AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

A story about how I dug into the PostgreSQL sources to write my own WAL receiver

Could not summarize article.

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Dad brains: How fatherhood rewires the male mind

Fatherhood triggers biological changes in men, not just social roles. Expectant fathers show lower testosterone and vasopressin before birth; postnatally, greater caregiving links to lower testosterone and higher bonding hormones such as oxytocin and prolactin. Brain imaging finds neural changes during the transition, shaping responses to infants. Involvement level drives the degree of change, supporting Hrdy’s idea of an alloparental substrate. Findings span straight and gay fathers. Public policy should bolster dads’ involvement and leave. A large 7-year study found children of more attentive fathers have better heart health, underscoring paternal biology’s family benefits.

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NASA Shuts Off Instrument on Voyager 1 to Keep Spacecraft Operating

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory shut down the Low-energy Charged Particles instrument (LECP) aboard Voyager 1 to conserve power as the probe's energy margins thin. Launched in 1977 and now over 15 billion miles from Earth, Voyager 1 loses about 4 watts per year. The LECP shutdown will take about 23 hours to reach Voyager 1 and roughly 3 hours to complete; a small LECP motor (0.5 W) will stay on in case it can be reactivated. Two other instruments remain active. A broader "Big Bang" energy-saving upgrade will be tested first on Voyager 2, then Voyager 1 if successful.

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In the AI propaganda war, Iran is winning

Could not summarize article.

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Modern Common Lisp with FSET

Scott L. Burson’s Modern Common Lisp with FSet is a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 guide to FSet, a functional-collections library for Common Lisp. It covers why FSet was created, benefits of functional data structures, and hands-on material: getting started, tutorials for Sets, Maps, Seqs, Bags, nesting, assignment, importing, and Emacs tips. It also presents conceptual background, design of FSet (equality, data structures, time complexity), a comprehensive API (sets, maps, bags, sequences, replay structures), iterators, printing/JSON, and examples (histograms, graph walking). The document includes recommendations for language designers and historical critiques of other libraries.

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Optimizing Ruby Path Methods

The post outlines optimizing Ruby startup time in CI by shortening the setup phase with Bootsnap and faster path handling. Bootsnap caches load-path entries for near-constant-time requires, using mtimes for cache invalidation. A key win came from adding Dir.scan to walk load paths with file-type info, delivering about a 2x directory-scanning speedup and informing a Ruby 4.1 feature. The author also slimmed File.join and other path methods: added ASCII fast paths, inlined C, reduced allocations, and replaced rb_string_value_cstr with rb_str_null_check. Benchmarks show substantial gains in path-related operations.

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Any Color You Like: NIST Scientists Create 'Any Wavelength' Lasers

NIST researchers have created integrated photonics chips that generate multiple laser colors on a single chip by stacking nonlinear materials on silicon. The 3D circuits use lithium niobate and tantalum pentoxide (tantala) with metal interfaces to convert, route, and switch light across many wavelengths. They demonstrated about 50 fingernail-sized chips on a wafer, each with roughly 10,000 circuits outputting a unique color. The approach could miniaturize bulky lasers, aiding quantum clocks/computers, AI, navigation, biomedicine and communications. Nature paper; collaboration with Octave Photonics.

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PgQue: Zero-Bloat Postgres Queue

PgQue is a zero-bloat, pure-SQL Postgres queue that reimplements PgQ for PostgreSQL 14+ without C extensions or external daemons. It ships as a single sql/pgque.sql file and runs on managed Postgres (RDS, Aurora, Cloud SQL, AlloyDB, Supabase, Neon). It uses pg_cron (or your own scheduler) to tick every second, delivering snapshot-based batching with TRUNCATE rotation to avoid dead tuples. It offers language-agnostic SQL API, per-consumer cursors with fan-out, ACID durability, and modest end-to-end latency (~1–2 seconds). Roles: pgque_reader, pgque_writer, pgque_admin; client libraries in Python/Go/TypeScript.

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PostgreSQL production incident caused by transaction ID wraparound

An in-production PostgreSQL outage was caused by transaction ID wraparound, where aging XIDs can silently near a 2‑billion limit and cause a hard stop on writes to prevent corruption. Autovacuum had been disabled on some tables for years, allowing relfrozenxid to age; others continued, letting the risk accumulate across the cluster. Recovery required aggressive VACUUM FREEZE and terminating long-running transactions. Root cause: long‑standing configuration decisions and disabled autovacuum; similar risks existed across systems. Unlike PostgreSQL, SQL Server uses LSNs and does not halt writes for wraparound.

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Floating Point Fun on Cortex-M Processors

Floating Point Fun on Cortex‑M Processors explains how ARM Cortex‑M FPU support is exposed via ABI variants (-mfloat-abi): soft, softfp, and hard. It shows how hard ABI uses FP registers for argument passing and may call runtime FP functions for soft operations; soft and softfp mix with hard can trigger linker errors. It covers how to inspect ABI attributes with readelf and how Zephyr config (CONFIG_CPU_HAS_FPU, CONFIG_FPU) controls FPU enablement, including dynamic init via z_arm_floating_point_init and CPACR/FPCCR/FPSCR setup. It warns that using FP without enabling the FPU causes NOCP faults and discusses use cases for toggling FP hardware.

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Rail: A self-hosting language that speaks TLS alone

Rail is a self-hosting systems language with zero C dependencies, whose ARM64-assembly GC and runtime live inside the compiler. As of v3.0.0 it includes a pure-Rail TLS 1.3 stack with X.509 chain validation and a native HTTPS client (no OpenSSL or curl). The compiler can bootstrap itself to byte-identical, targets macOS ARM64, Linux ARM64, Linux x86_64, and WASM, and ships four backends. The project also uses a self-improving flywheel: the compiler acts as the training signal for LLM-driven training loops. License: BSL 1.1.

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4-bit floating point FP4

Could not summarize article.

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College instructor turns to typewriters to curb AI-written work

A Cornell German instructor, Grit Matthias Phelps, uses manual typewriters once a semester to disconnect students from screens and curb AI-generated writing. Started in spring 2023 after frustration with AI and online translators producing polished but inauthentic work. Students type without spellcheck or delete keys, learning to slow down, think more, and rely on discussion. Some struggle with one-handed typing and formatting, but many say the exercise helps them engage with writing differently. It’s part of a broader shift toward analog methods to prevent AI misuse.

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Show HN: Remoroo. trying to fix memory in long-running coding agents

Remoroo is an autonomous research engine that runs ML experiments overnight on your code locally. Write a spec (program.md); Remoroo executes experiments, evaluates metrics, and keeps or reverts changes, producing verified, reproducible results by morning. It automates hyperparameter searches, architecture tweaks, and multi-objective constraints using a fixed evaluation harness and artifact replay. Example runs show val_bpb improvements (e.g., 2.2396 → 1.5484, 31%). It contrasts slow manual tuning with metric-driven automation, offers a CLI install (pip install remoroo), pricing via Haiku-hour credits with a free tier, and reproducible patches with proof.

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Show HN: AI Subroutines – Run automation scripts inside your browser tab

rtrvr.ai's AI Subroutines let you record a browser task once in the extension and replay it inside the page as a callable tool, with auth, CSRF, and session data propagated from the live page at zero token cost and deterministically; same input, same output. The trick is in-page recording/replay plus a ranking/trimming step to isolate the actual API call amid noisy network traffic; only a handful of requests become Subroutines. Subroutines are tools; the agent invokes them with per-row parameters. The release also adds BYO ChatGPT/Claude, WhatsApp automation, knowledge-base tools, Rover, and a public library of shared Subroutines.

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Young sons of U.S. marshal ride horseback from Oklahoma to New York (2018)

Could not summarize article.

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Thoughts and feelings around Claude Design

Claude Design argues design tooling is splitting into two paths. Figma-style systems lock tokens, components, and styles into a dense, hard-to-automate file that even its own team’s file exposes as a complex, multi-mode beast; this limits training data and future automation. By contrast, Claude Design (with Claude Code) stays honest about being HTML/JS down to the metal, enabling direct code–design integration. As code becomes easier for designers, the source of truth shifts back to code, while two futures emerge: a pure exploration tool or a high-fidelity, code-driven workflow, with Figma Make staying system-bound.

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Traders placed over $1B in perfectly timed bets on the Iran war

Online prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi enabled more than $1bn in bets on the Iran war, with timing matching major moves. Bets before 27 February strikes yielded about $855k in profits for dozens of accounts; a single user earned about $553k predicting Khamenei would be removed before an Israeli assassination. Similar windfalls occurred around a ceasefire announcement and oil futures. Regulators (CFTC) are examining possible insider trading; enforcement is hampered by jurisdiction and the lack of clear rules, with discussion of new legislation.

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Building a Grow-Only Counter on a Sequentially Consistent KV Store

Examines how to implement a grow-only counter on Maelstrom’s SeqKV. A naive read-modify-write fails under concurrency; CAS can be atomic but not deterministic. A CRDT-like approach spreads per-node counters and sums them, avoiding write conflicts but isn't a full CRDT without proper merge/compare. The root issue is SeqKV’s sequential consistency and internal behavior, which can yield non-deterministic results and stale final reads despite cooldown. Hacky workaround: write a unique value to force the latest state. Non-hacky options: implement a real CRDT with gossip or switch to LinKV for linearizability, which yields deterministic passes.

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Understanding the FFT Algorithm (2013)

An accessible dive into the Cooley–Tukey FFT: the fast O(N log N) algorithm to compute the DFT by exploiting symmetry and divide-and-conquer. Starting from the DFT definition, the post shows how splitting the input into even and odd parts yields two smaller DFTs, recursively halving problem size until brute-force DFT is cheaper. It presents a Python implementation: a slow DFT, a recursive FFT, and a vectorized non-recursive version, with timing comparisons to numpy's FFT. Explains FFTPACK/NumPy speed, extensions (Bluestein, Rader), and that understanding the background helps data scientists.

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