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Sem – Semantic version control. Entity-level diffs on top of Git

sem is a semantic version control CLI from Ataraxy-Labs that delivers entity-level diffs, blame, graph, and impact analysis for code. It parses 16 languages via tree-sitter and supports structured formats (JSON, YAML, TOML, CSV, Markdown), enabling precise changes and rename/move detection through structural hashing. Features include diff, graph, blame, and impact commands with JSON output options. Implemented in Rust; available as a library sem-core; MIT/Apache-2.0 licenses.

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The Lobster Programming Language

Lobster is an open-source, statically-typed language designed for games, combining compile-time memory management (reference counting with lifetime analysis and borrow checker) with Python-like indentation and lightweight blocks. It offers flow-sensitive type inference and specialization, vector operations, unified static/dynamic dispatch, immutable inline structs, and GIL-less multi-threading. Run via a JIT or compile to C++ for speed. The runtime provides a graphical debugger, dynamic code loading, and cross-platform OpenGL-based graphics, audio, and UI tooling, with built-in libraries for tasks like pathfinding. Code emphasizes concise, terse syntax and blocks.

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Notes on Writing WASM

Key patterns for Rust+Wasm with wasm-bindgen: pass across boundary by reference; wrap exported types with Wasm* prefixes; prefix JS-imported types with Js*; prefer interior-mutability wrappers (Rc<RefCell<T>> or Arc<Mutex<T>>) and avoid &mut across the boundary; avoid deriving Copy on wrappers; use duck-typed extern "C" JS interfaces to duck-bind; use wasm_refgen to automate boilerplate; convert Rust errors to js_sys::Error via From<...> for JsValue; print build info on startup for easier debugging.

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I'm Not Consulting an LLM

I argue that LLMs like GPT undermine intellectual growth. An idealized “I’m Feeling Lucky” search yields precise results but deprives you of real-world research: questioning, disagreements, conflicting sources, and the epistemic judgments that train understanding. LLMs often give plausible yet uncertain answers, may reproduce mistakes, and obscure uncertainty behind confident fluency. True intellect grows from grappling with debates, footnotes, and why assumptions fail. A tool can be efficient yet intellectually corrosive. Exceptions: repetitive, automatable tasks. References to Gell-Mann Amnesia, generalization bias in summarization, and overconfidence in LLMs.

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Rijksmuseum researchers discover new painting by Rembrandt van Rijn

Rijksmuseum researchers confirm Vision of Zacharias in the Temple (1633) is by Rembrandt. Using methods like those for Operation Night Watch and comparing with early Rembrandts, they find matching materials, painting build-up, alterations by Rembrandt, an original signature, and dendrochronological dating to 1633. Macro‑XRF scans support the authenticity. After a 65-year absence, the work—on long-term loan from a private collector—will be on display from 4 March. The scene shows Zacharias learning from the Archangel Gabriel about the birth of John the Baptist.

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Revisiting Time: UT1, UTC, NTP and NTS

Leap seconds intermittently adjust UTC to stay within 0.9 s of UT1, historically causing IT glitches; newer approaches smear or smooth the adjustment to avoid outages. Time standards span UT1 (Earth rotation), UTC (atomic, with leap seconds), and TAI; NTP synchronizes client clocks to UTC, measuring offset, delay, and dispersion, using a stratum hierarchy and slewing for small corrections. Securing NTP via NTS (TLS-based key exchange and cookies) improves authenticity without altering timing. QUIC-based TSQ for NTP is experimental and controversial. Time services are both public and private assets, vulnerable to jamming; Sweden, Brazil, Germany explore NTS-based time networks.

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New Research Reassesses the Value of Agents.md Files for AI Coding

New ETH Zurich study questions value of AGENTS.md context files for AI coding. Using AGENTbench (138 Python tasks) and four agents (Claude 3.5 Sonnet, Codex GPT-5.2/5.1 mini, Qwen Code), researchers tested no context, an LLM-generated AGENTS.md, and a human-written one. Results: LLM-generated context decreased task success by ~3% vs no context and increased steps and costs by >20%. Human-written context gave ~4% better success but raised steps/costs up to ~19%. Authors conclude context files offer at most marginal gains, mainly if manually written, and call for better automatic, task-relevant guidance. They note a gap between recommendations and observed outcomes.

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Digital Iris [video]

Could not summarize article.

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Show HN: Curiosity – DIY 6" Newtonian Reflector Telescope

Curiosity is a 6-inch Newtonian reflector built in Bengaluru, inspired by Richard Berry’s book. They designed and assembled a 900 mm focal-length OTA using a 150 mm primary, 190 mm inner-diameter PVC tube, and a rocker-box cradle with 3D-printed parts and aluminium brackets. CAD modeling in Fusion 360 guided fabrication (OTA, primary/secondary mirrors, spider vane). It uses 25 mm and 9 mm eyepieces with a 2x barlow; observed Moon, Jupiter, and a lunar eclipse; notes on collimation. They explain LGP (625x), focal ratio f/6, magnification, Airy disk, and Dobsonian vs equatorial mounts and sky-learning apps.

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To the Polypropylene Makers

Amid COVID-19, two Braskem polypropylene plants faced shutdown risk that could stop mask fabric. About eighty workers volunteered to isolate on-site for four weeks—twelve-hour shifts, sleeping on air mattresses, and family contact only via screens—receiving full wages and a paid week off afterwards. In 28 days they produced 40 million pounds of polypropylene, enough for about 500 million N95s. The story argues emergencies reward creative, well-compensated labor, and shows ordinary people solving critical problems; a 2026 blizzard example is cited similarly.

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From RGB to L*a*b* color space (2024)

RGB is not perceptually uniform, so equal RGB changes don’t map to equal perceived color changes. Lab (L*, a*, b*) is perceptually uniform and supports Delta E for objective color differences. L* = lightness; a* and b* encode green–red and blue–yellow. Converting sRGB to Lab: normalize RGB to [0,1], apply gamma correction to obtain linear RGB, convert to XYZ with a D65 matrix, then convert XYZ to Lab using a reference white (Xn,Yn,Zn) and the f(t) function. White points (D65, D50, E) and observers (2°, 10°) matter. Python: skimage.color.rgb2lab.

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The Editor Who Helped Build a Golden Age of American Letters

Greg Barnhisel reevaluates Malcolm Cowley as a pivotal, though imperfect, broker of America’s literary golden age. Through reporting, reviewing, and especially editing, Cowley helped turn three writers—Hemingway, Faulkner, Fitzgerald—into serious literature via Portable Library editions, while later shepherding Kerouac’s On the Road and Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest into cultural prominence. The piece argues Cowley’s work bridged Lost Generation modernists with postwar writers, shaping American literary prestige during a time of growing publishing power, and contrasts that era with today’s fragmented, commercially driven landscape.

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How to run Qwen 3.5 locally

Unsloth's Qwen3.5 guide shows how to run Qwen3.5 locally across sizes (35B-A3B, 27B, 122B-A10B, 397B-A17B and small 0.8B–9B). It covers hardware needs, context length, and memory requirements, plus GGUF/quantization options (Dynamic 4-bit MXFP4_MOE; UD-Q4_K_XL; UD-Q2_K_XL; 4-bit/8-bit variants). Instructions span llama.cpp and llama-server setups, including CPU/GPU offloading, 256K–262K context, and 12–70+ GB RAM footprints. It explains enabling thinking/non-thinking modes, LM Studio integration, tool calling, and production deployment with llama-server. Benchmarks and recommended settings accompany model-by-model guidance.

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Ten Years of Deploying to Production

Brandon Vincent recalls 2018’s production-ops setup where deployments were biweekly, ops controlled production, and developers faced friction fixing misbehaving models. He undertook a DevOps shift: learned Chef, built an internal PyPi repo with versioned releases, created Chef recipes for Python apps, and established code-and-release practices that enabled faster, traceable production deployments. By 2026, the company moved to Platform Engineering to accelerate development, improve developer experience, and make CI/CD fast and observable, with clearer production diagnostics and reduced reliance on heroic fixes.

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I don't know if my job will still exist in ten years

An experienced software engineer argues that AI agents will transform or erase software jobs within a decade. He outlines two scenarios—underdemand where humans mainly supervise AI, or over-demand where short-term need rises before models replace them—doubts the Jevons effect will save demand, notes AI-assisted maintenance, and concludes the industry faces a worrying, uncertain future, though he hopes to be wrong.

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A Grand Vision for Rust

Yoshua Wuyts sketches a grand vision for Rust focused on three directions: enhanced effect systems, deeper substructural typing, and refinement types. He advocates more function guarantees via type-and-effect ideas (e.g., functions that never panic, terminate, are deterministic, or avoid IO). He explains substructural types beyond affine: linear (exactly-once) and ordered (exactly-once in order), with Move and Forget for ergonomics and emplacement described as an effect. For refinement, he proposes pattern types and view types to tighten memory safety without runtime checks. The aim is a safer, production-grade Rust.

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MonoGame: A .NET framework for making cross-platform games

MonoGame is an open-source .NET framework for creating cross-platform games in C#, re-implementing Microsoft's XNA. It supports desktop, mobile, and console targets (Windows, Linux, macOS, Android, iOS, PlayStation, Xbox, Switch) with Vulkan and DirectX 12 in preview. The project includes sample games (Platformer 2D, Neon Shooter, 3D Ship Game), a content pipeline and tools (mgcb, mgfxc), and contributor guidance. The full source, licenses, and community support (Issues, Discussions, Discord) are on GitHub, with donations aiding hosting and development.

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Best Performance of a C++ Singleton

The post compares two singleton implementations for performance: a block-local static DisplayManager Instance() and a private static data member. It shows how a user-declared constructor triggers guard checks (__cxa_guard_acquire/release) and more assembly code, making defaulted constructors preferable. When a user-defined constructor is required, the static data member version delivers faster, lock-free initialization; if the default constructor can be defaulted, both patterns are similar in performance. The author endorses the static data member for performance, while noting block-local static is convenient to avoid extra files.

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They all said Hormuz closure would be brief. What if they were wrong?

Six days into the Middle East war, Hormuz is effectively closed, undermining hopes it would be brief. A prolonged closure now seems plausible: high war risk, insurance costs, and safety concerns raise barriers to large-scale transits. Some traffic trickles through, while many vessels head for safe loading ports in the Atlantic basin. Gulf producers face storage limits and output cuts (Qatar LNG down ~20%, Iraq and Kuwait reducing), risking broader energy disruption. VLCC and LPG rates have surged to record highs, with analysts warning a prolonged closure would be very bearish.

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"Warn about PyPy being unmaintained"

A GitHub PR (astral-sh/uv #17643) adds a warning that PyPy is not actively developed and is being phased out, referencing numpy’s PyPy concerns. The docs note that PyPy is not supported as a actively maintained distribution and only supports up to Python 3.11. The change aims to prevent assuming PyPy is a supported Python distribution, and was merged by konstin in Jan 2026 with related documentation updates.

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