AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Show HN: Trust – Coding Rust like it's 1989

TRUST is an experimental retro TUI IDE for Rust, inspired by 1989 blue-screen DOS environments. It lets you edit files, browse Rust projects, and run Cargo commands from a nostalgia-focused interface. Features include editing, saving (F2/Ctrl+S), opening files, and executing cargo run, build, check, and test via keyboard shortcuts. To use, run cargo run -- /path/to/rust/project (or the current dir). It’s an independent project, not affiliated with classic DOS vendors.

HN Comments

SingleRide: Longest route on NYC Subway without visiting the same station twice

A piece consisting solely of the phrase 'Single Ride' with no additional details.

HN Comments

Show HN: Social Network for Corporate Cringe

A brand tagline promising to amplify cringe to a professional level.

HN Comments

Making LLM Training Faster with Unsloth and NVIDIA

Unsloth and NVIDIA boosted LLM fine-tuning speed by ~25% by tackling metadata bottlenecks and data-copy overhead. Key optimizations: 1) cache packed-sequence metadata (lengths, cu_seqlens, max_seqlen, masks) to reuse across layers; forward up to 43.3% (Qwen3-14B QLoRA SFT), backward +5.8%. 2) double-buffered activation checkpoint reloads to overlap copies with backward compute; gains ~8–9% (8B) to ~4–5% (32B) step-time with modest memory cost. 3) a MoE routing improvement for GPT-OSS using a single bincount/grouped tokens; ~10–15% speedups, up to +23% forward and +13% backward. Larger models benefit most; results reflect reduced bookkeeping and overlapped IO/compute.

HN Comments

Photoshop's challenges with focus, pt. 2

Marcin Wichary criticizes Photoshop 2026’s Spectrum UI, insisting the focus problems aren’t just cosmetic: dialogs don’t auto-focus or auto-select, clicking fields may not focus, backspace triggers a focus-stealing error modal, and tabbing disrupts quick width/height entry; other inconsistencies abound (undo broken by UI, hidden shortcuts, poor tooltips). He calls the refresh sloppy and lazy, a failure of imagination, urging fixes (tooltip-like errors, better shortcuts, memory of legacy settings) or a reconsideration of the redesign.

HN Comments

Show HN: Agent-skills-eval – Test whether Agent Skills improve outputs

agent-skills-eval is a test runner for Agent Skills (agent-skills.io). It empirically validates a SKILL.md by running each eval twice—once with the skill loaded in context and once baseline—graded by a judge model, and outputs a side-by-side report plus a static HTML artifact. It supports OpenAI-compatible providers, local Llama, tool calls, and deterministic assertions. Features include CLI and SDK, YAML config, per-eval defaults, and publishable artifacts. Quickstart: npx agent-skills-eval ./skills --target gpt-4o-mini --judge gpt-4o-mini --baseline --strict. Skills live in folders containing SKILL.md and evals.json.

HN Comments

Ads on Apple Maps

Ads on Apple Maps are coming soon, letting local businesses run ads where customers search for places. Ads reach Apple users in a privacy-first environment with no tracking; campaigns are controllable and can start/stop anytime, and views can convert to calls, directions, or orders. To start, claim your business location and upload photos. Apple emphasizes on-device data, end-to-end encryption, and no targeting by precise location or identity; ads rely on contextual data like search terms and map area; identifiers rotate and aren't tied to Apple IDs. Initially available in the US and Canada.

HN Comments

Chevrolet Performance eCrate package (400v/200hp)

Chevrolet Performance’s eCrate is the first EV-conversion kit, with a 66 kWh lithium‑ion pack and a 400‑V drive motor delivering 200 hp and 266 lb‑ft of torque, designed to mate to a GM 4‑speed automatic with an external mode switch. It is 50‑state emissions compliant under CARB EO B‑88. The kit weighs about 947 lb. Charging options: Level 1 included, Level 2 optional, Level 3 DC fast. Sold only through Authorized Installers (e.g., Lingenfelter); manual transmissions aren’t supported yet and horsepower cannot be increased. Two wheelbase kits plus an installation kit are available.

HN Comments

Wolfgang Koeppen's Structural Musicality

A Cloudflare block prevents access to theparisreview.org. The page says the security service blocked your action (possible triggers include certain words, SQL commands, or malformed data). To resolve, enable cookies and email the site owner with what you were doing, plus the Cloudflare Ray ID (9f7e34fd4cde3117) and your IP.

HN Comments

Building the TD4 4-Bit CPU

Dilshan Jayakody describes building the TD4, Kaoru Tonami’s 4‑bit CPU from How to Build a CPU, using a 74‑series TTL hardware design. He translated the book, sourced a TD4 PCB, and assembled a hard‑wired processor with 12 instructions and a 16‑byte ROM programmed by DIP switches. It runs on 5V (USB power or 2.54 mm header); key parts include 74HC161 counters, 74HC153 multiplexers, 74HC283 ALU, 74HC10/32 gates, and a 74HC14 clock. The ROM is a diode matrix (1N4148) decoding DIP switches. No firmware; educational tool. A TD4 assembler converts assembly to DIP settings (GitHub).

HN Comments

The Mathematical Dance Inside Plant Cells

Biophysicists Nico Schramma and Mazi Jalaal showed that chloroplasts in Elodea cells organize into a mathematically optimal packing that balances light absorption with the ability to hide from excess light. Using 2D simulations of discs in a rectangle and microscope data, they found chloroplasts arrange to fill 70–80% of a cell’s exposed surface while leaving space for motion, and actual cells match predictions. The packing behaves near a glass transition: under constant light the cytoplasm is solid-like, but light changes make it fluid-like, enabling chloroplasts to re-position. Evolution may have driven this efficiency, though universality across species remains open.

HN Comments

Diskless Linux boot using ZFS, iSCSI and PXE

Aniket outlines a diskless Linux boot using ZFS, iSCSI, and PXE to boot Debian 13 from a SAN via netboot.xyz. He uses Proxmox to export an iSCSI backstore, ZVols for disk images, a NAS hosting Netboot.xyz, a TFTP server, and DNSMasq on his router. The process covers configuring Netboot.xyz, iPXE menus, TFTP and DNS, creating a ZVol as the iSCSI backing store, defining an iSCSI target with ACLs and mutual authentication, and installing Debian over iSCSI so the OS boots from the remote disk with GRUB on the remote drive. Limitation: slower network boot; not for browsing.

HN Comments

RSS Feeds Send Me More Traffic Than Google

Terence Eden details lightweight analytics to see how visitors reach his blog. Although Google remains a primary source, RSS feeds and newsletters deliver meaningful traffic—sometimes rivaling or exceeding Google. About 25% of traffic comes from subscribers. He tracks via separate RSS/Atom/email methods; the data are rough but useful. Traffic sources include search engines, aggregators, and the Fediverse, with two formats (RSS/Atom) that could be merged. Conclusion: subscription feeds can be a substantial traffic channel alongside search.

HN Comments

We programmed a program to program new programs (2011)

An SMBC blog post from September 8, 2011 announces a new comic featuring Tanya, a reader/googler, and says it’s loosely based on a Beerscussion chat. The author jokes about remembering the conversation but not the other person’s name at 1:30 a.m. and asks the person to send the name for credit; the post also mentions comments and sharing options.

HN Comments

What I Learned Making an App for My Family

OurCar documents Mendel Greenberg’s experiment building a family car‑sharing app with Flutter, Pocketbase, and Riverpod. Frustrated by unfair gas bills and scheduling, he scoped a solution to track location (when available), car status, fuel usage, and trips via a single timeline. He avoided privacy-heavy GPS, aiming for a native feel by using Flutter Platform Widgets and referencing WhatsApp and iOS apps for UX. The code evolved into a state-machine approach, open beta deployment, and a navigation router (Auto Route). After refining backend, UI, and invite flows, the family drifted apart and the project remains in alpha, with 1.0 potential.

HN Comments

Pen pal programs endure in a digital age

Pen pal programs endure in both traditional and digital forms. IPF has connected over 2 million people in 59 years, with pandemic-era revival and growing interest among 21–26-year-olds. In schools and universities, pen pals foster empathy and reflection (Texas medical students; Villanova; Kingsborough CC). A Slowly app blends delayed-delivery with digital messaging for about 10 million users since 2017. Holly Ramer and her NZ pen pal Molly Nunns met after 15 years, illustrating enduring personal connections. Overall, pen pals persist and adapt, offering a tactile, mindful alternative to constant online chatter.

HN Comments

Finding the differences in a series of power supplies

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

Permacomputing Principles

Permacomputing applies permaculture ethics to digital tech, offering ten principles to reduce environmental and social harms and to foster resilience. It urges observing contexts before acting, resisting tech-driven growth, exposing inner workings to enable accountability, and balancing simplicity with necessary complexity. It promotes flexible, long-lived designs built on open standards; valuing and reusing hardware; and exploring local, renewable materials. While not prescriptive, it guides context-aware, iterative practice to reveal systemic issues and foster a more just, sustainable relationship between computing and ecology.

HN Comments

Perturb-MARS: Reading mouse experiments through a human lens

Perturb-MARS couples Perturb-Map, a scalable in vivo mouse perturbation platform with hundreds of genetic knockouts and preserved spatial context, and TARIO-2, a human-cancer foundation model that predicts spatial transcriptomics from H&E. Applying TARIO-2 to Perturb-Map H&E yields human-centric readouts of mouse experiments, enabling mapping of mouse biology to human biology, analysis of tumor microenvironment and immune infiltration, and rapid exploration of combination therapies (e.g., PD-1–related). It promises a scalable, end-to-end simulator for human cancer biology and seeks partners.

HN Comments

SQLite Is a Library of Congress Recommended Storage Format

The Library of Congress endorses certain dataset storage formats to maximize longevity and accessibility. SQLite is listed as a recommended format, along with XML, JSON, and CSV (as of 2018-05-29). Criteria include disclosure (full specs/tools), adoption (existing widespread use), transparency (human-readability), self-documentation (metadata), external dependencies (future risk), impact of patents, and technical protection mechanisms.

HN Comments

Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML