AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Apple approves driver that lets Nvidia eGPUs work with Arm Macs

Apple approved a Tiny Corp driver that enables Nvidia eGPUs to run on Arm Macs. It's not plug-and-play—users must compile it with Docker—and it's aimed at running large-language-model workloads. The driver can be signed by Apple, so SIP doesn’t need to be disabled, and it supports both AMD and Nvidia GPUs.

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What life looks like on the most remote inhabited island

Tristan da Cunha, the world’s most remote inhabited island, has 221 residents in Edinburgh of the Seven Seas. With no airport and few ships, life is intensely communal and self-reliant, tasks shared across families. The economy centers on lobster and crawfish fishing and potato farming; livestock and field work fill days from dawn to dusk. Daily life weaves school, fisheries, processing, and celebrations like christenings. A history of gradual change—WWII cash wages, a 1949 lobster fishery, and a 1961 eruption evacuation—gives way to modern upgrades: electricity, satellite internet, and growing tourism and conservation work. Everyone does everything.

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Show HN: sllm – Split a GPU node with other developers, unlimited tokens

Product page lists several AI models (e.g., llama-4-scout-109b, qwen-3.5-122b, glm-5-754b, kimi-k2.5-1t, deepseek-v3.2-685b, deepseek-r1-0528-685b) with two pricing/commitment options: $10 for 1 month at 15 tok/s (0% availability) and $40 for 3 months at 35 tok/s (100% availability). Filters let you sort by Availability, Price, Throughput; shows 0 of 0 results; no cohorts match.

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Why LLM-Generated Passwords Are Dangerously Insecure

LLM-generated passwords are insecure by design. Since LLMs predict tokens rather than sampling uniformly from a character set, they produce biased, repetitive passwords with low entropy. Tests across Claude, GPT-5.2, Gemini, and Gemini 3 Flash show frequent patterns (e.g., common starts like G7$, limited symbol usage) and high repetition, yielding effective entropy around 20–27 bits instead of 100+ bits for truly random passwords. Coding agents also favor LLM passwords depending on prompts. Recommendation: do not rely on LLM outputs for passwords; use cryptographically secure PRNGs (openssl rand, /dev/random) and password managers, and audit/rotate any LLM-generated credentials.

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The Indie Internet Index – submit your favorite sites

Could not summarize article.

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German men 18-45 need military permit to leave country for longer than 3 months

Germany's Military Service Modernization Act, effective Jan 2026, requires men aged 18–46 to obtain Bundeswehr approval before leaving the country for more than three months. The permit, issued by the Bundeswehr Career Center, can apply even for study or work abroad and is for wartime planning. The law aims to raise active-duty personnel from about 180,000 to 260,000 by 2035 while keeping service voluntary. From 2027, 18-year-olds will undergo a fitness test to gauge draft eligibility; protests accompanied the debate, and penalties for violations remain unclear.

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Show HN: TurboQuant-WASM – Google's vector quantization in the browser

TurboQuant WASM is a browser/Node WASM SIMD vector compressor delivering ~3–4.5 bits/dim with a fast dot product. It uses relaxed SIMD (Chrome 114+, Firefox 128+, Safari 18+, Node 20+) and ships as the npm package turboquant-wasm. API: TurboQuant.init({dim, seed}), encode(vec), decode(comp), dot(query, comp), destroy(). It preserves inner products (byte-identical to a Zig reference) with ~4.5 bits/dim payload; supports vector search, image similarity, and 3D Gaussian Splatting demos. MIT license; based on TurboQuant paper (ICLR 2026).

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Components of a Coding Agent

Sebastian Raschka argues practical LLM-powered coding depends as much on the surrounding system as on the model. He outlines six core coding-harness components: 1) Live repository context (repo root, git state); 2) Stable prompt shape and cache reuse; 3) Structured tools, validation, and permissions; 4) Context reduction and output management; 5) Structured session memory (full transcripts and a compact working memory); 6) Delegation with bounded subagents. The article emphasizes that harness design—context management, tools, memory, and controlled execution—often makes coding agents outperform plain chat, with a Mini Coding Agent as an example, and compares to OpenClaw.

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Author of "Careless People" banned from saying anything negative about Meta

Meta used an emergency-arbitrator ruling to gag Sarah Wynn-Williams from promoting or speaking about her book Careless People, enforcing a severance non-disparagement clause with potential $50,000 fines per statement and even restricting private speech at home. The ruling did not determine truth but silenced a public-interest exposé alleging sexual harassment, censorship, manipulation of teens, and possible Meta-CCP ties. Despite the gag, the book became a bestseller. Wynn-Williams later testified in a US Senate subcommittee; Zuckerberg faced a major LA trial as Meta defended its free-speech stance.

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The smallest ELF executable (2021)

Tiny ELF Files: Revisited in 2021 updates how to craft extremely small ELF64 executables on Linux. Starting from a 383-byte minimal Hello, World, the author removes section headers (down to 173 bytes), then shrinks code via instruction-size tricks, and finally overlaps ELF header and program header to reach 120 bytes (and as low as ~114 by shortening the string). The piece discusses clobbering non-critical header bytes (with evidence on what can be overwritten), the resulting tools’ compatibility issues (readelf/objdump), and acknowledges Josh Triplett’s 105-byte version and the 45-byte original article. It concludes that modern 64-bit Linux allows impressive minimization but with limits.

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Jack Dorsey says Block employees now bring prototypes, not slides, to meetings

Block CEO Jack Dorsey says employees now bring prototypes to meetings instead of slide decks, claiming prototypes have more depth, realism, and can be modified in real time, lowering the cost of wrong decisions. He ties this to AI-driven efficiency behind February layoffs of over 4,000 employees (~40% of the workforce). The trend away from slide decks is echoed by Perplexity’s Aravind Srinivas and past preferences like Jeff Bezos’ memo approach and Steve Jobs’ dislike of slides.

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Why Inventing Color TV Was So Difficult [video]

The page reports unusual traffic from the user’s IP, likely automated requests triggering a Google CAPTCHA. It instructs enabling JavaScript and solving the CAPTCHA to continue, and notes the traffic may stem from malware, a browser plugin, or a scripted bot. If sharing the network, ask an administrator to check. The block will expire when activity stops. Details shown include IP 2600:3c01::f03c:95ff:fe34:475a, time 2026-04-04T13:37:48Z, and the URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyjCmIbRRvs.

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Tesla Is Sitting on a Record 50k Unsold EVs

Could not summarize article.

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The Cathedral, the Bazaar, and the Winchester Mystery House

Eric S. Raymond’s Cathedral and the Bazaar argued for closed, planned software vs open, community-driven development. The internet enabled the Bazaar; Linus’s Law claimed more eyeballs yield fewer bugs. The piece argues AI cheapens code further, creating Winchester Mystery House–like ecosystems: idiosyncratic, sprawling tools built by individuals with minimal central coordination. It cites Steve Yegge’s Gastown, OpenClaw, and others as examples. Three lessons: Bazaar and Winchester can coexist; don’t sell only the fun stuff—offer a common core plus user-built extensions; the real limit is communication; we need better tools to surface ideas amid the deluge.

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Mbodi AI (YC P25) Is Hiring

Mbodi AI is hiring a Senior Robotics Engineer (Systems & Controls) in New York. You’ll design and tune control architectures for robot motion, model dynamics, and lead on-site commissioning, integrating with industrial hardware and OEM interfaces. Responsibilities: controller design (PID/LQR/MPC), first-principles modeling, system integration, and full-stack debugging. Requirements: 4+ years in robotics software, strong C++/Python, applied control theory, and hands-on hardware integration with ABB/Fanuc/KUKA/UR. Preferred: RAPID, ROS2; PhD or equivalent. Salary $100k–$250k; equity 0.50%–2.00%. Mbodi is an embodied AI platform backed by YC; founders Xavier (Tianhao) Chi and Sebastian Peralta.

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The CMS is dead. Long live the CMS

Challenging AI-driven claims that CMSs are obsolete, the author argues WordPress isn’t dead. Despite headlines about migrating sites to AI-first stacks (Astro, EmDash) and AI-driven tooling, he warns of vendor lock-in, dependency hell, and eroded proven workflows. Through Joost de Valk’s experiences and his own headless rebuild, he concludes AI can augment rather than replace a CMS—keep the CMS, use AI thoughtfully, and choose the right tool (fast/cheap/good; pick two).

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SQLite in Production: Lessons from Running a Store on a Single File

Ultrathink runs a real e-commerce store on SQLite, using four databases in one Docker volume: primary (orders/products/users), cache, queue, and cable. Rails 8 enables WAL, allowing multiple readers with a single writer, which suits their read-heavy workload. A two-hour window of overlapping blue–green deploys caused three containers to share a WAL and caused orders 16–17 to be charged but not recorded, exposing a deployment pipeline flaw. The fix: stop pushing to main so quickly and batch related changes. sqlite_sequence helps audit auto-increment history. They’d choose SQLite again for single-server deployments but migrate to Postgres if multi-writer concurrency is needed.

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The most-disliked people in the publishing industry

Naomi Kanakia reviews Laura McGrath’s Middlemen: Literary Agents and the Making of American Fiction, arguing it illuminates how prestige publishing is shaped by a small, reputational economy of agents. The piece situates this within the sociology of literature—institutions like MFA programs, publishers, and awards—and contrasts debates about quality versus market. It explains why agents gatekeep access to prestige presses (about 25 agents represent half of prize-shortlisted authors), discusses the difficulty of selling short-story collections, and highlights the debut narrative as a career lever. It notes racial dynamics and praises McGrath’s nuanced account as a useful starting point for critics.

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TurboQuant model weight compression support added to Llamacpp

Adds TQ4_1S weight compression (4-bit, 5.0 BPW) using WHT rotation and Lloyd–Max centroids, with V2.1 fused Metal kernel and zero threadgroup memory. Post-training quantization requires no retraining or model changes. It introduces a CUDA port of the V2.1 kernel for future porting; runtime currently on Metal, with storage+load-convert on CUDA via a dual-mode format. Lays out dequant and MUL_MAT paths, and integrates llama-quantize. Regression tests show no negative impact on TurboQuant KV cache; across Qwen/Phi/Llama families, 27–38% size reduction, modest PPL changes, and no regressions. PR merged to main.

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GitHub has DMCA'd nearly all forks of the official Claude-code repo

GitHub repository page for anthropics/claude-code. It shows repo stats (≈17.8k forks, 108k stars, 5k+ issues, 439 PRs), a list of forks (doggy8088/claude-code, bunjavascript/claude-code, t3dotgg/claude-code, etc.) with recent activity, and standard navigation (Code, Issues, Pull requests, Actions, Security, Insights). The forks are mainly created/updated in 2025–2026, reflecting ongoing community activity around Claude-based code samples.

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