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GenCAD

https://gencad.github.io/
48•dagenix•2h ago•11 comments

ThinkPad: From IBM's Bento Box to Lenovo's AI Workstations

https://www.jdhodges.com/blog/thinkpad-history/
35•zdw•2h ago•10 comments

Design posters showcasing your country's electrical grid

https://github.com/open-energy-transition/grid2poster
15•lyoncy•1h ago•1 comments

Prolog Coding Horror

https://www.metalevel.at/prolog/horror
48•RohanAdwankar•3h ago•14 comments

Fabricked: Misconfiguring Infinity Fabric to Break AMD SEV-SNP

https://xca-attacks.github.io/fabricked/
15•negura•1h ago•2 comments

I turned a $80 RK3562 Android tablet into a Debian Linux workstation

https://github.com/tech4bot/rk3562deb
226•tech4bot•11h ago•116 comments

Two EA-18 fighter jets collide at Mountain Home airshow, pilots ejected safely

https://idahonews.com/news/local/two-f-18-fighter-jets-have-crashed-during-an-airshow-at-mountain...
65•ChrisArchitect•2h ago•41 comments

Jank now has its own custom IR

https://jank-lang.org/blog/2026-05-08-optimization/
25•DASD•2d ago•2 comments

Ask an Astronaut: 333 hours of Q&A footage with astronauts

https://askanastronaut.issinrealtime.org/
18•gaws•2d ago•0 comments

Mercurial, 20 years and counting: how are we still alive and kicking? [video]

https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/AGWUVH-mercurial-aint-you-dead-yet/
152•ibobev•2d ago•130 comments

VoIP brings back old-fashioned pay phones to rural Vermont (2025)

https://spectrum.ieee.org/payphone-voip
105•bookofjoe•4h ago•28 comments

Magical Realism: “Northern Exposure” 25 Years Later (2015)

https://www.rogerebert.com/streaming/magical-realism-nothern-exposure-25-years-later
60•walterbell•1d ago•26 comments

Show HN: Semble – Code search for agents that uses 98% fewer tokens than grep

https://github.com/MinishLab/semble
134•Bibabomas•8h ago•37 comments

New Nightmare Just Dropped: '3D' Animated Ads on Trucks in Traffic

https://www.thedrive.com/news/new-nightmare-just-dropped-3d-animated-ads-on-trucks-in-traffic
72•cf100clunk•1d ago•30 comments

CUDA Books

https://github.com/alternbits/awesome-cuda-books
116•dariubs•11h ago•23 comments

I don't think AI will make your processes go faster

https://frederickvanbrabant.com/blog/2026-05-15-i-dont-think-ai-will-make-your-processes-go-faster/
473•TheEdonian•12h ago•339 comments

Hindenburg’s Smoking Room

https://www.airships.net/hindenburg-smoking-room/
146•crescit_eundo•3d ago•92 comments

Prolog Basics Explained with Pokémon

https://unplannedobsolescence.com/blog/prolog-basics-pokemon/
200•birdculture•2d ago•32 comments

High-Entropy Alloy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-entropy_alloy
102•leonidasrup•3d ago•22 comments

Trials on veterans suggest ibogaine could provide a new treatment for PTSD

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260514-how-hallucinogenic-ibogaine-helps-veterans-overcome-ptsd
75•bushwart•12h ago•79 comments

The occasional ECONNRESET

https://movq.de/blog/postings/2026-05-05/1/POSTING-en.html
87•zdw•7h ago•20 comments

Tesla Solar Roof is on life support as it pivot to panels

https://electrek.co/2026/05/14/tesla-solar-roof-promise-vs-reality-pivot-panels/
141•celsoazevedo•20h ago•147 comments

Schanuel's Conjecture and the Semantics of Triton's FPSan

https://cp4space.hatsya.com/2026/05/03/schanuels-conjecture-and-the-semantics-of-fpsan/
19•c1ccccc1•1d ago•3 comments

Native all the way, until you need text

https://justsitandgrin.im/posts/native-all-the-way-until-you-need-text/
375•dive•12h ago•251 comments

Mozilla to UK regulators: VPNs are essential privacy and security tools

https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2026/05/15/mozilla-to-uk-regulators-vpns-are-essential-privacy...
623•WithinReason•18h ago•264 comments

AI is a technology not a product

https://daringfireball.net/2026/05/ai_is_technology_not_a_product
304•ch_sm•11h ago•123 comments

Colossus: The Forbin Project

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colossus:_The_Forbin_Project
211•doener•3d ago•80 comments

Multi-Species Canopy Latrines in Costa Rican Cloud Forests

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.72964
39•PaulHoule•3d ago•5 comments

Apple Silicon costs more than OpenRouter

https://www.williamangel.net/blog/2026/05/17/offline-llm-energy-use.html
291•datadrivenangel•12h ago•246 comments

A nicer voltmeter clock

https://lcamtuf.substack.com/p/a-nicer-voltmeter-clock
308•surprisetalk•1d ago•41 comments
Open in hackernews

An AI Hate Wave Is Here

https://www.axios.com/2026/05/17/ai-backlash-polling-sentiment
58•karakoram•2h ago

Comments

karakoram•2h ago
https://archive.md/sgGST
saez•2h ago
I think it’s interesting that AI is in itself compressing the length of time it takes to move through its phases to reach maturity. It’s a lot faster than for example the dotcom phase. Humans don’t much like change, and fast change worries them even more. The dotcom bubble didn’t really threaten jobs in the same way that the AI shift is. It’s closer to the industrial revolution / the industrial loom where people lost their jobs in waves. It’s going to be interesting to see if we end up with another Luddite push back.
10xDev•2h ago
The tech industry is just eating itself. Other fields seem nowhere near as impacted.
Imustaskforhelp•2h ago
Artists for one are impacted by AI, teachers are impacted too combined with the whole education system and the job market is really weird in all industries not just tech because all of these factors combined with all others

One can argue that hard labour is the one which isn't impacted but even those dont pay enough to break your body completely over unless you own your business, and even then, to say that AI/Robotics companies are definitely going to or are already trying to position themselves here too.

My point is that a lot of industries feel unsafe right now because of AI, but its just that tech has the most direct impact.

AussieWog93•1h ago
I've personally used Codex to reconcile financial data, and met a guy who basically built his own AI inference engine to help him fight a custody battle for his daughter (semantic search over gigabytes of documents).

I'm not saying lawyers and accountants are going to all be out of a job (at the end of the day, they do more than just comb over documents to find the needle in the haystack), but a lot of the manual grunt work can be automated there too.

reactordev•47m ago
This. AI is augmenting normal work and eating engineering/security/research work alive. Eventually it will eat normal work. We'll be prompting no matter the role.
bigstrat2003•30m ago
I would say there's basically zero chance lawyers go out of a job. As soon as it looks like lawyers will be replaced by AI, the people who run the government (who are lawyers!) will pass laws to make it illegal to cut the human out of the loop.
bjt•18m ago
There are licensing laws already protecting the lawyers whose names appear on motions and briefs, but not much protection for the junior lawyers who will be impacted most. Big law, like the fancy consultancies, was historically built like a pyramid, with an army of 1st-3rd year associates doing due diligence and document reviews. The bottom was cut out of that in the 2000s by offshoring and automation. AI is contributing to another wave, but not dropping off a cliff.

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/IHLIDXUSTPLEGA

yodsanklai•13m ago
Gemini helped me a lot for my tax return. It actually did a better job than Deloitte, it found several mistakes in previous returns they filled for me.
TomJansen•1h ago
I agree partly with your comment, but I want to add this perspective:

The dot-com era treatened and killed many jobs in banking (bank tellers and such). AI is now doing the same, but now it is threatening the jobs of consultants.

throwaway27448•52m ago
Luddite would imply people are burning data centers down to fight back. I don't think we're quite there yet.
happytoexplain•48m ago
Sure, but sentiment is harder to compare. People can't just go burn down a data center so simply. I think if "AI" was just a machine in the field outside, people would be destroying it.
Avicebron•2h ago
It's not AI. Like the layoffs AI is a convenient scapegoat for the economy creaking to a halt, real world income across most sectors won't buy a house in the state where the job is. It's hate, but it's only "against AI" because AI is being trotted out why people can't get their first home until they are 50 if they are lucky..
Manuel_D•1h ago
This seems to be a problem limited to specific metros. On the whole, Gen Z is more likely than millennials to be a homeowner at their age. Millennials in turn were more likely than Gen-X to own a home when Boomers were at that age. The idea that living standards and financial milestones have gone down for more recent generations doesn't seem to bear out, this Economist piece digs into detail: https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2024/04/16/g...

Hopefully non-logged in users can at lease see the income-by-age graph: https://www.economist.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=480,quality=10...

Avicebron•50m ago
I thought that was nicely rebutted years ago..

https://prospect.org/2024/05/14/2024-05-14-trendy-nonsense-g...

superkuh•1h ago
Right. It's not AI. It's the corporations behavior in relation to AI. But most people have no experience or interaction with AI outside of corporate services or AI features in things that shouldn't have AI or make it worse (like phone support). So in their lived experience all AI sucks and you can't blame 'em for that perception.

But the real villains here are the same as ever, the most dangerous non-human persons: corporate persons.

wilg•53m ago
Fortunately the complaints about the economy and homeownership are also just folk wisdom that doesn't really reflect reality https://www.cnbc.com/2024/09/05/how-gen-z-outpaces-past-gene...

The economy, real wages, etc are basically higher than ever (despite idiot Trump's best efforts).

People are mad because being mad is fun and we're all on being mad machines 24/7.

happytoexplain•50m ago
This has nothing to do with reality, where reality means "what people have", rather than "the economy".
wilg•44m ago
"What people have" is robustly measured, well-understood, and pretty much all available evidence suggests that people (at least in the US and developed countries) are doing better than ever on most important metrics. But it is not as seductive as "everything is terrible"!
xyzsparetimexyz•21m ago
Home ownership being one of them? What about % of people turning to sex work (either in person or online) for income?
edgyquant•19m ago
You are out of touch with reality
happytoexplain•10m ago
Sorry to sound harsh, but you are out of touch. Many social metrics are very complex objectively and are not accounted for by "robust measuring", and this is the biggest example there ever was. Data is king where it can describe reality - but the elephant in the room is that data can't describe reality in some very high-profile societal contexts, and pretending it can is dangerous with a capital D.
wilg•5m ago
What are you relying on if not information about reality?
reactordev•50m ago
Where are you getting your numbers from because the stock market has ceased to be linked to reality for the last decade. Trump fired the stats and numbers office. The only numbers we have are "trust me" numbers which are completely false. Most people would agree that the economy has ground to a halt and everyone I know complains about the gas prices and grocery prices. The reality is there are a lot of people out of work that aren't factored into unemployment numbers because we can't accurately calculate unemployment numbers anymore.
wilg•44m ago
Whether most people agree is irrelevant to whether it's right. You can look at all kinds of numbers which are not the stock market to determine how well people are doing and whether things are getting better or worse. Your conspiracy theories about unemployment numbers are wrong.
edgyquant•18m ago
The job market is objectively terrible, groceries are insanely expensive and people can’t afford to buy homes until they’re 50. Your attempts at gaslighting aren’t going to work anymore buddy
epistasis•36m ago
I think that the creepiness of the tech CEOs that show up in media has a ton to do with this too, as they seem like cartoonish villians.

Alex Karp, in particular, has some of the most absolutely horrifying clips of his TV appearances circulating all over video social media. But Musk has broader reach, and is even more oblivious and has tied himself to someone who he himself accused of pedophilia.

Andreesen, Thiel, Sam Altman, and the above are great at raising valuations for investors but they are doing it incredibly stupidly in a way that leads to massive backlash. California is voting for a billionaire tax this year, and I think that these tech CEOs only have themselves to blame for the backlash they are causing.

ElProlactin•31m ago
It might not be your intention, but your comment seems to imply that the problem here is more image than substance.

The problem isn't that these people are simply inarticulate and incapable of expressing their views in ways that appeal to people. It's that their views are unappealing (if not downright objectionable) to most people.

epistasis•18m ago
I agree fully with your second paragraph. But regardless of what the core ideas are, they way they have been presented has been abominable, and the politics is judged on the presentation, because the US media largely presents these words unfiltered and without context and completely along the lines of the message that the US tech CEOs want to present.
xboxnolifes•12m ago
It's both. A view people do not like, but are unaware of, is one they are not mad about.
munificent•7m ago
Right on.

It's a sign of how disempowered the populace is that these selfish ghouls don't even feel the need to pretend to be decent functioning adults anymore. Because, why bother? What is anyone gonna do about it?

gpt5•32m ago
I spent some time thinking about the social response, and my take it:

1. The public response resembles the stages of grief, and people are fluctuating between denial (AI isn't really that smart) and anger (AI is horrible).

2. Your perception of something tend to be shaped by the sum of your experiences with it, and a lot of the exposure to AI is via fake, scams, bots, and low efforts content (AI slop).

3. I think that the fear of losing your job and your life's stability is there, but it's not yet as common as it should be in the general public. I expect that to be the main driver of AI hate, and that will be a lot fiercer than the current hate, and could lead to a civil war or worse. Depending on AI progression.

4. There is also a lot of tribalism involved. We live in a polarized society, and many people adapt their opinions to the opinion of the group they identify with. That itself drives anger towards AI, as it is part of the greater cause.

crooked-v•29m ago
I have to wonder sometimes if the people of the US will ever realize that their housing shortages are self-inflicted. It seems like a massive number of people have somehow been hypnotized into thinking that building more homes increases home prices.
xyzsparetimexyz•23m ago
Its not self inflicted. It does have many causes, zoning being one of them, but the reluctance to build a they do in eg China is a problem
LPisGood•20m ago
Reluctance to build makes it a self inflicted problem, no?
crooked-v•19m ago
It is absolutely self-inflicted. Most major US cities made the choice to massively limit dense housing construction through zoning and permitting in the 70s-80s, and then shifted into complete amnesia mode and/or active denialism about why population numbers were suddenly growing much faster than housing construction rates.
Danox•5m ago
By coincidence the United States isn’t the only country Great Britain, Ireland, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand have the same problem lack of affordability for people between 18 and 35 who can’t afford to buy a house/home.

Notice that all these countries are English speaking countries? Aside from speaking English they also have lots in common when it comes to the way the economy and society is run. I can only speak for the United States, but I’ve noticed unfordable not luxury apartments going up everywhere and starter homes are not.

gljiva•21m ago
As I understand it, the last sentence stems from the fact that too large of a share of the total wealth is in the hands of those that don't benefit from more homes. AI is what's prioritised by them and what will lead to even smaller flow from the efficient wealth aggregators to those needing homes, once most of the simpler office work becomes obsolete, because, let's be real, average person's reasoning, work-pay efficiency, obedience and meticulousness shouldn't be too hard to surpass with AI in a few years. AI also makes it easier to prevent a change in status quo, while being harmful to the environment and decreasing the share of current-level-of-above-average-quality-user-oriented output.

So yeah, money becoming less of a proxy of "how much someone contributed to society" and more "how much someone contributed to the oligarchs' goals", while those goals are for AI and for peoples' detriment, makes the situation actually about AI.

The technology that helps extract wealth improves, while most of the purely consumer-oriented products are becoming a con and a scam, especially if US companies are involved. The Mirabell's "original" recipe turned the best treat in the world into a generic candy, all are just palm oil + sugar + shrinkflation. There is also non-repairable tech with non-standard components, non-removable batteries, meat gets filled with water, washing machines die right after warranty ends, every digital service is trying to steal data instead of taking only the necessary or at least being transparent about what's taken and why, entertainment like Reddit and streaming services also get worse... AI slop is just another example, but a bit more visible and with a bit more side-effects.

xyzsparetimexyz•18m ago
People also hard slop images
sscaryterry•58m ago
I hate it, yet I'm burning millions of tokens doing shit I previously knew I could do, never had the attention or time to, but now, its like crack...
karim79•9m ago
Are your tokens earning dollars and do they translate into a sustainable form of income? Honest question. I know people who have been laid off and their answer seems to be "use AI make stuff and go forward for the win". All the while actually paying these AI companies to train on their thoughts or slop or whatever it should be called now.

I think there is some mass confusion happening right now (psychosis even) and things are getting scary.

antiquark•48m ago
To put it simply, nobody wants to watch AI slop. This should be obvious!
al_borland•17m ago
That might be obvious, but when a significant number of people don't pay enough attention to know something is AI, or simply watch it anyway and then scroll onto the next clip, so it keeps them engaged rather than bouncing them off the platform, it's still doing it's job of retaining attention to push more ads.

Most people I know will claim to not like AI, but they happily continue to scroll their Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok feed that's full of it. Until they delete the app in protest and go read a book, little will change.

pier25•41m ago
The hate is not about the tech.

It's about the greed, lies, fascism, and basically that AI is making almost everything it touches worse.

voidfunc•41m ago
In our new era of corpo-facism the people will learn to love it or else.

Nothing a couple years of brain washing bots and algorithmic feeds cant fix.

Marciplan•21m ago
I know I can read this through archive.ph (like Bloomberg and Verge) but I’m just not gonna
lousken•20m ago
It was here for quite a while - see Copilot, Recall, Microslop; pizza glue, bard, firefly, ...

Shoving shitty products down customers throat was a bad idea from the start. And now there are even more reasons to hate it

maplethorpe•18m ago
I used to be proud to say I worked in tech. Now I look around me and I'm surrounded by scam artists and grifters. Where did it all go wrong?
happytoexplain•8m ago
Same. I was convinced software was beautiful by previous generations - and as far as I can tell, it was.