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Show HN: Ghost Pepper – Local hold-to-talk speech-to-text for macOS

https://github.com/matthartman/ghost-pepper
212•MattHart88•4h ago•97 comments

Show HN: GovAuctions lets you browse government auctions at once

https://www.govauctions.app/
203•player_piano•8h ago•63 comments

Show HN: Hippo, biologically inspired memory for AI agents

https://github.com/kitfunso/hippo-memory
36•kitfunso•2h ago•13 comments

Show HN: Tusk for macOS and Gnome

https://shapemachine.xyz/tusk/
44•factorialboy•2d ago•15 comments

Show HN: Anos – a hand-written ~100KiB microkernel for x86-64 and RISC-V

https://github.com/roscopeco/anos
16•noone_youknow•2d ago•5 comments

Show HN: TTF-DOOM – A raycaster running inside TrueType font hinting

https://github.com/4RH1T3CT0R7/ttf-doom
23•4RH1T3CT0R•5h ago•4 comments

Show HN: Docking – Extensible Linux dock in Python

https://docking.cc
21•edumucelli•2d ago•5 comments

Show HN: Physical constants from 2 integers – MIT, 1225 tests, falsifiable

https://bpr.thestardrive.com
2•iq19zero•56m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a tiny LLM to demystify how language models work

https://github.com/arman-bd/guppylm
840•armanified•1d ago•126 comments

Show HN: Real-time AI (audio/video in, voice out) on an M3 Pro with Gemma E2B

https://github.com/fikrikarim/parlor
261•karimf•1d ago•30 comments

Show HN: Weird Clocks

https://clocks.specr.net
22•vunderba•9h ago•10 comments

Show HN: Gemma Gem – AI model embedded in a browser – no API keys, no cloud

https://github.com/kessler/gemma-gem
142•ikessler•1d ago•20 comments

Show HN: MemberLane – Paid Communities on Telegram, Discord, and WhatsApp

https://www.memberlane.app
2•grene98•2h ago•0 comments

Show HN: CacheZero – Karpathy's LLM wiki idea as one NPM install

3•swarajbachu•2h ago•0 comments

Show HN: I made a YouTube search form with advanced filters

https://playlists.at/youtube/search/
303•nevernothing•1d ago•194 comments

Show HN: Meta-agent: self-improving agent harnesses from live traces

https://github.com/canvas-org/meta-agent
5•essamsleiman•5h ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a site that turns your Steam gaming hours into a RL skill tree

https://alternatelife.xyz/
5•naorz•3h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Modo – I built an open-source alternative to Kiro, Cursor, and Windsurf

https://github.com/mohshomis/modo
93•mohshomis•1d ago•18 comments

Show HN: ReverseCam – See yourself as others see you

https://www.reversecam.com
7•ilamparithi•9h ago•1 comments

Show HN: Splice CAD – Wiring and cable assembly CAD with an agentic assist

https://splice-cad.com/
3•djsdjs•4h ago•0 comments

Show HN: A game where you build a GPU

https://jaso1024.com/mvidia/
945•Jaso1024•2d ago•181 comments

Show HN: Kept for the children and machines that come after

https://www.latentdiaries.com/
2•ainthusiast•5h ago•1 comments

Show HN: I just built a MCP Server that connects Claude to all your wearables

https://pacetraining.co/
14•anton_salcher•15h ago•12 comments

Show HN: OsintRadar – Curated directory for osint tools

https://osintradar.com/
81•lexalizer•1d ago•9 comments

Show HN: M. C. Escher spiral in WebGL inspired by 3Blue1Brown

https://static.laszlokorte.de/escher/
172•laszlokorte•2d ago•28 comments

Show HN: Vajra, a background coding agent with graph-based workflows

https://github.com/zamana-inc/vajra
2•shloked•7h ago•0 comments

Show HN: I replaced Google Analytics with my own tool – no cookies, <1KB script

https://datakool.com/
11•VictorChanet•13h ago•8 comments

Show HN: Contrapunk – Real-time counterpoint harmony from guitar input

https://contrapunk.com/
116•waveywaves•2d ago•54 comments

Show HN: Tiny TUI for disk usage exploration

https://github.com/dhbradshaw/syz
4•dhbradshaw•9h ago•5 comments

Show HN: MCP 2000 – Browser-based drum machine with AI-generated sounds

https://www.mcp2000.com/
3•harmoni-pet•9h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: Hippo, biologically inspired memory for AI agents

https://github.com/kitfunso/hippo-memory
36•kitfunso•2h ago

Comments

cyanydeez•2h ago
no open code plugin? This seems like something that should just run in the background. It's well documented that it should just be a skill agents can use when they get into various fruitless states.

The "biological" memory strength shouldn't just be a time thing, and even then, the time of the AI agent should only be conformed to the AI's lifetime and not the actual clock. Look up https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3523442/difference-betwe... monotonic clock. If you want a decay, it shouldn't be related to an actual clock, but it's work time.

But memory is more about triggers than it is about anything else. So you should absolutely have memory triggers based on location. Something like a path hash. So whever an agent is working and remembering things it should be tightly compacted to that location; only where a "compaction" happens should these memories become more and more generalized to locations.

The types of memory that often are more prominent are like this, whether it's sports or GUIs, physical location triggers much more intrinsics than conscious memory. Focus on how to trigger recall based on project paths, filenames in the path, file path names, etc.

kitfunso•2h ago
coming right up, adding it as we speak
russellthehippo•2h ago
yep came here to say this. great to hear it's in process.
Grosvenor•2h ago
Sparse distributed memory is what you’re looking for.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sparse_distributed_memory

pbhjpbhj•1h ago
Memory links to location but that's largely because humans are localised. Isn't that also a weakness. We should be trying to exploit the benefits of non-locality [of ML models and training data] too.

I feel like much of my life is virtual, non-localised. Writing missives to the four corners of the wind here and elsewhere; gaming online; research/chats with LLMs or on the web, email with people.

My physical location is often not important - a continuing context from non-physical aspects of my existence matters more.

That said, one of the things that's hard for me about digital life is the lack of waymarks - I used to be quite "geographical" in my thinking. Like "oh the part I found interesting was on the left page after the RGB diagram", I'd find that and also find my train of thought and extend it. Now, information can be in any myriad of freeform places across at least 3 devices and in emails, notebooks, bookmarks, chat histories, and of course my brain. When some ready syncretism of those things happens it feels like we'll make better advances. Personal agents can be a part of that.

nberkman•2h ago
Cool project. I like the neuroscience analogy with decay and consolidation.

I've been working on a related problem from the other direction: Claude Code and Codex already persist full session transcripts, but there's no good way to search across them. So I built ccrider (https://github.com/neilberkman/ccrider). It indexes existing sessions into SQLite FTS5 and exposes an MCP server so agents can query their own conversation history without a separate memory layer. Basically treating it as a retrieval problem rather than a storage problem.

the_arun•2h ago
Aren't tools like claude already store context by project in file system? Also any reason use "capture" instead of "export" (an obvious opposite of import)?
nberkman•1h ago
> Aren't tools like claude already store context by project in file system?

They do, the missing piece is a tool to access them. See comment about my tool that addresses this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47668270

gfody•1h ago
yegge has a cool solution for this in gastown: the current agent is able to hold a seance with the previous one
kami23•1h ago
Cool to see others on this thread.

Here's a post I wrote about how we can start to potentially mimic mechanisms

https://n0tls.com/2026-03-14-musings.html

Would love to compare notes, I'm also looking at linguistic phenomena through an LLM lens

https://n0tls.com/2026-03-19-more-musings.html

Hoping to wrap up some of the kaggle eval work and move back to researching more neuropsych.

swyx•1h ago
hmm the repo doesnt mention this at all but this name and problem domain brings up HippoRAG https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.14831 <- any relation? seems odd to miss out this exactly similarly named paper with related techniques.
esafak•1h ago
How does it select what to forget? Let's say I land a PR that introduces a sharp change, migrating from one thing to another. An exponential decay won't catch this. Biological learning makes sense when things we observe similar things repeatedly in order to learn patterns. I am skeptical that it applies to learning the commits of one code base.
matt765•15m ago
cool project mate, gj