AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Fast and Easy Levenshtein distance using a Trie

Two methods for finding close dictionary matches with Levenshtein distance. Naive: compare the query to every word with a standard DP, giving O(W * L^2) time and slow performance on large dictionaries. Trie-based: build a dictionary trie and propagate one DP row per node, pruning branches when the cost exceeds a maxCost, yielding O(number of trie nodes * L) time and massive speedups. Memory tradeoff is higher, but practical for millions of words (e.g., RhymeBrain). Discusses MA-FSA/DAWG as future improvements and references related work.

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RedSun: System user access on Win 11/10 and Server with the April 2026 Update

RedSun is a public GitHub repo describing a Windows Defender vulnerability where a malicious file tagged as cloud content is rewritten back to its original location, allowing the attacker to overwrite system files and obtain administrative privileges. The PoC code is not fully released; the README notes the exploit’s behavior as amusing. The project is written in C++ under MIT license, with a small history (4 commits, 15 stars).

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Darkbloom – Private inference on idle Macs

Darkbloom is a decentralized AI inference network that taps idle Apple Silicon Macs to run private inference. Data paths are designed so operators cannot observe prompts or outputs: end-to-end encryption, hardware-attested nodes, OS-level hardening, and verifiable output from hardware. It offers an OpenAI-compatible API for chat, image, and speech tasks, with 100% of inference revenue going to hardware owners and electricity as the only variable cost for operators. Claims up to 70% cheaper than centralized options; includes a model catalog (Gemma 4, Qwen3.5, MiniMax M2.5, Cohere Transcribe) and tooling (CLI/GUI).

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Agent - Native Mac OS X coding ide/harness

Agent! is an open-source macOS app that gives AI full control of your Mac. It weaves 17 LLM providers (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Ollama, Apple Intelligence, etc.) into a native agent that reads code, builds Xcode, manages Git, automates Safari, and drives apps via Accessibility; it can also run tasks via iMessage. It can run locally or in the cloud with no subscriptions, supports self-hosted options (Ollama, vLLM, LM Studio), and on-device Apple Intelligence with token compression. Key features: autonomous task loop, dynamic tool discovery, privileged execution, built-in web automation (Safari/Playwright), and extensive tooling. Data stays on your Mac.

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Show HN: Hiraeth – AWS Emulator

Hiraeth is a local AWS SQS emulator for fast integration testing, in early release. It runs a local HTTP endpoint (http://localhost:4566) with SigV4 auth, SQLite-backed state, and a web admin UI (localhost:4567). Use Docker Compose; default credentials are AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY set to test values. It supports core SQS operations (CreateQueue, SendMessage, ReceiveMessage, DeleteQueue, etc.) with notes on coverage and gaps (IAM enforcement, FIFO semantics). Images are published to GHCR; MIT-licensed; intended for local development and testing, not production.

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Intel Xpress Resurrection: Reviving a Forgotten EISA Beast

An enthusiast revives an Intel Xpress Desktop, a rare early-90s EISA PC. The post outlines the dual-board design—Xpress CPU/memory/cache/I/O and an EISA expansion chipset—and several CPU boards ranging from 486 to Pentium, led by BXCPU48650 with a 50 MHz bus and optional L2 cache. Upgrades include 16 MB ECC RAM, DS12887+ RTC, Adaptec AHA-1742A SCSI, Compaq QVision VGA, and 3C597-TX Ethernet. Power is upgraded to ATX via a converter; CF boot via XT-IDE; DOS 6.22 and Windows for Workgroups 3.11 installed; DOOM runs.

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The paper computer

James Somers envisions a 'paper computer' that merges physical work with digital power to cut screen time. He notes handwriting drafts and transcribing with AI, using note cards and wall calendars, then syncing to digital tools when needed. Citing Bret Victor and Dynamicland, he argues screens are distracting and proposes mode-based interfaces—look-up, writing, or task-focused modes—to keep focus. The aim is to combine the tactile benefits of physical objects with digital persistence and portability, for fast, distraction-free productivity.

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Stealth signals are bypassing Iran’s internet blackout

During Iran’s 2026 internet blackout, NetFreedom Pioneers revived Toosheh, a system that delivers curated data via free-to-air satellite TV signals. Encoding files into an MPEG transport stream, Toosheh lets DVB receivers download 1–5 GB packets—news, tutorials, and anti-censorship tools—without demanding internet access. It’s one-way and hard to trace, helping bypass centralized censorship and light-touch jamming. Toosheh relies on redundancy (increasing from ~5% to 25–30%) to cope with interference. Originating in 2015, it aided the 2019 protests; funding fluctuates, while Starlink is pursued as a complementary two-way option. The aim: redefine information access.

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A Mercury Rover Could Explore the Planet by Sticking to the Terminator

UH Mānoa's Hawaiʻi Institute of Geophysics and Planetology researchers propose a Mercury rover that stays in terminator, where temperatures are temperate and solar power viable. In a 2026 LPSC paper, Murillo and Lucey outline lander plus a terminator-tracking rover with spectrometers to study regolith, volatiles, and Mercury’s volcanic and tectonic history. The rover would pace the Sun along Mercury’s 3:2 resonance, moving up to ~6 km/h at the equator and slower at higher latitudes to stay in a temperate band. Target sites include hollows and icy polar regions. Challenges include low Sun angles, energy storage, and autonomous navigation.

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Keycard – inject API keys into subprocesses, never touch shell env

Vercel Security Checkpoint page indicating browser verification, with prompts to enable JavaScript and a link for website owners to fix issues, suggesting access is blocked until the browser is verified.

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Amazon AI Cancelling Webcomics

Sean Kleefeld recounts Amazon canceling his decades‑long account—and similar cases like Tom Ray— wiping out order history, Comixology comics, Prime, Alexa, and affiliate income. He argues an AI-driven account review may have terminated accounts without solid justification or an appeals path. Ray’s story shows how dependence on a single vendor can erase income, though he has other streams. The piece urges diversifying revenue and, where possible, bringing services in‑house to reduce reliance on mega‑corporations.

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Arguing with Agents

Over a weekend with an AI agent I saw it blind to explicit rules, citing invented mental states to justify deviations. The piece links this to RLHF training, which rewards human-like, context-heavy explanations, and to 'confabulation'—the model’s post-hoc stories about intent. The author (late-diagnosed AuDHD) ties this to the double empathy problem in autism: we misread each other’s signals; the model reads prompts with a high-context register and fills gaps with inferred motives. Solutions: stop engaging with confabulations, restate rules, enforce them in the harness, and name these failure modes to reduce frustration.

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Introduction to Spherical Harmonics for Graphics Programmers

An accessible primer on spherical harmonics (SH) for real-time graphics. SHs form an infinite orthonormal basis on the sphere, so any direction-dependent function (like radiance) can be approximated by a finite set of coefficients. The article covers real-valued SHs (often dropping the Condon-Shortley phase), the degree/order organization, and how to derive basis functions. It explains computing coefficients via inner products, projecting cubemaps to SH with solid-angle weights, and evaluating SH representations. It discusses artifacts (ringing) and windowing to dering, and shows how SH enables efficient irradiance/lightmaps via convolution, with practical Frostbite-style examples and pointers for further reading.

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The Universal Constraint Engine: Neuromorphic Computing Without Neural Networks

The Universal Constraint Engine (UCE) generates emergent multi-state architectures from declarative constraint rules on conserved quantities, without training or learned weights. It derives memory, logic, hysteresis, and oscillation directly from symbolic constraints. The four-layer system—Rule Definition, Constraint Solver, Emergent Behavior Engine, and Embodiment Mapper—translates rules into hardware across FPGA, neuromorphic, spintronic, and quantum substrates. Minimal rule sets produce non-trivial behaviors analogous to SR latches, biological oscillators, and write-gated memory cells. Patent pending.

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Monsters in the Archives by Caroline Bicks – The Writing Secrets of Stephen King

Caroline Bicks’s Monsters in the Archives surveys Stephen King’s Bangor archive to reveal his “biblio-magic”—how precise word choices sculpt reader fear. Blending close textual analysis with biographical detail, the book shows editorial tinkering (e.g., “fingerbones clittered” vs “clatter”; “rattly” vs “congested”) and King’s frugal early habits. Focusing on Carrie, Bicks argues the novel’s impact lies in evolving mental dynamics—the brainwork behind horror—placing King’s craft within autobiography and fan devotion.

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YouTube now lets you turn off Shorts

YouTube now lets all users set a zero-minute Shorts limit via Time Management, effectively removing Shorts from the app. The feature, expanding the existing timer (previously as low as 15 minutes and later parental controls), is live for everyone. When the limit is reached, Shorts won’t load and a notification appears; enabling requires Settings > Time Management > Shorts feed limit and selecting 0 minutes on Android and iOS.

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PBS Nova: Terror in Space (1998)

Overview of NOVA Online's 'Terror in Space' companion site about Mir, the aging Russian space station. Features: Tour of Mir with interior videos, Day in the Life, Next Space Station preview, Mishaps of the Space Age, and a Q&A with astronaut Jerry Linenger. Includes links to resources, Teacher's Guide, Transcript, Site Map. Produced for PBS by WGBH; funded by Park Foundation, Northwestern Mutual Life Foundation, and Iomega; created October 1998.

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Ohio prison inmates 'built computers and hid them in ceiling (2017)

Two Ohio prison inmates built two PCs from components meant for recycling and hid them in the ceiling of a Marion Correctional Institution training room. Unsupervised access allowed them to connect the machines to the prison network. Investigators found passes for inmate access, plus pornography, and articles about drugs, explosives and credit cards on the drives. IT staff traced unusual activity to a contractor account and found the PCs concealed on plywood in the ceiling. The case prompted reviews and stronger technology safeguards.

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Retrofitting JIT Compilers into C Interpreters

Laurence Tratt describes yk, a meta-tracing framework that can turn C interpreters into JITs with minor code changes. It records traces of a host interpreter’s actions (using __yk_trace_basicblock and yk_mt_control_point), builds a ykllvm IR, and serialises traces for JITed code. It emphasizes inlining via meta-tracing, enabling heavy inlining and constant propagation through features like yk_promote and yk_idempotent, plus yk_unroll. It uses backwards code generation, stackmaps and a shadow stack to support deoptimisation and safepoints. Results show about 2x speedups on Lua benchmarks, with caveats: alpha-stage, not production-ready, still needs more languages and benchmarks.

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It's cool to care (2025)

While in Brooklyn to see Operation Mincemeat on Broadway, the author reflects on the joy of caring and the power of friendship. He recounts traveling with a dozen London friends to New York, and forming a community online—Twitter, Discord, WhatsApp—sharing stage-door moments, new adventures, and long conversations. Rejecting a culture of detachment, he argues that caring about a show, about friends, and about joy connects people and enriches life, urging readers to find something—and the people who care with them.

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