AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

My adventure in designing API keys

Blog on API key design and shard routing for a multi-tenant system. Keys are hashed (stored as hashes) with optional prefix and checksum, and copied on creation. Explores three routing approaches: map hash to account; per-prefix mapping; encode the hash via base62/base70. BigInt-based encoding was slow; SHA3 SHAKE256 with base64url encoding to 10 characters offered SHA-256-like performance with smaller indices and negligible collision risk (about 72 quintillion possibilities). Overall, final approach yields efficient, scalable API key design for a sharded backend.

HN Comments

PCBWay sponsorship: full-size SD module for Arduino projects

[email protected] recounts PCBWay sponsoring his BurgerDisk project with up to $100 in exchange for a review. He notes PCBWay’s open‑source support (KiCad donations, Share & Sell) and a BOM‑driven process that’s slower but helps catch errors. He has them fabricate a full‑size SD card module for 5V Arduinos (with required level shifters/regulator) because AliExpress options lack proper protection. A 20‑unit run cost $75 ($3.75 each), about 10 cents more than JLCPCB, justified by quality control and OSS contributions. He shared the design for others to fabricate.

HN Comments

Fixing a 20-year-old bug in Enlightenment E16

Kamila Szewczyk describes fixing a 20-year bug in Enlightenment E16 that caused a PDF window title hang. Root cause: a Newton‑style loop in TextstateTextFitMB oscillated while truncating long titles via middle ellipsis. She traces the crash to a flawed iteration and tight exit criteria. The fix adds bounded iterations and guards: cap iterations at 32, ensure minimum nuke_count and character width, and adjust the derivative, in both multibyte and ASCII paths. Patch against e16 1.0.30 provided. Also includes reflections on software maintenance and supply-chain worries.

HN Comments

Saying Goodbye to Agile

The post argues Agile’s value is overstated and its meaning vague, defined largely by what it isn’t—Waterfall. Waterfall had long-standing issues (Royce 1970; Bell & Thayer 1976), and iterative approaches predate Agile. The Agile Manifesto offers little concrete guidance. With cheap LLMs, developers rely more on specs, making Spec-Driven Development more effective than “working software over documentation.” The piece contends Agile belongs in the dustbin of history, urging a move beyond Agile to stronger engineering practices.

HN Comments

Don't feel like exercising? Maybe it's the wrong time of day for you

A new Open Heart study of 134 middle‑aged Pakistanis at heart risk shows exercising when your body clock prefers—morning for larks, evening for night owls—yields bigger benefits. Those matched to their chronotype improved more in blood pressure, aerobic capacity, metabolic markers and sleep; mismatched timing still helped, but less. The findings warn against a one‑size‑fits‑all schedule and highlight reducing 'social jetlag' as a way to cut heart risk. Regular, varied exercise remains important per NHS guidance.

HN Comments

Game: Print Gallery Of An Artist, A brief exploration of recursive spaces

Print Gallery Of An Artist is a platformer by Daniel Linssen that explores recursive spaces. Players move left/right and jump/wall-jump through rotating, painterly levels inspired by a 3Blue1Brown video and Escher. Made with Paint Tiles; no generative AI used. Published 6 days ago; released on HTML5 and Windows. 4.8/5 from 152 ratings. Download: Print Gallery Of An Artist.zip (75 MB).

HN Comments

Not all elementary functions can be expressed with exp-minus-log

Robert Smith reviews Andrzej Odrzywołek's claim that all elementary functions can be expressed using E(x,y)=exp x - log y (EML terms). He agrees EML terms are expressive but argues they do not capture standard elementary functions, which include polynomial roots. Using Khovanskii's topological Galois theory, he proves every EML term has solvable monodromy, while standard elementary functions can have non-solvable monodromy (e.g., a generic quintic with S5 monodromy). Hence T_n ⊊ E_n. The post notes the title's narrower meaning of 'elementary' and mentions edits removing a previous absolute-value example.

HN Comments

Tactical Success, Strategic Failure? Washington Walks the Path to Defeat in Iran

Tactical Success, Strategic Failure? argues that six weeks into the US-Israel war on Iran, Washington has not defined a political end state. The administration treated battlefield destruction as victory, cycling shifting aims (defend Americans, regime change, surrender, proxies, Kharg Island) without a coherent political objective. Despite destroying missiles, ships, and infrastructure, Iran remains in control, energy markets unstable, and the Strait of Hormuz under Tehran’s leverage. Clausewitz’s warning holds: war is a political instrument, and without a clear theory of victory, tactical gains do not yield strategic success. The ceasefire may unravel, escalation looms, and negotiations lack an end-state.

HN Comments

Installing OpenBSD on the Pomera DM250 Writerdeck

Notes and pre-built images for installing OpenBSD-current on Japanese Pomera DM250, DM250X, DM250XY. It requires a custom kernel/U-Boot and a recovery script (_sdboot.sh). Steps: backup; prepare a multi-part SD card with EFI; install OpenBSD using a patched U-Boot; copy back a custom kernel; disable reorder_kernel; post-install firmware for bwfm; optional custom ramdisk; recovery via USB (xrock) in MaskROM. Cautions: not stable, battery risk, US DM250US unsupported.

HN Comments

Dependency cooldowns turn you into a free-rider

Cal Paterson argues dependency cooldowns shift risk to others and are hard to standardize across ecosystems; they free-ride on others' testing and can be bypassed. He proposes a centralized upload queue that separates publication from distribution: publish to the index, then wait days while automated scanners, diffs, and voluntary beta testing run before public distribution. This Debian-inspired model avoids per-project config, reduces surprise, and strengthens security without broad workflow changes. Funding could come from paid expedited reviews or corporate sponsorship; AI/Markdown risks underscore urgency.

HN Comments

Understanding Clojure's Persistent Vectors, pt. 1 (2013)

Explains how Clojure’s persistent vectors implement efficient, immutable updates using a shallow, 32-ary tree and path copying. Updates copy the path to the leaf and replace the value; appends handle three cases (space in leaf, space in root, root overflow) by generating nodes or promoting a new root; popping removes elements by copying paths, removing empty nodes, and possibly shrinking the root; due to 32-way branching, depth stays small, giving effectively constant-time operations though O(log32 n). The post promises deeper coverage of tails, transients, subvec, and lookup in later parts.

HN Comments

OpenAI's $852B valuation faces investor scrutiny amid strategy shift, FT reports

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

The FCC just saved Netgear from its router ban for no obvious reason

The Verge reports that the FCC granted Netgear a conditional import approval for its future routers, cable modems and gateways through Oct. 1, 2027, even though they’re manufactured in Asia and Netgear hasn’t publicly committed to U.S. manufacturing. The Pentagon says these devices pose no national-security risk, but the rationale for the exemption is unclear. The FCC’s process requires a time-bound U.S. manufacturing plan, which Netgear hasn’t disclosed. The piece questions Netgear’s statements about updates and the implications of naming models to skirt the ban.

HN Comments

Apple App Store threatened to remove Grok over deepfakes: Letter

Apple privately warned it would remove Elon Musk’s Grok AI app from the App Store in January after determining Grok’s ability to generate nude or sexualized deepfakes violated its guidelines; in a letter to U.S. senators obtained by NBC News, Apple said both X and Grok violated policy and that Musk’s xAI had failed to curb the issue.

HN Comments

A Communist Apple II and Fourteen Years of Not Knowing What You're Testing

Friday archaeology notes how AI hype often eclipses understanding, arguing that reverse engineering is the true engine of progress. Feldman remembers Bulgaria’s Правец Apple II clones—mass-produced by reverse-engineering a Western design during the Cold War—and contrasts that craftsmanship with today’s grand claims. He recounts ISCAS-85 benchmarks, which researchers used for years without knowing what they compute until Hayes et al. reverse-engineered them to reveal actual functions (interrupt controller, ALU, multiplier, 32-bit adder). These examples show diagnosis, synthesis, and reverse engineering as the same core idea. The circuits do not hallucinate.

HN Comments

Stop Flock

Flock Safety sells AI-powered cameras that fingerprint vehicles by color, make, damage, bumper stickers, and even detect frequent pairings or routes, creating a searchable, nationwide database accessible to police without warrants. The piece argues this extends mass surveillance beyond ALPRs, threatens Fourth Amendment rights, and risks abuse, citing examples of stalking, investigative misuses, biased stops, and near-ubiquitous deployment across cities and private partners like HOAs and retailers. It frames Flock as part of a broader, corporate-driven surveillance trend and urges transparency, oversight, and public action.

HN Comments

Free, fast diagnostic tools for DNS, email authentication, and network security

Mr.DNS offers a free suite of DNS, network, and email diagnostic tools for developers, network engineers, and email admins. Features include DNS lookups (A/AAAA/MX/TXT/NS/etc.), a global DNS propagation checker, DNSSEC and Whois/RDAP data, IP geolocation, ping, traceroute, port checks, banner grabbing, and HTTP headers with HTTP/2/HTTP/3 and HSTS checks. Email tools cover SPF, DKIM, DMARC health checks/validation, MTA-STS, BIMI, and an Email Header Analyzer. Generators publish SPF and DMARC records.

HN Comments

Picasso's Guernica (Gigapixel)

Guernica, 1937, Picasso. Óleo sobre lienzo, 349,3 × 776,6 cm, expuesto en Sala 206. Nuevos estudios fotográficos del Museo Reina Sofía revelan cambios en la ejecución (documentados por Dora Maar) y alteraciones del soporte: craquelados, fisuras y pérdidas; acumulaciones de cera por la restauración de 1957 en MoMA; cera residual y barniz de 1962; residuos de pintura del acto vandálico de 1974 (acrílica roja) de Tony Shafrazi. Reflectografía infrarroja muestra trazos y rectificaciones; existe un estudio de restauración detallado y un mapa de alteraciones.

HN Comments

Responsive images in Hugo using Render Hooks

The article shows how Hugo now uses Render Hooks to create responsive images, replacing shortcodes. It provides a render-image.html hook that builds a WebP + JPEG srcset for multiple widths and outputs a single <img> tag (no <picture>), with a WebP reference and a JPEG fallback. It supports page bundles—placing images alongside content—and configurable image quality in config (imaging and imaging.webp). The approach simplifies maintenance and aligns with modern Markdown usage.

HN Comments

Civilization Is Not the Default. Violence Is

Civilization is not the default; violence is. Tracing Rome’s collapse to medieval fragmentation shows how a monopoly on violence enables institutions and trade, and how chaos returns when order fades. The postwar Pax Americana underpinned a global order—stable law, sea lanes, dispute resolution—that spurred growth. That order is fraying, yielding realpolitik and a likely unstable multipolar world. Western liberal ideals are under pressure, but liberalism remains preferable, as civilizational shifts will still rebuild new orders.

HN Comments

Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML