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EU Open Sources Ten-Year Network Development Planning Tools

https://github.com/open-energy-transition/open-tyndp
107•lyoncy•1h ago•25 comments

5k Restaurant Menus, Years 1880-1920

https://pudding.cool/2026/06/menu-collection/
67•xbryanx•1h ago•16 comments

The curious case of the disappearing Polish S (2015)

https://aresluna.org/the-curious-case-of-the-disappearing-polish-s/
92•colinprince•3h ago•24 comments

EU to legislate about Chat Control behind closed doors

https://www.patrick-breyer.de/en/double-threat-to-private-communications-undemocratic-chat-contro...
142•NeutralForest•1h ago•57 comments

Flock cameras track more than your license plate, and they're spreading fast

https://www.engadget.com/2203000/flock-cameras-recording-license-plate/
144•SanjayMehta•1h ago•66 comments

A way to exclude sensitive files issue still open for OpenAI Codex

https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/2847
96•pikseladam•3h ago•71 comments

Do Babies Dream of Baby Sheep?

https://devz.cl/posts/do-babies-dream-of-electric-sheep/
22•DanielVZ•3d ago•9 comments

Michigan bill would bar employers from requiring after-hours coms with workers

https://www.cbsnews.com/detroit/news/workplace-boundaries-act-employees-after-hours/
48•cebert•1h ago•18 comments

Marfa Public Radio Puts You to Sleep

https://www.marfapublicradio.org/podcast/marfa-public-radio-puts-you-to-sleep
341•reaperducer•13h ago•98 comments

California legislature agrees to upload driver's licenses to national database

https://papersplease.org/wp/2026/06/27/california-legislature-agrees-to-upload-drivers-licenses-t...
19•iamnothere•41m ago•6 comments

The MUMPS 76 Primer – anniversary edition

https://github.com/rochus-keller/MUMPS/blob/main/docs/MUMPS_Primer.adoc
29•Rochus•3h ago•12 comments

DLL that was not present in memory despite not being formally unloaded

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20260625-00/?p=112467
77•ibobev•6h ago•30 comments

The origins of the school system aimed to produce independent, critical thinkers

https://www.cbc.ca/radio/ideas/humboldt-education-system-bildung-1.7172093
64•pseudolus•3h ago•23 comments

Google limits Meta's use of its Gemini AI models

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/28/google-limits-metas-use-of-its-gemini-ai-models-ft-reports.html
74•root-parent•2h ago•23 comments

Bringing Swift to the Apple ][

https://yeokhengmeng.com/2026/06/swift-on-apple-ii/
30•LucidLynx•3d ago•2 comments

AMD Strix Halo RDMA Cluster Setup Guide

https://github.com/kyuz0/amd-strix-halo-vllm-toolboxes/blob/main/rdma_cluster/setup_guide.md
203•jakogut•15h ago•60 comments

Anonymous GitHub account mass-dropping undisclosed 0-days

https://github.com/bikini/exploitarium
897•binyu•1d ago•350 comments

Designing a Personal Pebble Watchface

https://www.jonashietala.se/blog/2026/06/26/designing_a_personal_pebble_watchface/
3•lawn•1d ago•0 comments

Bashblog – a single bash script to create blogs

https://github.com/cfenollosa/bashblog
87•ludicrousdispla•11h ago•65 comments

Choosing a Public DNS Resolver

https://evilbit.de/dns-resolver-guide.html
236•pawal•17h ago•102 comments

Wayfinder Router: deterministic routing of queries between local and hosted LLM

https://github.com/itsthelore/wayfinder-router
96•handfuloflight•11h ago•48 comments

Austria Lobbies EU to Host Anthropic After US Access Curbs

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-28/austria-lobbies-eu-to-host-anthropic-after-us-...
76•root-parent•2h ago•66 comments

Show HN: Decomp Academy – Learn to decompile GameCube games into matching C

https://decomp-academy.dev
167•jackpriceburns•14h ago•66 comments

A stray "j" ruined my evening

https://napkins.mtmn.name/posts/stray-jay.html
50•birdculture•4d ago•28 comments

Engineering for Bounded Cognition

https://shapeofthesystem.com/posts/2026/02/03/bounded-cognition
98•supermatt•2d ago•22 comments

WAL-RUS: a Rust Rewrite of WAL-G for PostgreSQL Backups

https://clickhouse.com/blog/walrus-postgres-backups-in-rust
120•saisrirampur•16h ago•15 comments

Regular expressions that work “everywhere”

https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2026/06/23/regex-everywhere/
87•ColinWright•3d ago•34 comments

Space Shuttle Endeavour's 20-story vertical display

https://californiasciencecenter.org/about-us/samuel-oschin-air-and-space-center/go-for-stack
90•uticus•2d ago•18 comments

Turning music into a chore is how I became a musician (2022)

https://the.scapegoat.dev/turning-music-into-a-chore-is-what-made-me-an-artist/
78•herbertl•14h ago•29 comments

Mobile Web Computing Before Smartphones. (University of Liverpool, ~2010) [pdf]

https://cgi.csc.liv.ac.uk/~trp/Teaching_Resources/COMP327/327-Lecture4-MobileWeb.pdf
12•rfmoz•3d ago•3 comments
Open in hackernews

Greece Is Richer. So Why Do So Many Greeks Still Feel Poor?

https://www.dnews.gr/eidhseis/news-in-english/596650/greece-is-richer-so-why-do-so-many-greeks-still-feel-poor
26•theanonymousone•3h ago

Comments

root-parent•2h ago
Same with Brazil or Portugal or Angola. Full of billionaires with poor people.
mlinhares•1h ago
Yeah, its all inequality. Most people are going to be renters forever in my hometown and the government has absolutely no plan to fix it. People will just be pushed farther and farther away from where they work and will have longer and longer commutes because it is impossible to pay to live close to work with the salaries they're making.
bluefirebrand•1h ago
> Most people are going to be renters forever in my hometown and the government has absolutely no plan to fix it

This seems to be the plan basically everywhere though. Yes, some countries still have a ladder for average people to own property and find success, but the global trend seems to be that this possibility is shrinking for the vast majority of people

That's what happens when average people have to compete with real estate conglomerates for housing though

aleph_minus_one•1h ago
> Most people are going to be renters forever in my hometown and the government has absolutely no plan to fix it. People will just be pushed farther and farther away from where they work and will have longer and longer commutes because it is impossible to pay to live close to work with the salaries they're making.

[emphasis mine]

I somewhat disagree: at least during the COVID-19 times the government did have a plan to partially fix it: At that time there were a lot of discussions whether work from home will be there to stay or not.

If it would have stayed, that would have partially solved the problem (not for everybody, but for a substantial subset of people):

Since people can live at places where rent or the price of houses is much lower, companies can pay smaller salaries, but employees (after subtracting the cost of living) still have more money. In other words: both sides get their slice of the pie: employers can decrease salaries while employees still have more money.

Unluckily, when COVID-19 was over, companies decided they basically want people to come back to to office (working from home should be an exception).

This was the central reason why this plan failed.

microgpt•1h ago
Renting itself isn't inherently the problem if you have very strong tenant rights. Imagine renting came with all the rights of owning except the money flowed differently (like a perpetual mortgage) - that'd be pretty okay, actually. It is within the power of a government to enable something like that.
_puk•1h ago
But renting is a problem if there's no asset at the end of it.

Even if rents were capped at half what a mortgage for the same property is, you still are in a position that once the asset of the house is paid off the landlord now has an asset that earns income without labour.

And the inverse.

Regardless of what you earn (to a point, even into higher income brackets), if you do not put it into an asset that can house you, and you stop earning, you cannot live without reducing your overall capital.

So rental means a lack of opportunity to reduce your labour dependent income over time (important as you age), and a reduced ability to weather negative life events.

wqaatwt•1h ago
It can work (and did in some places in Western Europe for a while) if housing stock is mostly state owned and/or communal. Of course that introduces some other issues
microgpt•53m ago
Paying to consume something continually isn't inherently wrong. We do that with food.
samiv•1h ago
There's no paradox here. Distribution of wealth matters. Rich got richer and everyone else didn't. Simple as that.
abirch•1h ago
As Ray Dalio has mentioned, you should measure results on how it impacts the bottom 51% of the people (the majority) it's a lot more illustrative than looking at the average.
samiv•1h ago
Yep. I'm not an economist but my social democratic common sense would tell me to look at the bottom 10% income bracket and see how they're doing.

Incidentally these people are the best economic citizens because if you give them money they'll spend every cent of it because they need to buy food and energy, use health care and pay rent.

In other words if a rich person gets a million they (if they're sane) spend a fraction of it and put the rest in assets, stock market, property, etc. If you give 1000 poor people each 1000e every cent will go into local economy immediately.

IshKebab•1h ago
Bottom 10% are outliers though. Bottom 50% is much more reasonable.
bryanlarsen•1h ago
Treatment of bottom 10% and treatment of bottom 50% are both interesting metrics, but for very different reasons, and they are often contradictory.

The "bottom 50%" is a measure of how well you make it possible for everybody to succeed without extraordinary help.

The "bottom 10%" is a measure of extraordinary help.

erdeibit•1h ago
Capitalism optimization: make the rich richer making the poor poorer
d4ng•1h ago
Influence will be distributed similarly, regardless of political system: (Pareto Principle) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareto_principle
password54321•1h ago
You live in the most privileged period in human history.

https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?tab=li...

dwroberts•1h ago
You’re posting this like it’s a counterpoint, but it further highlights how disgusting the situation is. We have people becoming trillionaires while 10% of the world’s population is considered to be in extreme poverty. It’s ‘less bad’ than in the past but it’s still absolutely horrifying.
password54321•1h ago
How much of that trillion is liquid? If people stopped buying a Tesla, would that somehow help the poor?

Making electric vehicles more mainstream seems like a net-positive to the world.

ykonstant•1h ago
Feel poor??? Man... this is some prime ragebait title.
BariumBlue•1h ago
Seems like housing again:

> Rents have surged in recent years, driven by tourism, foreign investment and a shortage of affordable housing. The cost of housing now consumes one of the largest shares of disposable income in the European Union

My impression is that where housing is expensive, there will be complaints of unaffordability (obviously), but also vice versa, that where there is unaffordability, housing always seems to be a large component (at least in "the west").

in most places basic food (rice and beans or an equivalent) is cheap. Services can usually be skimped on. Transportation can usually be flexible (new car / cheap used car / transit / bike). Housing costs seem to be relatively non-flexible though.

I wouldn't be surprised if Greece has strong NIMBY factors.

cucumber3732842•1h ago
>I wouldn't be surprised if Greece has strong NIMBY factors.

No doubt. You see it in tourism economies the world over.

Cheap services + cultural/historical novelty + nice climate make tourism highly viable -> tourism becomes outsized part of economy -> those enriched by peddling tourism write the rules to their benefit -> it becomes all but illegal to develop any other industry, build housing, etc, etc because all this activity winds up punitively regulated lest someone do something that scared away the tourists.

j16sdiz•1h ago
> (at least in "the west").

It is the same in the east - it is either housing, or housing related tax.

spystath•1h ago
You are right that it's due to housing but in my opinion most of unaffordability comes from immense pressure due to tourism. Housing situation is better outside the touristy areas (and Athens). If anything Greece has seen massive housebuilding up until the economic crash in the early 10s. I remember block of flats appearing left and right in most major cities in a span of months. They still do but in a lot of cases they are almost exclusively short-term lets (again especially in tourist hubs). Why let a flat for €500 monthly when you can charge €150 per night? It's maddening.
lebuffon•1h ago
The way this wealth inequality is so common around the world. makes me wonder if the next time the pitchforks come out, it will be some kind of global uprising. Perhaps accelerated by social media. Or are the elite better able to control the masses in this age?
aleph_minus_one•1h ago
> The way this wealth inequality is so common around the world. makes me wonder if the next time the pitchforks come out, it will be some kind of global uprising. [...] Or are the elite better able to control the masses in this age?

I rather believe that the individual problems in each country are very different (even though you summarize them by "this wealth inequality is so common around the world"). Additionally, it often happens that the interests of people in one country are antagonistic to the interests of people in another country, so I don't believe that people from different countries will club together, and have common wishes.

jedimastert•1h ago
> Additionally, it often happens that the interests of people in one country are antagonistic to the interests of people in another country.

I find this honestly kind of difficult to believe, except when it comes to distractions by the people who want to stay in power

aleph_minus_one•1h ago
Just to give one class of examples:

Should a country implement some very nationalist policies that serve the interests of the not so well-off people in its own country, but will be against the interests of other countries and their people?

Think of the uprise of right-wing, nationalist parties in many European countries that often present themselves as "the new worker parties", i.e. they intend to implement policies that are good for the workers in their own country, but on the other hand make it very clear that they have not the interests of people of other EU countries in mind.

cucumber3732842•1h ago
Because, to the surprise of literally nobody who's ever been on the receiving end of these sorts of policies they cook up in far away think tank offices and the ivory towers of academia, there's a million ways to make the number go up that doesn't actually make normal people any better off.
nosioptar•1h ago
At this point, I'd settle for not being better off. It'd be a helluva lot better than everything getting worse.

We need to eat the fucking rich. Bnch of parasitic fuckwads.

g8oz•1h ago
<https://rentierblackhole.com/>

"The Rentier Black Hole"

A theory of land, housing, and open-economy failure: how a non-reproducible asset absorbs global savings, breaks wage-price adjustment, and hollows out the productive economy.

jedimastert•1h ago
The idea that the answer to this question would not be intuitive to pretty much anyone that participates in an economy is a genuine shock.
Avicebron•1h ago
"It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!" -Upton Sinclair
alephnerd•1h ago
Gotta love HNers who never read articles and use it as a soapbox:

"The scale of the destruction that followed the debt crisis was extraordinary. Between 2009 and the trough of the bailout years in 2016, average household wealth fell by roughly 35%, wiping out more than a third of Greek families' assets"

...

"The labour market has improved markedly since the darkest years of the crisis, with unemployment falling sharply and the informal economy shrinking. But structural weaknesses remain deeply embedded. Long-term unemployment, low participation in the workforce and a high reliance on self-employment continue to shape opportunities and outcomes"

----

Tl;dr - Greek households still haven't recovered from the Eurozone and Greek Debt crisis.

sgt101•1h ago
Frustraged by the endless prattle about GDP, europoors and Brexit, me and my agent frien's sat (manifested) together and brewed up some alternatives:

https://x.com/AiSimonThompson/status/2070900546119114970/pho...

I think that median household disposable income is a much better way of looking at this than GDP.

2014 is the turn. The US gained shale, isolationism is possible, Trump 2 is created by the general (true) perception that things were good under Trump 1. The European war starts and China is left to dominate Asia.

wqaatwt•1h ago
Also massive influx of money from Europe especially due to the dominance of the US megacorps and the tech sector in general.

Basically you had companies like Google or Meta constantly leeching from everyone while providing approximately zero real value in return.

lokar•1h ago
I could see this was bad reporting right away. Average wealth? Per-capita gdp? Pointless. Give me the decile values, or just show the histogram.
BurningFrog•1h ago
"Poor" is a relative concept!

If everyone gets 10x richer, half the people will still be in the poorer half, and will still feel poor in some sense.

This is surely not the only factor in this story, but it's you need to keep it in mind in these discussions.

1970-01-01•1h ago
In no particular order:

- Per capital GDP still awful

- Quality of life continues to get worse thanks to rising global temperature.

- Everything else worth doing is still fairly terrible compared to better-off EU neighbors since tourism remains the economic staple. That strangles any other economic programs from working.

antisthenes•1h ago
Also in that bucket:

- Average is one of the worst ways to measure wealth (use Median)

- Wealth is typically tied up in illiquid assets (e.g. housing), making people feel trapped or anchored to a place that may not be economically mobile (e.g. rural)

jaharios•54m ago
While income taxes are low for the majority ( the salaries are low anyway) the indirect taxing is the way the Greek Goverment managed to recover.

The prices of everyday goods rose (sometimes more than double) and the profits from VAT(24%) with them.

High duties on fuel + fuel price went up, combined with rent prices (living far away from your workplace) => longer work commute, bad infrastructure and older vehicles ( no money to buy a fuel efficient one when you are poor)

Liberalization of the energy market forced by EU which lead to extreme prices. (new companies that don't produce anything got in the middleman position with only goal higher profits)

In summary, everything has been and continues to be done at the expense of the majority (low-wage earners), while making them even poorer.

onraglanroad•1h ago
The capitalist response to that would be that the investment in companies is better because it makes everyone richer in the long term by increasing overall wealth.

I'm not sure I buy it but it's an effect to consider.

kubb•1h ago
That does sometimes happen - investment does cause development. The mistake is to assume that's always what happens, and that everybody can benefit from the development.
zhoBEENG•1h ago
Should we perhaps look at the top 51% instead? Why pick one perspective over the other?

I’m not familiar with Dalio outside some weird pseudo-academic paper he wrote where he attempts to provide a new grand theory of economics based on “transactions”, but I would be interested to hear this perspective supported.

Edit: samiv above answered my question

rcxdude•1h ago
Well, if you're looking at the bottom X%, then you can be confident that the rest of the population are in a better position.
wqaatwt•1h ago
Technically yes but its not that straightforward.

Take a country like Sweden for example everyone is reasonably well off (if not exactly thriving) since income inequality is quite low. At the same time wealth inequality is extremely high since the rich pulled the ladder after them and there are hardly any options for the middle class to accumulate much wealth. In turn that probably doesn’t help productivity and innovation that much. Why work harder if you won’t get anything in return? Which is a general vibe vibe in Scandinavian work culture.

Then again they (well Denmark at least since a petrostate like Norway doesn’t count and Sweden hasn’t been stellar) are doing quite well economically compared to most other European countries.

abirch•47m ago
Ray Dalio created one of the most successful hedge funds ever and as he calls himself "a professional capitalist." The guy even helped with launching the Chickent McNugget (advising McDonald's with Poultry futures)

If you look at the top 51% things are going extremely well, but as this article shows it can hide a lot. I loved his explanation of how the economic machine works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHe0bXAIuk0 his book Principles is pretty good too.

amelius•1h ago
The median is usually used for this; it throws away outliers on both sides.
rcxdude•1h ago
This is not quite the same as the median: it is possible for the bottom 50% to improve but for the median to stay the same (i.e. imagine if everyone in the bottom 50% suddenly equaled the best of them). But the median is a lot better than the mean for not being distorted by large changes in the top and bottom percentiles.
mannykannot•1h ago
This seems to tacitly assume that the outliers on either side have equivalent weight with respect to whatever is being investigated, while the explicit premise behind this proposal is that in this case they do not.
radu_floricica•1h ago
Considering how skewed tax participation is, this would be a very one sided view. Just tax the top 49% more, no matter what's their current level of taxation, and redistribute to the lower 51%. It'll always make this criteria look like a success.

Problem is, this creates systemic effects. If you look longer term, a society that does this will end up a lot poorer than one that doesn't. Even for the bottom 51% you were optimizing. Because there are two variables to control: the redistribution, and the actual productivity. If you just focus on splitting wealth, you stop growing wealth.

Growing wealth on the other hand will make everybody richer, including the botton 51%. Simply participating in a richer economy has advantages. Plus the smaller redistribution percentage will actually end up bigger in absolute terms.

Garlef•46m ago
> If you look longer term, a society that does this will end up a lot poorer than one that doesn't.

Got data to back that up?

(On the serious level, I'm really curious; But on the polemic level I'll call BS - I highly doubt there ever was such a period in any capitalist country ever)

neves•1h ago
Sometimes I think economists don't know what a median is.
microgpt•54m ago
Objection: irrelevant deflection.
password54321•46m ago
Bot account with a dramatic amount of comments in a short period of time. How do we let this nonsense through?
wqaatwt•53m ago
Possibly. If they invested their money into something more societally productive and/or the government took their money to do that or they weren’t allowed to accumulate enough surplus wealth in the first place. Of course the last two options have been a bit problematic historically.
jedimastert•1h ago
And yet we are also living in some of the strongest wealth inequality in the last 100 years at least.

https://ourworldindata.org/economic-inequality

password54321•1h ago
This seems to apply much more to certain nations like the US while it drops worldwide in recent decades.

https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/inequality?tab=line&cou...

jedimastert•45m ago
I would call that holding steady worldwide in the last decade, which honestly is still unacceptable with how much more wealthy the world has gotten
wqaatwt•57m ago
So what? That seems entirely tangential. Unless your point that economic inequality inherently accelerates technological progress (which seems valid at least to some extent)?
password54321•55m ago
You don't think capitalism played a role in eliminating poverty?
wqaatwt•48m ago
No, I implied it did.

I actually think that free market competition has been the main driving force behind human progress for quite a while now. The issue is that the “winning condition” of capitalism results in the complete subversion of that process. So it’s always a balance.

microgpt•54m ago
How privileged is a period?
dataflow•1h ago
> Why let a flat for €500 monthly when you can charge €150 per night?

Isn't a tax the obvious solution here?

EgregiousCube•1h ago
Why are prices up even though population is down over the past ten years? Did everybody decide to move to the city or something?
bryanlarsen•1h ago
The article gives a dozen reasons why people in Greece feel poor. Housing is just one of them. A big one, perhaps, but there are many others in the article.

It's interesting that housing is the one that all the HN commenters pick out to comment on. It's probably the most universal complaint, the one that's easiest to sympathize with from halfway around the world.

jedimastert•41m ago
These kinds of policies are exactly what I meant by "distractions", those policies tend to help the wealthy far more than workers, and then those same policies are turned towards the workers when there aren't any more immigrants to hurt
wqaatwt•1h ago
> that the individual problems in each country are very different

When it comes to housing prices and general cost of living the patterns are extremely similar in most Western countries. Especially after covid and the infinite money hoses..

Spooky23•54m ago
Nah, it will be triggered by a debt crisis.

Remember the plurality of the rich are working off asset loans on paper wealth. Those credit lines get cut by an event, that triggers an asset sell off which creates a vicious cycle.