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We haven't seen the worst of what gambling and prediction markets will do

https://www.derekthompson.org/p/we-havent-seen-the-worst-of-what
199•mmcclure•1h ago•104 comments

CERN to host Europe's flagship open access publishing platform

https://home.cern/news/news/cern/cern-host-europes-flagship-open-access-publishing-platform
77•JohnHammersley•1h ago•6 comments

Why so many control rooms were seafoam green (2025)

https://bethmathews.substack.com/p/why-so-many-control-rooms-were-seafoam
336•Amorymeltzer•1d ago•57 comments

John Bradley, author of xv, has passed away

https://voxday.net/2026/03/25/rip-john-bradley/
105•linsomniac•2h ago•39 comments

My minute-by-minute response to the LiteLLM malware attack

https://futuresearch.ai/blog/litellm-attack-transcript/
211•Fibonar•5h ago•97 comments

Doom entirely from DNS records

https://github.com/resumex/doom-over-dns
120•Venn1•3d ago•29 comments

How much precision can you squeeze out of a table?

https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2026/03/26/table-precision/
19•nomemory•1h ago•2 comments

Show HN: Turbolite – a SQLite VFS serving sub-250ms cold JOIN queries from S3

https://github.com/russellromney/turbolite
53•russellthehippo•1h ago•14 comments

Colibri – chat platform built on the AT Protocol for communities big and small

https://colibri.social/
84•todotask2•3h ago•38 comments

Fermented foods shaped human biology

https://press.asimov.com/articles/culture-shift
62•mailyk•6d ago•29 comments

Moving from GitHub to Codeberg, for lazy people

https://unterwaditzer.net/2025/codeberg.html
443•jslakro•7h ago•228 comments

OpenTelemetry profiles enters public alpha

https://opentelemetry.io/blog/2026/profiles-alpha/
107•tanelpoder•4h ago•12 comments

HyperAgents: Self-referential self-improving agents

https://github.com/facebookresearch/hyperagents
72•andyg_blog•2d ago•25 comments

Personal Encyclopedias

https://whoami.wiki/blog/personal-encyclopedias
754•jrmyphlmn•1d ago•152 comments

Stripe Projects: Provision and manage services from the CLI

https://projects.dev/
75•piinbinary•4h ago•18 comments

From zero to a RAG system: successes and failures

https://en.andros.dev/blog/aa31d744/from-zero-to-a-rag-system-successes-and-failures/
247•andros•2d ago•77 comments

Building a Blog with Elixir and Phoenix

https://jola.dev/posts/building-a-blog-with-elixir-and-phoenix
52•shintoist•3h ago•3 comments

Fast regex search: indexing text for agent tools

https://cursor.com/blog/fast-regex-search
5•jxmorris12•2d ago•0 comments

Running Tesla Model 3's computer on my desk using parts from crashed cars

https://bugs.xdavidhu.me/tesla/2026/03/23/running-tesla-model-3s-computer-on-my-desk-using-parts-...
825•driesdep•23h ago•288 comments

My home network observes bedtime with OpenBSD and pf

https://ratfactor.com/openbsd/pf-gateway-bedtime
87•ibobev•3d ago•27 comments

Taming LLMs: Using Executable Oracles to Prevent Bad Code

https://john.regehr.org/writing/zero_dof_programming.html
18•mad44•3h ago•4 comments

End of "Chat Control": EU parliament stops mass surveillance

https://www.patrick-breyer.de/en/end-of-chat-control-eu-parliament-stops-mass-surveillance-in-vot...
473•amarcheschi•8h ago•245 comments

The Oxford Comma – Why and Why Not

https://www.deborahcourtbooks.com/post/the-oxford-comma-why-and-why-not
19•taubek•3h ago•25 comments

Interoperability Can Save the Open Web (2023)

https://spectrum.ieee.org/doctorow-interoperability
154•janandonly•6h ago•47 comments

Obsolete Sounds

https://citiesandmemory.com/obsolete-sounds/
200•benbreen•16h ago•35 comments

Light on Glass: Why do you start making a game engine?

https://analogdreamdev.substack.com/p/light-on-glass
38•atan2•3d ago•22 comments

Olympic Committee bars transgender athletes from women’s events

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/26/world/olympics/ioc-transgender-athletes-ban.html
146•RestlessMind•6h ago•322 comments

Shell Tricks That Make Life Easier (and Save Your Sanity)

https://blog.hofstede.it/shell-tricks-that-actually-make-life-easier-and-save-your-sanity/
456•zdw•20h ago•219 comments

Show HN: Orloj – agent infrastructure as code (YAML and GitOps)

https://github.com/OrlojHQ/orloj
13•An0n_Jon•15h ago•9 comments

New York City hospitals drop Palantir as controversial AI firm expands in UK

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/mar/26/new-york-hospitals-palantir-ai
7•chrisjj•16m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

John Bradley, author of xv, has passed away

https://voxday.net/2026/03/25/rip-john-bradley/
103•linsomniac•2h ago

Comments

toomuchtodo•2h ago
https://voxday.net/2026/03/25/rip-john-bradley/
colesantiago•1h ago
RIP.

This should be the main link, we should replace this link instead of the Gab one.

linsomniac•1h ago
Maybe. While the vox link is referenced in the page I posted, the vox link provides way, way less flavor than the posted link. Including, notably, the vox link has no mention of Xv.
bosse•1h ago
The flavor in the Gab articles after your post was enough to sour the whole meal.
Philpax•1h ago
I'm not sure replacing Gab with Vox Day is much of an improvement!
colesantiago•57m ago
Anything better than Gab is fine.
p5248q•1h ago
long time lurker, but yeah I didn't need to experience that hatred on my eyeballs

going to go pet the cat for 25 minutes

tomhow•1h ago
We updated the link, thanks!
latchkey•1h ago
There is a mention of tummy.com and a man, but it is owned by Evelyn Mitchell.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/evelynmitchell/

linsomniac•1h ago
I am that man at the Usenix conference.
latchkey•1h ago
Cool, are you related to tummy then? I'm just trying to clear up my own confusion.
linsomniac•1h ago
As much as anybody these days, since tummy.com shut down 3-5 years ago. I left a dozen years ago. I'm the one that wrote the scanning extensions to xv that were mentioned in the posted article. Evelyn and I were co-owners for the first ~22 years.
latchkey•1h ago
Oh wow, thanks for the context and your work!
mikepurvis•1h ago
For others whose Linux experience is almost exclusively on the command line, xv is a desktop image viewer, capable of some basic edits:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xv_(software)

mrlonglong•1h ago
Xv! A true blast from the past. A much unappreciated piece of software
protastus•1h ago
xv is my favorite image viewer of all time. I loved how it launched immediately and made it very easy to see an image or browse a folder right from the command-line. 20 years later, computers are dramatically faster and such a fundamental task has become unbearably laggy.
tibbydudeza•1h ago
I made the massive mistake of scrolling down - something vile and worse than X.
JoshTriplett•1h ago
Yeah, we should not be linking to gab and its ilk here.
mschuster91•35m ago
Link has since been replaced and I didn't catch the gab link, but yikes, the new site is also filled with conspiracy peddling [1] and, even worse, blatant Russia apologetism [2].

[1] https://voxday.net/tag/immigration/

[2] https://voxday.net/tag/russia/

mjd•1h ago
XV was excellent, and had some features I've never seen anywhere else. For example, it had a control panel that would allow you to take part of the color space and map it uniformly to a different part of the color space, for example, turning all the reds (and just the reds) green.

When my kid, now almost 22, was very small, she would sit on my lap in front of the computer, with XV displaying a picture of Elmo. “Green Elmo!” she would demand. I would adjust the sliders to turn the reds green, and we would laugh uproariously at green Elmo. Next it would be “Purple Elmo!”, and we would laugh even harder.

This kept us both amused for quite a while.

(Update: Here's a picture of what that control panel looked like. The turn-Elmo-green control is top center. https://xv.trilon.com/manual/xv-3.10a/color-editor-1.html)

linsomniac•1h ago
>a control panel

That control panel was really great! Particularly for scanning, it was nice to be able to adjust some of the color curves slightly to correct the scanned image.

However, one thing I REALLY used that control panel for was greyscale images, you could adjust the curve so that things that were barely legible in the image suddenly popped way out. Almost like that trick of rubbing a pencil across a blank page to reveal what someone wrote on the page above it. Or smaller adjustments just to make a greyscale more uniform.

That was really one of xv's superpowers.

lysace•1h ago
xv was very neatly and cleverly designed. I liked it a lot in the 90s. Still somehow remember his name.
jnpnj•52m ago
saw a screenshot as I was reading this article, made me eager to try it, and it's indeed simple, slick and featured... elegant look and feel for a different age.
lysace•41m ago
Here's two screenshots:

https://snapcraft.io/xv

linsomniac•1h ago
To expand on this a little bit:

I had a friend that wanted to scan the cover of his album to start selling copies of it online. This would have been in like 1995 maybe. I went out and bought a HP ScanJet and wrote a command-line program run the scanner and grab that image for him.

I started thinking about making a GUI companion to it. I kept thinking "I need to do this like xv does, I need to do that like xv does." I finally realized: What if I just added a scanning screen to Xv? But because of the license, I couldn't just release it as open source.

I contacted John Bradley, thinking it was probably a long shot that he'd answer. But he did, and he accepted my idea: I'd sell xv with scanning for $50, and send him half. Real nice guy, though the majority of our interaction was me just sending him periodic checks.

I had a domain, tummy.com, because it was a fun name for a fat guy, and when I registered the domain my provider (back in the early '90s) wouldn't let me register a .org unless I was a non profit org, so I went with .com. Because of this deal with John Bradley, I registered tummy.com as an LLC to start selling this software. Over around a decade, I sent John well into the 5 digits of licensing fees. Mostly it was one-offs, but there were a few organizations where it was handfulls of copies for their site.

I had done that software in the evenings while I did a contracting gig at the Telco (USWest). When that contract was up, I was tired of working for a giant company, so I wanted to start doing Linux sys admin consulting. So I started doing that under the tummy.com brand. Did that for around 20 years until around a dozen years ago.

RIP John Bradley.

Barbing•1h ago
Wonderful share, thanks
jhbadger•54m ago
I really liked the widget set (custom made for the program) that xv used. In the 1990s it looked far more "professional" than most GUI apps on Linux/Unix in general.
fdefilippo•51m ago
ciao John!
kristopolous•46m ago
He was still accepting shareware payment for it on his website, which I think is amazing... https://xv.trilon.com/
HoldOnAMinute•41m ago
I was blown away when I discovered xv in the early 90's. Coming from Deluxe Paint and Photon Paint, I was very impressed.
fullstop•37m ago
Sometimes you see credits and say "Oh, wow, I didn't know that they were involved with that!?"

For John Bradley, it is xv and xcalc.

For Hisham Muhammad it is htop and LuaRocks.

And for Jason Donenfeld it is wireguard and cgit.

Perhaps some of you have other examples.

mschuster91•31m ago
> Perhaps some of you have other examples.

The entirety of the works of Fabrice Bellard. QEMU and FFmpeg are the most well-known ones, but there's also a full blown x86 emulator fully and exclusively written in native JavaScript, a greenfield image compression format, a JS engine and probably a dozen other things I only randomly stumble upon and think "oh, wtf, another Fabrice Bellard thing?".

fullstop•28m ago
I can't even imagine being able to think like he can.
paulpauper•33m ago
I am confused why this goes to a tribute page to a musician when everyone is talking about a software developer?
mjd•29m ago
Most people are more than one person.
linsomniac•25m ago
Originally I posted a link to a gab article that extensively discussed the software developer side of John as well as the musician side, but it has been decided to replace it with a link that only mentions the musician side.
nickdothutton•13m ago
xv was fast, stable, had a good interface, and useful far beyond the normal lifespan of such a piece of software. Used it all the time in the early 90s.