AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Fable 5 wrote a Windows kernel in 38 minutes

Researchers show ntoskrnl-rs, an NT-shaped kernel written by AI (Fable 5) in Rust, booting in QEMU and passing self-tests after a 38-minute run. The core implements OS components (scheduler, memory, I/O, object manager) and later loads Windows drivers and unmodified binaries in kernel and user mode, forming a testing sandbox. The article argues AI-authored kernels reveal trust boundaries and foreground the verification gap: exhaustive concurrency tests, Miri, proptest, and formal verification are needed before such code can be trusted as a TCB. It warns that rewriting critical infrastructure in Rust is possible but requires robust verification and auditable pipelines.

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Cyberdecks, going analog, and convivial technology

Hydroponic Trash argues that the corporate internet and AI-driven standardization push people toward analog, handmade tech (cyberdecks) and physical media. It links today’s cyberdeck renaissance—driven by women and marginalized groups—to historic medieval guilds, Luddites, and the Arts and Crafts movement, framing tech as a tool that can either exploit or empower. It urges anti-capitalist, permacultural approaches: reuse/upcycle hardware, extend device lifespans, reduce reliance on money, foster mutual aid, resist platform co-optation, and reimagine an economy oriented to human flourishing.

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Is it time for a new Embedded Linux build system?

The piece surveys embedded Linux build systems and argues that traditional tools (Buildroot, OpenEmbedded/Yocto) are strained as edge devices become cloud-like, languages diversify, and cross-compilation grows brittle. It highlights small teams' needs and the limitations of current tooling. The author prototypes a next-gen build system for embedded Linux (the [yoe] build) that uses modern language ecosystems, AI-assisted tooling, build caching, and cross-platform base distros to speed delivery and reduce reliance on lengthy cross-compilation, while noting Yocto still serves regulated, reproducible cases.

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Tacky men with ridiculous glasses want you to wear them too

An outspoken critique of smart glasses as a fashion dead-end driven by a few tech leaders. The author traces AR eyewear from Google Glass to Meta Ray-Ban and Apple Vision Pro, arguing that despite hype, the devices remain ugly, have short battery life, privacy drawbacks, and questionable usefulness. The piece suggests the real draw is recording potential rather than utility, and laments the persisting trend among Silicon Valley CEOs, with Tim Cook's Vanity Fair outing cited as emblematic. Overall: unlikely to reshape everyday computing.

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PivCo-Huffman "Merge" Operations

PivCo-Huffman proposes a parallel Huffman coding/decoding method that treats decoding as a bottom-up merge of symbol lists guided by the bitstream, enabling data-parallel implementations on CPUs/GPUs. The post details a practical merge kernel: 8-byte chunks with a 256-entry index-table, and a 16-byte version using two tables and tricks to share indices between L and R halves. Hardware targets include AVX512_VBMI2 (best), AVX2/SSE, and NEON/ARM, with trade-offs around prefix sums and table sizes. The approach is hardware-dependent but promising, requiring wire formats that support wide parallelism.

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Nearly Half of LG Smart TV Apps Contain Residential Proxy SDKs

Spur Intelligence scanned 6,038 LG webOS and Samsung Tizen TV apps and found 2,058 embedding residential proxy SDKs to monetize the TV’s internet access. TVs are ideal proxy hosts: always on, rarely audited, with consent prompts easy to overlook. SDKs often run after the app closes, and some apps frame proxy use as an ad-free option. Major vendors Bright Data, Massive, and Oxylabs appear as publishers in many cases, sometimes via wrapper apps. Amazon bans such software; Roku reportedly blocks it; LG/Samsung lack a clear policy. Risks include local-network exposure (routers, NAS, printers). Calls for transparency and platform oversight.

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Unsloth GLM-5.2 – How to Run Locally

Documentation for running GLM-5.2 locally on Unsloth. Describes GLM-5.2 (744B params, 1M context) and how to run it via Unsloth Studio or llama.cpp using Dynamic GGUF quantization (UD-IQ2_M 2-bit; UD-IQ1_S 1-bit; 8-bit). Full model ~1.51TB; 2-bit ~239GB; 1-bit ~223GB RAM; 8-bit ~810GB RAM. Includes hardware recommendations, installation steps (Unsloth install, HTTPS tunnel), downloading GLM-5.2-GGUF, and auto-inference parameter tuning; benchmarks vs Claude Opus, GPT-5.5, Gemini; KV cache long-context quantization guidance.

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Walt Disney Company is the most successful at monetizing human nostalgia [audio]

Acquired's Spring 2026 Episode 4 traces The Walt Disney Company's rise from Walt's bold bets (Snow White, Fantasia) to Disneyland and a broad IP-driven empire. It argues Disney perfected a flywheel-like model—merging art, commerce, and engineering—to monetize nostalgia at global scale, creating an enduring entertainment conglomerate. The episode cites biographers and histories (Gabler, Barrier, Thomas, PBS) and presents Disney as a case study in the fusion of creativity and business, with podcast-style disclosures typical of the series.

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Flock-Powered Police Chiefs Stalking Women Shows Why Warrants Are Needed

A Holiday Hills, IL police chief and other officials used Flock's license-plate reader to track six people he knew romantically, prompting official misconduct charges. The pattern shows LPRs track people, not just cars, contradicting Flock's claim. Advocates urge warrants for routine stored LPR data; courts already require warrants for GPS, cell-site data, and wiretaps. The cases, including high-ranking officers, underscore the need for warrant-based oversight of powerful tracking tech.

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Kyber (YC W23) Is Hiring a Head of Engineering

Kyber, an AI-native enterprise document platform backed by YC, seeks a hands-on Head of Engineering in New York (salary $220k–$280k; 0.5–1.5% equity). Reports to the CTO and owns end-to-end tech (backend, frontend, data, infra), leads the product roadmap, and drives reliability, security, and AI-driven workflows while mentoring and scaling the team. Requirements: a 10x engineer with system-design mastery and experience with enterprise security/compliance (SOC 2, HIPAA, ISO). Benefits include full medical, generous stock, and joining a profitable company with rapid revenue growth.

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Canyon HUD helmet for road riding

Canyon's Stingr Smart helmet is a HUD-enabled helmet built with Canyon Predict safety. It features a retractable visor that projects road hazards, other road users, group dynamics, and riding-advice into the peripheral vision, with configurable alerts via haptics and on-screen prompts. It can display speed, distance, cadence, power, elevation and heart rate, and can ingest data from a smartphone or Bluetooth/ANT+. Voice commands or external buttons control visor deployment, while it can operate standalone or with the Canyon Predict bike. The aim is to reduce cognitive load and improve rider safety.

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Steam Machine launches today

Valve announces the launch of Steam Machines today as part of Steam Hardware; the page is a Steam News hub with sign-in, store, and language options.

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Japanese symbols that speak without words

Japan relies on wordless graphic symbols embedded in everyday life to convey complex status and needs without speech. Kamon (family crests) and transport marks identify service levels, roles, or affiliations—from government emblems on police cars and snow-crystal fire symbols, to tokkyū limited-express logos on trains. Driver marks (new, elderly, hearing-impaired, disabled) and transit marks (Help Mark, maternity mark) guide behavior without words. This system stems from "reading the air"—anticipating others' needs and fostering mutual consideration in public spaces.

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Memory crisis is getting so bad that even retro RAM prices are going to the Moon

Global memory shortage driven by AI demand is pushing buyers toward legacy DDR2/DDR3, raising prices and inflating PC costs. TrendForce notes RAM makers prioritizing high-margin HBM/server DRAM, reducing mainstream supply. DDR2 contract prices could rise 55–60% in Q2 2026, with another 35–40% in Q3. Manufacturers are only slowly expanding capacity: Winbond reducing DDR2 output, ESMT maintaining current allocation. SK hynix plans to double wafer output in five years; Micron expects meaningful capacity at its Virginia fab in 2027–28. Some devices are being redesigned to DDR2/DDR3 to cut costs.

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Brazilian Psychic Predicts Alien Invasion During World Cup Game Next Week

A Brazilian psychic predicts an alien invasion during a World Cup game next week, as reported by Coast to Coast AM.

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Optocam Zero: a Pi Zero based digital camera made using off the shelf components

Optocam Zero is a Raspberry Pi Zero-based compact digital camera built from off-the-shelf components. It aims for portability and fun, featuring autofocus camera module, 8 filters, a custom hotspot for fast image transfer, and an intuitive interface; optimized for mobile and desktop, with screen dimming and USB-C charging. It uses an interchangeable 14500 Li-ion battery (70–80 minutes per charge), 15–20 fps preview, 22 s boot, and a fully 3D-printed case with optional TPU sleeve. The repo provides BOM, build guides, STL/CAD files, and software for setup.

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British Columbia, Time Zones, and Postgres

British Columbia moved to year-round Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7) in 2026, making Vancouver time fixed and highlighting how timestamptz stores UTC and converts with current tz rules, which can shift times after tzdata updates. If tzdata updates, dates like 2026-11-10 10:00 local may become 11:00. The article recommends a dual-column pattern: local_time (wall clock), timezone_name (IANA), and starts_at_utc (computed UTC) via triggers to preserve user intent. RFC 9557 is not yet adopted or a solution for future-local times. If tzdata changes, plan migration, notify users, test, and recompute.

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Linux and Secure Boot certificate expiration (2025)

Linux Secure Boot faces expiry of the Microsoft-signed 2011 key (Sept 2025), which authenticates the shim bootloader. After expiry, installers may need a shim signed with the 2023 MS key; many systems lack that key or firmware updates to install it. LVFS/fwupd can push KEK, db, and related updates via firmware updates to add the new key, but success varies and issues like efivar space can hinder updates. If vendors don’t provide updates, Secure Boot may need to be disabled to install or boot. The situation is evolving across hardware, firmware and distros.

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Bain tests software takeover targets by vibecoding AI replicas

Financial Times security verification page blocks access with a 403 error and asks users to enable JavaScript and cookies to proceed. It provides a help URL (help.ft.com), a request ID (a0fd3e000dc8a364), and links to terms, privacy, cookie policies, and FT copyright/self-regulation notices.

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Show HN: Selector Forge – browser extension for AI-generated resilient selectors

Selector Forge is a standalone browser extension (Chrome & Firefox MV3) that helps you build robust CSS or XPath selectors using AI. You pick elements on a live page; the extension captures context, sends it to a backend that proposes and ranks candidate selectors, and re-verifies each candidate against the live DOM. It supports single-element and list selections, with the browser as the source of truth. It currently uses Intuned for authentication and selector generation; future plans include a self-hosted backend and broader automation. MIT licensed.

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