AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

My DIY FPGA board can run Quake II

Petr Mikheev details a next‑generation FPGA board to run Quake II. It uses an Efinix Ti60F256 FPGA with 1 GB DDR3L, a DDR3 soft controller, and a 6‑layer PCB, plus TMDS serializer, USB power limiter, an SD voltage switch, RTC, ESP32 Wi‑Fi, and extra USB‑C power. He describes soldering a BGA with paste and stencil and reports a successful build after debugging; an early Wi‑Fi issue due ESP32 pins was fixed. The SoC relies on VexRiscv with SpinalHDL IP cores; results: high FPGA utilization, 207 MHz, 1 GB RAM, SD 45 MB/s, DMA 1130 MB/s. Next part soon.

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Tired of Ghost Positions in Companies?

Ghost Jobs Index exposes fake job postings, interview ghosting, and data harvesting, allowing users to anonymously report hiring fraud. Reporting is registration-free and anonymized via a one-way IP hash. The site helps job seekers research companies before applying and warns others about recruiters who ghost applicants. Top reported companies include Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, IBM, and Accenture. It also promotes an Honest Hiring Manifesto for employers and offers partner resources, with reports submitted anonymously.

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Health NZ staff told to stop using ChatGPT to write clinical notes

A 403 Forbidden error from a Varnish cache server, including internal cache identifiers (cache-bur-kbur8200045-BUR) and numeric IDs.

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Sodium-ion EV battery breakthrough delivers 11-min charging and 450 km range

BAIC Group reports a significant sodium-ion EV battery breakthrough: first sodium-ion prototype in its Aurora series with prismatic cells above 170 Wh/kg. The pack delivers a 450 km CLTC range and 4C charging to full in ~11 minutes, with operation from −40°C to 60°C and >92% energy retention at −20°C. March 19 saw a mass‑production method for prismatic sodium‑ion cells established. Following CATL’s sodium‑ion demos in Changan Nevo A06, sodium‑ion tech aims to reduce lithium reliance and costs, with rising shipments and projected 500–600 km per charge as the technology scales toward 1,000 GWh in four years.

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Running Tesla Model 3's Computer on My Desk Using Parts from Crashed Cars

An enthusiast builds a desk Tesla Model 3 computer by buying salvaged MCU and autopilot units, a Model 3 touchscreen, and necessary cables. He powers the MCU with a 12V supply, taps into the car's internal network (192.168.90.x) to access SSH and a REST-like ODIN API, and references Tesla's public Electrical Reference for wiring. Cable compatibility issues lead to buying a full dashboard wiring loom. After wiring loom installation, the system boots, the touchscreen works, and the desk setup allows him to interact with the MCU, CAN buses, and firmware research as part of Tesla's bug-bounty program.

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China is mass-producing hypersonic missiles for $99,000

A private Chinese firm says it is mass-producing hypersonic missiles (YKJ-1000) for about $99,000, with launchers disguised as shipping containers for mobile, worldwide deployment. With a range up to 1,300 km, these cheap missiles create a severe offense–defense imbalance, as defenses struggle to intercept and cost-benefit favors attack. The missiles could be exported to China-friendly or adversarial states, threatening the US, Israel, and global defense markets, regardless of precise accuracy or payload.

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Earthquake scientists reveal how overplowing weakens soil at experimental farm

UW researchers used fiber-optic distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) to monitor soil moisture and water retention across UK plots with varying tillage depth and tire compaction at a Harper Adams University farm. They found tilling and compaction disrupt soil capillary networks, diminishing the soil’s sponge-like moisture retention and causing surface pooling, crusting, erosion, and higher flood risk. By linking seismic velocity changes to soil moisture, they created high-resolution models of soil response to rainfall. The approach could help farmers manage land, enable real-time flood alerts, improve earth-system models, and inform liquefaction-risk maps. Science, March 19, 2026.

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Drone Attack on Parked U.S. Army BlackHawk in Iraq a Harbinger of What's to Come

A Iran-backed militia used short-range kamikaze FPV drones to strike a parked US Army HH-60M medevac helicopter and an AN/MPQ-64 Sentinel radar at the Victory Base Complex near Baghdad, marking the first known successful drone attack on a U.S. military aircraft. The incidents underscore the growing threat of small drones, possibly employing swarming or fiber-optic control links, that can bypass traditional defenses and threaten bases at home as well as abroad. The piece notes limited counter-drone options and calls for faster, more potent defenses.

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FreeCAD Version 1.1 Released

FreeCAD 1.1 is released (March 25, 2026) with substantial updates including transparent Part Design previews, interactive draggers for Fillet and Chamfer, 3-point lighting, a Clarify Selection tool, improvements to Assembly and FEM with animations, and a new CAM tool library system. A full list of changes is in the Release Notes; the post also invites donations to support ongoing development.

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90% of Claude-linked output going to GitHub repos w <2 stars

Claude's Code dashboard tracks momentum and adoption: growth +23% WoW, acceleration +2.8pp, doubling time 24 days. Early adopter commits (Feb 24, 2025) show initial public Claude Code activity, including moinmir/ClashOfCans. The page highlights new repos and a global activity snapshot: about 20.6M total commits, 50.1B lines added, 19.6B lines deleted; top languages TypeScript, Python, JavaScript. It also catalogs numerous co-authored commits across projects and includes UI/ workflow notes (dark mode fixes, asset labeling, security hardening, design prompts).

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ARC-AGI-3 benchmark is out now

Promotes ARC Prize 2026 and the ARC-AGI-3 Task ls20, a game‑like AI agent challenge where you build agents to solve a task and compete on model performance. The page offers a public demo, a level-based interface, and a sortable table of published runs to compare scores and actions. It also promotes newsletters, community resources, history, and how to get started with ARC-AGI competitions.

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Apple randomly closes bug reports unless you "verify" the bug remains unfixed

Jeff Johnson criticizes Apple’s bug-report process, arguing it wastes reporters’ time and pressures them to verify unfixed bugs in betas. He cites FB12088655 (privacy: network filter extension IP leak) filed in 2023 with no response for years, then Apple asked him to verify against macOS 26.4 beta 4; he cannot reliably test betas and received evasive replies and threats to close the report if unverified. Little Snitch testers confirmed the bug in beta. He also notes FB22057274 (pinned tabs) marked “Investigation complete.” He argues leadership incentives hide real software quality issues and betas feel punitive.

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ARC-AGI-3

ARC-AGI-3 is an interactive reasoning benchmark for AI agents to explore environments, acquire goals on the fly, and learn continually. A 100% score means agents beat every game as efficiently as humans. It measures long-horizon planning, skill growth, sparse feedback, and experience-driven adaptation. Design emphasizes ease of use, no pre-loaded knowledge, clear goals, and novelty to prevent memorization. Features include replayable runs, a developer toolkit, and an interactive UI with documentation for integration and evaluation.

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The EU still wants to scan your private messages and photos

Fight Chat Control warns that the European Conservatives (EPP) want to force a Thursday vote to reverse Parliament’s no on indiscriminate scanning, calling it a threat to democracy and privacy and urging action against the move. The page cites Patrick Breyer, EDRI, and noyb.

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Ball Pit

Could not summarize article.

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Updates to GitHub Copilot interaction data usage policy

From April 24, Copilot Free/Pro/Pro+ interaction data (inputs, outputs, code snippets, and context) may be used to train and improve AI models unless you opt out. Copilot Business/Enterprise are not affected. Opt-out in Privacy settings; prior opt-outs preserved. If you participate, data may include outputs accepted/modified, inputs, code context, file names, repo structure, navigation, Copilot interactions, and your feedback. It will not include data from Copilot Business/Enterprise or enterprise-owned repos, nor content from issues/discussions/private repos at rest. Data may be shared with GitHub affiliates (Microsoft) and used for training; Microsoft interaction data will also be used.

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Tracy Kidder, Author of 'The Soul of a New Machine,' Dies at 80

Could not summarize article.

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Quantization from the Ground Up

Quantization explains how LLMs stay huge and how precision matters. Weights and layers drive size; floating formats (float32/16, bf16, float8/4) trade range for precision. Quantization compresses values to smaller ranges with round-to-nearest, enabling 16-bit-to-4-bit reductions with modest accuracy loss. Symmetric quantization can waste space; asymmetric uses a zero-point to fit data better, reducing error. Block-wise quantization tames outliers, which are few but influential. Metrics like perplexity and KL divergence, plus GPQA benchmarks, show 8- and 4-bit can preserve most quality while boosting speed. Formats: Q8_0, Q4_1, Q4_0, Q2_K. Conclusion: quantized local models are viable; measure trade-offs and formats.

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Meta and Google found liable in social media addiction trial

Los Angeles jurors found Meta and Google liable for a young woman’s childhood addiction to social media, ruling Meta 70% responsible and YouTube 30% for harming her mental health. The five‑week trial focused on Instagram; Kaley, now 20, alleged addiction harmed her. Snap and TikTok settled with Kaley before trial. Meta contests the verdict; Google notes shared responsibility. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified about policies banning under‑13s and internal data showing under‑13 use, saying progress has been made. The verdict could influence hundreds of similar lawsuits.

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Meta and YouTube Found Negligent in Landmark Social Media Addiction Case

Could not summarize article.

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