Slop Terrifies Me
The article explores the author's fear and discomfort with the rapid advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), particularly the emergence of AI-generated content known as 'slop', which can be indistinguishable from human-created work. The author expresses concerns about the potential impact of AI on creativity, authenticity, and the future of human expression.
Why E cores make Apple silicon fast
The article discusses the role of E-cores (Efficient cores) in Apple Silicon processors, explaining how they contribute to the overall performance and efficiency of these chips, particularly in tasks that don't require maximum processing power.
Substack confirms data breach affects users’ email addresses and phone numbers
Substack, the popular newsletter platform, has confirmed a data breach that has exposed email addresses and phone numbers of its users. The company is investigating the incident and has notified affected users.
Matchlock – Secures AI agent workloads with a Linux-based sandbox
The article discusses the history and development of the matchlock, an early firearm technology that was widely used in Europe and Asia during the 15th and 16th centuries. It explores the design, function, and tactical advantages of the matchlock, as well as its impact on military and social changes of the time.
Homeland Security Spying on Reddit Users
The article reveals that the Department of Homeland Security has been monitoring and analyzing online discussions on Reddit, in an effort to track potential threats and extremist activities. It raises concerns about government surveillance of public online forums without clear oversight or justification.
Bye Bye Humanity: The Potential AMOC Collapse
The article discusses the potential collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), a critical ocean current system, and its potential consequences for global climate and human society. It explores the scientific evidence, the risks of a collapse, and the possible impact on weather patterns, sea levels, and the environment.
Curating a Show on My Ineffable Mother, Ursula K. Le Guin
The article discusses the challenges and considerations involved in curating an art exhibition inspired by the work and life of renowned author Ursula K. Le Guin. The curator reflects on the complexities of capturing the essence of Le Guin's multifaceted legacy and her 'ineffable' nature through visual art.
OpenClaw Is Changing My Life
The article discusses the author's experience with using the OpenClaw programming toolkit to build web applications, and how it has significantly improved their development workflow and productivity, leading to a positive impact on their life.
Reverse Engineering Raiders of the Lost Ark for the Atari 2600
Raiders2600 is an open-source emulator for the Atari 2600 video game console, built using Rust and supporting various hardware configurations. It aims to provide an accurate and efficient emulation experience for classic Atari games.
In the Australian outback, we're listening for nuclear tests
This article explores the Warramunga seismic research facility in Australia, which was used to monitor nuclear tests conducted in the Australian outback in the 1950s and 1960s. The facility played a crucial role in detecting and analyzing these tests, contributing to global nuclear non-proliferation efforts.
Arcan Explained – A browser for different webs
The article explains Arcan, a browser designed to handle different types of web content, including traditional websites, games, and real-time applications. It highlights Arcan's unique features, such as its modular architecture and support for diverse display technologies, making it a versatile tool for navigating the evolving web landscape.
Smart Homes Are Terrible
The article explores the potential impact of smart home technologies on personal privacy and the growing concerns surrounding the data collected by these devices. It examines the complex trade-offs between convenience and security, and the need for increased transparency and regulation in the smart home industry.
Pentagon cutting ties w/ "woke" Harvard, ending military training & fellowships
The Pentagon has announced it is cutting ties with Harvard University and discontinuing military training fellowships, citing concerns over the university's perceived 'woke' ideology and policies that are seen as limiting free speech and opposing military values.
Canada, better the 28th EU member than the 51st US state
The article explores the idea of Canada joining the European Union as its 28th member, rather than becoming the 51st state of the United States. It discusses the potential benefits and challenges of such a move for Canada and its relationship with both the EU and the US.
Show HN: Portview, A diagnostic-first port viewer for Linux (~930 KB, zero deps)
PortView is an open-source web application that provides a comprehensive overview of the performance and status of network ports and interfaces. It offers real-time monitoring, historical data analysis, and customizable dashboards to help network administrators efficiently manage and troubleshoot their infrastructure.
Substack makes money from hosting Nazi newsletters
The article reveals how Substack, a newsletter platform, makes money by hosting far-right and Nazi-aligned newsletters, despite the company's claims of promoting free speech and not censoring content.
Open-Weight Models Are Getting Serious: GLM 4.7 vs. MiniMax M2.1
The article discusses the increasing capabilities and potential of open-source language models, noting that they are starting to rival proprietary models in areas like task performance and language generation. It highlights the growing significance of open-source AI models as an alternative to large tech companies' closed-source offerings.
HRL Labs in Malibu laying off 1/3 of their workforce
HRL Laboratories, a research and development company in Malibu, has cut 376 jobs after losing government work. The job cuts come as the company faces a reduction in government contracts and funding.
Show HN: A Prompting Framework for Non-Vibe-Coders
Hi, a little context for this simple project:
I only started this "agentic development" thing this year thanks to the Google AI Pro sale, therefore my most used agent is Antigravity - Gemini 3, which is smart but a loose cannon. So my attempt to "tame" this model turned into this. (Btw I have claude code and cursor)
It could be useful for people who:
- are used to conventional coding and want to try out agentic development
- don't vibe-code or prefer staying in the loop
- using less polished harness or less rigorous models
It's a skill defining a methodology to command LLMs. You reference the workflow files to make LLM plan, execute, review, red-team, etc. — each output a typed markdown document with a defined template and lifecycle.
Documents chain together (Plan → Execute → Audit), are just files in your repo, and double as persistent memory across sessions. Basically a lightweight project management protocol between you and the agent.
I am posting this simply because it's proven useful for me; I wouldn't say this is good or smart way to approach agentic development :)
MIT Technology Review has confirmed that posts on Moltbook were fake
The article discusses the rise and fall of Moltbook, a highly anticipated AI system that was marketed as a revolutionary breakthrough but ultimately failed to live up to the hype. It explores the challenges faced by the Moltbook team and the broader implications for the AI industry.