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Artemis II crew see first glimpse of far side of Moon [video]

https://www.bbc.com/news/videos/ce3d5gkd2geo
201•mooreds•3h ago•141 comments

Eight years of wanting, three months of building with AI

https://lalitm.com/post/building-syntaqlite-ai/
270•brilee•5h ago•69 comments

A tail-call interpreter in (nightly) Rust

https://www.mattkeeter.com/blog/2026-04-05-tailcall/
53•g0xA52A2A•2h ago•2 comments

Caveman: Why use many token when few token do trick

https://github.com/JuliusBrussee/caveman
439•tosh•8h ago•249 comments

Codex is switching to API pricing based usage for all users

https://help.openai.com/en/articles/20001106-codex-rate-card
121•ccmcarey•1h ago•78 comments

Computational Physics (2nd Edition)

https://websites.umich.edu/~mejn/cp2/
21•teleforce•2h ago•1 comments

Nanocode: The best Claude Code that $200 can buy in pure JAX on TPUs

https://github.com/salmanmohammadi/nanocode/discussions/1
42•desideratum•3h ago•7 comments

Finnish sauna heat exposure induces stronger immune cell than cytokine responses

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/23328940.2026.2645467#abstract
190•Growtika•4h ago•107 comments

Reaffirming our commitment to child safety in the face of EuropeanUnion inaction

https://blog.google/company-news/inside-google/around-the-globe/google-europe/reaffirming-commitm...
5•upofadown•29m ago•1 comments

Lisette a little language inspired by Rust that compiles to Go

https://lisette.run/
203•jspdown•10h ago•104 comments

From birds to brains: My path to the fusiform face area (2024)

https://www.kavliprize.org/nancy-kanwisher-autobiography
7•everbody•41m ago•0 comments

Baby's Second Garbage Collector

https://www.matheusmoreira.com/articles/babys-second-garbage-collector
21•matheusmoreira•3d ago•4 comments

Just 'English with Hanzi'

https://www.oldnorthwhale.com/p/why-modern-chinese-is-just-english
12•scour•1d ago•3 comments

The threat is comfortable drift toward not understanding what you're doing

https://ergosphere.blog/posts/the-machines-are-fine/
610•zaikunzhang•7h ago•428 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...
484•DyslexicAtheist•18h ago•443 comments

Friendica – A Decentralized Social Network

https://friendi.ca/
73•janandonly•7h ago•29 comments

Hightouch (YC S19) Is Hiring

https://hightouch.com/careers#open-positions
1•joshwget•5h ago

Phone-free bars and restaurants on the rise across the U.S.

https://www.axios.com/2026/04/05/phone-free-restaurants-bars-bans-restrictions-offline
61•Brajeshwar•2h ago•35 comments

OpenScreen is an open-source alternative to Screen Studio

https://github.com/siddharthvaddem/openscreen
405•jskopek•4d ago•69 comments

My Google Workspace account suspension

https://zencapital.substack.com/p/sad-story-of-my-google-workspace
239•zenincognito•6h ago•123 comments

The Melanesian: Dark-skinned people with blonde hair region of Oceania

https://guardian.ng/life/the-melanesian-dark-skinned-people-with-blonde-hair/
15•thunderbong•1h ago•0 comments

Iguanaworks has closed and our products are no longer sold

http://iguanaworks.net/products/usb-ir-transceiver.html
76•ripe•4h ago•13 comments

Someone at BrowserStack is leaking users' email addresses

https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/04/someone-at-browserstack-is-leaking-users-email-address/
317•m_km•4h ago•87 comments

Perfmon – Consolidate your favorite CLI monitoring tools into a single TUI

https://github.com/sumant1122/Perfmon
17•paperplaneflyr•3h ago•4 comments

Introduction to Computer Music (2009) [pdf]

https://composerprogrammer.com/introductiontocomputermusic.pdf
203•luu•15h ago•64 comments

Tracing Goroutines in Realtime with eBPF

https://sazak.io/articles/tracing-goroutines-in-realtime-with-ebpf-2026-03-31
25•darccio•3d ago•4 comments

Aegis – open-source FPGA silicon

https://github.com/MidstallSoftware/aegis
95•rosscomputerguy•12h ago•9 comments

StackOverflow: Retiring the Beta Site

https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/438628/retiring-the-beta-site
33•stefankuehnel•2h ago•22 comments

Shared mutable state in Rust (2022)

https://draft.ryhl.io/blog/shared-mutable-state/
31•vinhnx•3d ago•7 comments

Scientists Figured Out How Eels Reproduce (2022)

https://www.intelligentliving.co/scientists-finally-figured-out-how-eels-reproduce/
81•thunderbong•3d ago•16 comments
Open in hackernews

Banray.eu: Raising awareness of the terrible idea that is always-on AI glasses

https://banray.eu/en/index.html
27•ChrisArchitect•3h ago

Comments

ChrisArchitect•3h ago
Associated blog with some background: https://monocultured.com/blog/banray-raising-awareness-of-th...
brookst•2h ago
As someone with pretty good prosopagnosia, I am also unsettled and disturbed at all of y’all’s hardware acceleration for facial recognition.

I was 30 before I realized that when people recognize each other, it’s not from clothes and hair, or voice, or some kind of cognitive memory like “Bob has big ears and a wide nose”.

So, while I’m sympathetic and supportive of concerns about AI glasses, please also realize that to a subset of the population (about 1% IIRC), most of you already have a weird and privacy-violating skill, right there in the neurons.

analog31•2h ago
We don't continuously share and sell the info we gather, and none of us have any hope of recognizing more than a tiny fraction of the population.
Juliate•2h ago
Comparing a natural ability to some kind of privacy-violating skill sounds a bit a hard sell.

Kind of like selling hard won skills as some kind of gate keeping.

Improving the quality of life of people cannot be done at the expense of the basic social needs of everyone else.

gcanyon•2h ago
Is the terrible idea "always-on AI glasses" or is it "giving all the data they collect to Meta with no proper regulation in place"?

My phone and laptop already collect a ton of data that is more than I would like to share with a company that thinks of me as a product. But that data collection is unavoidable as a side effect of very useful functionality. We need to focus on trust, not restriction.

Juliate•1h ago
How can we still believe in the trust idea when 1/ accidental leaks happen every single day and 2/ corporations do not even hide any more their intent and uses of the collected data? (Pokemon Go being the « funniest » recent one)

At some point, the regulatory/legal backlash will require hard personal responsibility (that is, jail consequences) for this to be taken seriously at the corporate and technical levels and so trust to be reinstated.

toofy•39m ago
> We need to focus on trust, not restriction.

we could probably focus on both.

without sounding too cynical, by now we would be fools to continue trusting certain companies/industries.

we’re victims in an abusive relationship, “they won’t hit us next time, they promised.”

quotemstr•1h ago
Pick a technology --- AR, robotics, AVs, SMRs, the cookie header --- and you'll find a well-funded and sanctimonious ecosystem of NGOs, regulatory bodies, and compliance departments dedicated to ensuring nobody uses it.

The pretext for these bans is always that unassailable cluster of feel-good yet vague virtues like privacy or the environment that you can make mean anything you want, but the reality on the Continent is just a rotating series of excuses for the catechism of "no, non, nein".

And it's never enough to just regulate the EU. Oh, no. The EU is the world's moral guardian, a "regulatory superpower", humanity's conscience. Obviously EU regulation should apply worldwide. The rest of humanity can't be trusted to care about privacy and the environment enough, right?

Well, I'm sick of it. How about they start saying ja to something? How about they walk about HOW we incorporate fledging technological capabilities into society instead of trying to freeze our information environment in 2008 amber?

At this point, when thinking about how we deploy new technology, I'm inclined to just leave Europe behind. Seal it off from the world of innovation with firewall rules and geofencing. The alternative is to suspend technology, the only thing that's ever in all history improved the human condition, for the sake of small-minded, small-hearted people who like mankind less than they love nein.

hagbard_c•1h ago
While I agree on some points - the sanctimonious regulatory-industrial complex feeding a large army of NGOs etc - I don't see this issue - always-on camera glasses feeding their data to the data parasites out to monetise every aspect of your life and death - as the best one to vent your frustrations. I shun these companies - from Google to the Fruit Factory, from TCFKAFacebook to the current crop of 'AI' incumbents - and I certainly don't want other with their always-on faceware to fill the void my absence in their registers has left. Yes, I know about 'shadow accounts' which these companies supposedly have on people like me but at least I can try to reduce their ability to build up a profile on me. I can not do that if the denizens of whatever locality I happen to show my face happily signal my presence to their digital overlords.
Juliate•59m ago
Saying ja/oui to something, is saying nein/non to something else.

If all you have is taking sides with what ought to be dismissed, or rather, discussed and controlled, rather than let alone wild at the expense of most people, that's a choice that is yours.

scuff3d•36m ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook%E2%80%93Cambridge_Ana...

https://cybernews.com/privacy/meta-flo-period-data-privacy-l...

https://violationtracker.goodjobsfirst.org/mega_scandal/Onli...

https://apnews.com/article/google-smartphone-surveillance-ve...

https://www.security.org/identity-theft/breach/equifax/

4 major incidents and a site referring to dozens more, and that's just a few minutes of searching.

And that's only tech companies'(or tech related) misconducted. If we broaden the scope to corporations in general I'm pretty sure I would hit a post text limit before I even got through a quarter of them.

It's like the old saying goes "Every regulation is written in blood". Regs don't exist because someone doesn't want technology to progress. They exist because companies have shown time and again, as far back as you'd like to go, that they are not responsible members or society. They're willing to do anything in the name of profits, including mass privacy violations, abusing customers, and in extreme cases allowing people to die.

quotemstr•29m ago
And who was harmed, precisely, and how? The EU sanctimony complex regularly cites these things as if each were an infosec Chernobyl, but I've yet to see a real-world harm come from these incidents. The advocates say they're harmful because they violate privacy rules, and we need the privacy rules lest companies cause harm by violating them. It's circular. The rules are made up. They do not correspond to the prevention of suffering on the part of real people in the real world.

Even if we were to grant that these alleged privacy disasters causes harm, we'd have to balance them against the lost advantages of refusal to deploy the enabling technologies. It's like banning telephones on the account of everything crime anyone's ever organized over a phone call.