New best story on News: SomaFM

SomaFM
554 by Datenstrom | 130 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: SomaFM

SomaFM
551 by Datenstrom | 130 comments on


New best story on News: So I Took a Corporation to Arbitration

So I Took a Corporation to Arbitration
601 by snapetom | 272 comments .


New best story on News: So I Took a Corporation to Arbitration

So I Took a Corporation to Arbitration
533 by snapetom | 244 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: So I Took a Corporation to Arbitration

So I Took a Corporation to Arbitration
521 by snapetom | 239 comments on


New best story on News: Ask HN: Burnt-out, directionless but want to turn it around

Ask HN: Burnt-out, directionless but want to turn it around
536 by RoseBuckler | 286 comments on News.
I've been programming on and off since the age of 16. Unfortunately, I have never been a rockstar programmer. I've always pieced code together from multiple sources to create programs but I've always failed to come up with a solution from scratch of my own and provide any value. I've always wondered how other smart people are able to come up with libraries, services and various solutions from scratch. I've devised countless ideas only to never execute them for various reasons or get started with them only to never fully complete them and see it all the way through. I've already wasted my entire teens and 20s, current 28 years old, working as a software engineer (Full-Stack) at a startup for ~4 years. I've been feeling like a loser and not good enough for this career even though I am a sole developer for Mobile and Web platforms at this startup in a very small team. I've put in countless hours of work every day (70-90 hrs), being on-call almost 24/7, sometimes for straight 7 days for months despite only getting paid on a salary basis on 40 hr work weeks; being a loner helps with working long hours. My salary also hasn't increased much, and feel like I'm severely underpaid based on the # of years of experience but I struggle with evaluating my value in the market to determine my worth. I assumed working hard would pay off but that hasn't been the case at all; I truly believe I've been doing the opposite of "Work Smart, Not Hard". I've been trying to get back to learning DS and Algos so I can apply to places but I struggle with LeetCode, which is making me feel like even a bigger loser for not being able to solve problems. I'm stuck in a rut, wanting to better my skills and earn a good amount of money but unable to concentrate, riddled with brain fog, and unsure of my future. My self-confidence and self-esteem are taking a hit. I am terrible at networking, so I don't have others to reach out to for tips and advice, hence I'm turning to HN. I apologize if this isn't the place for a post like this. How can I turn my directionless life around and find satisfaction with my career?

New best story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Burnt-out, directionless but want to turn it around

Ask HN: Burnt-out, directionless but want to turn it around
534 by RoseBuckler | 285 comments on
I've been programming on and off since the age of 16. Unfortunately, I have never been a rockstar programmer. I've always pieced code together from multiple sources to create programs but I've always failed to come up with a solution from scratch of my own and provide any value. I've always wondered how other smart people are able to come up with libraries, services and various solutions from scratch. I've devised countless ideas only to never execute them for various reasons or get started with them only to never fully complete them and see it all the way through. I've already wasted my entire teens and 20s, current 28 years old, working as a software engineer (Full-Stack) at a startup for ~4 years. I've been feeling like a loser and not good enough for this career even though I am a sole developer for Mobile and Web platforms at this startup in a very small team. I've put in countless hours of work every day (70-90 hrs), being on-call almost 24/7, sometimes for straight 7 days for months despite only getting paid on a salary basis on 40 hr work weeks; being a loner helps with working long hours. My salary also hasn't increased much, and feel like I'm severely underpaid based on the # of years of experience but I struggle with evaluating my value in the market to determine my worth. I assumed working hard would pay off but that hasn't been the case at all; I truly believe I've been doing the opposite of "Work Smart, Not Hard". I've been trying to get back to learning DS and Algos so I can apply to places but I struggle with LeetCode, which is making me feel like even a bigger loser for not being able to solve problems. I'm stuck in a rut, wanting to better my skills and earn a good amount of money but unable to concentrate, riddled with brain fog, and unsure of my future. My self-confidence and self-esteem are taking a hit. I am terrible at networking, so I don't have others to reach out to for tips and advice, hence I'm turning to HN. I apologize if this isn't the place for a post like this. How can I turn my directionless life around and find satisfaction with my career?

New best story on News: Ask HN: Burnt-out, directionless but want to turn it around

Ask HN: Burnt-out, directionless but want to turn it around
527 by RoseBuckler | 284 comments .
I've been programming on and off since the age of 16. Unfortunately, I have never been a rockstar programmer. I've always pieced code together from multiple sources to create programs but I've always failed to come up with a solution from scratch of my own and provide any value. I've always wondered how other smart people are able to come up with libraries, services and various solutions from scratch. I've devised countless ideas only to never execute them for various reasons or get started with them only to never fully complete them and see it all the way through. I've already wasted my entire teens and 20s, current 28 years old, working as a software engineer (Full-Stack) at a startup for ~4 years. I've been feeling like a loser and not good enough for this career even though I am a sole developer for Mobile and Web platforms at this startup in a very small team. I've put in countless hours of work every day (70-90 hrs), being on-call almost 24/7, sometimes for straight 7 days for months despite only getting paid on a salary basis on 40 hr work weeks; being a loner helps with working long hours. My salary also hasn't increased much, and feel like I'm severely underpaid based on the # of years of experience but I struggle with evaluating my value in the market to determine my worth. I assumed working hard would pay off but that hasn't been the case at all; I truly believe I've been doing the opposite of "Work Smart, Not Hard". I've been trying to get back to learning DS and Algos so I can apply to places but I struggle with LeetCode, which is making me feel like even a bigger loser for not being able to solve problems. I'm stuck in a rut, wanting to better my skills and earn a good amount of money but unable to concentrate, riddled with brain fog, and unsure of my future. My self-confidence and self-esteem are taking a hit. I am terrible at networking, so I don't have others to reach out to for tips and advice, hence I'm turning to HN. I apologize if this isn't the place for a post like this. How can I turn my directionless life around and find satisfaction with my career?

New best story on News: Neon – Serverless Postgres

Neon – Serverless Postgres
535 by nikolay | 242 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: Neon – Serverless Postgres

Neon – Serverless Postgres
535 by nikolay | 242 comments on


New best story on News: Neon – Serverless Postgres

Neon – Serverless Postgres
533 by nikolay | 240 comments .


New best story on News: Knots 3D – Learn how to tie over 150 useful knots

Knots 3D – Learn how to tie over 150 useful knots
515 by kosasbest | 121 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: Knots 3D – Learn how to tie over 150 useful knots

Knots 3D – Learn how to tie over 150 useful knots
513 by kosasbest | 120 comments on


New best story on News: Knots 3D – Learn how to tie over 150 useful knots

Knots 3D – Learn how to tie over 150 useful knots
513 by kosasbest | 120 comments .


New best story on Hacker News: Broadcom to acquire VMware for $61B

Broadcom to acquire VMware for $61B
542 by squidofbits | 359 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: Show HN: I turned my face rec system into a video codec

Show HN: I turned my face rec system into a video codec
484 by jacobgorm | 138 comments on
Before the pandemic, my tiny startup was doing quite well selling Edge AI systems, based on our own lightweight AI inference engine, with object detection and face recognition for smart city and smart retail & food service applications. When the real world shut down, there was suddenly nothing to monitor on streets and in restaurants, so I set out to try and evolve our real time face recognition system into a video codec for high quality face-to-face online interactions, as I was not satisfied with the quality of Zoom and friends. I got it to work, and the first release for IOS was just approved on Apple's app store, link: https://ift.tt/bfZ39Ks The way it works is that you create a meeting URL, which you can share out-of-band, for instance via slack or text message. You can also share as a QR code which the app can scan to join a call. You then place your device on a surface in front of you so that the front camera can see you, and it will recognize you face and assign you to your own session, which is broadcast to the meeting channel. If more than one person is in view, both of you will be broadcast but with separate session ids, like if you were on separate cameras. Other meeting participants will show up on your screen and you can start talking. It is optimized for eye contact, meaning that the eyes will actually make it through to the other side as more than just dark pixel clouds, so thinks should feel a bit more personal than the standard Zoom/Teams/or Google Meet call. Because it uses face rec, you can ONLY show your face, and if you disappear from view your audio will stop after a while, to avoid situations like when you need to go the the restroom but forget to mute. This also solves dick-pics etc. The CODEC is not based on H26[45], but is pure AI that runs on the GPU. There is a neural network that compresses the video in real time, and another one decompressing on the receiving end. Finding a tight network architecture that would do this in real time with acceptable quality was a major part of the effort. There are several quality settings possible, but right now it is set fairly high and for 20FPS maxes out around 700kbit/s, though typically uses about half. I've demonstrated good results down to around 200kbit/s, so in theory it should work over satellite links or even Bluetooth. The protocol is UDP with no congestion control but with (Wirehair) FEC to protect against mild packet loss, future versions will detect packet loss and adapt to available bandwidth. The audio just uses OPUS and may click a little bit, I blame AudioEngine or the fact that the last time I wrote audio code was for the game I published for the Amiga in 1994. If you don't have a friend around or multiple devices to play with, there is an "echo test" server mode that allows you to be in a meeting with yourself. Traffic will be peer-to-peer if possible, but otherwise you will be relaying through my tiny Raspberry PI server, so YMMV. I plan to try to switch to something like fly.io soon to improve scalability. There is also a MacOS version coming very soon, and the underlying AI engine also runs on Windows & Linux. Android support is planned. Please take a look and let me know what you think.

New best story on News: Show HN: I turned my face rec system into a video codec

Show HN: I turned my face rec system into a video codec
484 by jacobgorm | 138 comments .
Before the pandemic, my tiny startup was doing quite well selling Edge AI systems, based on our own lightweight AI inference engine, with object detection and face recognition for smart city and smart retail & food service applications. When the real world shut down, there was suddenly nothing to monitor on streets and in restaurants, so I set out to try and evolve our real time face recognition system into a video codec for high quality face-to-face online interactions, as I was not satisfied with the quality of Zoom and friends. I got it to work, and the first release for IOS was just approved on Apple's app store, link: https://ift.tt/jbEU0s5 The way it works is that you create a meeting URL, which you can share out-of-band, for instance via slack or text message. You can also share as a QR code which the app can scan to join a call. You then place your device on a surface in front of you so that the front camera can see you, and it will recognize you face and assign you to your own session, which is broadcast to the meeting channel. If more than one person is in view, both of you will be broadcast but with separate session ids, like if you were on separate cameras. Other meeting participants will show up on your screen and you can start talking. It is optimized for eye contact, meaning that the eyes will actually make it through to the other side as more than just dark pixel clouds, so thinks should feel a bit more personal than the standard Zoom/Teams/or Google Meet call. Because it uses face rec, you can ONLY show your face, and if you disappear from view your audio will stop after a while, to avoid situations like when you need to go the the restroom but forget to mute. This also solves dick-pics etc. The CODEC is not based on H26[45], but is pure AI that runs on the GPU. There is a neural network that compresses the video in real time, and another one decompressing on the receiving end. Finding a tight network architecture that would do this in real time with acceptable quality was a major part of the effort. There are several quality settings possible, but right now it is set fairly high and for 20FPS maxes out around 700kbit/s, though typically uses about half. I've demonstrated good results down to around 200kbit/s, so in theory it should work over satellite links or even Bluetooth. The protocol is UDP with no congestion control but with (Wirehair) FEC to protect against mild packet loss, future versions will detect packet loss and adapt to available bandwidth. The audio just uses OPUS and may click a little bit, I blame AudioEngine or the fact that the last time I wrote audio code was for the game I published for the Amiga in 1994. If you don't have a friend around or multiple devices to play with, there is an "echo test" server mode that allows you to be in a meeting with yourself. Traffic will be peer-to-peer if possible, but otherwise you will be relaying through my tiny Raspberry PI server, so YMMV. I plan to try to switch to something like fly.io soon to improve scalability. There is also a MacOS version coming very soon, and the underlying AI engine also runs on Windows & Linux. Android support is planned. Please take a look and let me know what you think.

New best story on News: Tell HN: I made $1000 with my app and now making $500/mo

Tell HN: I made $1000 with my app and now making $500/mo
447 by strongpigeon | 141 comments on News.
Edit: Wow #1 on HN. Y'all are making my day. Hey HN, I'm mostly a lurker on HN who's always super inspired by other people's small project that end-up making money. (Huge fan of Ben Stoke's Tiny Project [0]) After being burnt-out in big tech, I decided to write my own weightlifting app and set myself a humble goal of reaching $1000 in total proceeds. See [1] for my initial launch post. I've now surpassed that goal and am now making about 500$/mo by selling premium features in the app. Android version is coming soon too. Doing the whole thing end-to-end (code, launch, marketing, support) was super gratifying and taught me a whole lot. I have to admit that I got almost teary eyed the first time someone bought one of my IAPs. I'm not making a killing out of the app, and that was never the goal. But the personal satisfaction I got out of it was worth everything. I can't pretend to have derived any life lesson that applies to everybody from this, but this whole mini-journey was worth it for me, and I hope it will be for you too, should you embark in a similar one. [0] https://ift.tt/DZnqG8w [1] https://ift.tt/4udLYUQ

New best story on Hacker News: Tell HN: I made $1000 with my app and now making $500/mo

Tell HN: I made $1000 with my app and now making $500/mo
446 by strongpigeon | 141 comments on
Edit: Wow #1 on HN. Y'all are making my day. Hey HN, I'm mostly a lurker on HN who's always super inspired by other people's small project that end-up making money. (Huge fan of Ben Stoke's Tiny Project [0]) After being burnt-out in big tech, I decided to write my own weightlifting app and set myself a humble goal of reaching $1000 in total proceeds. See [1] for my initial launch post. I've now surpassed that goal and am now making about 500$/mo by selling premium features in the app. Android version is coming soon too. Doing the whole thing end-to-end (code, launch, marketing, support) was super gratifying and taught me a whole lot. I have to admit that I got almost teary eyed the first time someone bought one of my IAPs. I'm not making a killing out of the app, and that was never the goal. But the personal satisfaction I got out of it was worth everything. I can't pretend to have derived any life lesson that applies to everybody from this, but this whole mini-journey was worth it for me, and I hope it will be for you too, should you embark in a similar one. [0] https://ift.tt/DZnqG8w [1] https://ift.tt/4udLYUQ

New best story on News: Tell HN: I made $1000 with my app and now making $500/mo

Tell HN: I made $1000 with my app and now making $500/mo
445 by strongpigeon | 140 comments .
Edit: Wow #1 on HN. Y'all are making my day. Hey HN, I'm mostly a lurker on HN who's always super inspired by other people's small project that end-up making money. (Huge fan of Ben Stoke's Tiny Project [0]) After being burnt-out in big tech, I decided to write my own weightlifting app and set myself a humble goal of reaching $1000 in total proceeds. See [1] for my initial launch post. I've now surpassed that goal and am now making about 500$/mo by selling premium features in the app. Android version is coming soon too. Doing the whole thing end-to-end (code, launch, marketing, support) was super gratifying and taught me a whole lot. I have to admit that I got almost teary eyed the first time someone bought one of my IAPs. I'm not making a killing out of the app, and that was never the goal. But the personal satisfaction I got out of it was worth everything. I can't pretend to have derived any life lesson that applies to everybody from this, but this whole mini-journey was worth it for me, and I hope it will be for you too, should you embark in a similar one. [0] https://ift.tt/DZnqG8w [1] https://ift.tt/4udLYUQ

New best story on News: FTC fines Twitter $150M for using 2FA phone numbers for ad targeting

FTC fines Twitter $150M for using 2FA phone numbers for ad targeting
617 by averysmallbird | 180 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: FTC fines Twitter $150M for using 2FA phone numbers for ad targeting

FTC fines Twitter $150M for using 2FA phone numbers for ad targeting
609 by averysmallbird | 177 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: Keep the web free, say no to Web3 (2021)

Keep the web free, say no to Web3 (2021)
533 by memorable | 383 comments on


New best story on News: Vangelis has died

Vangelis has died
523 by Saint_Genet | 127 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: Vangelis has died

Vangelis has died
523 by Saint_Genet | 127 comments on


New best story on News: Vangelis has died

Vangelis has died
519 by Saint_Genet | 124 comments .


New best story on News: Why Google is so unbearable, and how to fix it

Why Google is so unbearable, and how to fix it
466 by ixnus | 412 comments on News.


New best story on News: Show HN: Bike – macOS Native Outliner

Show HN: Bike – macOS Native Outliner
498 by jessegrosjean | 231 comments on News.
Bike’s most original feature is the “fluid” text editing. Lots of text editors have animated some interactions (cursor movement, insert newline, etc), but I think Bike is the first designed from the ground up to support fluid editing. Give it a try, it feels different. (movie on home page if you don't have Mac) Other Features: • In text mode Bike works like a normal text editor. In outline mode rows are constrained to outline hierarchy. • .bike file format is HTML subset, so files are easy to parse and manipulate. Bike also supports .opml and .txt. • Scriptable via AppleScript. Javascript plugin API also expected in future, though no timing on that. • Architecture needed to support fluid editing also makes Bike faster/more scalable than most (all?) outliners and many text editors. I test performance using the Moby Dick Workout[^1]. Implementation Notes: • View is built using CALayers[^2]. • Animations are performed by Core animation and Motion[^3] lib. • View performance is determined by visible text, not document size. Model representation is interesting in that it’s just a flat list of rows. Each row has a `level` property, outline structure is determined dynamically. View implementation requires that each row has a unique ID. I’m using OrderedDictionary from Swift Collections[^4] to store rows. This is Bike’s performance bottleneck for large outlines. Eventually I may change to augmented b+tree and then should be able to work with gigabytes worth of outline. That will be fun, but not sure it’s actually needed. Already probably fast enough for 99% of use cases as is. Hope you find Bike interesting. I’m happy to answer any questions. [^1]: https://ift.tt/vsR6bkj [^2]: https://ift.tt/HDslkYx [^3]: https://ift.tt/LlJar82 [^4]: https://ift.tt/gPlx9GD

New best story on Hacker News: Show HN: Bike – macOS Native Outliner

Show HN: Bike – macOS Native Outliner
498 by jessegrosjean | 231 comments on
Bike’s most original feature is the “fluid” text editing. Lots of text editors have animated some interactions (cursor movement, insert newline, etc), but I think Bike is the first designed from the ground up to support fluid editing. Give it a try, it feels different. (movie on home page if you don't have Mac) Other Features: • In text mode Bike works like a normal text editor. In outline mode rows are constrained to outline hierarchy. • .bike file format is HTML subset, so files are easy to parse and manipulate. Bike also supports .opml and .txt. • Scriptable via AppleScript. Javascript plugin API also expected in future, though no timing on that. • Architecture needed to support fluid editing also makes Bike faster/more scalable than most (all?) outliners and many text editors. I test performance using the Moby Dick Workout[^1]. Implementation Notes: • View is built using CALayers[^2]. • Animations are performed by Core animation and Motion[^3] lib. • View performance is determined by visible text, not document size. Model representation is interesting in that it’s just a flat list of rows. Each row has a `level` property, outline structure is determined dynamically. View implementation requires that each row has a unique ID. I’m using OrderedDictionary from Swift Collections[^4] to store rows. This is Bike’s performance bottleneck for large outlines. Eventually I may change to augmented b+tree and then should be able to work with gigabytes worth of outline. That will be fun, but not sure it’s actually needed. Already probably fast enough for 99% of use cases as is. Hope you find Bike interesting. I’m happy to answer any questions. [^1]: https://ift.tt/vsR6bkj [^2]: https://ift.tt/HDslkYx [^3]: https://ift.tt/LlJar82 [^4]: https://ift.tt/gPlx9GD

New best story on News: The new and upgraded Framework Laptop

The new and upgraded Framework Laptop
587 by etbusch | 256 comments .


New best story on News: Nearly 20% of active Twitter accounts likely to be fake or spam

Nearly 20% of active Twitter accounts likely to be fake or spam
498 by iamflimflam1 | 391 comments .


New best story on News: Web3 is expensive P2P

Web3 is expensive P2P
494 by mritzmann | 355 comments .


New best story on News: Modern JavaScript Tutorial

Modern JavaScript Tutorial
525 by Hbruz0 | 98 comments .


New best story on News: Fly.io: The reclaimer of Heroku's magic

Fly.io: The reclaimer of Heroku's magic
517 by sealeck | 294 comments .


New best story on News: Web3 is expensive P2P

Web3 is expensive P2P
494 by mritzmann | 355 comments on News.


New best story on News: Modern JavaScript Tutorial

Modern JavaScript Tutorial
524 by Hbruz0 | 98 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: Fly.io: The reclaimer of Heroku's magic

Fly.io: The reclaimer of Heroku's magic
517 by sealeck | 294 comments on


New best story on News: I want an iPhone Mini-sized Android phone

I want an iPhone Mini-sized Android phone
809 by erohead | 597 comments on News.


New best story on News: I want an iPhone Mini-sized Android phone

I want an iPhone Mini-sized Android phone
689 by erohead | 512 comments .


New best story on Hacker News: I want an iPhone Mini-sized Android phone

I want an iPhone Mini-sized Android phone
599 by erohead | 451 comments on


New best story on News: Taking a Break from Social Media Makes You Happier and Less Anxious

Taking a Break from Social Media Makes You Happier and Less Anxious
570 by yarapavan | 392 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: Taking a Break from Social Media Makes You Happier and Less Anxious

Taking a Break from Social Media Makes You Happier and Less Anxious
566 by yarapavan | 392 comments on


New best story on News: Taking a Break from Social Media Makes You Happier and Less Anxious

Taking a Break from Social Media Makes You Happier and Less Anxious
563 by yarapavan | 390 comments .


New best story on News: Apple Maps location scan spikes WiFi latency every 60 seconds

Apple Maps location scan spikes WiFi latency every 60 seconds
665 by ivank | 166 comments .


New best story on News: DeepMind: A Generalist Agent

DeepMind: A Generalist Agent
489 by extr | 335 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Is anyone else glad the crypto market is crashing?

Ask HN: Is anyone else glad the crypto market is crashing?
602 by blueberrychpstx | 614 comments on
Obviously it's bad if people lose their entire life savings and all that dead horse beating disclaimer stuff. I fancy myself as a somewhat esoteric idea person, and so when I first discovered cryptocurrency a few years ago, I was very excited to explore the mind bending ways we can build __NEW__ things. Instead, JPEGs and skeuomorphic representations of traditional financial vehicles in web3 space. I'm hoping this crash and those in the future rid the space of the toxic backrooms these $30,000 jpegs provide access to and get us to collectively work on building really exciting cool new things. What do you all think?

New best story on Hacker News: DeepMind: A Generalist Agent

DeepMind: A Generalist Agent
489 by extr | 335 comments on


New best story on News: Ask HN: Is anyone else glad the crypto market is crashing?

Ask HN: Is anyone else glad the crypto market is crashing?
602 by blueberrychpstx | 614 comments .
Obviously it's bad if people lose their entire life savings and all that dead horse beating disclaimer stuff. I fancy myself as a somewhat esoteric idea person, and so when I first discovered cryptocurrency a few years ago, I was very excited to explore the mind bending ways we can build __NEW__ things. Instead, JPEGs and skeuomorphic representations of traditional financial vehicles in web3 space. I'm hoping this crash and those in the future rid the space of the toxic backrooms these $30,000 jpegs provide access to and get us to collectively work on building really exciting cool new things. What do you all think?

New best story on News: DeepMind: A Generalist Agent

DeepMind: A Generalist Agent
489 by extr | 335 comments .


New best story on News: Markdoc: Stripe's Markdown-based authoring framework

Markdoc: Stripe's Markdown-based authoring framework
758 by colinclerk | 138 comments .


New best story on News: Coinbase warns that bankruptcy could wipe out user funds

Coinbase warns that bankruptcy could wipe out user funds
676 by okasaki | 435 comments .


New best story on News: The ACLU Has Lost Its Way

The ACLU Has Lost Its Way
742 by tysone | 899 comments .


New best story on News: The ACLU Has Lost Its Way

The ACLU Has Lost Its Way
742 by tysone | 899 comments on News.


New best story on News: Apple is discontinuing the iPod

Apple is discontinuing the iPod
652 by minimaxir | 502 comments on News.


New best story on News: Apple is discontinuing the iPod

Apple is discontinuing the iPod
649 by minimaxir | 501 comments .


New best story on News: UST Stablecoin Loses Dollar Peg

UST Stablecoin Loses Dollar Peg
647 by prostoalex | 658 comments .


New best story on News: I'm all-in on server-side SQLite

I'm all-in on server-side SQLite
782 by dpeck | 231 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: I'm all-in on server-side SQLite

I'm all-in on server-side SQLite
774 by dpeck | 230 comments on


New best story on News: Everything with a battery should have an off switch

Everything with a battery should have an off switch
651 by danso | 442 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: Everything with a battery should have an off switch

Everything with a battery should have an off switch
651 by danso | 442 comments on


New best story on News: Everything with a battery should have an off switch

Everything with a battery should have an off switch
636 by danso | 434 comments .


New best story on News: PowerToys – open-source Windows utilities

PowerToys – open-source Windows utilities
609 by thunderbong | 287 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: PowerToys – open-source Windows utilities

PowerToys – open-source Windows utilities
609 by thunderbong | 286 comments on


New best story on News: PowerToys – open-source Windows utilities

PowerToys – open-source Windows utilities
609 by thunderbong | 286 comments .


New best story on Hacker News: Apple's Director of Machine Learning Resigns Due to Return to Office Work

Apple's Director of Machine Learning Resigns Due to Return to Office Work
543 by carlycue | 293 comments on


New best story on News: Apple's Director of Machine Learning Resigns Due to Return to Office Work

Apple's Director of Machine Learning Resigns Due to Return to Office Work
530 by carlycue | 288 comments .


New best story on News: Please stop disabling zoom

Please stop disabling zoom
601 by zachflower | 300 comments .


New best story on News: Moving a macOS window by clicking anywhere on it

Moving a macOS window by clicking anywhere on it
505 by charlieirish | 297 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: When I tell the Windows Terminal team something is simple, I am "misguided"

When I tell the Windows Terminal team something is simple, I am "misguided"
589 by moritonal | 424 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: Please stop disabling zoom

Please stop disabling zoom
601 by zachflower | 300 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: Moving a macOS window by clicking anywhere on it

Moving a macOS window by clicking anywhere on it
505 by charlieirish | 297 comments on


New best story on News: Moving a macOS window by clicking anywhere on it

Moving a macOS window by clicking anywhere on it
505 by charlieirish | 297 comments .


New best story on News: The Google incentive mismatch: Problems with promotion-oriented cultures

The Google incentive mismatch: Problems with promotion-oriented cultures
555 by zachlloyd | 540 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: The Google incentive mismatch: Problems with promotion-oriented cultures

The Google incentive mismatch: Problems with promotion-oriented cultures
552 by zachlloyd | 539 comments on


New best story on News: The Google incentive mismatch: Problems with promotion-oriented cultures

The Google incentive mismatch: Problems with promotion-oriented cultures
548 by zachlloyd | 539 comments .


New best story on News: What are your most used self-hosted applications?

What are your most used self-hosted applications?
531 by geeked | 332 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: What are your most used self-hosted applications?

What are your most used self-hosted applications?
530 by geeked | 332 comments on


New best story on News: What are your most used self-hosted applications?

What are your most used self-hosted applications?
529 by geeked | 330 comments .


New best story on News: Kaketsugi – A technique for repairing holes or tears in fabric (2021) [video]

Kaketsugi – A technique for repairing holes or tears in fabric (2021) [video]
455 by zdw | 100 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: Kaketsugi – A technique for repairing holes or tears in fabric (2021) [video]

Kaketsugi – A technique for repairing holes or tears in fabric (2021) [video]
453 by zdw | 100 comments on


New best story on News: Kaketsugi – A technique for repairing holes or tears in fabric (2021) [video]

Kaketsugi – A technique for repairing holes or tears in fabric (2021) [video]
452 by zdw | 99 comments .


New best story on Hacker News: OPT: Open Pre-trained Transformer Language Models

OPT: Open Pre-trained Transformer Language Models
435 by MasterScrat | 214 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: I won free load testing

I won free load testing
448 by 0xedb | 131 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: DALL-E 2 open source implementation

DALL-E 2 open source implementation
503 by jonas_kgomo | 147 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: Fig (YC S20) – Adds IDE-style autocomplete to your existing terminal

Fig (YC S20) – Adds IDE-style autocomplete to your existing terminal
582 by behnamoh | 245 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: Internet Archive joins opposition to the “SMART Copyright Act”

Internet Archive joins opposition to the “SMART Copyright Act”
606 by raybb | 166 comments on


New best story on Hacker News: Noto emoji, a new black and white emoji font with less color

Noto emoji, a new black and white emoji font with less color
528 by Vinnl | 144 comments on


New best story on News: Internet Archive joins opposition to the “SMART Copyright Act”

Internet Archive joins opposition to the “SMART Copyright Act”
606 by raybb | 166 comments .


New best story on News: Noto emoji, a new black and white emoji font with less color

Noto emoji, a new black and white emoji font with less color
528 by Vinnl | 144 comments .


New best story on Hacker News: We think this cool study we found is flawed. Help us reproduce it

We think this cool study we found is flawed. Help us reproduce it
646 by colinprince | 306 comments on


New best story on News: We think this cool study we found is flawed. Help us reproduce it

We think this cool study we found is flawed. Help us reproduce it
646 by colinprince | 306 comments .


New best story on Hacker News: How to professionally say

How to professionally say
665 by ghostfoxgod | 312 comments on


New best story on News: How to professionally say

How to professionally say
661 by ghostfoxgod | 311 comments .


New best story on News: I accidentally loaned all my money to the US government

I accidentally loaned all my money to the US government
650 by beanlog | 392 comments on News.


New best story on Hacker News: I accidentally loaned all my money to the US government

I accidentally loaned all my money to the US government
648 by beanlog | 390 comments on


New best story on News: I accidentally loaned all my money to the US government

I accidentally loaned all my money to the US government
643 by beanlog | 388 comments .


New best story on News: ChatControl: EU wants to scan all private messages, even in encrypted apps

ChatControl: EU wants to scan all private messages, even in encrypted apps 942 by Metalhearf | 515 comments on News.