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Google releases Gemma 4 open models

https://deepmind.google/models/gemma/gemma-4/
958•jeffmcjunkin•6h ago•298 comments

Tailscale's new macOS home

https://tailscale.com/blog/macos-notch-escape
238•tosh•4h ago•115 comments

Cursor 3

https://cursor.com/blog/cursor-3
221•adamfeldman•4h ago•182 comments

Artemis II's toilet is a moon mission milestone

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/artemis-iis-toilet-is-a-moon-mission-milestone/
66•1659447091•20h ago•22 comments

George Goble has died

https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/wlfi/name/george-goble-obituary?id=61144779
84•finaard•4h ago•18 comments

Qwen3.6-Plus: Towards real world agents

https://qwen.ai/blog?id=qwen3.6
390•pretext•8h ago•135 comments

ParadeDB (YC S23) Is Hiring Database Internal Engineers (Rust)

https://paradedb.notion.site/
1•philippemnoel•31m ago

Decisions that eroded trust in Azure – by a former Azure Core engineer

https://isolveproblems.substack.com/p/how-microsoft-vaporized-a-trillion
130•axelriet•6h ago•28 comments

Good ideas do not need lots of lies in order to gain public acceptance (2008)

https://blog.danieldavies.com/2004/05/d-squared-digest-one-minute-mba.html
108•sedev•5h ago•43 comments

Lemonade by AMD: a fast and open source local LLM server using GPU and NPU

https://lemonade-server.ai
402•AbuAssar•11h ago•94 comments

The Australian government has announced gambling advertising reforms

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c62492e925lo
48•gostsamo•4h ago•31 comments

LinkedIn is searching your browser extensions

https://browsergate.eu/
1496•digitalWestie•9h ago•659 comments

JSON Canvas Spec (2024)

https://jsoncanvas.org/spec/1.0/
76•tobr•3d ago•28 comments

Significant progress made on Xbox 360 recompilation

https://readonlymemo.com/rexglue-xbox-360-recompilation-interview/
49•tetrisgm•4d ago•15 comments

Prefer do notation over Applicative operators when assembling records (2024)

https://haskellforall.com/2024/05/prefer-do-notation-over-applicative
7•wazHFsRy•2d ago•0 comments

OpenAI Acquires TBPN

https://openai.com/index/openai-acquires-tbpn/
115•surprisetalk•5h ago•97 comments

Memo: A language that remembers only the last 12 lines of code

https://danieltemkin.com/Esolangs/Memo/
4•notem•22m ago•0 comments

Inside Nepal's Fake Rescue Racket

https://kathmandupost.com/money/2026/03/27/inside-nepal-s-fake-rescue-racket
239•lode•11h ago•106 comments

Significant Raise of Reports

https://lwn.net/Articles/1065620/
264•stratos123•13h ago•143 comments

Magic the Gathering Deck Shuffler

https://mtg.jessitron.honeydemo.io/
25•mooreds•3d ago•14 comments

Artemis computer running two instances of MS outlook; they can't figure out why

https://bsky.app/profile/nikigrayson.com/post/3miik2wzosk25
261•mooreds•7h ago•206 comments

IBM Announces Strategic Collaboration with Arm

https://newsroom.ibm.com/2026-04-02-ibm-announces-strategic-collaboration-with-arm-to-shape-the-f...
255•bonzini•13h ago•166 comments

Foxing aspires to be an eBPF-powered replication engine for Linux filesystems

https://codeberg.org/aenertia/foxing
25•tanelpoder•3d ago•4 comments

'Backrooms' and the Rise of the Institutional Gothic

https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/backrooms-and-the-rise-of-the-institutional-gothic/
157•anarbadalov•9h ago•71 comments

Amazon is adding a fuel surcharge to fees it collects from third-party sellers

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/04/02/amazon-add-3point5percent-fuel-and-logistics-surcharge-for-seller...
113•lehi•3h ago•49 comments

Show HN: A P2P messenger with dual network modes (Fast and Tor)

https://github.com/Realman78/Kiyeovo/
23•Realman78•7h ago•5 comments

Sweden goes back to basics, swapping screens for books in the classroom

https://undark.org/2026/04/01/sweden-schools-books/
701•novaRom•11h ago•371 comments

Hugo's New CSS Powers

https://www.brycewray.com/posts/2026/04/hugos-new-css-powers/
32•speckx•4h ago•7 comments

Artemis II will use laser beams to live-stream 4K moon footage at 260 Mbps

https://www.tomshardware.com/networking/artemis-ii-will-use-laser-beams-to-live-stream-4k-moon-fo...
305•speckx•7h ago•135 comments

Renewables reached nearly 50% of global electricity capacity last year

https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/01/renewables_generated_nearly_half_global_power/
233•Growtika•7h ago•111 comments
Open in hackernews

US Burned 14 Years of Missiles in 30 Days

https://trendytechtribe.com/energy/us-burned-14-years-missiles-30-days
51•Betelbuddy•2h ago

Comments

ReptileMan•2h ago
Which should be a good waking up call to investigate the MIC about their abysmally low productivity. Iran is a good stress test for the airforce and logistics - and the lesson is that Taiwan is indefensible with current production rates.

If US stocks are so depleted after something that is barely a skirmish against 8th tier adversary - a lot of people that have been responsible for procurement in the last 20 years should lose their jobs.

asdff•1h ago
>a lot of people that have been responsible for procurement in the last 20 years should lose their jobs.

If anything I would say this means procurement has been closer to "right sized" than not.

lopsotronic•10m ago
Taiwan might be indefensible at any rate of production the United States could conceivably spin up within a practical time horizon.

The volume of fire that can be generated inside the 100km line by PLAN/PLAAF/PLAARF forces is nothing less than breathtaking. Even if you parked three Ford class carriers inside optimal mission radius, and their entire complement could take off and land in near-training conditions, and they don't need DCAP or electronic warfare coverage, *AND* if every single bomb and aircraft has a glassy-perfect mission right weapon to right target - EVEN WITH all these impossible conditions satisfied . . you're still not generating enough weapon effect to suppress even half of the PRC fire generation complex vis a vis a Taiwan situation. And they don't need half.

And that is not going to be the operational situation for USN. No, not by a long shot. If we're particularly unlucky, we might not ever know for sure what happened to the USS Whoever - just that it sailed into an electronic fog past Zamami and was gone. Rescued sailors could add little more.

The powers-that-be know this, the elected politicians know this (but don't care because they often have pockets stuffed from Chinese interests), but still we have chest beaters of the unstoppable American juggernaut. Yes, we do have a very big military - it's true! - but it's a military that the largest economy in the world has spent a good deal of its resources working to counter. For twenty years.

My greatest fear is that the chest beaters do assert direct control, court disaster, and have the worst possible reaction. I'm not confident in a sane response to a major surface asset being sunk; these are not people mentally geared to handle humiliation.

We're flirting this line already with Iran - with goddamn Iran of all people - where many People Who Should Know Better have already been flapping their mouths about breaking the taboo on First Use. For Iran.

TheOtherHobbes•2h ago
Interestingly, this leaves the US much less able to deal with a war with some other enemy.
HoldOnAMinute•1h ago
That was the goal all along.
righthand•2h ago
The Xeno Databse game(?) on that site is beyond abstract in purpose. You also have to scroll to the end of the page, not article to “collect” it.
ljsprague•2h ago
"The burn rate is unsustainable: The US fired 850+ Tomahawk cruise missiles in 30 days but purchased only 57 in the FY2026 budget. That is 14.9 years of production consumed in a single month."

Does the author think the US can only make 57 missiles a year?

lateforwork•2h ago
Do you think the US has idle capacity that can be activated at a moment's notice?
palmotea•1h ago
> Do you think the US has idle capacity that can be activated at a moment's notice?

I'm sure some very smart MBA increased profits by eliminating spare capacity or making cuts that would make it much harder to spin up. That's American business culture: focus on this quarter or this year, nothing else matters.

HoldOnAMinute•1h ago
We can just buy them off Alibaba
dbvn•2h ago
Very unreasonable to use the amount purchased last year as the only amount they could ever get in a fiscal year
jotux•1h ago
I rewrote the article, it's even better now:

The tomahawk entered service in 1983, in 2026 they only produced 57. DO THE MATH!

This means the military can only have (2025-1983) * 57 = 2394 Tomahawks.

But the military says they have approximately 3000-4000 tomahawks in inventory. Is it a conspiracy? How could they POSSIBLY have more than 2394 if they can ONLY MAKE 57 PER YEAR?!

prompt: rite me article about US only can make 57 tomohok missels a year but looks lik they have moar than that

simmerup•12m ago
That's not defense procurement, that's defense de-procurement
jotux•2h ago
A better article: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/u-s-tomahawks-iran-war-faster-t...

>The maximum rate of production is estimated to be 2,330 per year: Three contracts from Raytheon each have a capacity of 600 and a BAE has a contract to produce up to 530 missiles per year, according to a report from the Center for Strategic and International Studies, which cites Pentagon budget documents.

>However, the actual procurement rate for the U.S. military is about 90 per year, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. The Navy requested only 57 missiles for fiscal year 2026, according to Defense Department budget documents.

So the rate of production has been low because the procurement rate has been low.

pfannkuchen•1h ago
Does the US actually publish real numbers about weapons production? Color me skeptical, as strategically that would be very foolish*.

*Yes, the current administration is very foolish, but as far as I know they have not changed the policy in this area and if anything they would be more likely to lie than previous admins, right?

asdff•1h ago
Yeah they do. At the end of the day the budgets are public, and when the US government wants more of something they don't make it in house. They put out a call for proposals for more of something, and private companies (e.g. general dynamics or raytheon) bid for the contract with very specifically defined requirements. I'm sure it is ripe information for foreign intelligence but it has been playing out like this for decades at this point.

https://www.war.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/4026238/fa...

pfannkuchen•1h ago
> the budgets are public

LOL

There have been so many disclosures of secret things happening in past decades, decades after the fact. Did they stop doing that? This seems really naive to me.

asdff•1h ago
That is stuff like cia shenanigans not 155mm shell production contracts though. Like they have to put those numbers out because its an order to fill and vendors have to be able to fulfill it...
simmerup•1h ago
That article feels like I'm reading a prompt output
josefritzishere•1h ago
Why is this flagged? Everyone is being so well behaved.