AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Doing nothing at work

The post argues engineers should operate at ~80% capacity, keeping 20% of time off-computer to spot high‑impact opportunities. Real impact comes from small, time‑dependent changes (closing deals, preventing incidents, shipping high‑profile features) that can take only a few hours. Being perpetually busy makes you miss chances and annoys managers. Do nothing strategically: slow down during on‑calls, think before acting, and avoid unrecorded glue work or backchannel asks. Reserve rare, high‑reward bursts of effort and let organizational pain drive change.

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Galaxy-killing wind discovered in the early universe

Using JWST and ALMA, researchers observed CRISTAL-02, a galaxy about 1 billion years after the Big Bang undergoing a rapid star-formation burst during a collision. They detect a giant plume of cold gas extending nearly the galaxy’s length, signaling a powerful wind that ejects gas twice as fast as stars form. If sustained, the wind could quench star formation in under 50 million years, explaining the abundance of massive dead galaxies in the early universe. The team suggests such winds may be widespread during early galaxy mergers.

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A new era for software testing

Automatic programming can speed software creation but often falls short of the best hand-written code in structure and economy. The author argues that for software QA and testing, LLMs enable powerful new automation that can maintain quality. A Markdown-driven QA workflow lets an AI agent analyze commits, identify affected areas, and run manual-style tests to catch regressions (speed, distributed inference) and unseen issues. Examples with Redis Arrays and DwarfStar show AI-driven QA can reveal bugs and undocumented features, potentially raising release quality despite rapid development.

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Reading for pleasure is sharply down among schoolkids, report shows

Education Department data show a long-run drop in reading for pleasure among U.S. children. Among 9-year-olds, the share who read for fun near daily fell from 53% in 2012 to 37% in 2025; among 13-year-olds, the figure has fallen by nearly half since 2012. Reading regularly correlates with higher test scores, and both reading and math scores have declined since 2012, with increased screen time cited as a factor. Younger children still report more reading than teens, and some post-pandemic gains are credited to early-literacy programs, though concerns persist about school tech and screen use.

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Oh good, screwworms are back (2025)

The post explains that the New World Screwworm, a parasite that lays eggs in living animals, was eradicated via the sterile insect technique (SIT) developed by Bushland and Knipling. It led to elimination in Curaçao, North America, and Panama by the 1990s, with COPEG coordinating the Panama barrier. In 2022 the barrier was breached, causing thousands of cases and spread into Central America and Mexico. Causes cited include Covid-related production disruptions and likely northward movement of livestock. The author calls for surveillance, tighter livestock controls, ivermectin in feed, and scaled SIT production to restore eradication, which may take years.

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Fully autonomous drones have killed human soldiers for the first time

New Scientist reports that autonomous drones with no human oversight killed soldiers in Ukraine during a one-off test two years ago. Ten AI quadcopters patrolled 3–5 km for ~10 minutes before autonomously engaging targets. No video feed; casualties—soldiers and a truck—were confirmed later by human teams. The test near Bakhmut/Chasiv Yar was not repeated due to rules requiring humans at the final interception stage. Alexander Kokhanovskyy, the drone maker behind the project, now leads Aero Center and is developing ALITA (64 drones) for autonomous interception, still with humans in the loop. The UN and experts debate legality and ethics.

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Vinyl succumbs to Loudness War: more than just collateral damage (2025)

Vinyl is harmed by the Loudness War when cut from compressed digital masters rather than a vinyl-specific master. Using Prince Purple Rain, the article shows digital DR12 (-16.3 LUFS) vs a remastered DR6 (-8.3 LUFS), a drop of about 5 dB in dynamic range with flattened peaks. Vinyl can’t simply be turned up, so compression carried into the cutting process reduces fidelity, though lacquer cutting can recover a little DR. Proper vinyl master workflows should tailor for vinyl; many recent releases follow the digital master, hurting fidelity, while some jazz, blues, and classical titles avoid this.

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How Terry Tao became an evangelist for AI in math

Terence Tao has become a leading advocate for machine-assisted, massively collaborative mathematics. Building on the Polymath experiments, he now promotes formal verification (Lean) to check large-scale collaborative work and scale problem solving to thousands of subproblems. After organizing a 2022 Lean workshop, he formalized results in Lean and led the Polymath-like Equational Theories project (2024), reducing 22 million potential law implications to a handful, aided by automated provers and a decentralized volunteer network. The effort yielded new ideas (eg, magma cohomology) and embodies Tao’s vision of an experimental, AI-augmented era in math.

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Show HN: Claw Patrol, a security firewall for agents

Claw Patrol is a security firewall for agents that sits between agents and production, parsing traffic and gating actions against user-defined HCL rules. It can block destructive commands (e.g., SQL, kubectl delete) or pause actions for human approval. Rules are CEL expressions over wire-level facts (protocol data like SQL verbs, Kubernetes resources, HTTP method/paths). Deployment options include a gateway proxy, a WireGuard-enabled join, and per-process wrapping of an agent’s run. Docs at clawpatrol.dev; install via a curl script or make. MIT license.

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Developer gets Half-Life running at 30 FPS on a Nokia N95

Argentine developer Dante Leoncini has got the original Half-Life running at 30 FPS on a Nokia N95 (Symbian, 2007), adding Bluetooth mouse and keyboard support. Half-Life (1998) minimums were 133 MHz P5 and 24 MB RAM; the N95’s 332 MHz TI OMAP 2420, PowerVR MBX 3D, and 64 MB RAM suffice on paper. Leoncini has also run Quake 3, Crash Bandicoot, and emulated Sega, ScummVM, and NES on the device. The port is native Symbian; slowdowns remain but a fix is in progress. Earlier ports existed for similar Symbian phones.

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Waymo Premier

Waymo announces Waymo Premier, an invite-only $29.99/month membership for top riders. Benefits include Priority Pickups, 10% Waymo Cash back on every trip (with higher perks during busy times), Early Access to Waymo in new cities, and up to five free cancellations per month. Initially limited to select riders in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Phoenix, with plans to expand to more cities as Waymo grows.

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macOS 27 Beta breaks the ability to boot Asahi Linux

Apple's macOS 27 Golden Gate beta hides the Asahi Linux partition on Apple Silicon, preventing boot to Linux even though data remains intact. Asahi Linux warns users not to install macOS 27 yet and suggests using a secondary macOS 26 or older to boot the Asahi partition in the meantime. The project filed a bug with Apple and awaits a fix. Separately, Linux 7.2 will add boot support for Apple M3 Macs, though not yet usable for end users.

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Emacs appearances in pop culture

This blog post catalogs Emacs appearances in pop culture (as of June 2026), spanning film, TV, comics, manga, and documentary footage. Highlights include The Social Network (Emacs scripting), Tron: Legacy (eshell), Arctic Blast (Elisp on screen), Silicon Valley (editor wars), The Hacker Files, Ōsama-tachi no Viking, Key the Metal Idol, The Internship, Aldnoah.Zero, AlphaGo, How to Sell Drugs Online (Fast), A Murder at the End of the World, and Haker. Honorable mentions: xkcd, Neal Stephenson, and lists of famous Emacs users. The author plans updates and shares personal notes on switching to Emacs (Evil-mode) after Silicon Valley.

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Show HN: Homebrew 6.0.0

Homebrew 6.0.0 adds tap trust for third-party taps, a default internal JSON API, Linux sandboxing, and performance/usability improvements. It enforces trusted taps, provides new tap-management commands, and strengthens bundle trust. The internal API is now default (HOMEBREW_USE_INTERNAL_API deprecated). Linux sandboxing via Bubblewrap aligns with macOS, with hardened install phases. Defaults favor safety with ask-mode prompts; brew bundle gains parallel installs and cleanup, plus npm/krew extensions. Initial macOS 27 (Golden Gate) support; Intel migration underway with future deprecations. New commands: brew exec, as-console-user; improved info output and security hardening.

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US House rejects FISA Section 702 extension, warrantless surveillance expires

Could not summarize article.

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Omniglot: The Online Encyclopedia of Writing Systems and Languages

Omniglot is an online encyclopedia of writing systems and languages. It surveys scripts (alphabets, abjads, abugidas, syllabaries, constructed scripts) and natural and constructed languages, with sections on language learning tips, phrases, numbers, colors, idioms, and multilingual pages. The site also features news, blogs, quizzes, and an extensive directory of languages and resources, including examples like Manjak, Vute, Lotha, and Flāmtón. © 1998–2026 Simon Ager.

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Software Is Made Between Commits

Zed argues collaboration should happen in code as it evolves, not after commits. They unveil DeltaDB, a version control that records every operation as a delta, so code, conversations, and edits stay linked. Deltas enable addressing code over time, allow conflict-free replicated worktrees for concurrent edits by people and agents, and let conversations accompany code. The goal: you shouldn’t need to commit to collaborate. Git/CI stay for checks, while DeltaDB handles collaboration. A beta is coming soon; join the waitlist.

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SVG-Line: Better Status Bars for Emacs – Charlie Holland's Blog

svg-line is an Emacs package that renders all four status bars (mode-line, header-line, tab-bar, tab-line) as unified SVG images, giving consistent multi-line layouts, alignment, icons, and interactivity across bars. It uses Emacs SVG rendering, with a simple config: define a :content function and call svg-line-activate. Features include multi-line rows on every bar, wrap-enabled tab-line, clickable segments, text-icon glyphs, masthead icons, dynamic indicators, and scale-aware rendering. SVGs enable precise placement, mouse events, and uniform configuration. Mode-line examples show simple and rich setups; tab-line supports wrapping. Acknowledge Nicolas Rougier.

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Solar generates more energy in US than coal for first time

In May, solar topped coal for the first time in the US, supplying 12.8% of electricity versus coal’s 12.2%. Solar became the third-largest source after natural gas and nuclear, with coal at a monthly low in April. Despite Trump’s push for coal, solar and storage accounted for 91% of new generating capacity in Q1, making solar the leading source of new power for five years. Globally, renewables are growing, with the IEA forecasting about 45% of electricity from renewables by 2030.

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The RCE that AMD wouldn't fix

Security blogger MrBruh discovered a remote code execution in AMD’s AutoUpdate: update URLs were HTTP with no signature checks, enabling MITM tampering. AMD initially deemed the issue out of scope for their bug bounty and asked for a post to be taken down. After community pressure, AMD reviewed it, issued a CVE, and patched the flaw by moving updates to the application layer and enforcing HTTPS, though CRC-32 is the only check (not cryptographic). A separate redirection bug could crash the updater. The author recommends uninstalling old tools and updating from AMD’s site.

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