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Show HN: A game where you build a GPU

https://jaso1024.com/mvidia/
424•Jaso1024•6h ago•122 comments

How many products does Microsoft have named 'Copilot'?

https://teybannerman.com/strategy/2026/03/31/how-many-microsoft-copilot-are-there.html
310•gpi•3h ago•167 comments

Embarrassingly simple self-distillation improves code generation

https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.01193
513•Anon84•13h ago•161 comments

LLM Wiki – example of an "idea file"

https://gist.github.com/karpathy/442a6bf555914893e9891c11519de94f
17•tamnd•6h ago•2 comments

Show HN: I made open source, zero power PCB hackathon badges

https://github.com/KaiPereira/Overglade-Badges
23•kaipereira•9h ago•2 comments

Ruckus: Racket for iOS

https://ruckus.defn.io/
49•nsm•2d ago•1 comments

Banning All Anthropic Employees

https://joeyh.name/blog/entry/banning_all_Anthropic_employees/
6•edward•35m ago•0 comments

Show HN: sllm – Split a GPU node with other developers, unlimited tokens

https://sllm.cloud
107•jrandolf•8h ago•62 comments

OpenScreen is an open-source alternative to Screen Studio

https://github.com/siddharthvaddem/openscreen
13•jskopek•3d ago•1 comments

Apple approves driver that lets Nvidia eGPUs work with Arm Macs

https://www.theverge.com/tech/907003/apple-approves-driver-that-lets-nvidia-egpus-work-with-arm-macs
325•naves•7h ago•145 comments

Show HN: TurboQuant-WASM – Google's vector quantization in the browser

https://github.com/teamchong/turboquant-wasm
123•teamchong•8h ago•4 comments

The Indie Internet Index – submit your favorite sites

https://iii.social
82•freshman_dev•9h ago•15 comments

German implementation of eIDAS will require an Apple/Google account to function

https://bmi.usercontent.opencode.de/eudi-wallet/wallet-development-documentation-public/latest/ar...
13•DyslexicAtheist•35m ago•1 comments

Components of a Coding Agent

https://magazine.sebastianraschka.com/p/components-of-a-coding-agent
141•MindGods•10h ago•54 comments

Some Unusual Trees

https://thoughts.wyounas.com/p/some-unusual-trees
237•simplegeek•14h ago•69 comments

Emotion concepts and their function in a large language model

https://www.anthropic.com/research/emotion-concepts-function
129•dnw•17h ago•126 comments

The CMS is dead, long live the CMS

https://next.jazzsequence.com/posts/the-cms-is-dead-long-live-the-cms
112•taubek•12h ago•70 comments

IBM 3270 Information Display System: Color and Programmed Symbols (1979) [pdf]

https://bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/3278/GA33-3056-0_3270_Information_Display_System_Color_and_Programm...
29•hggh•6h ago•8 comments

Electrical Transformer Manufacturing Is Throttling the Electrified Future

https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2025-bottlenecks-transformers/
54•toomuchtodo•3d ago•44 comments

Claude Code Found a Linux Vulnerability Hidden for 23 Years

https://mtlynch.io/claude-code-found-linux-vulnerability/
348•eichin•23h ago•225 comments

Plague Ships (2020)

https://www.afloat.com.au/feature/plague-ships/
32•bryanrasmussen•6h ago•5 comments

Training mRNA Language Models Across 25 Species for $165

102•maziyar•3d ago•27 comments

The Cathedral, the Bazaar, and the Winchester Mystery House

https://www.dbreunig.com/2026/03/26/winchester-mystery-house.html
147•dbreunig•3d ago•52 comments

Sopwith – 1984 Game (2000)

http://www.sopwith.org/
70•elvis70•5h ago•32 comments

Breaking Enigma with Index of Coincidence on a Commodore 64

https://imapenguin.com/2026/03/breaking-enigma-with-index-of-coincidence-on-a-commodore-64/
13•saganus•4d ago•2 comments

Mbodi AI (YC P25) Is Hiring

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/mbodi-ai/jobs/mf9L3sy-senior-robotics-engineer-systems-cont...
1•chitianhao•11h ago

Scientists observe an immune signaling complex forming inside cells

https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2026/03/immune-response-inside-cells-inflammation-research
81•ohjeez•5h ago•6 comments

Author of "Careless People" banned from saying anything negative about Meta

https://www.thetimes.com/uk/technology-uk/article/sarah-wynn-williams-careless-people-meta-nrffdfpmf
695•macleginn•8h ago•460 comments

Tell HN: Anthropic no longer allowing Claude Code subscriptions to use OpenClaw

1021•firloop•1d ago•772 comments

When legal sports betting surges, so do Americans' financial problems

https://www.npr.org/2026/04/04/nx-s1-5773354/legal-sports-betting-research-credit-bankruptcy
141•pseudolus•8h ago•99 comments
Open in hackernews

Sopwith – 1984 Game (2000)

http://www.sopwith.org/
69•elvis70•5h ago

Comments

justinhj•4h ago
This game was so fun. I think there's a lot of unexplored game design in this style of 2d aviation.

The multiplayer game Altitude was a good modern example.

jauntywundrkind•4h ago
Lufteauser is a bigger space & higher motion, but has hit some good vibes for me, in this zone. Single player.

We were always begging the daycare to let us play this. Very solid.

teamonkey•3h ago
Do you mean Luftrausers?
jauntywundrkind•1h ago
Yes sorry thank you!
lstodd•3h ago
Highfleet is nice.
sheiyei•3h ago
We had an awesome split screen dogfighting game on a Win98 PC where everyone had a Spitfire-like plane and tried to take the others down. You could land at your base and heal etc. Super fun. I think it was called Iron Birds? Don't think I've found it since.
NooneAtAll3•4h ago
I fondly remember what essentially is a more modern clone of Sopwith - "Pe-2 diving bomber"

It is fun. Shoot-bomb-rearm/refuel in missions, upgrade your plane in between

jesse_dot_id•4h ago
This is the first computer game I remember playing on my brother's Commodore Colt. I was very bad at it.
contingencies•4h ago
Superior successor was Wings of Fury. The DOS version.

Honorable mention: Choplifter. Gameboy.

pan69•3h ago
I remember playing this on my families Olivetti M24. It was very difficult. Maybe because the game was speed sensitive and the M24 was an 8086 running 8Mhz. Good times nonetheless.
jedberg•3h ago
I played this on the original IBM PC. (Un)fortunately, my dad got the 8MHz upgrade, so the game was really hard, because it was built for a 4MHz clock.

Luckily someone eventually realeased a DOS utility that would fake a 4MHz clock by making everything take two cycles.

Good times. :)

hencq•3h ago
I think ours had a turbo button that would double/half the clock speed. Good times indeed :)
jedberg•3h ago
I seem to recall that the turbo button didn't come along until the 80286, but some of the PC clones had them before that.

My 486 definitely had a turbo button (that was the one I built after using the original PC for so many years).

vasac•3h ago
The Turbo button worked wonders for Tetris. You start it with turbo turned on, so Tetris adjusts to the computer’s speed - but it only does this once, at startup. As soon as the blocks start falling, you turn the turbo off, and now your Tetris runs at half speed. I even managed, a few times, to roll over a score of 32,768 (ah, those signed integers).
hencq•1h ago
Hmm, maybe my memory is betraying me. I remember our first family computer was an XT and then later we had a 386. Maybe I'm misremembering and it was the 386 that had the turbo button or maybe the earlier one was a clone. My first own PC was a 486 as well that I built together with my dad. Good memories.
stephenhuey•3h ago
Discovered this on an old Apple 2 in the 90s. Loved the basic physics of things like flying inverted or flying down low and then releasing a bomb while pulling up into a steep climb so the bomb would fly more laterally to a target.
waltbosz•3h ago
I was just thinking of this game last night. I was wondering if AI could take the ASM and convert it into a browser game. Playable w/o DOSBOX.
migueldeicaza•3h ago
Did the site get slashdotted?
danw1979•3h ago
The first time I ever saw a PC it was running Sopwith. Must have been 1989. I loved the game, but it was this exotic new machine that really interested me. It had 5.25” floppies, probably a 286 and quite an old machine by then.

I had only used Z80/128k machines up to then. My dad had an Amstrad 6128, with those 3” “hard” floppies, sturdy, with a decent thick metal gate.

This PC was a very different beast. I remember being confused about the disks. They seemed weak and unprotected ! you could literally see that delicate magnetic surface through the opening. I had always been told never to touch it, but there it was, just asking to be touched…

NikolaNovak•3h ago
One of first games I ever played at my dad's work when I was probably 6 or 7 years old. I've always enjoyed flight Sims, understanding this dubiously qualifies :). I've enjoyed the strategic aspect of fuel and bomb management and while the ai is simple, it provided a challenge.

I now have kids of my own; over the winter I setup an old laptop with old games, and started introducing them chronologically to games like Sopwith, Paratrooper, Alley Cat etc.

My 6 year olds son comment on this game in his journal:

"I like: everything. I don't like: nothing."

Took me a second to not over interpret the seeming double negative :-)

Update : years later I played wings of fury on my cousin's amiga 500 ; far better game but not the same magic :)

ChrisArchitect•3h ago
More info on the SDL Sopwith port project https://fragglet.github.io/sdl-sopwith/
nikolay•2h ago
That's an outstanding port! Kudos!
Sharlin•2h ago
The classic Sopwith clone from the golden days of the Finnish shareware game scene, Triplane Turmoil, turns thirty this year. It was open sourced in 2009 and community-ported to more modern platforms via SDL. Was a lot of fun back in the days of shared-keyboard multiplayer.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triplane_Turmoil

nikolay•2h ago
I've spent endless hours playing Sopwith! What a legend!
fwip•2h ago
As a small kid, I learned how to use the DOS command line to launch this game on my parents' PC. I also remember really enjoying Sopwith 2, which added cows, among other things.
pavel_lishin•1h ago
I remember playing this game on my dad's computer, and being largely baffled at what I was supposed to do. Shoot, drop bombs, of course - but how do I land, refuel, how do the points work?

Still a core memory, though.

bananaboy•1h ago
Like many others here I played this a lot when young on my dad’s PC. I remember finding it really hard to play at the time!
abroun_beholder•1h ago
I loved Sopwith as a child and back in 2004 I made my own version 'Camel' as a homage to Sopwith https://sopwithcamel.sourceforge.net/ to get myself a job in the games industry. Hard to compete with the original though. :)
FpUser•1h ago
What a memory. I loved game.
digitalsushi•1h ago
I got sopwith.exe from my uncle's "big blue disks" subscription. plus a lot of other racy games an 8 year old shouldn't have played.

I tried playing a copy on a modern computer and the game started and finished on its own in about 1/4 of a second! i'm not that fast anymore!

I got very good at dropping the bomb while upside down and then flipping and getting outta there. i was also obsessed with disney's tale spin and imagined it was the seaduck.

kkotak•54m ago
Reminds me of Defender, a faster version with a 'Smart Bomb!' that was so fun to use :)
qingcharles•50m ago
One of the PC games that worked great on the sorta-PC 186 RM Nimbus which a lot of British schools had in the 80s and 90s.