AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Show HN: What if AI agents had Zodiac personalities?

An experimental GitHub project explores how 12 AI agents, each embodying a zodiac sign personality, respond to identical moral dilemmas. All agents use the same Gemini 3 model; only personality framing differs. Ten dilemmas cover ethics, career, finance, relationships, innovation, forgiveness, risk, truth, loyalty, and trust. Results show mixed consensus on many prompts; Sagittarius and Aquarius give the most YES responses (about 9/10), while Cancer, Taurus are most NO (9/10). The README explains how to run locally (npm install, env GEMINI_API_KEY) and outlines project structure (src/prompts for each sign, orchestrator).

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Rare Iron Age war trumpet and boar standard found

Archaeologists near Thetford, Norfolk, uncovered a rare Iron Age hoard centering on the most complete carnyx (war trumpet) ever found in Europe and Britain’s first boar’s head flag standard, dating circa 50 BC–AD 50. The relics—together with shield bosses—are fragile and undergoing conservation; a coroner will decide treasure status. The carnyx, used by Celtic tribes including the Iceni under Boudica, amazed researchers; the boar standard symbolized strength and battlefield rallying. The find, described as extraordinary, will be explored further on BBC’s Digging for Britain.

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iMessage-kit is an iMessage SDK for macOS

photon-hq/imessage-kit is a TypeScript-based, zero-dependency iMessage SDK for macOS that lets apps read, send, and automate iMessage conversations. It supports real-time watching, auto replies, batch sending, group chats, and scheduling, with a plugin system and robust error handling. It’s designed for AI agents and automation tools, with cross-runtime support and a minimal runtime (Node.js 18+ or Bun, macOS only) and requires Full Disk Access. Installation via Bun or npm, and provides examples and an API covering messages, chats, attachments, and reminders. MIT license.

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Insights into Claude Opus 4.5 from Pokémon

Claude Opus 4.5 shows real progress in Pokémon Red: better door/NPC recognition, improved 2D navigation, and much stronger notes that sustain longer runs. It also self-corrects more and avoids loops. However, attention blindness remains, with hallucinations and misidentifications; long-term planning is weak (inventory management, overreliance on Charizard). Harnesses and prompts drive most gains; raw cognition isn’t the only lever—structured prompts/notes matter. A comparison: GPT-5.1 on Crystal completes a run in far fewer hours than Claude’s Pokémon Red effort.

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Erich von Däniken has died

Erich von Däniken (1935–2026) was a Swiss author who pioneered the theory that extraterrestrials influenced ancient cultures; his book Chariots of the Gods inspired global audiences. He produced 49 titles, with ongoing research through A.A.S., RAMAR, and the EvD Foundation. He died on January 10, 2026; an obituary and memorial messages are noted. He argued that terrestrial myths and religions arose from contact with extraterrestrials who visited Earth long ago and promised to return, and that evidence—supported by illustrated, source-backed books—should guide understanding rather than myth.

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The Next Two Years of Software Engineering

Addy Osmani argues software is at an AI-inflection point, shifting from growth to efficiency and mutating workforce needs. Five questions for 2026 explore: 1) Junior hiring could collapse or expand into AI-spread domains; 2) core skills may atrophy as AI writes more code or become decisive as humans oversee AI; 3) the role may shrink to audits or become an orchestrator of AI-driven systems; 4) specialists risk obsolescence unless they become T-shaped; 5) education may stay via degrees or move toward bootcamps, portfolios, and employer training. The through-line: continuously learn, diversify, and leverage AI where it augments human judgment.

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A 2026 look at three bio-ML opinions I had in 2024

An author revisits three 2024 bio-ML predictions—on synthesis bottlenecks hindering generative chemistry, the role of molecular dynamics data for next-generation ML protein models, and wet-lab innovations powering AI in biology—and updates their status for 2026. For the chemistry claim, he suggests synthesis remains a bottleneck in a contrived sense, but funding has boosted synthesis improvements and the pool of easily synthesizable molecules has grown from ~40B to ~80B, implying bottlenecks may be easing. He also summarizes the other two predictions with verdicts and reflections on landscape shifts since 2024.

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I'd tell you a UDP joke…

A plea to stop.

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FUSE is All You Need – Giving agents access to anything via filesystems

FUSE is proposed as a way to give AI agents universal access to data by exposing it as a filesystem. The article argues that a Unix-like filesystem lets agents chain tasks and manage long context via plan/scratch files while reducing tool bloat. It outlines turning an email platform’s data into a sandboxed FS (folders, emails as .eml, starred/needs_action as symlinks), with readdir/read/getattr implemented in TypeScript using fuse-native inside Docker. An Anthropic Agent SDK example demonstrates reading, moving, and organizing emails. It acknowledges practical challenges (ingestion, sync) and foresees broader sandbox APIs.

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I Cannot SSH into My Server Anymore (and That's Fine)

Thomas Letan chronicles decommissioning a costly VPS ('moana') and replacing it with 'tinkerbell', a lean, container-centric stack built on Fedora CoreOS, Ignition, Podman Quadlets, and Terraform. He provisions a Vultr VM via Terraform and Ignition, deploys his static site inside a container, and uses Caddy for TLS. Containers are orchestrated through Quadlet (pods) and auto-updates, so SSH access isn't needed. The setup emphasizes immutability and declarative configuration, trading bespoke manual management for automated deployment and updates, with ongoing plans to add observability.

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2026 is the Year of Self-hosting

2026 is pitched as the year of self-hosting, enabled by CLI agents like Claude Code that run on a cheap home server. The author replaces heavy setups with a Beelink Mini N150, Ubuntu 22.04, Tailscale, and Claude Code, which can install and manage services via plain-English prompts. Core apps run in containers: Vaultwarden, Plex, Immich, ReadDeck, Uptime Kuma, Caddy, Home Assistant, etc. This setup is lightweight (13 containers, ~4 GB RAM, low CPU) and feels empowering, approachable, and fun for terminal-savvy users who want SaaS-like control without infra work.

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This game is a single 13 KiB file that runs on Windows, Linux and in the Browser

A tiny cross-platform Snake game that runs from a source on Windows, Linux and in the browser. Three implementations exist: C/i686 WinAPI, C/x86_64 Linux/X11, and JavaScript/HTML5 Canvas; file is 13,312 bytes (download 13,772). Windows uses a decompressing stub with a quirky PE header that doubles as a shell script on Linux; Linux uses LZMA with a shell dropper; the HTML version is packed and hides garbage with CSS. Gameplay is classic Snake with score, food (yellow fruit 15% worth 20), ten foods per level and randomized, solvable walls; controls via arrows or WASD, Space to start, ESC/R/P to manage.

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DHS restricts congressional visits to ICE facilities in Minneapolis

The Department of Homeland Security issued a policy requiring seven days’ notice for visits to ICE facilities funded by the reconciliation bill, effectively blocking unannounced congressional visits. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said the rule protects members, detainees, and staff, noting the facilities rely on the bill’s funds. The policy was used to bar a Saturday visit by Rep. Ilhan Omar and colleagues to Minneapolis’s Whipple Federal Building ICE detention center. Democrats urge greater oversight as immigration issues intensify; more than 2,000 federal agents are deployed in Minnesota.

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Show HN: Chr2 – consensus for side effects (exactly-once is a lie)

Chronon is a Rust implementation of a crash-safe, deterministic distributed state machine with exactly-once side effects. It blends Viewstamped Replication with a durable outbox pattern to guarantee exactly-once execution of side effects across crashes and leader changes. Architecture separates control plane from data plane for resilience. Key components: VSR layer, kernel executor, durable outbox, storage/log, snapshots, and fencing. Applications implement the ChrApplication trait; only the primary emits side effects and acks them after commit. Supports chaos testing, optional io_uring, and is under active development.

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BYD's cheapest electric cars to have Lidar self-driving tech

Could not summarize article.

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Elo – A data expression language which compiles to JavaScript, Ruby, and SQL

Elo is a simple, portable data expression language that compiles to JavaScript, Ruby, and SQL, designed for no-code tools and non-technical users. It is a pure data language with one equality operator, first-class dates, times, and durations, data schemas with coercion, and safe runtime guards. It supports functional pipelines (filter, map, reduce), lambdas, and a standard library, compiling the same expression to all targets. Relational algebra is coming soon. Open-source under MIT; try it in the Playground.

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The struggle of resizing windows on macOS Tahoe

macOS Tahoe’s oversized window corners hinder resizing. The resize hotspot is a ~19×19 pixel area near the corner, but the large corner radius pushes most of that area outside the window. Consequently, users often have to grab outside the corner—an unintuitive, error-prone gesture that degrades usability.

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American Dialect Society 2025 Word of the Year Is "Slop"

American Dialect Society named “slop” the 2025 Word of the Year at its 36th annual vote, held with the Linguistic Society of America in New Orleans. “Slop” was chosen for low-quality, high-quantity content often AI-generated, and as a productive combining form (e.g., sloppunk, slopification, friend slop). The word need not be brand-new, only newly prominent. The society emphasizes language change, not official induction. The American Name Society selected “No Kings” as Name of the Year for 2025.

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Pigeon's Device (2009)

Pigeon's Device is a C trick—an independently originated counterpart to Duff’s device—that uses a switch with deliberate fall‑through to select different behavior based on a mode. The example pigeons_device returns different results (arfle or barfle) or uses a preliminary test (gloop) to pick between them, all via mode-dependent control flow. The lfdcmp example extends this: a static mode controls how two records are compared, including REVDFWDT (reverse date, forward time) by converting UNIX timestamps to DOS date/time. The mode is injected via hidden settings (setsortmode/getsortmode) for library sorts.

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Show HN: Interactive California Budget (by Claude Code)

A tool for exploring California's state budget.

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