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gsky | 40,318,123 | 134 | Food labels and the lies they tell us about ‘best before’ expiration dates (2021) | story | https://www.vox.com/22559293/food-waste-expiration-label-best-before | null |
tyoma | 40,321,824 | 113 | An informal comparison of the three major implementations of std:string | story | https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20240510-00/?p=109742 | null |
Kye | 40,312,192 | 70 | Cylindrical Slide Rules | story | https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object-groups/slide-rules/cylindrical-slide-rules | null |
sohkamyung | 40,331,246 | 9 | Sydney's tree wars: Greed and harbour views fuel vandalism | story | https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-68871869 | null |
aestuans | 40,294,660 | 132 | Show HN: A simple 2D fluid and gravity simulation with WASM and WebGL | story | https://aestuans.github.io/blob/ | The little particles will gravitate to your cursor (or touch location), and can even enter stable orbits if the conditions are right!<p>Mainly an excuse for me to experiment with wasm and WebGL, but it makes for a surprisingly good fidget toy. |
kotk | 40,297,642 | 119 | Logicola 3 | story | https://medium.com/@malikpiara/introducing-logicola-3-1aa4047ee335 | null |
rsc | 40,273,968 | 289 | Secure Randomness in Go 1.22 | story | https://go.dev/blog/chacha8rand?hn=1 | null |
whinvik | 40,284,225 | 143 | The Birth of Parquet | story | https://sympathetic.ink/2024/01/24/Chapter-1-The-birth-of-Parquet.html | null |
benbreen | 40,290,228 | 133 | Medieval Icelanders were likely hunting blue whales before industrial technology | story | https://hakaimagazine.com/features/how-viking-age-hunters-took-down-the-biggest-animal-on-earth/ | null |
tromp | 40,299,271 | 102 | New capacitor with 19-times energy density | story | https://www.livescience.com/technology/electronics/ev-batteries-could-last-much-longer-thanks-to-new-capacitor-with-19-times-power-density-that-scientists-created-by-mistake | null |
afc | 40,307,089 | 133 | Show HN: Browser-based knitting (pattern) software | story | https://github.com/alefore/knit | I wrote some simple open source web-based app to (1) dynamically compute knitting patterns (based on input parameters, such as the exact desired size), and (2) display these patterns and help me keep track of which row I'm on (as I start knitting), similar to minimalist "row counters" that other knitters use. It also gives you a simple visualization of the shape of what you're knitting. You can see it in action at <a href="https://alefore.github.io/knit/" rel="nofollow">https://alefore.github.io/knit/</a> (and read about it in <a href="https://github.com/alefore/knit">https://github.com/alefore/knit</a>).<p>Right now I only implemented on simple pattern: Sophie scarfs. After knitting one that came out somewhat … asymmetric, I decided to just write some software to help me (1) easily adjust the length/width of the scarf (using Bézier curves), and (2) keep track of which row I'm on (so that I can make sure I apply increases/decreases at the right places). In the future, I expect to extend this with many other knitting patterns for other types of items.<p>The application is 100% browser (JavaScript, tested in only in Chrome in Linux/Android) based (no server-side component): all state is kept in the URL hash. I've used it to knit two scarves, including <a href="https://github.com/alefore/knit/blob/main/images/000.jpg">https://github.com/alefore/knit/blob/main/images/000.jpg</a>.<p>The current state of knitting patterns is far from optional, stuck in pre-computer times. Perhaps knitters are not the most technically minded group. Most knitters just download patterns as PDF files. These files will show multiple numbers from which you should choose one depending on the size you're knitting, saying things like "Purl 24 (32 38 42 50 64) times" (you're supposed to pick the right number depending on the size you're knitting). They'll say things like "repeat rows 4 to 6 sixteen times".<p>I think software can display patterns much better (including not being limited to a few pre-selected sizes, but letting you choose the _exact_ size you want, and adjusting everything accordingly), and keep track of your progress much more easily. For example, for my scarf, the user inputs the desired number of rows (based on the desired length, which makes the pattern agnostic to the needle size), and the software computes where to apply increases/decreases.<p>I have many other ideas for improvements (e.g., track how much time I've spent in each row, show a clock), but I figured I'd share this early and ask for feedback. Hopefully there are other fellow knitters in HN. :-) Check it out and let me know what you think! |
nabla9 | 40,326,895 | 27 | Hacking the immune system could slow ageing | story | https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01274-3 | null |
smegger001 | 40,329,930 | 9 | Steam is now banned in Vietnam | story | https://www.eurogamer.net/steam-is-now-banned-in-vietnam | null |
MagnitudeFC | 40,328,705 | 14 | Ask HN: Talk me through the acquihire process | story | null | I need your advice, guys.<p>My seed stage startup isn't going to make it to its series A, and we have 1.5 months of cash left. I am exploring an acquihire to see if I can find a soft landing for our team. I’ve got a meeting scheduled with a fairly senior Corp Dev person at a FAANG for Monday. I’ve never worked for a BigCo before nor have I been through an acquihire process, so I would love any advice on how I should navigate this.<p>(In hindsight I am very aware that this was a lousy situation to have put myself in, but here we are anyway.)<p>Specific questions:<p>1) What can I do to maximize my chances of getting my team acquihired?<p>2) Are acquihire packages substantially better than just trying to interview at these companies?<p>3) How long does this process take from start to finish?<p>4) What can I expect post acquihire? Will my team get absorbed into the org or will we have a chance to continue working together?<p>I know there are a lot of variables here so I'm providing some context below.<p>TL;DR we have decent traction on our product but not enough to justify a Series A and I don't want to keep treading water by taking on any extension capital from our existing investors. Therefore I am exploring an acquihire for our team. We are a 4 person team consisting of 2 founders (CEO and CTO) and 2 amazing engineers who have worked together for 4 years. We work really well together, work insanely hard and have built products together that we are proud of, but sadly didn’t find PMF.<p>On a personal note: I’ve been in the startup game for the last 10 years and I’m 36 years old. Expecting my first child this year. I need some stability in my life. Therefore I think it is time to go work for a BigCo for some time and figure out my life. |
fzeindl | 40,318,538 | 92 | The API database architecture – Stop writing HTTP-GET endpoints | story | https://www.fabianzeindl.com/posts/the-api-database-architecture | null |
RedlineTriad | 40,318,487 | 67 | Swipos-GIS/GEO, nationwide GNSS RTK correction for centimeter accurate location | story | https://www.swisstopo.admin.ch/en/swipos-gisgeo-for-rtk-and-postprocessing-applications | null |
hunterbrooks | 40,309,719 | 116 | Show HN: Ellipsis – Automated PR reviews and bug fixes | story | https://www.ellipsis.dev/ | Hi HN, hunterbrooks and nbrad here from Ellipsis (<a href="https://www.ellipsis.dev">https://www.ellipsis.dev</a>). Ellipsis automatically reviews your PRs when opened and on each new commit. If you tag @ellipsis-dev in a comment, it can make changes to the PR (via direct commit or side PR) and answer questions, just like a human.<p>Demo video: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X61NGZpaNQA" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X61NGZpaNQA</a><p>So far, we have dozens of open source projects and companies using Ellipsis. We seem to have landed in a kind of sweet spot where there’s a good match between the current capabilities of AI tools and the actual needs of software engineers - this doesn’t replace human review, but it saves you time by catching/fixing lots of small silly stuff.<p>Here’s an example in the wild: <a href="https://github.com/relari-ai/continuous-eval/pull/38">https://github.com/relari-ai/continuous-eval/pull/38</a>. Ellipsis (1) adds a PR summary; (2) finds a bug and adds a review comment; (3) after a (human) user comments, generates a side PR with the fix; and (4) after a (human) user merges the side PR and adds another commit, re-reviews the PR and approves it<p>Here’s another example: <a href="https://github.com/SciPhi-AI/R2R/pull/350#pullrequestreview-204013694">https://github.com/SciPhi-AI/R2R/pull/350#pullrequestreview-...</a>, where Ellipsis adds several comments with inline suggestions that were directly merged by the developer.<p>You can configure Ellipsis in natural language to enforce custom rules, style guides, or conventions. For example, here’s how the `jxnl/instructor` repo uses natural language rules to make sure that docs are kept in sync: <a href="https://github.com/jxnl/instructor/blob/main/ellipsis.yaml#L13-L14">https://github.com/jxnl/instructor/blob/main/ellipsis.yaml#L...</a>, and here’s an example PR that Ellipsis came up with based on those rules: <a href="https://github.com/jxnl/instructor/pull/346">https://github.com/jxnl/instructor/pull/346</a>.<p>Installing into your repo takes 2 clicks at <a href="https://www.ellipsis.dev">https://www.ellipsis.dev</a>. You do have to sign up to try it out because we need you to authorize our GitHub app to read your code. Don’t worry, your code is never stored or used to train models (<a href="https://docs.ellipsis.dev/security">https://docs.ellipsis.dev/security</a>).<p>We’d really appreciate your feedback, thoughts, and ideas! |
chmaynard | 40,316,021 | 55 | Hexagonal Tiling Honeycomb | story | https://johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com/2024/05/04/hexagonal-tiling-honeycomb/ | null |
rtfeldman | 40,274,113 | 36 | Weaver: An ergonomic CLI parsing library for Roc lang | story | https://sammohr.dev/blog/announcing-weaver | null |
gone35 | 40,314,236 | 171 | CS388: Natural Language Processing | story | https://www.cs.utexas.edu/~gdurrett/courses/online-course/materials.html | null |
mappu | 40,301,508 | 70 | Telegram founder claims Signal has a US government backdoor | story | https://t.me/durov/274 | null |
lucasfcosta | 40,296,734 | 87 | Logarithmic Scales | story | https://briefer.cloud/blog/posts/logarithms/ | null |
sschueller | 40,287,020 | 902 | Road resurfacing during the daytime without stopping traffic [video] | story | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymyIEGRw4-U | null |
pjmlp | 40,272,514 | 206 | How to Use the Foreign Function API in Java 22 to Call C Libraries | story | https://ifesunmola.com/how-to-use-the-foreign-function-api-in-java-22-to-call-c-libraries/ | null |
mpweiher | 40,327,543 | 98 | Lessons learned reinventing the Python notebook | story | https://marimo.io/blog/lessons-learned | null |
peteforde | 40,309,759 | 224 | ESP32 Drum Synth Machine | story | https://github.com/zircothc/DRUM_2004_V1 | null |
fanf2 | 40,321,013 | 16 | Coding for non-programmers: we need better web GUI automation tools. (2021) | story | https://matduggan.com/why-we-need-better/ | null |
HCazlab | 40,326,855 | 3 | An unexpected detour into partially symbolic, sparsity-expoiting autodiff | story | https://dansblog.netlify.app/posts/2024-05-08-laplace/laplace | null |
zhisbug | 40,302,201 | 458 | Consistency LLM: converting LLMs to parallel decoders accelerates inference 3.5x | story | https://hao-ai-lab.github.io/blogs/cllm/ | null |
isomorph | 40,327,578 | 82 | She was accused of faking incriminating video of cheerleaders. Nothing was fake | story | https://www.theguardian.com/technology/article/2024/may/11/she-was-accused-of-faking-an-incriminating-video-of-teenage-cheerleaders-she-was-arrested-outcast-and-condemned-the-problem-nothing-was-fake-after-all | null |
wglb | 40,261,378 | 49 | In medieval England, leprosy spread btwn red squirrels/people, genome evidence | story | https://phys.org/news/2024-05-medieval-england-leprosy-red-squirrels.html | null |
pubg | 40,320,667 | 21 | Ask HN: What distributed file system would you use in 2024? | story | null | What distributed file system would you use for a greenfield homelab project today?<p>Requirements / desires:<p>* Reliable<p>* Performant<p>* Easy to setup and operate<p>Some options:<p>SeaweedFS - https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs<p>289 hits: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&query=seaweedfs&sort=byPopularity&type=all<p>JuiceFS - https://github.com/juicedata/juicefs<p>2047 hits: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&query=juicefs&sort=byPopularity&type=all<p>MooseFS - https://github.com/moosefs/moosefs<p>126 hits: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&query=moosefs&sort=byPopularity&type=all<p>Do people still use Ceph or Gluster? I don't think they qualify as "easy to setup and operate".<p>Thanks! |
rtrunck | 40,303,425 | 99 | A Man Who Raced to Tell the World That Mount Everest Had Been Climbed | story | https://www.outsideonline.com/outdoor-adventure/everest/everest-hillary-norgay-1953-news/ | null |
superasn | 40,304,717 | 88 | Sony Wearable Thermal Device | story | https://www.sony.com.hk/reonpocket/en/ | null |
happy-dude | 40,313,798 | 174 | Wprs – rootless remote desktop for Wayland (and X11, via XWayland) applications | story | https://github.com/wayland-transpositor/wprs | null |
dulvui | 40,330,816 | 39 | Flatpak – a security nightmare – 2 years later (2020) | story | https://flatkill.org/2020/ | null |
commspam | 40,261,023 | 61 | Hymn for Walpurgisnacht | story | https://themillions.com/2024/04/hymn-for-walpurgisnacht.html | null |
truro | 40,323,966 | 55 | Microsoft confirms Windows 11 24H2 turns on Device Encryption by default | story | https://www.windowslatest.com/2024/05/08/microsoft-confirms-windows-11-24h2-turns-on-device-encryption-by-default/ | null |
chuckhend | 40,307,454 | 239 | Show HN: An SQS Alternative on Postgres | story | https://github.com/tembo-io/pgmq | null |
jpjacobpadilla | 40,281,139 | 278 | How Python asyncio works: recreating it from scratch | story | https://jacobpadilla.com/articles/recreating-asyncio | null |
etherdream | 40,283,752 | 175 | Using AirPods as a Morse Transmitter | story | https://github.com/EtherDream/headphone-morse-transmitter | null |
sklargh | 40,314,285 | 84 | Weapons in Space Technology, Politics, and the Rise and Fall of SDI | story | https://direct.mit.edu/books/oa-monograph/5770/Weapons-in-SpaceTechnology-Politics-and-the-Rise | null |
bwidlar | 40,316,039 | 107 | Tine Text Editor | story | https://github.com/travisdoor/tine | null |
matan-h | 40,278,874 | 156 | Common Google XSS | story | https://matan-h.com/common-google-xss | null |
fsloth | 40,326,521 | 3 | Geomagnetically Induced Currents (Wikipedia) | story | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geomagnetically_induced_current | null |
yonom | 40,317,740 | 377 | Popover API | story | https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Popover_API | null |
andyjohnson0 | 40,327,418 | 13 | Big Energy | story | https://www.profgalloway.com/big-energy/ | null |
luu | 40,292,853 | 33 | RTK Experiments | story | https://n1vux.github.io/articles/Geodetic/RTK-experiments.html | null |
nrabulinski | 40,271,797 | 126 | Pair Your Compilers at the ABI Café | story | https://faultlore.com/blah/abi-puns/ | null |
davedx | 40,272,439 | 137 | Grace Version Control System | story | https://github.com/ScottArbeit/Grace | null |
surprisetalk | 40,283,954 | 239 | Industrial Design Student Work: "How Long Should Objects Last?" | story | https://www.core77.com/posts/132088/Fantastic-Industrial-Design-Student-Work-How-Long-Should-Objects-Last | null |
shpx | 40,326,313 | 3 | Assembly | story | https://assembly.louve.systems/ | null |
gmac | 40,299,761 | 76 | Bringing psql’s \d to your web browser | story | https://neon.tech/blog/bringing-psqls-d-to-your-web-browser | null |
peutetre | 40,297,748 | 537 | 'Underwater bicycle' propels swimmers forward at superhuman speed | story | https://newatlas.com/marine/seabike-swimming-propeller/ | null |
bondant | 40,307,098 | 370 | Algebraic Data Types for C99 | story | https://github.com/Hirrolot/datatype99 | null |
keepamovin | 40,317,515 | 19 | Astrophysics Data System | story | https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu:443/classic-form/ | null |
jseliger | 40,325,044 | 5 | Tony Soprano and the Jungian Death Mother (2023) | story | https://www.robkhenderson.com/p/tony-soprano-and-the-jungian-death | null |
BerislavLopac | 40,273,534 | 339 | Design docs at Google (2020) | story | https://www.industrialempathy.com/posts/design-docs-at-google/ | null |
fzliu | 40,294,808 | 62 | Radient – vectorize many data types, not just text | story | https://github.com/fzliu/radient | null |
LevoMX | 40,301,592 | 52 | TimeGPT: Production Ready Time Series Foundation Model for Forecasting | story | https://github.com/Nixtla/nixtla | null |
sahil_singla | 40,299,556 | 48 | Launch HN: Baselit (YC W23) – Automatically Reduce Snowflake Costs | story | null | Hey HN! We are Baselit (<a href="https://baselit.ai/">https://baselit.ai/</a>), a tool that automatically optimizes Snowflake costs. Here’s a demo video: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ls6VRzBQ-pQ" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ls6VRzBQ-pQ</a>.<p>Snowflake is one of the most widely used data warehouses today. It abstracts out the underlying compute infrastructure into “warehouses” for the user - compute units with t-shirt sizes (X-Small, Small, Medium etc.). In general, if you want to lower your data processing costs, the only thing you can do is to just process less data (i.e. query optimization). But Snowflake’s warehouse abstraction allows an extra dimension along which you can optimize - by minimizing the compute you need to process that same data (i.e. warehouse optimization). Baselit automates Snowflake warehouse optimization for you.<p>While we were working on another idea last year (AI for SQL generation), users frequently shared with us how Snowflake costs had become a top concern, and cost optimization was now their business priority. Every few months, they would manually look for opportunities to cut down on costs (removing workloads or optimizing queries) - a time consuming process. We decided to build a solution that could automate cost optimization, and complement the manual effort of data teams.<p>There are two key components of Baselit:<p>1. Automated agents that cut down on warehouse idle time. This happens in one of two ways: cache optimization (when to suspend a warehouse vs letting it run idle) and cluster optimization (optimal spin down of clusters).<p>You can easily find out how much these agents can save you. Here’s a SQL query that you can run on your Snowflake, and it will calculate your savings - <a href="https://baselit.ai/docs/savings-estimate">https://baselit.ai/docs/savings-estimate</a><p>2. Autoscaler that lets you create custom scaling policies for multi-cluster warehouses based on SLAs. Snowflake’s default policies (Economy and Standard) are not cost optimal in most cases, and they don’t give you any control.<p>One use case for Autoscaler is that it helps you efficiently merge several warehouses into one multi-cluster warehouse - with a custom scaling policy that is optimal for a particular type of workload. In Autoscaler, you can set a parameter called “Allowed Queuing Time” that controls how fast a new cluster should spin up. For e.g. if you want to merge transformation workloads, you might want to set a higher queuing time. Baselit will slow down the cluster spin up, ensuring all clusters are running at a high utilization, and you’ll see a reduction in costs.<p>We’ve built a bunch of other features that help in optimizing Snowflake costs: a dbt optimization feature that automatically picks the right warehouse size for dbt models through constant experimentation, a “cost lineage”, spend views by teams/roles/users, and automatic recommendations from scanning Snowflake metadata.<p>Due to the nature of our product (access to Snowflake metadata required), we haven’t made Baselit self-serve yet. We invite you to run our savings query (<a href="https://baselit.ai/docs/savings-estimate">https://baselit.ai/docs/savings-estimate</a>) and find out your potential savings. And if you’d like to know more about any of our features and get a live demo, you can book one at this link - <a href="https://calendly.com/baselit-sahil/baselit-demo" rel="nofollow">https://calendly.com/baselit-sahil/baselit-demo</a><p>We’d love to read your feedback and ideas on Snowflake optimization! |
georgehill | 40,300,482 | 152 | OpenAI: Model Spec | story | https://openai.com/index/introducing-the-model-spec | null |
smandava | 40,272,339 | 317 | Show HN: AI climbing coach – visualize how to climb any route based on your body | story | https://climbing.ai/ | I made SABR - an AI model that helps you visualize the beta/technique on any route, based on your body parameters. You can input a video of you climbing any route, in any orientation or lighting condition (it's truly versatile!). SABR then creates a virtual avatar of your body shape and uses it to climb the route you're climbing. Then, you can compare/contrast.<p>You can see the demo here:
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnvNPWoYZz4" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnvNPWoYZz4</a><p>Will be open sourcing the model, backend, and frontend codebase soon! |
mundanerality | 40,304,453 | 497 | The Time I Lied to the CTO and Saved the Day | story | https://GrumpyOldDev.com/post/the-one-where-i-lie-to-the-cto/ | null |
libcheet | 40,303,661 | 260 | Opening Windows in Linux with sockets, bare hands and 200 lines of C | story | https://hereket.com/posts/from-scratch-x11-windowing/ | null |
kmdupree | 40,308,044 | 105 | VideoPrism: A foundational visual encoder for video understanding | story | https://research.google/blog/videoprism-a-foundational-visual-encoder-for-video-understanding/ | null |
ssutch3 | 40,284,495 | 88 | Homemade liquid nitrogen generator Joule Thomson throttle (2013) | story | http://homemadeliquidnitrogen.com/ | null |
prismatic | 40,282,706 | 91 | Japanese Trade Publications Helped Japan Form a New Graphic Identity (2023) | story | https://www.collectorsweekly.com/articles/how-a-rare-set-of-japanese-trade-publications-helped-japan-form-a-new-graphic-identity/ | null |
lupyuen | 40,324,623 | 4 | Apache NuttX International Workshop 2024 (13-14 Jun) | story | https://events.nuttx.apache.org/ | null |
wslh | 40,327,585 | 9 | Bitcoin Wallet Maker Exodus Jumping Up to New York Stock Exchange | story | https://decrypt.co/229589/bitcoin-wallet-exodus-nyse-exod-listing | null |
mauricesvp | 40,294,650 | 194 | XLSTM: Extended Long Short-Term Memory | story | https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.04517 | null |
leephillips | 40,323,890 | 39 | Divided Supreme Court rules no quick hearing required when police seize property | story | https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/divided-supreme-court-rules-quick-hearing-required-police-110074364 | null |
timjver | 40,297,502 | 66 | Pulley system composition – a systematic approach (2020) | story | https://www.kiipeilytuomas.fi/articles-in-english/pulley-system-composition-a-systematic-approach/ | null |
repelsteeltje | 40,316,704 | 43 | Fedora Asahi Remix 40 is a big step forward for Linux on Macs | story | https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/05/fedora-asahi-remix-40-is-another-big-step-forward-for-linux-on-apple-silicon-macs/ | null |
stefankuehnel | 40,284,164 | 228 | Dotfiles: Unofficial Guide to Dotfiles on GitHub | story | https://dotfiles.github.io/ | null |
antoine-kaufm | 40,303,336 | 66 | Show HN: SimBricks – Modular Full-System Simulation for HW-SW Systems | story | https://simbricks.github.io/ | Hi HN,<p>we are building SimBricks, an open-source simulation framework for heterogeneous systems, especially with custom hardware. SimBricks modularly combines existing simulators for machines, networks, and hardware, allowing you to build, test, and evaluate intricate complete systems in a virtual environment. Head over to the SimBricks website (<a href="https://simbricks.github.io/" rel="nofollow">https://simbricks.github.io/</a>, also has a quick demo video) to learn more. We have pre-built docker images, and you can even immediately play around on codespaces.<p>Concrete use-cases:
- Evaluate HW accelerators, from early design with simple behavioral models, to simulating complete Verilog implementations, both as part of complete systems with many instances of the accelerator and machines running full OS and real applications (we did a university course on this with SimBricks).
- Test network protocols, topologies, and communication stacks for real workloads in potentially large systems (we ran up to 1000 hosts so far).
- Rapid RTL prototyping for FPGAs, no waiting for synthesis or fiddling with timing initially (we simulate the complete unmodified RTL for the Corundum Open-source NIC with their unmodified PCIe drivers).<p>SimBricks originally started out as an internal research tool, for helping us build and evaluate our research ideas on network protocol offload, but has since grown into a separate open-source project.<p>Would be great if you give it a shot and let us know what you think! |
fanf2 | 40,273,121 | 120 | Conical Slicing: A different angle of 3D printing | story | https://www.cnckitchen.com/blog/conical-slicing-a-different-angle-of-3d-printing | null |
yeldarb | 40,297,946 | 314 | TimesFM: Time Series Foundation Model for time-series forecasting | story | https://github.com/google-research/timesfm | null |
ibylich | 40,276,112 | 131 | Arena-based parsers | story | https://iliabylich.github.io/arena-based-parsers/ | null |
turtlegrids | 40,330,362 | 36 | Some 787 Production Test Records Were Falsified, Boeing Says | story | https://aviationweek.com/air-transport/some-787-production-test-records-were-falsified-boeing-says | null |
Wasserpuncher | 40,329,503 | 7 | Dell API abused to steal 49M customer records in data breach | story | https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/dell-api-abused-to-steal-49-million-customer-records-in-data-breach/ | null |
ingve | 40,263,109 | 317 | A 100x speedup with unsafe Python | story | https://yosefk.com/blog/a-100x-speedup-with-unsafe-python.html | null |
todsacerdoti | 40,293,505 | 111 | Needle: A DFA Based Regex Library That Compiles to JVM ByteCode | story | https://justinblank.com/experiments/needle.html | null |
matt_d | 40,300,523 | 20 | HiFi-DRAM: Enabling High-Fidelity DRAM Research by Uncovering Sense Amplifiers | story | https://comsec.ethz.ch/research/dram/hifi-dram/ | null |
chmaynard | 40,303,338 | 82 | Securing Git Repositories with Gittuf | story | https://lwn.net/SubscriberLink/972467/595a68b99f57a87d/ | null |
SirLJ | 40,264,091 | 160 | A book Stanley Kubrick didn’t want anyone to read is being published | story | https://www.theguardian.com/film/2024/apr/21/stanley-kubrick-director-book-block-flaws-films-published | null |
conductor | 40,311,110 | 59 | DNSecure – a configuration tool of DoT and DoH for iOS and iPadOS | story | https://github.com/kkebo/DNSecure | null |
davikr | 40,325,684 | 7 | Yet Another X-Class Flare Observed | story | https://www.spaceweather.gov/news/yet-another-x-class-flare-observed | null |
archermarks | 40,315,400 | 123 | Object oriented design patterns in the Linux kernel (2011) | story | https://lwn.net/Articles/444910/ | null |
leotravis10 | 40,324,965 | 21 | EA is prototyping in-game ads even as we speak | story | https://www.theverge.com/2024/5/10/24153809/ea-in-game-ads-redux | null |
PaulHoule | 40,315,022 | 93 | Energy-Efficient Llama 2 Inference on FPGAs via High Level Synthesis | story | https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.00738 | null |
Gamemaster1379 | 40,329,426 | 3 | New static recompiler tool N64Recomp aims to seamlessly modernize N64 games | story | https://gbatemp.net/threads/new-static-recompiler-tool-n64recomp-aims-to-seamlessly-modernize-n64-games.655670/ | null |
metadat | 40,287,341 | 195 | Temporal Python – A durable, distributed asyncio event loop (2023) | story | https://temporal.io/blog/durable-distributed-asyncio-event-loop | null |
ecliptik | 40,286,942 | 121 | J.G. Ballard predicted the rise of social media (2016) | story | https://www.openculture.com/2016/03/j-g-ballard-predicted-the-rise-of-social-media-and-youtube-celebrity-in-1977.html | null |
fagnerbrack | 40,280,490 | 750 | Caniemail.com – like caniuse but for email content | story | https://www.caniemail.com/ | null |
f1nlay | 40,329,793 | 13 | Show HN: Project Random – Random, obscure content from around the web | story | https://0xbeef.co.uk/random | null |
andyjohnson0 | 40,329,360 | 3 | Neolithic site in Orkney to be reburied after 20 years of excavation | story | https://www.theguardian.com/science/article/2024/may/11/orkney-ness-of-brodgar-neolithic-site-reburied-after-excavation | null |
mikerg87 | 40,273,516 | 103 | Radius Full Page Display | story | https://32by32.com/radius-full-page-display/ | null |
Brajeshwar | 40,328,344 | 7 | New phononics materials may lead to smaller, more powerful wireless devices | story | https://phys.org/news/2024-05-phononics-materials-smaller-powerful-wireless.html | null |
zerojames | 40,307,832 | 182 | No "Zero-Shot" Without Exponential Data | story | https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.04125 | null |