt-2
220•antics•4d ago•105 comments

Corruption erodes social trust more in democracies than in autocracies

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/political-science/articles/10.3389/fpos.2026.1779810/full
679•PaulHoule•16h ago•355 comments

On The Need For Understanding

https://blog.information-superhighway.net/on-the-need-for-understanding
94•zdw•5d ago•39 comments

Kona EV Hacking

http://techno-fandom.org/~hobbit/cars/ev/
126•AnnikaL•5d ago•69 comments

Lazycut: A simple terminal video trimmer using FFmpeg

https://github.com/emin-ozata/lazycut
168•masterpos•15h ago•53 comments

Cert Authorities Check for DNSSEC from Today

https://www.grepular.com/Cert_Authorities_Check_for_DNSSEC_From_Today
95•zdw•1d ago•221 comments
Open in hackernews

The future of Amazon coders is the present of Amazon warehouse workers

https://pluralistic.net/2025/03/13/electronic-whipping/
37•martin-t•2h ago

Comments

martin-t•2h ago
A year later, do you see it now?

I always say humans are not smart enough. First they came for the communists... You know the rest but how many of you would pick up a rifle and stand against evil?

Well, first they came for the manual workers and many on HN were happy to help. Now they and their autocompletes came for open source devs, taking our work without consent, credit or respecting the licenses and almost nobody stands up against it. They expect me to pay for me own stolen code and most devs are OK with it because it's not their stolen code and they can get their job slightly faster.

So how long before they come for you? Because by then you will be economically irrelevant and unable to do anything about it.

skybrian•1h ago
How far back do you want to go? Programmers have been automating jobs away for a long time. Some historical context:

When Craig Newmark created Craigslist (along with Ebay), it was devastating for the economics of newspapers. Lots of jobs selling classified ads went away, as well as funding for the other jobs.

Wikipedia made other encyclopedias obsolete.

It used to be that you had to do things by mail, by phone, or in person. The websites that we now take for granted probably eliminated lots of jobs processing transactions.

Companies used to have typing pools.

Were these bad improvements? How is it different now?

forgetfreeman•1h ago
If I was given a choice between robust journalism and whatever Craigslist is the choice seems rather plain. A dispassionate analysis of the majority of tech industry "improvements" reveals similar choices.
KnuthIsGod•1h ago
Things look much better when looked at with the foggy lens of the retrospecto-scope.

I began reading newspapers in the 1960's.

Most journalism even in those days was bad and of dubious quality.

forgetfreeman•1h ago
Attempting to lecture me on what journalism was is a misstep on your part. My first professional development gig was supporting software integrations between 33 local newsrooms, their printing floors, and their (at the time fledgling) online presence. In addition to my normal development work I was frequently called upon to work directly with editorial and newsroom staff on specialty projects and provide on-site support at industry events. As a result I spent a lot of time in the room where shit was going down.

While it's always been possible to find shills in the media landscape the overwhelming majority of the men and women I worked for were the kind of intense scary-obsessive anti-authoritarian types that literally skipped meals and sleep (sometimes days at a time) just for a chance at catching industry or government fucking around. And with literally hundreds of newsrooms scattered across the country staffed similarly journalism was a force to be reconned with. But hey, having to pay $5 to sell your couch to a stranger was kind of a drag so I guess this is better.

martin-t•1h ago
> How is it different now?

Most cases, it was either:

a) a new technology unrelated to the original job, which made the job redundant - the printing press was not made by watching scribes doing their mechanical movements faster, it was a fundamentally different principle. It was fair competition between independent 2 options, neither of which exploited the other.

In contrast, LLMs cannot exist without programmers first writing immense, astronomical amounts of code as training data.

b) people coming together and making something for free which was paid. Wikipedia is not just subsidized by some corporation which makes money from ads, it is made by people who willingly spend their time to make the world a better place for everyone. And none of them, neither a megacorp stand to become rich from it.

In contrast, LLMs are trained on people's work without their consent, quite offer against explicitly stated wishes. And it's not a common good, it's a for-profit business which ultimately funnels the gains to the top.

---

I am not even against LLMs, they are a tool - neither good or bad. I am against how they are created - LLMs trained on AGPL shoud be AGPL and their output should be AGPL. And I am against how they are used - they extract value from people and redirect the reward for work to people who didn't contribute any work.

Fundamentally, people should (collectively) own the product of their work and should negotiate how the reward is distributed on equal footing.

amazingamazing•1h ago
remote work was foolish for disassociating the value of swes to just code. llms are here to finish off the job. the profession will still exist of course
KnuthIsGod•1h ago
""Code reviewer" is a much less fulfilling job than "programmer." Code reviewers are also easier to replace than programmers.

A code reviewer is a reverse-centaur, a servant to the machine.

Every time you hear "AI-assisted programmer," you should substitute "programmer-assisted AI.""

add-sub-mul-div•1h ago
Right. Even if headcount stays the same, replacing previously highly skilled roles with low-paid fungible operators of AI is a big win for employers.
EarlKing•1h ago
I'm sure I'm supposed to sympathize with the plight of the poor Amazon coder, but since everyone in the valley are encouraged to systematically shit on everyone they believe is beneath them.... I can't.

...and don't tell me they don't. I've been to way too many corporate parties and seen how they act when they think no one is watching.

martin-t•1h ago
Yes but not every dev is an Amazon coder.

I have the privilege of working for a robotics company small enough that I (a SW dev) can walk a few doors down the hallway and talk to anyone from mechanics, to electronics, to sales, to the people who actually operate the robors on customers' sites. And I have a lot of respect for people who pull a 16 hour shift in freezing cold or with water pouring down their necks.

For the company to function, it requires a lot of people with different skills to come together and each do what they're best at.

As Doctorow says, this is why huge corps segregate people into casts - to keep them from seeing the other's contribution and to keep them hating the other instead of hating those who exploit both.

daft_pink•55m ago
Amazon has the reputation of being a difficult place to work for.