AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Plastic is made from milk and it vanishes in 13 weeks

Researchers at Flinders University developed a biodegradable packaging film from milk protein (calcium caseinate), starch, and bentonite nanoclay, reinforced with glycerol and polyvinyl alcohol. The film works like conventional plastic but fully decomposes in soil in about 13 weeks, offering a potential eco-friendly alternative for single-use food packaging. Safety tests showed acceptable bacterial levels; further antibacterial testing is recommended. The project involved Colombian collaborators and was reported in Polymers (2025).

HN Comments

Use the Mikado Method to do safe changes in a complex codebase

A safe-change method for tangled codebases: the Mikado Method. Set a clear goal on paper, work in short timeboxes, and avoid breaking the build by reverting when needed. Break the goal into subgoals and tackle from the leaves, committing only at milestone checks. If a change proves too tangled, revert and reframe with new subgoals. Example: upgrading an ORM by extracting calls first to minimize cross-cutting changes. Tips: keep timeboxes around 10 minutes, commit on each checked subgoal, and iterate until the main goal is achieved. Inspired by Mikado sticks; popularized by Nicolas Carlo.

HN Comments

An Interesting Find: STM32 RDP1 Decryptor

An STM32 RDP1 Decryptor claims to bypass Read‑Out Protection on F0/F1/F2/F4. The author bought a 150 yuan USB dongle kit with adapters, tested on an STM32F205RBT6. Windows app required Defender off and switching non‑Unicode encoding to Chinese Simplified. The tool read the flash at room temperature; it sometimes overshot boundaries but the valid 128 KB contents were correct. It successfully dumped the full flash of the RDP1‑protected chip, offering a turnkey alternative to glitching/boot exploits—though the internal workings remain unclear and the Windows tool is clunky.

HN Comments

Apple introduces the new iPad Air, powered by M4

Apple unveils the iPad Air with M4, delivering up to 30% faster CPU/GPU (8-core/9-core) and 12GB unified memory (120GB/s), with a faster Neural Engine and 50% more memory than the prior generation. M4 enables AI tasks and high-end graphics; N1 wireless (Wi‑Fi 7, Bluetooth 6, Thread) and C1X cellular modem add faster 5G, GPS, and eSIM. Available in 11" and 13" with four finishes, 128GB–1TB. iPadOS 26 brings a new windowing system, Files, and enhanced Apple Pencil Pro and Magic Keyboard support. Prices: 11" from $599/$749; 13" from $799/$949. Pre-orders March 4; ships March 11.

HN Comments

Anthropic Cowork feature creates 10GB VM bundle on macOS without warning

After using the cowork feature, Claude Desktop becomes slow with high CPU usage, UI lag, and increasing swap. The cowork feature creates a VM bundle at ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/vm_bundles/claudevm.bundle/rootfs.img that grows to 10GB and isn’t cleaned; it regrows after deletion. Cleanup of vm_bundles, Cache, and Code Cache yields ~75% faster performance, but degradation returns within minutes. Workaround: quit Claude Desktop and remove the VM bundle and caches; performance temporarily improves but will degrade again. Expected fix: stable CPU usage with cleaned bundles after cowork sessions on 8GB RAM systems.

HN Comments

Squidcasa/midipipe: ALSA Sequencer to plain text and back

midipipe converts MIDI between plain-text streams and the ALSA Sequencer API. It reads MIDI events from stdin as text, writes to a device or client, and can also stream in the reverse direction. It keeps a persistent ALSA client for continuous messaging and serves as a MIDI monitor. Supported: -i, -o, -d to select devices; -l to list; -v for version; text formats for note_on/off, cc, pgm, etc.; timestamps not used. It requires ALSA, can interoperate with Pipewire. Build with make, cross-build with make cross-build, and install with make install.

HN Comments

Libxml2 Enterprise Edition (AGPL, from the previous maintainer)

libxml2-ee is an enterprise edition of the libxml2 XML toolkit, offering up to 10x faster, SIMD-accelerated parsing, fixed DoS issues with guaranteed linear behavior, 64-bit hardening, and an optional 64‑bit‑safe mode (ABI-breaking). It extends libxml2 with improved fuzzing and error handling, and provides full Meson support as the canonical build system, plus CMake and Autotools options. Features include C14N, Catalogs, HTML, memory, writer, XPath, XInclude, Schemas, RELAX NG, and more. Build options and dependencies vary; license is AGPL-3.0.

HN Comments

Inside the M4 Apple Neural Engine, Part 1: Reverse Engineering

This is Part 1 of a three‑part series in which maderix and Claude Opus reverse‑engineer Apple’s M4 Neural Engine (ANE), bypass CoreML, and talk directly to hardware. They map the stack from CoreML to IOKit, uncover private ANE classes, and show how to compile MIL to an E5 binary and execute it on ANE with up to 127 in‑flight requests. They demonstrate direct ANE access via _ANEClient/_ANEModel/_ANERequest and an in‑memory MIL path, discuss IOSurface I/O, DVFS, and the hardware profile, and outline upcoming benchmarks and a training experiment.

HN Comments

OpenClaw Surpasses React to Become the Most-Starred Software Project on GitHub

OpenClaw has overtaken React to become GitHub's most-starred software project—surpassing 250,000 stars and leading the non-aggregator projects. After previously reporting that it had climbed to the #14 all-time spot by surpassing Linux, OpenClaw now tops React, which had about 243,000 stars. The rise from zero to #1 took under four months, with no sign of slowing down.

HN Comments

AMD Am386 released March 2, 1991

Despite a myth, AMD did clone the 386; reverse‑engineered it in about two years and, after an eight‑year legal battle with Intel, won the right to ship the Am386 on March 2, 1991. Intel sought to delay AMD and block 486 clones; IBM initially declined the 386 due to market strategy, delaying second sources. The Am386 DX-40 offered comparable performance to Intel’s 386 and remained a value option even against later 486s. The protracted litigation cost both sides about $100M, helped Intel solidify high‑margin business, and shaped AMD’s later strategy and market position.

HN Comments

Microslop Manifesto

MICROSLOP is a manifesto accusing Microsoft of flooding the internet with AI-generated, low-quality, unverified content. It highlights Bing hallucinations and fabricated citations, Copilot-driven UI clutter, and widespread AI-written posts that are indexed as authoritative. It warns of a verification crisis and erosion of trust as AI trains on its own outputs, creating a “slop cycle” of degraded models. A live Slop Tracker documents incidents (e.g., hallucinations in Bing, broken Copilot code, intrusive AI prompts) and invites reports.

HN Comments

Show HN: Web Audio Studio – A Visual Debugger for Web Audio API Graphs

Web Audio Studio is an in-browser learning platform for the Web Audio API that lets you write code, run it, and view a live, interactive node graph with real-time parameter tweaks. You can inspect signals by inserting analysers to view waveforms or spectra, visualize modulation with dashed lines and modulation ranges, and choose from 20 templates from basic to 3D audio (sine, FM, convolution reverb, HRTF). Aimed at Web developers, audio programmers, students/educators and curious users, currently desktop alpha with regular updates; signup for updates; created by Alex Griss.

HN Comments

Go-Native Durable Execution

DBOS’s Golang-native Durable Execution library extends Go’s context.Context as durable.Context to make workflows and steps durable while preserving Go ergonomics and type safety. RunWorkflow and RunAsStep manage execution, spawn child contexts seeded with workflow metadata, and checkpoint state; cancellation uses standard Go deadlines without preemption. To maintain a single interface and type safety, the library provides generic package functions alongside type-erased wrappers. Go’s lack of variadic generics drove design tradeoffs in signatures. Serialization uses gob for encoding but falls back to JSON for list results, returning JSON strings.

HN Comments

Robert F Kennedy Jr: 1 year of failure

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

Pluralism and the Modern Poet

Seamus Perry uses William James’s A Pluralistic Universe to trace how modern poetry has been haunted by pluralism. Rejecting Bradley’s monism, James argues the world is a tangle of independent ‘each-forms’ that never fully cohere into an ‘all-form.’ Perry links this to Romanticism and to poets—Browning, MacNeice, Eliot—who celebrate ordinary life and the ‘and’ that threads disparate experiences. He shows how poets bear the political and moral costs of pluralism, from Berlin’s value conflicts to Empson’s ‘stand up between them,’ suggesting poetry can mediate irresolvable goods rather than resolve them.

HN Comments

Microsoft bans the word "Microslop" on its Discord, then locks the server

Microsoft blocked the word Microslop in the official Copilot Discord server, automatically filtering any message containing it. After backlash, users tried variations like Microsl0p, and the server was locked with posting permissions restricted. The episode highlights tensions around Microsoft’s AI push with Copilot and Windows 11, as public sentiment remains critical of the AI rollout.

HN Comments

Mondrian Entered the Public Domain. The Estate Disagrees

Mondrian’s Composition II with Red, Blue, and Yellow (1930) entered the U.S. public domain on Jan 1, 2026. The Mondrian/Holtzman Trust claims it remains protected, arguing URAA restoration, a supposed “dual copyright” regime, and Spanish law. The article explains there is no dual term in U.S. law; URAA restores only the remainder of the term, which for a 1930 publication ends Dec 31, 2025. Even Spanish-law claims fail. The Trust’s warning letter is part of a broader pattern of post–PD-day licensing threats meant to chill use, not extend rights.

HN Comments

U.S. science agency moves to restrict foreign scientists from its labs

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

Jolla phone – a full-stack European alternative

Jolla Phone (Sep 2026) is an independent, community‑driven Linux phone limited to 1,000 units in the Sep batch. Price 649€ incl. VAT; 99€ refundable down payment; 50€ upgrade for 12GB RAM. Specs: Dimensity 7100 5G, 8GB (12GB opt), 256GB + microSD, 6.36” FHD AMOLED, dual nano-SIM 4G/5G, 50MP/13MP rear, 32MP selfie, ~5500mAh removable battery; replaceable back cover; Privacy Switch. Sailfish OS 5 with Android AppSupport; privacy by design (no trackers), long-term support ≥5 years. The Other Half modular covers. Colors: Snow White, Kaamos Black, The Orange. Ships Sep 2026 to EU/UK/Norway/Switzerland.

HN Comments

Neocaml – Rubocop Creator's New OCaml Mode for Emacs

neocaml is a modern Emacs major mode for OCaml, TreeSitter-powered with two modes (.ml, .mli) and OCaml REPL integration. It provides tree-sitter font-locking (4 levels), indentation, navigation, imenu categories, and toggling between implementations via C-c C-a. It integrates with Eglot/ocamllsp for LSP, and offers ocaml-eglot support. Includes neocaml-repl for sending code to the toplevel, with configurable program/args (utop option), and guidance to install grammars with M-x neocaml-install-grammars. It aims to be leaner than caml-mode/tuareg, and is available from MELPA or directly from GitHub. GPL-3.0.

HN Comments

Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML