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Swiss parliament lifts ban on new nuclear power plants

https://www.bluewin.ch/en/news/switzerland/parliament-lifts-ban-on-new-nuclear-power-plants-32575...
173•leonidasrup•1h ago•75 comments

Emacs 31 Is Around the Corner: The Changes I'm Daily Driving

https://www.rahuljuliato.com/posts/emacs-31-around-the-corner
258•frou_dh•4h ago•116 comments

What was nice about the UI of Windows 2000

https://movq.de/blog/postings/2026-06-16/0/POSTING-en.html
63•npongratz•1h ago•46 comments

I found 10k GitHub repositories distributing Trojan malware

https://orchidfiles.com/github-repositories-distributing-malware/
231•theorchid•4h ago•64 comments

Ubiquiti: Enterprise NAS, Built on ZFS

https://blog.ui.com/article/introducing-enterprise-nas
83•ksec•1h ago•59 comments

A website that lists websites to submit your website to

https://www.submission.directory/
36•azeemkafridi•1h ago•12 comments

Launch HN: TesterArmy (YC P26) – Agents that test web and mobile apps

https://tester.army
23•okwasniewski•1h ago•10 comments

Hospitals and universities repurposing drugs at 90% lower cost

https://www.kcl.ac.uk/news/hospitals-and-universities-repurposing-drugs-at-90-lower-cost
162•giuliomagnifico•5h ago•70 comments

Has W Social switched to closed source?

https://blog.elenarossini.com/w-social-public-institutions-and-the-theater-of-european-digital-so...
117•nemoniac•3h ago•65 comments

Dwarf Fortress in the Browser

https://github.com/Sessa93/remote-df
30•andre9317•3d ago•18 comments

Midjourney Medical

https://www.midjourney.com/medical/blogpost
1125•ricochet11•14h ago•766 comments

Show HN: 10x better performance from the Coding Harnesses with LLM-wiki

https://llm-wiki.net/
12•nvk•52m ago•4 comments

Advanced Compilers: The Self-Guided Online Course

https://www.cs.cornell.edu/courses/cs6120/2025fa/self-guided/
123•ibobev•5h ago•14 comments

TerraPower in Deal with Meta for Eight Natrium 345 MW Advanced Nuclear Plants

https://neutronbytes.com/2026/01/09/terrapower-in-mega-deal-with-meta-for-eight-natrium-345-mw-ad...
14•mpweiher•1h ago•4 comments

How Alberta Eradicated Rats

https://worksinprogress.co/issue/albertas-war-on-rats/
50•tzury•3h ago•37 comments

Modos Color Monitor Pushes E-Paper Displays Further

https://spectrum.ieee.org/modos-e-paper-monitor
87•Vinnl•4h ago•24 comments

Emacs, how it all started (for me)

https://xvw.lol/en/articles/emacs-start.html
33•nukifw•3d ago•5 comments

DeepSeek Introduces Vision

https://chat.deepseek.com/
349•RIshabh235•9h ago•138 comments

Microsoft new Outlook takes 10 seconds to do what Outlook Classic does instantly

https://www.windowslatest.com/2026/06/15/microsofts-new-outlook-takes-10-seconds-to-do-what-outlo...
293•Adam-Hincu•3h ago•207 comments

.gitignore Isn't the Only Way to Ignore Files in Git

https://nelson.cloud/.gitignore-isnt-the-only-way-to-ignore-files-in-git/
106•FergusArgyll•5h ago•27 comments

Local Qwen isn't a worse Opus, it's a different tool

https://blog.alexellis.io/local-ai-is-not-opus/
368•alphabettsy•13h ago•202 comments

We built a persistent agent memory layer on Elasticsearch with 0.89 recall

https://www.elastic.co/search-labs/blog/agent-memory-elasticsearch
65•showmypost•4h ago•23 comments

Migrate from OpenClaw

https://hermes-agent.nousresearch.com/docs/guides/migrate-from-openclaw
67•JumpCrisscross•1h ago•55 comments

Unity vs. Floating Point

https://aras-p.info/blog/2026/06/11/Unity-vs-floating-point/
29•ibobev•3d ago•2 comments

Image Toolbox (T8RIN)

https://github.com/T8RIN/ImageToolbox/
18•unexpectedVCR•3d ago•2 comments

Vinyl Cache and Varnish Cache

https://vinyl-cache.org/organization/on_vinyl_cache_and_varnish_cache.html#org-vinyl-varnish
60•embedding-shape•3d ago•25 comments

Seven Perfect Shuffles Randomize a Deck of Cards. But How Many Sloppy Ones?

https://www.quantamagazine.org/seven-perfect-shuffles-randomize-a-deck-of-cards-but-how-many-slop...
50•layer8•7h ago•29 comments

US holds off blacklisting DeepSeek, more than 100 firms deemed security risks

https://www.reuters.com/world/china/us-holds-off-blacklisting-chinas-deepseek-more-than-100-firms...
506•giuliomagnifico•1d ago•556 comments

Show HN: Gerrymandle - Daily puzzle game where you redraw electoral districts

https://gerrymandle.cc/
13•realmofthemad•1h ago•7 comments

AMD silently removes memory encryption from consumer Ryzen CPUs

https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/amd-silently-removes-memory-encryption-from-consu...
333•lompad•8h ago•161 comments
Open in hackernews

Ubiquiti: Enterprise NAS, Built on ZFS

https://blog.ui.com/article/introducing-enterprise-nas
80•ksec•1h ago

Comments

exabrial•1h ago
Ubiquiti's biggest feature is no monthly recurring cost. I really hope they continue the streak on products like this. Seems like anything else bought up these days is switched to an MRR model with no vision into the long term viability.
DataDynamo•1h ago
*yet

They will at some point just cash out.

revnode•47m ago
They've been at this for a while. They do have offerings you subscribe for and pay monthly. They have also consistently offered an option for each of those offerings to bring your own or self host. They've earned my trust.
softfalcon•22m ago
I tend to agree with you.

In my opinion, as long as the majority of their profits come from people continuing to buy the self-host devices, it is fairly unlikely they'll ever stop offering those devices. Why change a working business model?

Yes, subscription models are enticing for that recurring revenue... number must go up, right? /s

If a majority of your sales are not in subscription products though, I think it would be foolish for a business to blow off its own leg trying to chase that particular dragon.

Then again... businesses have made dumber calls in the past out of nowhere...

roamerz•13m ago
>>they’ve earned my trust

Boy I hope Broadcom didn’t hear that…

qurren•37m ago
I just wish they would put better processors in their stuff. Is this yet another NAS powered by an ARM Cortex?
hannesfur•30m ago
It says 8 Arm Neoverse N2 cores in the blog post. So not directly ARM Cortex, derived from ARM Cortex-X3 but same family as NVIDIA Grace, Google Axion and AWS Graviton4.
softfalcon•26m ago
I have heard others say the same as you about Ubiquiti devices. I genuinely curious what bottlenecks you've hit.

I've only been using Ubiquiti as a pro-sumer, but it has held up well for my use case of Plex and little game servers.

I use a Synology NAS for my storage though, which is a slightly beefier mobile AMD chipset.

I'd be very interested to know what I should and shouldn't expect from my ARM based network stack though!

qurren•13m ago
> I genuinely curious what bottlenecks you've hit.

1. My UDM Pro absolutely chokes and stalls with intrusion detection enabled on the firewall and 8 cameras connected. Network goes down, cameras disconnect, devices disconnect from Wi-Fi every time a car drives past a camera due to AI features triggering, etc.

3. The UNAS 8 I don't own but I believe it would struggle with >1Gbps links and encryption enabled

sussexby•20m ago
It's based on Neoverse N2 which in our other platforms (e.g., ENVR Core, UDM Beast, EF Core) has contributed to vast improvements in performance versus ARM Cortex.
tristor•1h ago
I am highly interested in this, especially if it works well with Time Machine to do backups over the network. I've got a fully 10GbE + WiFi 7 network w/ Ubiquiti gear already, would love to ditch my janky DIY NAS setup for something that is integrated with the rest and could potentially give me a better backup setup for my photography as well as enough storage to act as a media server.
fragmede•1h ago
Wireless Time Machine backup works until one day, Time Machine decides to shit the bed. Do not trust it. Invest in a different backup solution if your data is at all important to you. Something like Arq or Backblaze or tarsnap.
tristor•1h ago
I use the 3-2-1 strategy for backups. I keep one copy off-site by using cloud backups, currently I primarily use Backblaze for that purpose but am considering alternatives for several reasons. I keep a second copy on an external SSD via Time Machine, and I keep one copy on-device. I'd like to use network Time Machine to get rid of the inconvenience of having a bunch of USB external SSDs floating around, especially since none of them are large enough to backup my entire drive if I get close to filling it.

I appreciate the perspective, I definitely take backups seriously for my photography.

oarsinsync•34m ago
I think a combination of:

1/ ZFS datasets with hourly (or daily) snapshots

2/ Samba with vfs_fruit

Gives the peace of mind that even when the sparsebundle shits the bed, you can rollback to a suitable snapshot and only lose a small period of backups, rather than having to lose the entire history and start again from scratch.

(I say when, not if, through considerable experience over the last 15 years that it will always, inevitably, shit the bed.)

swrobel•1h ago
Did we decide ZFS is good after all this time?
AdmiralAsshat•1h ago
Who said it was bad? I thought we were all pretty much in agreement that it was good, and the only thing holding it back from wider adoption into e.g. the Linux kernel was the poison-pill of Oracle's ownership and licensing.
natebc•1h ago
another thing holding it back is the threat of a lawsuit from Netapp.

source: used to work for a storage vendor that was marketing a NAS based on ZFS and got credible threats from Netapp to the point that we sought a partnership with Oracle that included indemnification under Oracles settlement with Netapp.

smartbit•58m ago
only threats, no court cases or journalist writing about ZFS indemnification? IOW please provide links to credible sources.
natebc•41m ago
sorry, don't have a link to the CEO telling us that we were signing a partnership with oracle that included the indemnification.

I was just a lowly support engineer so not privy to all the legal details that the executives were dealing with. I too had to just take them at their word.

ETA: I searched a bit. Here's a link

https://www.enterprisestorageforum.com/networking/netapp-thr...

Maybe threats were enough? I certainly wouldn't want to test it myself.

evanjrowley•1h ago
I've never been a fan of Ubiquiti's proprietary solutions, but this might actually be one product that I can be enthusiastic about.
cassianoleal•1h ago
I've recently been convinced to implement a Unifi stack for my home network. I got a Cloud Gateway, a 10G switch and a couple WiFi APs.

The Cloud Gateway will be sold or given away. It's utter crap. I'm now building an OpenWRT container on IncusOS as my Internet gateway/router.

The switch is meh. It's easy to admin, which is nice - though I'm having to run UnifiOS on another container on said IncusOS.

The APs are fine. Decent power and the central administration with the switch is actually quite nice.

If I knew everything I know now, I wouldn't have bought any of those but they will do for now.

robinvdvleuten•52m ago
What do you know now then?
cassianoleal•44m ago
See the answer I gave to the sibling comment.
mohaine•51m ago
I love by Dream Machine Pro. Seems to just work and keep everything up to date. I have it running my security cameras as well and it has been pretty much bullet proof.

What needs do you have for a router that the Cloud Gateway is missing or is bad at? A PiHole equivalent is about all I can think I'm missing.

cassianoleal
annoyingnoob•1h ago
Looks interesting, but likely lacks FIPS support which makes it an issue for companies that work with the government.
throw0101c•1h ago
Maybe worth noting that TrueNAS added FIPS in 2024:

* https://www.truenas.com/blog/truenas-security-in-2024/

stableappendix•25m ago
FIPS mode is the greatest
greggsy•59m ago
Not really deal breaker for most customers
SideburnsOfDoom•54m ago
> with ... no firmware restrictions on drive models, organizations can scale capacity without being restricted by proprietary hardware ecosystems.

This looks like a dig at Synology, who do this.

wccrawford•12m ago
They did it for a very short time. The community backlash was so bad that they recanted immediately.

I'm not at all surprised that Ubiquiti is getting ahead of that and promising it from the start.

kyrra•54m ago
Store page: https://store.ui.com/us/en/category/network-storage/products...

$3999

mpeg•36m ago
That seems reasonable, I don't buy NAS for datacenters (just run a modest 80tb one for my home lab) but equivalent rackmount 16-bay ones from other vendors would be more expensive (maybe $5k-6k?) and with less polish.
toomuchtodo•28m ago
Pays for itself in ~40 months of not paying $100/month for streaming services.

Edit: Drives are not included :(

ericd•13m ago
The drives are the expensive part, though - 16x24TB HDDs adds another $11k.
AbsurdCensor•10m ago
That's without storage. They are charging $750 each for 24tb HDD's, so filling it up brings that cost to $16k. Only need to run it for 13+ years and have zero HDD failures in that time, and then pay for all the media you are going to load it up with. Not exactly sure this would be cheaper or easier than just paying for streaming services and cancelling them when you don't need them.
toomuchtodo•7m ago
topspin•45m ago
Is this some xBSD or UniFi OS (debian) with ZFSoL? Can't tell from what they've written. 8C+64GB: enough for essential block+file service, but not for dedup and other demanding ZFS features. Also, doesn't appear the controller is redundant; just the power supplies. iSCSI is headlined; nice they didn't limit this to file. No mention of object store, or NVMe-oF.

Seems like a nice, basic, affordable platform for workgroup/SME stuff. Not NetApp/Pure Storage "enterprise" grade though.

BadBadJellyBean•37m ago
Could be Linux as well since ZFS on Linux is pretty good now. It would fit in with their other devices which are also Linux based AFAIK.
nyrikki•15m ago
They seem to follow the anti-corruption layer model for most of their offerings, so I would expect they use what ever OS is best supported by the upstream.

It is a large reason they can mitigate vendor risk IMHO, offering different tiers of switches as an example without being held hostage by on particular switch IC vendor like many brands.

I do wish someone would take up comstar though, netapp bought and killed several jbod lines etc… to kill it before Oracle bought Sun and also killed it to protect their enterprise storage offerings.

NVMe-oF may be a possibility because there are FPGA IP vendors but without comstar there are some challenges IMHO.

speed_spread•41m ago
I'm reminded of the Sun Fire X4500 "Thumper" for which ZFS was originally developed. 48 SATA drives packed in a slide-out rack: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zQ5RLAyA7w
elevation•35m ago
I'm glad to see UBNT in this space.

I've always used ZFS because it's vastly superior to other options. When I see storage companies building without fault tolerance, or without a merkle tree (so that you can backup deltas efficiently without having to recompute them) it's a sign their marketing team has more influence over the company than their engineers.

Sadly, the few ZFS COTS options have been somewhat underpowered. QNAP supports ZFS filesystems, but their backup configuration won't let you arrange for a nas to pull from the source (instead of the source doing a push.) You can still pull it off by scheduling your own cron job, but this somewhat defeats the purpose of paying extra for a vendor solution.

UBNT is still supporting my 15 year old edgerouters with security updates, and their interface is clean and usable for anyone with basic network experience. And their video surveillance solutions are unusual in that they allow you to keep your footage entirely onsite and offline, an uncommon level of privacy. If they can bring the same polish to their storage solutions, I'll be using these new products for a long time.

sussexby•18m ago
The same is true for our AI processing on the cameras. This is entirely local and private. You can even air gap the UniFi Protect system from the Internet and it'll operate fine.
bhouston•23m ago
> "Dual 25 Gigabit SFP28 ports and redundant power supplies for resilience"

Can you actually saturate the links with the spinning drives?

I've had the hardest time making my TrueNAS ZFS server fast when it was filled with HDD spinning disks. I initially also had 12 of them trying to get maximum speed. I have 128GB RAM and a 10G ethernet connection. I tried all types of optimizations like L2ARC via NVMe, etc, and it wasn't very effective and just too much time spent tweaking and testing.

Instead I just threw up my hands and replaced all the spinning disks with NVMe drives for the data I actually shared (8x 4TB NVMe drives.) And now it very usable and no need for LRArc, etc. Random or streaming access is equally fast.

Best choice I made. Now I did do this over a year ago so I skipped the NVMe price inflation.

I still keep 4 spinning disks but it is for archival data that I expect to never access unless something bad happens. It is slow and I use it like a tape drive.

bakies•17m ago
I really want a object store in my storage appliance :(

Would be nice to have a CSI, but I can probably just use democratic-csi like I already do on my homemade ZFS based storage appliance.

jjcm•9m ago
What is the current state of ZFS? I know it had some licensing issues traditionally, despite it being a delight to use every time I've tried it. Is it back?
varenc•1h ago
I have a UNAS-Pro, which runs the same Unifi Drive software as this, and it works great for Time Machine backups. Dead simple.

I also have tons of other Ubiquiti gear, and honestly there's not a ton of synergy between the NAS and everything else. It's a great NAS though. And also, it's only a NAS. It's not an application server like a Synology NAS.

throw0101c•56m ago
Oracle and NetApp 'mutually dismissed' in 2010:

* https://www.theregister.com/off-prem/2010/09/09/oracle-and-n...

* https://www.computerworld.com/article/1585889/opinion-patent...

NetApp originally sued then-independent Sun in 2007, and Sun counter-sued.

Free/TrueNAS/iXsystems has been offering ZFS-based solutions for many years now, and I haven't heard NetApp going after them:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TrueNAS

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IXsystems

natebc•39m ago
I remember all this too. The time period that I was in this scene was AFTER 2010 though so who knows. As mentioned in response to the sibling "credible sources" bro, I was just a lowly support engineer so i had to trust that the CEO wasn't lying to us about all this.

Maybe he was ... they do that sometimes.

I looked around a little. the C&D from Netapp was in ~July 2010 and the partnership and product with Oracle in the Fall (Around the cease fire) and we continued with that (via the Oracle Partnership) through 2011-2015 when the company ran out of cash and laid us all off.

bzmrgonz•11m ago
Do we add this corp. body count to Oracle then? I'm pretty sure that Oracle partnership wasn't cheap.
•
44m ago
IPv6 support is basic at best. The zone-based firewall is very prescriptive and limited. ACL stuff is not great. To increase the MTU of the physical interface connected to the ISP I would need to hack a systemd unit that did it on boot (I either need it at 1508 so the PPPoE interface uses 1500, or I need to MSS clamp it and have it effectively reduced to 1492). Initial configuration requires the device to be connected to the Internet.

There were a few other niggles, and in the end I just found it easier to do what I need on OpenWRT.

m-s-y•23m ago
just genuinely curious about your MTU use case and why this is required...?
SparkyMcUnicorn•44m ago
I really like the DM Pro and have it deployed to an office of about 50 people. It's a pretty no-fuss solution and fairly simple to manage.

For my personal setup, I decided to go with OPNSense and I couldn't be happier. Much more control, at the cost of being a little more hands on.

I think the best (rough) comparison here is MacOS vs Linux (or more accurately in this case, FreeBSD).

threecheese•44m ago
What were your constraints and how were they not met? Looking to buy the same, Dream Machine specifically.
mpeg•21m ago
I went with eero and really wish I'd gone with unifi

Apart from the shitty software and basic features either missing or locked behind a monthly cost, the network itself is not bad at all, I get 600-700mbps on wifi throughout the house and have my servers wired on 2.5gbe

But the one thing I really thought I was buying into by choosing an amazon brand was ease when it came to buying upgrades, and yet I ended up having to buy extra hardware (like the wired gateway) from ebay and sellers in the US as amazon does not sell their own hardware everywhere

AbsurdCensor•9m ago
I started with Unifi and it's been pretty great overall. I've integrated all the cameras into Home Assistant, it's all local, and can bridge with HomeBridge so it all shows up and plays nicely with HomeKit as well. Rock solid and very few complaints.
wccrawford•7m ago
I've had standalone routers, Eero Pro, Google Wifi, TP Link Deco, TP Link Omada, and probably some I'm forgetting. They all had something that just enraged me.

I finally bought a Unifi and I'm very happy with it so far, 6 months in. There's a few things I haven't tried, like rebooting it while it doesn't have an internet connection (I'm looking at you, Deco!), but so far my big complaints are that it's opinionated about the initial setup, and setting up a static IP for a device that isn't connected yet is a serious PITA. I had devices on my old system that I didn't want to have to change IPs (because the computers talk to each other) and that was not easy. If I had to do it again, I'd probably just let it do what it wants and deal with changing all those configs to the new IPs.

FWIW, I just have it as a router, and my Wifi is still some of my expensive standalone Asus wifi routers acting as just access points. I didn't see a point in replacing them when they were working great as APs.

MiracleRabbit•58m ago
They are getting better.

After a long time they introduced ONVIF into their camera products which basically opened it to everyone.

Streaming services can change their catalog at any time. Bits stored on my drives remain mine forever, at my cost of course. Any premium between self storage and streaming is a premium to defend against enshittification [1] in this context.

(i store PBs of data, ymmv)

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enshittification