AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Dataframe 1.0.0.0

Dataframe 1.0.0.0 for Haskell adds typed dataframes (DataFrame.Typed) with full schema tracked at compile time, including deriveSchemaFromCsv and a sample pipeline computing rooms_per_household, imputing total_bedrooms, and deriving bedrooms_per_household and population_per_household. It offers Python interop via Apache Arrow C Data interface and data exchange with Polars; supports Hugging Face datasets via readParquet. The lazy engine handles large data (≈1B rows) in ~10–30 minutes. Ergonomics improved with numeric promotion and null awareness; next: connectors (BigQuery, Snowflake, S3), formats (Parquet, Iceberg, DuckDB), and AI-assisted exploration; thanks to contributors.

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Show HN: Agent Kernel – Three Markdown files that make any AI agent stateful

agent-kernel is a minimal kernel to make an AI coding agent stateful. It stores memory in plain Markdown files in a git repo, no database or vector store. Core files: AGENTS.md (kernel), IDENTITY.md (agent identity), KNOWLEDGE.md (facts), plus knowledge/ and notes/ (append-only). Each agent is its own repo; clone the kernel, customize identity/knowledge, and run with any AI agent (OpenCode, Claude, Codex, Cursor, Windsurf, etc.). MIT license.

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A Bilingual Localization for Pillars of Eternity (EN and ZH)

Stockadora describes an open‑source bilingual localization project for Pillars of Eternity, born from love of the game and not obligation. English and Chinese are shown together for story text to preserve tone, while UI stays Chinese for speed and clarity. AI agents Codex and Claude drive the scale, with a human in the loop for review. The workflow: a mechanical first pass to structure strings, a second AI-assisted pass, then in‑game testing and feedback to refine nuances. The project is publicly available at github.com/cerrorism/poe-localization.

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Show HN: The King Wen Permutation: [52, 10, 2]

This study analyzes the King Wen permutation: the map between the binary natural order (0–63) and the I Ching’s King Wen sequence of 64 hexagrams. As a permutation in S64, it decomposes into three cycles [52, 10, 2], with no fixed points, and about 81% of hexagrams in a single cycle. Reportedly unreported, it offers interactive verification tools, with order 260 (σ^260 = identity) and comparisons to random expectations (Hamming distance, parity). The work links binary representations, genome rearrangement, and game theory; Shao Yong’s binary order is noted as a later formalization.

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White-Collar AI Apocalypse Narrative Is Just Another Bullshit

An skeptical critique of the 'white-collar AI apocalypse' notes AI hype ignores task truth: many jobs are semi‑decidable. In practice, 80% of routine work is decidable and automatable, but the remaining 10–20%—the undecidable, high‑variance cases—cost more time and may halt automation projects. Even when teams automate large portions of customer‑support (roughly 90%), the unsolved portion persists. Real data show customer‑support hiring rebounding to pre‑COVID levels, suggesting AI will reshape, not erase, white‑collar work, limited by undecidable tasks.

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POSSE – Publish on your Own Site, Syndicate Elsewhere

POSSE (Publish On Your Own Site, Syndicate Elsewhere) is the IndieWeb approach of posting content first on your own site and then syndicating copies to third‑party silos with links back to the original. It aims to reduce third‑party dependence, preserve ownership, provide canonical URLs, and improve search while enabling backfeed of interactions. Implementations emphasize automatic, invisible UI and linking from syndicated copies to originals; various silo‑specific workflows exist (Twitter, Facebook, Medium, WordPress, Ghost, plain text). The page catalogs examples from many developers, notes related approaches (COPE, POSE, PESOS, PESETAS), and historical background.

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Walmart: ChatGPT checkout converted 3x worse than website

Could not summarize article.

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AI Proteomics Competition 2026 – $13K Prize, Internships and Compute Support

Could not summarize article.

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Plane and ground vehicle collide at New York's LaGuardia airport halting flights

An Air Canada Jazz CRJ-900, arriving from Montreal with about 70–76 people aboard, collided at LaGuardia with a Port Authority of NY & NJ firefighting vehicle responding to a separate incident. The airport was closed and the FAA issued a ground stop likely to be extended. The plane sustained significant damage and there were reported injuries. Emergency crews were on scene and the NTSB opened an investigation; roads into the airport were closed.

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World Cup Trophy Theft: Gangsters, Spies and the Dog That Found It

Bloomberg blocks access with a bot-check notice after detecting unusual activity, prompting the user to verify they’re not a robot (JavaScript and cookies must be enabled), with a reference ID for support and a subscription prompt.

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The way CTRL-C in Postgres CLI cancels queries is incredibly hack-y

Blog explains PostgreSQL CancelRequest: canceling a running query uses a separate connection identified by a backend PID and secret key. CancelRequest is sent in plaintext, a risk because libpq didn’t encrypt it until Postgres 17, opening DoS/interception even on TLS. Some drivers now support encrypted cancellation, but psql still does not. The piece covers monitoring tools like Elephantshark and Neon’s proxy to map cancellations to destinations, and offers security tips: use Postgres 18 with min_protocol_version=3.2, use VPN, avoid Ctrl-C in psql, and check drivers for encryption.

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Can you get root with only a cigarette lighter? (2024)

Using a piezo lighter as an EM fault injector, the author attaches a wire to a DDR data pin to induce bit flips. He first shows a CPython exploit: glitching a pointer to turn a bytes object into a fake bytearray, yielding a read/write primitive. Extending to Linux, he sprays half of physical memory with level-0 page tables, then glitches a PTE’s bit-29 to point to those tables, enabling arbitrary memory access. He overwrites /usr/bin/su with a small ELF that spawns root and clears caches. Reliability around 20–50%; discusses DDR types, ARM, ECC, hypervisors, and other targets.

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A Copy-Paste Bug That Broke PSpice AES-256 Encryption

Researchers reveal a copy-paste bug in PSpice mode 4 where the AES-256 key is built from a short 8-byte DES-like key, a 4-byte XOR with the user key, a version suffix, and padding zeros, creating a 32-byte key with 28 known bytes. This collapses the keyspace to about 2^32 (or ~95^4 for ASCII keys), enabling seconds-long brute-force decryption with AES-NI or GPUs. Root cause: a copy-paste error using the short key in AES instead of the intended extended key. Fixing it would break compatibility. SpiceCrypt decrypts PSpice/LTspice formats.

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GoGoGrandparent (YC S16) is hiring Back end Engineers

GoGoGrandparent, a YC-backed digital caregiving startup helping seniors stay independent, is hiring a fully remote Backend Engineer ($80k–$160k) with 6+ years’ experience in Node.js/TypeScript. The role requires US-timezone overlap; stack includes MySQL, REST + GraphQL, AWS; Docker/Kubernetes and Vue.js are nice to have. The business integrates on-demand APIs (Uber/Lyft/DoorDash/Instacart) to offer a concierge service for seniors and people with disabilities. The company emphasizes impact, growth, profitability, and a close-knit, mission-driven team; 2-stage interview; founded 2016 (S16), about 50 staff, SF HQ.

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"Collaboration" Is Bullshit

JA Westenberg argues that 'collaboration' is a distraction from real work. He cites Marshal (Men Against Fire), Ringelmann, and Brooks to show that as group size grows, individual effort and accountability decline, while coordination costs explode. In tech, tools like Notion, Slack, Jira turned collaboration into a culture that masks lack of output. The piece suggests that high-quality work is usually done by individuals or small teams with clear ownership, and that organizations should reduce coordination overhead, embrace personal responsibility, and let people manage their own tasks rather than chase collective consensus.

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Answer Engine Optimization

AI tools now answer questions directly, so 'Answer Engine Optimization' (AEO) sits beside traditional SEO. AEO seeks to be cited or used as a direct answer (snippets, AI overviews, voice results); GEO targets AI-generated narratives. The author details site changes: expanded structured data (Person schema with socials; BlogPosting; CreativeWork/CollectionPage per project), added unique meta descriptions (≤160 chars), welcomed AI crawlers via robots.txt, and linked a sitemap in the head. Takeaways: optimize structured data and entity recognition, write precise meta descriptions, decide robots policy, and craft clear, well-structured content to improve credibility with both humans and machines.

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Migrating the American Express Payment Network, Twice

American Express explains two live migrations of its Payments Network with zero downtime. Migration #1 moved traffic from legacy to a new microservices-based platform using a Global Transaction Router (GTR), shadow traffic, and canary routing (1%→ higher) to ensure parity, with central routing and end-to-end observability. Migration #2 rebuilt the Kubernetes infrastructure in a new environment and repeated canary routing, including multi-region traffic shifting between identical platforms. Core enablers: infrastructure-as-code, rigorous performance/resiliency testing, rollback, and shadow traffic; key lesson: patience and discipline for reliability.

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The hottest new phone is Tin Can, a 'landline' for kids

Tin Can is a WiFi 'landline' for kids that delays smartphones. It functions as a VoIP phone with parental controls—only approved contacts and times, with a free plan to call other Tin Cans. Designed by Seattle dads, it has raised about $3.5M, sold tens of thousands since early 2025, and is backordered. It aims to give kids social autonomy and safer communication, filling a gap between devices like smartwatches or kid phones and full smartphones.

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Ordered Dithering with Arbitrary or Irregular Colour Palettes (2023)

This post surveys dithering with arbitrary or irregular colour palettes. It contrasts simple ordered dithering with error-diffusion, noting that the latter preserves color better but is serial and can cause frame jitter. It then reviews N-candidate methods (N-closest, N-convex, Knoll’s) and algebraic approaches (linear combination, barycentric coordinates) plus triangulation-based ideas (TIN, natural neighbours) for better palette fitting. It also covers Yliluoma’s positional dithering, Tetrapal palette triangulation, and practical notes on sRGB/linear space, threshold matrices (Bayer, blue noise), and noise functions. The author provides a C library for Delaunay-based dithering.

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Intuitions for Tranformer Circuits

Connor Davis presents a mechanistic interpretability view of an attention-only transformer, treating the residual stream as shared memory and attention as selecting which memory rows to read. He describes two linear circuits—QK (bilinear) and OV (linear)—that read from and write to the residual stream via low-rank weights. Subspace scores (composition coefficients) determine which subspaces are accessed. Induction heads arise from composing heads across layers to predict repeats. The post offers a practical intuition for analyzing transformers and raises questions about memory management and scalability.

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