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OpenRouter raises $113M Series B

https://openrouter.ai/announcements/series-b
126•freeCandy•1h ago•54 comments

Zig ELF Linker Improvements Devlog

https://ziglang.org/devlog/2026/#2026-05-30
59•kristoff_it•1h ago•9 comments

Voxel Space

https://s-macke.github.io/VoxelSpace/
171•davikr•4h ago•37 comments

Microcode inside the Intel 8087 floating-point chip: register exchange

https://www.righto.com/2026/05/microcode-inside-intel-8087-floating.html
28•pwg•1h ago•5 comments

Openrsync: An implementation of rsync, by the OpenBSD team

https://github.com/kristapsdz/openrsync
236•sph•7h ago•106 comments

Werner Herzog in conversation with Paul Cronin (2014)

https://fsgworkinprogress.com/2014/09/26/insignificant-bullets-evil-poachers-and-l-a-culture/
37•Michelangelo11•2h ago•14 comments

Pandoc Templates

https://pandoc-templates.org/
293•ankitg12•8h ago•42 comments

Hormuz crisis side effect: a sharp rise in container shipping rates

https://www.lloydslist.com/LL1157327/Hormuz-crisis-side-effect-a-sharp-rise-in-container-shipping...
5•mooreds•32m ago•0 comments

Let's talk about EU Sovereignty (2025)

https://musings.martyn.berlin/lets-talk-about-eu-sovereignty
8•mooreds•1h ago•2 comments

Navier-Stokes fluid simulation explained with Godot game engine

https://myzopotamia.dev/navier-stokes-fluid-simulation-explained-with-godot
122•myzek•3d ago•21 comments

It Takes Two Neurons to Ride a Bicycle

https://fermatslibrary.com/s/it-takes-two-neurons-to-ride-a-bicycle#email-newsletter
58•malshe•4d ago•16 comments

Downdetector and Speedtest sold to Accenture for $1.2B

https://www.theverge.com/tech/889234/downdetector-ookla-speedtest-sold-accenture
92•Garbage•2h ago•50 comments

IXI's autofocusing lenses are almost ready to replace multifocal glasses

https://www.engadget.com/wearables/ixis-autofocusing-lenses-multifocal-glasses-ces-2026-212608427...
109•amichail•2d ago•46 comments

Zig: Build System Reworked

https://ziglang.org/devlog/2026/#2026-05-26
284•tosh•10h ago•179 comments

Show HN: Helios – what plug-in solar could generate for any address in Britain

https://helios.southlondonscientific.com/
85•ruaraidh•7h ago•29 comments

What Happened to the Locusts?

https://explosion-scratch.github.io/locusts/
152•explosion-s•4d ago•32 comments

SQLite is all you need for durable workflows

https://obeli.sk/blog/sqlite-is-all-you-need-for-durable-workflows/
645•tomasol•1d ago•343 comments

Testing the WWI concrete ships and WWII concrete barges

https://thecretefleet.com/blog/f/testing-the-wwi-concrete-ships-and-wwii-concrete-barges
32•surprisetalk•1d ago•9 comments

Stateless Actors

https://www.massicotte.org/stateless-actors/
8•frizlab•1d ago•1 comments

Memory decline after menopause linked to loss of estrogen production in brain

https://news.northwestern.edu/stories/2026/05/memory-decline-after-menopause-linked-to-loss-of-es...
105•gmays•4h ago•46 comments

White House's Aliens.gov Site Brags That ICE Arrested More Than 700 US Citizens

https://www.wired.com/story/white-house-aliens-gov-us-citizens-arrested/
24•hydrolox•36m ago•1 comments

A Probabilistic Algorithm for Repairing All Roads in Lebanon via Papal Visits (2025)

https://sigbovik.org/2026/proceedings.pdf#%5B%7B%22num%22%3A13%2C%22gen%22%3A0%7D%2C%7B%22name%22...
64•kmstout•3h ago•3 comments

Notes from the Mistral AI Now Summit

https://koenvangilst.nl/lab/mistral-ai-now-summit
437•vnglst•1d ago•191 comments

Ask HN: What Is the State of App Development in 2026?

43•karakoram•3h ago•29 comments

MCP is dead?

https://www.quandri.io/engineering-blog/mcp-is-dead
359•nadis•19h ago•342 comments

Macsurf, "modern" web browser for macOS 9

https://github.com/mplsllc/macsurf
92•gattilorenz•11h ago•21 comments

Snowboard Kids 2 is 100% Decompiled

https://blog.chrislewis.au/snowboard-kids-2-is-100-decompiled/
266•GaggiX•3d ago•101 comments

The Last Technical Interview

https://steve-yegge.medium.com/the-last-technical-interview-bc13ddcf4564
212•headalgorithm•22h ago•202 comments

Print with dozens of colors: Our new open-source ColorMix for PrusaSlicer

https://blog.prusa3d.com/our-new-open-source-colormix-model-in-prusaslicer-and-easyprint_136079/
210•rented_mule•4d ago•67 comments

The dead economy theory

https://www.owenmcgrann.com/p/the-dead-economy-theory
1204•WillDaSilva•1d ago•1321 comments
Open in hackernews

OpenRouter raises $113M Series B

https://openrouter.ai/announcements/series-b
119•freeCandy•1h ago

Comments

minimaxir•1h ago
As someone who uses OpenRouter extensively (and wrote an unintentional adjacent PR piece a few days ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48317294 ), it's definitely the best way to try out new models without fiddling with each providers distinct APIs which is becoming a recurring concern as of late.

That said, I don't understand the people who use something a full agentic backbone with expensive models like Claude Opus with OpenRouter because that 5% surcharge is meaningful at that level of cost instead of going with the source API providers. But people are clearly doing it, and it's pure revenue.

nadermx•57m ago
Convenience has a markup
bwfan123•53m ago
There is a lot of dumb token spend right now - tokenmaxing and such. Economic cost of token is not being evaluated carefully because there is fomo and no one wants to be left behind. But folks are waking up to it, and dumb token spending is not sustainable and will revert.
furyofantares•53m ago
Better uptime? Given it will be routed to one of Anthropic, Amazon Bedrock, Claude Platform on AWS, Google Vertex (Europe) or Google Vertex
enraged_camel•23m ago
>> it's definitely the best way to try out new models without fiddling with each providers distinct APIs which is becoming a recurring concern as of late

Why not... Cursor?

frankest•58m ago
Using Tinfoil, Replicate, Cerebras, and OpenRouter. Competition is good.
simonw•55m ago
It took me quite a while to come round to OpenRouter. Originally I didn't understand why anyone would put a proxy between them and an LLM, but it actually adds some quite significant value:

1. By far the lowest friction way to support and try out all the models.

2. They offer billing caps! Most model providers still don't do this [EDIT: maybe they do, see reply comment], but if you're going to run anything in public it's very useful to have hard limits so it doesn't cost you $1m overnight because someone started abusing it.

3. Their rankings are one of the more interesting signals for which models are popular, despite their flaws (most OpenAI and Anthropic users don't go via OpenRouter, it's currently not possible to tell the difference between many users switching v.s. one "whale" changing their preferred model)

Given how API costs are becoming meaningful for a lot of companies now, having a provider like OpenRouter to help measure your spend and easily experiment with and switch providers feels like a valuable service.

SilverElfin•50m ago
The biggest benefit is that it creates competition among models. If more people use open weight models or models from other providers, it’ll be harder to ban them. Which is what OpenAI and Anthropic will try to accomplish. OpenAI by lobbying the Trump administration for favorable treatment (see Brockman’s MAGA PAC donations), Anthropic by using religious leaders and nonprofits to push “safety” justifications for difficult regulations.
fontain•47m ago
Out of interest, why OpenRouter over a free option like Cloudflare’s AI gateway or another paid option like Vercel’s — any specific benefit to OpenRouter you’ve found, or just first you used that’s good enough?
simonw•43m ago
I'll be honest, I hadn't clocked that Cloudflare and Vercel were offering equivalent products.

Looks like Vercel even have their own leaderboard: https://vercel.com/ai-gateway/leaderboards/models

Surprising that they have Opus 4.8 and 4.6 listed on the leaderboard but not Opus 4.7.

tom1337•51m ago
Is the Open in OpenRouter the same as in Open AI? I couldn’t find any repository or hosted code. Thought it'd be a open source, self hostable tool with a cloud offering but seems its just the latter?
alecco•33m ago
I assumed they were open source but now that I checked they are not, they say "Open" because they route to third-party open models. Yikes. Another VC crap layer?
bijowo1676•23m ago
tbh anyone can rig up something like openrouter in a few nights with claude code.

its just a proxy

m1keil•10m ago
Open as in single API layer which allows you to swap the model under it.
amazingamazing•49m ago
Too bad api use is like 100x more expensive than subscriptions for the big 3.
willis936•10m ago
Chatbot windows are a waste of time compared to API tools when trying to make stuff.

Subscribing to a vendor locks you in to sudden price swings that the big 3 are happy to do. The market needs lubrication for competition and provider routers offer that.

mmarian•46m ago
An amazing service. I use its 20+ free LLM options to allow completely free usage of LibreOffice AI extension with no signup https://librethinker.com .
bbg2401•12m ago
I'm banned from using the free options. At some point they flagged my account as having engaged in model training against their ToS. This despite my account using around £15 worth of tokens over several months, nearly entirely through BYOK providers.

The handful of times I did try a free model is when I used their chat interface to quickly compare a few open weight models with a single prompt. That's the only usage I can think which could have triggered the block on my account. Even still, what's the point in have the simultaneous chat feature if using it veers so quickly into a ToS violation.

Their support is beyond useless in helping understand the situation. I don't think I managed to speak to anyone other than Tony Bot (or whatever it was named).

Edit:

Total usage over 1 year:

Claude Sonnet 4.6 $8.80

Gemini 3.1 Pro Preview $6.71

Claude Opus 4 $6.19

Claude Opus 4.1 $7.49

Gemini 2.5 Pro $10.06

Claude Sonnet 4.5 $12.74

GPT-5 Codex $2.56

Grok 4 $4.39

Gemini 2.5 Flash Image Preview (Nano Banana) $1.88

GPT-5 $7.30

Others $7.99

Scene_Cast2•43m ago
I was sort of hoping that they were bootstrapped or at least non-VC funded. I'm wary of them introducing consumer-unfriendly revenue-generating schemes.
nkmak•37m ago
OpenRouter’s biggest value to me is reducing switching costs between models. The markup matters at scale, but for exploration and early-stage development, the convenience is hard to beat.
vasco•37m ago
> ... with participation from NVentures (NVIDIA's venture capital arm), ServiceNow Ventures, MongoDB Ventures, Snowflake Ventures, Databricks Ventures ...

Are tech companies FOMOing so hard that they're now all running AI venture arms themselves instead of you know, developing their own products? Except for NVIDIA who needs to keep pumping the bubble I didn't expect the others.

mschuster91•21m ago
> ServiceNow Ventures

Well, at least for them, investing into AI is actually developing their own product. The push to replace "Actually Indians" [1] with LLMs is huge because large Western companies want to save even the pittances they're paying Indian body shops.

[1] for those OOTL: https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/comments/1l3rpow/ac...

throw10920•33m ago
I think that OpenRouter will continue to be very popular while there lots of experimentation in the LLM space, and while the "current favorite" model continues to change between various frontier labs.

After things begin to settle down, we'll probably see a consolidation of both frontier and open-source models - and then OpenRouter will become less useful, because that 5% overhead is well worth it when you want to try 20 models from 10 labs, but harder to stomach when you only need 5 models from 2 providers, and each of those providers has its own API knobs that you can tune to make things even cheaper.

sgt•29m ago
I honestly thought this was some kind of OpenWRT firmware for routers until I clicked the link. "Ahhh, AI. Of course."
croes•28m ago
Aren’t they totally dependent on the good will of the model providers?
vinayaksodar•23m ago
Every tech company now seems to be invested in every AI startup.
weiliddat•15m ago
One thing that OpenRouter makes easy is the ability to manage API keys (mint new ones, expiry/limits per key, etc.) that I wish that other providers would make possible/easier.

So many use cases, like sharing AI/assisted features externally, with the ability to use those features but also limit the fallout if its shared / used for other purposes, without jumping through more fallible hoops like safeguards etc.

zero-dark•9m ago
Congrats to the OpenRouter team for securing this round of funding. The 5% surcharge for their pricing model may not be palatable to enterprises. In fact, the OpenRouter team could be a pivotal part of the enterprise GenAI stack if they can allow configurable, pluggable endpoints for routing directly to enterprise vetted endpoints to 1P/3P LLM APIs. A couple of large companies I’ve worked so far kinda have this system in place, albeit the dev and maintenance cost and of setting up such an “LLM gateway” could be significantly reduced with OpenRouter. I feel that this is largely an ignored, forgotten part of operating GenAI apps at scale.
gertlabs•8m ago
OpenRouter is our primary provider for evaluation data, and we've been really happy with them!

I'm sure they're experiencing growing pains, but a larger model selection (and faster releases for open weights models), would keep us from using other providers. For example, it took much longer than it should have to get Qwen 3.6 ~30B class models released (almost 2 weeks if I recall)

simianwords•7m ago
I like OpenRouter - lets me test out new model quickly and easily. I would still need a good functioning mobile application for it.

I think they should go in this direction: they should make their own Model Agnostic versions of whatever functionalities other AI companies are making. Examples

1. personal chat app

2. the chat app working with their own implementation of memory

3. coding harnesses that are model agnostic

When I think of OpenRouter, I should think of "model agnostic LLM tools".

c-hendricks•14m ago
Huh, Claude Opus is number 4 in number of tokens at 10%, not even in the top 10 in terms of requests, yet is #1 in costs at a whopping 43%!
Aurornis•45m ago
Good points. The easy experimentation factor is helpful for development, though I would gently encourage everyone to migrate to the 1st party APIs for pricing at scale.

OpenRouter is also a good place to find free LLM access with a catch: You should expect that any inputs and outputs are going into someone's training database. Clearly anyone who can pay should be using paid models with privacy protections, but the free models have been great for learning and experimenting. Especially for younger people learning API programming and LLMs who may not have access to a credit card or funds.

bix6•26m ago
It’s interesting all the focus on opt-out from training. Sometimes I worry there is an intentional focus on that so people don’t think about the other ways the company might be profiting off our data. Like I pay for Anthropic and they don’t train on that but are they selling my “anonymized” usage data in some other way?
derefr•13m ago
From what I recall, these companies don't offer any option to opt out of your session transcript data being used (and sold!) for "regular" adtech targeting purposes.
derefr•17m ago
> You should expect that any inputs and outputs are going into someone's training database.

True enough, in theory; but what exactly are you imagining would be a useful-enough signal in the OpenRouter request+response stream, that any company would want their data as training material?

Even a single OpenRouter-API-key-identified subscriber's traffic, may consist of an mixture of traffic from multiple different sessions, under potentially multiple different end-users. (Where, if the subscriber is doing security correctly, then their OpenRouter key lives on a gateway rather than in a frontend app; and so the only IP address / UA / etc OpenRouter sees is that of the gateway itself.)

And the traffic stream may also invoke multiple models, and provide multiple different system prompts for those models; which, while marked in the traffic (i.e. conveyed as part of each request), makes the resulting data much less useful in aggregate, than if it were all training data for one model with one system prompt.

Plus, there are no RLHF signals in OpenRouter data. Even if OpenRouter wanted to build a general model-neutral framework for collecting RLHF-type data, it can't force subscriber apps to do the UI-level stuff necessary to collect it (i.e. the things ChatGPT/Claude do, with "thumbs-down" buttons, A/B tested responses, etc.) Analysis would have to rely on pure transcript-level user sentiment extraction.

derac•15m ago
I recommend nvidia nim for completely free dev access for young people.
a13n•42m ago
Both OpenAI and Anthropic have billing caps… who doesn’t?
totaa•40m ago
Google Vertex
srameshc•29m ago
https://aistudio.google.com/spend ? Monthly spend cap
mips_avatar•18m ago
I spent two hours the other day trying to figure out how to manage spend on gcp, i gave up and used openrouter and cloudflare.
simonw•38m ago
Huh, so they do.

Anthropic: https://support.claude.com/en/articles/8977456-how-do-i-pay-... - you can pre-pay and get a hard cutoff.

OpenAI: https://community.openai.com/t/how-to-set-billing-limits-and... - last time I looked OpenAI had a soft but not hard limit, I guess they fixed that last year.

I remember bugging them both about this last year, I need to update my mental model!

tadfisher•35m ago
Based on experience, Google Cloud. No idea if that translates to Gemini usage billing.
simonw•13m ago
Gemini added prepaid billing and spending caps a few weeks ago: https://twitter.com/OfficialLoganK/status/204451626215244231...
maxloh•40m ago
OpenRouter is merely only a proxy. They also host some open-weight models
simonw•36m ago
I don't think they do. They proxy to a bunch of open-weight model hosts, but I've not seen that they host them themselves.

They don't list themselves on https://openrouter.ai/providers

minimaxir•20m ago
OpenRouter has stealth models that are indicated as "by OpenRouter" but indicate an external provider.

https://openrouter.ai/openrouter/owl-alpha

alecco•36m ago
At the moment for DeepSeek V4 it messes up caching and that's a key pricing feature for V4.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48319827

zorked•32m ago
The way how you manage the caps in OpenRouter is how every metered API provider should do it: keys have limits, and you can change the limits, and you set the limits to refill periodically, and you can create as many keys as you want.
GodelNumbering•21m ago
Another neat thing is, they publish hourly caching states for ALL model/provider combinations. I did some research on it to come up with a provider tiers and found a bunch of open-source 3rd party hosts are simply trash tier https://dirac.run/posts/cache-hit-rates-agents
stymaar•11m ago
And what is their business model?
minimaxir•8m ago
Credit is prepaid at a 5% surcharge.
MangoCoffee•8m ago
middle man? Model provider/hyperscalers -> OpenRouter -> consumers?

coffee farmers -> middle man -> you

behnamoh•8m ago
Commission on API calls extracted from you when you charge your account.