AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Platonic Hydrocarbons

Requests setting a user-agent and respecting robots policies, with references to w.wiki/4wJS and Phabricator task T400119.

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Shrimple – A Simpler, Nicer Markdown

Shrimple is a cleaner Markdown-like language that renders to HTML. It supports installation with Go and usage by piping a source to shrimple (flags -s/--default-css and -w/--wrap). It includes parse & render dictionaries for word highlighting, and a static-site generator that converts a Shrimple directory into HTML with optional navigation and menus. Links stay clean using footnotes; code blocks use 6-space indentation (optionally labeled with a language for syntax highlighting); lists and two header types (h1/h2) with underlined separators. Examples show building and generating a site (examples/StaticSite).

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An Ordinary Mind on an Ordinary Day

Pollan argues that novelists’ depictions of the stream of consciousness—Woolf, Joyce, and others—provide essential insights into consciousness that neuroscience often misses. He traces how spontaneous thought, once feared as madness in Victorian times, came to be valued as a truthful window into mind, influenced by Freud, physics, and modern life. The piece contrasts verbalized thought with nonverbal mind-stuff and shows how culture shapes our understanding of cognition. Adapted from A World Appears.

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Building relationships with customers through support didn't turn out as hoped

Castro's founder describes trying to differentiate with human, daily-use support and even paying a frequent user to handle emails. While some rapid fixes delighted a few customers, most honest replies proved unsatisfying or counterproductive. He catalogs support types—pricing complaints, bugs, nuanced questions, confused customers, and generic feature requests—and finds few of them build rapport. Ultimately, deep human intervention is not a reliable differentiator; better results come from improving the product and communicating appreciation rather than detailed explanations.

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Vaclav Havel, the Power of the Powerless (1978)

Havel argues that ideology under power structures becomes reality itself in post-totalitarian systems, as power relies on ritualized 'world of appearances' to maintain legitimacy. The regime protects this lie even as truth threatens it; living in the truth becomes the most potent form of political resistance, rooted in the hidden sphere of conscience rather than institutions. Dissidents arise from ordinary lives—artists, workers, teachers—who preserve a 'second culture' and create parallel structures (samizdat, private associations) that cohere as a 'parallel polis.' These structures undermine the regime and point toward post-democratic, human-centered renewal emphasizing trust, openness, and self-management.

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The Age of Personalized Hardware Is Coming

Wearable hardware and small devices are proliferating, and the software gap is shifting from device builders to everyday developers. The real value will come from software written close to sensors, not in data centers. But current embedded toolchains block web-like development. GEA proposes a solution: a single TypeScript-based codebase compiled ahead-of-time to native, targeting MCU, embedded Linux, macOS, iOS, etc. This moves the software boundary up the stack, letting web developers build native interfaces for personal hardware without mastering firmware. Hardware manufacturing and certification remain hard, but more people can write the software that runs on devices.

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A Forlorn Hope of Fortran Modernisation

Author argues Fortran remains indispensable for scientific parallel computing but suffers from an image problem and aging workforce. He proposes modernising it with a dependently typed FP-inspired language (Φ/𝓕) that compiles to core Fortran, trimming boilerplate and discarding fixed-format and implicit typing, OO and pointers. It adopts ML-style syntax, dependent types, ADTs, pattern matching, type classes, and modules, delivering a FP-first design with proofs of correctness. It would integrate CAF/PGAS parallelism, interoperate with Python and other languages, and be targetable by modern languages while preserving a Fortran core. A multi-pronged strategy in academia, industry, and tooling is urged.

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The Sneakerweb

sneakerweb is a peer-to-peer, permissionless web publishing protocol with no DNS or hosts. Websites reside on user devices and transfer via physical storage media, viewable offline in a normal browser and shared as .snk files. The sneakerweb CLI manages a local collection, enabling exporting/importing .snk files, creating sites, claiming domains, publishing to domains, blocking domains, and starting a local server. The protocol, built on Willow, prevents forgery, merges updates, and keeps .snk files compact.

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GPT-5.6 Sol Ultra will be in Codex

On X, Tibo replies to @haider1 that “Ultra will be in codex.”

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The Writers Who Wrote the Most in History

The author surveys historical writers famed for extreme output, from Chesterton to Tellado to Lope de Vega, Dumas, Balzac, Simenon, Cartland, and modern China’s Wǎngwén, showing how they sustained prodigious writing through ritual, discipline, collaboration, and industry pressures. The piece emphasizes that for these writers the act of showing up daily mattered more than fame or quality; compulsion, not hustle, drives creation. The author reflects on his own writing habit, noting continuity and the human cost, and suggests the value of consistency and dedication in writing.

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Building Agents That Don't Break Themselves

To prevent agents from breaking themselves, use sandboxed execution inside disposable Sprites. The agent loop runs models and tools, but dangerous commands should not run in the host sandbox. SpriteDoc creates a fresh Sprite per session, isolating filesystem access and never storing user tokens long-term. Hermes keeps one Sprite per task so it can reuse installs, while still executing commands in a separate Sprite. Checkpointing via copy-on-write lets you undo harmful steps quickly. The result: durable agent homes and safe, unattended operation.

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The Private Capture of Public Genius

The piece traces how AT&T’s regulated monopoly funded Bell Labs, yielding a surge of frontier science, then the 1956 consent decree freed Bell’s patents (mostly unrelated to telecom) and catalyzed a vast tech boom (Shockley→Intel) by enabling open licensing. It argues today’s frontier AI labs mine the internet’s public corpus to train models, treating data as a public good but risking the internet commons. Since attribution is intractable, it proposes a Corpus Royalty: a collective royalty from model revenues paid to the public, distributed like the Alaska Permanent Fund, to sustain the commons.

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Artificial Adventures

An enthusiast experiments with multiple AI models (Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Moonshot, DeepSeek, Cerebras), finds frontier models (Opus 4.8, GPT 5.5) most useful for code work, and views Claude Code/Codex as flaky. They sandbox models in bubblewrap, emphasize that the main value is code review and bug finding, including a double-free bug that others would miss. Bots struggle with larger, end-to-end UI tasks and often misplace decisions; optimal use is for small tasks and quick scripts. Sees need for better harnesses, verification, and tooling; sustainability depends on model improvements and new practices.

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The AI Compass Quiz

Could not summarize article.

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Zuckerberg says AI agent development going slower than expected

Could not summarize article.

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Has_not_been_viewed_much

The Art Institute of Chicago's API includes a has_not_been_viewed_much boolean on artworks, marking items with very low site visits—defined as under 200 views since Jan 1, 2010. The piece questions which artworks meet this flag and why they’re under-viewed, inviting readers to browse.

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Connections in Math: the two kinds of random

Two kinds of compression: statistical (entropy) and process-based (Kolmogorov complexity). Entropy measures average surprise in a source and governs lossless coding; uniform digits maximize entropy and are hard to compress statistically. Kolmogorov complexity K(x) is the length of the shortest program that outputs x; a string like π has a tiny generator and is highly compressible, while a random-looking string has high K. Entropy ignores generation rules; K is uncomputable. Almost all strings are incompressible by counting, but on average for random sources K≈entropy. The post links selection cost to differentiation and hints at learning and proof limits.

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Al Vigier: Canada's AI strategy shouldn't include secret Palantir bills

Al Vigier argues Canada's 'AI for All' should anchor sovereignty by buying openly from Canadian firms, not quietly funding foreign ones. He cites Defence and Ontario Police Palantir contracts as examples of secret AI purchases that clash with the strategy. The plan emphasizes equity, compute, and certification rather than direct procurement, risking slow buys and state‑backed champions. He proposes hard rules: fixed Canadian spending in each department, auditable receipts published quarterly, and open contracts starting with health and other high‑consequence sectors. Vigier runs Caseway.

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Johnson Thermoelectric Energy Converter

Requests should identify a user-agent and respect robots policy; see https://w.wiki/4wJS and https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T400119 for details.

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Had an idea for a Rust editor with simple Vim mode for learning

rust-vim is a minimal Rust GUI text editor that uses Vim-like keys. It provides Vim toggle and learning-oriented help, aimed at educating users about editing with Vim. The project is MIT-licensed.

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