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Write code like a human will maintain it

https://unstack.io/write-code-like-a-human-will-maintain-it
96•ScottWRobinson•1h ago•69 comments

Late Bronze Age Collapse

https://acoup.blog/2026/01/30/collections-the-late-bronze-age-collapse-a-very-brief-introduction/
125•dmonay•2h ago•43 comments

Scarf has moved away from Haskell

https://avi.press/posts/2026-07-10-after-7-years-in-production-scarf-has-reluctantly-moved-away-f...
35•aviaviavi•1h ago•33 comments

Successful Companies Go Blind

https://ianreppel.org/how-successful-companies-go-blind/
27•speckx•1h ago•9 comments

GPT-5.6

https://openai.com/index/gpt-5-6/
1429•logickkk1•21h ago•1007 comments

The mathematical secrets of Barcelona's Sagrada Familia

https://mappingignorance.org/2026/06/30/sagrada-familia/
51•Gedxx•1w ago•9 comments

Good Tools Are Invisible

https://www.gingerbill.org/article/2026/07/10/good-tools-are-invisible/
115•theanonymousone•4h ago•83 comments

In Emacs, Everything Looks Like a Service

http://yummymelon.com/devnull/in-emacs-everything-looks-like-a-service.html
98•kickingvegas•6h ago•54 comments

My burner email blocklist blocked me

https://benjamin.piouffle.com/blog/burner-email-blocklists/
8•betree•1d ago•1 comments

Show HN: Getting GLM 5.2 running on my slow computer

https://github.com/JustVugg/colibri
785•vforno•1d ago•192 comments

Show HN: Runloom – Go-style coroutines for Python free-threaded

https://github.com/robertsdotpm/runloom
11•Uptrenda•1h ago•1 comments

Laylo (YC S20) Is Hiring a Head of Finance

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/laylo/jobs/qce41D2-head-of-finance
1•amellin794•2h ago

Train sim created by just one person is being called the best ever made

https://kotaku.com/a-train-sim-created-by-just-one-person-is-being-called-the-best-ever-made-2000...
738•oumua_don17•5d ago•297 comments

EU Commission: addictive design Instagram and Facebook in breach of the DSA

https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/home/en
135•jeroenhd•3h ago•96 comments

Unified Memory, Explained: Why Mini PCs Can Run 70B Models a Big GPU Can't

https://vettedconsumer.com/unified-memory-explained-why-mini-pcs-can-run-70b-models-a-big-gpu-can...
15•ermantrout•4h ago•5 comments

How RCA Victor sold Sound Service to classrooms in 1939

https://pncnmnp.github.io/blogs/rca-victor-education.html
3•pncnmnp•18h ago•1 comments

Apple Silicon Exec Explains Mac Mini AI Demand and On-Device Future

https://www.macrumors.com/2026/07/06/apple-silicon-exec-explains-mac-mini-ai-demand/
138•tosh•3d ago•192 comments

Lost city discovered beneath Egypt's desert with ancient church

https://www.dailymail.com/sciencetech/article-15956159/Incredible-lost-city-discovered-Egypts-des...
5•Bender•4d ago•0 comments

Ditching Vagrant: VMs with KVM and Virsh on Debian

https://benjamintoll.com/2026/06/29/on-ditching-vagrant/
52•fanf2•4d ago•20 comments

Punk, or why I don't stream anymore

https://geohot.github.io//blog/jekyll/update/2026/05/03/punk-or-why-i-dont-stream.html
93•surprisetalk•1h ago•91 comments

AI-generated videos to maximally drive a target brain region

https://nevo-project.epfl.ch/
156•smusamashah•7h ago•166 comments

Interview with Mitchell Hashimoto about Ghostty and Zig

https://alexalejandre.com/programming/interview-with-mitchell-hashimoto/
309•veqq•21h ago•159 comments

Proton AG Services is currently experiencing some issues

https://status.proton.me/incidents/01lxtcq155lc
19•exploraz•1h ago•17 comments

Hy3

https://hy.tencent.com/research/hy3
524•andai•23h ago•107 comments

ActivityPub over ATProto

https://berjon.com/ap-at/
15•albuic•1h ago•5 comments

EU Parliament greenlights Chat Control 1.0

https://www.patrick-breyer.de/en/eu-parliament-greenlights-chat-control-1-0-breyer-our-children-l...
1520•rapnie•1d ago•753 comments

Ancient Coins: What About Spartan Coins?

https://coinweek.com/ancient-spartan-coins/
6•thunderbong•5d ago•1 comments

The glass backbone: Why the Army's logistics will break in the next war

https://mwi.westpoint.edu/the-glass-backbone-why-the-armys-logistics-will-break-in-the-next-war/
420•baud147258•1d ago•566 comments

A road to Lisp: Why Lisp

https://scotto.me/blog/2026-07-09-why-lisp/
269•silcoon•1d ago•248 comments

Building a real-time AI tutor for 5-year-olds

https://www.ello.com/blog/teaching-a-child-in-1000-ms
123•catalinvoss•18h ago•243 comments
Open in hackernews

Successful Companies Go Blind

https://ianreppel.org/how-successful-companies-go-blind/
27•speckx•1h ago

Comments

ActionHank•33m ago
From what I've seen, LLMs just accelerate or compound this whole process as well.

Everyone has the same group think, it bleeds into the way the LLM generates code and ultimately it just rots teams.

inigyou•27m ago
Corporations were the original AIs. They were slower, a bit less predictable, but they were superhuman intelligence disciplined to produce only the most bland depersonalised slop at all times.
trjordan•28m ago
Most startups fail. Most big company projects are kind of worthless. These are two sides of the same coin.

Producing something novel and valuable is HARD. Unbelievably hard. The idea is hard. The building is harder. The scaling and steering and feedback is ego-crushingly hard.

When it's valuable, it's frequently enormously valuable. That funds the experimentation, the incremental expansion, the waste. It's hard to really internalize how valuable localization, admin controls, FedRAMP, and onboarding tweaks are, truly, because they all compound. You can't just have the idea and the MVP, you also have to have all the other stuff, and it's hard to come up with new ideas while you're trying to keep a million users happy.

I vehemently disagree that people working at big companies are stupid, or making themselves stupid. There are VPs and SVPs at Adobe and Salesforce that are smarter, more knowledgable, and more productive than any startup employee. It's just structurally hard to move the needle there, and their successes aren't written about in TechCrunch. They're also paid a million dollars a year, and are unbothered by the lack of external recognition.

I'm off founding a startup now, and it's good for the soul, but I don't delude myself into thinking everybody else is blind.

karahime•17m ago
I agree with this, and would add that it's hard in part because it's always been hard, and people have overcome. I can only imagine the difficulty of coming up with something like HTTP, or a suspension bridge, or algebra, without the mental scaffolding already being there. If you go back and read the original discussions of these, they include a ton of what seems like circuitous explanation for what we take for granted as "simple" ideas, but which are absolutely not simple at all if you have to pull them from the primordial void sight unseen.
awestroke•22m ago
The article starts with a pretty weak simile and is structured in a way that reminds me of llm output. Made me stop reading pretty quickly.

I’m wary of essays that take a genuinely complicated organizational problem and explain it through one dominant lens. Life isn't that simple.

malfist•11m ago
For every complex and difficult problem with tons of nuance, there's a simple, easy and wrong solution
greenoracle9•14m ago
Success makes the old playbook feel safer than it really is.
terminalbraid•9m ago
Can we stop the "drop how at the start of a title" auto editing? I suspect this was to fix some flood of problems long ago, but every time I encounter it it modifies the title away from true intent of the author.
bsenftner•6m ago
Now apply this to entire industries and entire countries, and we begin to see what is happening to all of Western Culture.