AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

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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Graphs That Explain the State of AI in 2026

Stanford's 2026 AI Index, summarized by IEEE Spectrum, shows the US leading AI model releases (≈50 notable 2025 models; industry-led) while China leads robotics deployment (295k industrial robots in 2024). Global AI compute has grown ~3.3x yearly since 2022, Nvidia GPUs accounting for >60% of capacity. Training frontier models emits large CO2 (Grok 4 ~70k–140k t); inference emissions rising. LLMs quickly beat benchmarks; AI in medicine rising with more publications. 2025 investment hit a record ~$581B; GitHub AI projects surged. Public trust in AI regulation varies by country.

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The USDA's gardening zones have shifted. (Interactive app and map)

The USDA updated its plant hardiness map for the first time in 11 years, using 1991–2020 data and showing warmer zones across much of the U.S. The change reflects a warmer 30‑year average, meaning some areas shifted zones while extremes still matter. Zones predict winter survival of perennials but don’t reflect extreme cold frequency or summer heat, and local microclimates matter. Gardeners should treat the map as one tool among local advice from nurseries and extension services.

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Scientists discover "cleaner ants" that groom giant ants in Arizona desert

Researchers in southeastern Arizona observed a first: tiny cone ants (an undescribed Dorymyrmex species) act as cleaners for much larger harvester ants (Pogonomyrmex barbatus). Over several days, up to five cone ants repeatedly climbed onto harvester ants, licking and nibbling across their bodies, even inside open jaws, while the larger ants remained still. The behavior, akin to ocean cleaner fish, may benefit the cone ants by feeding on particles removed from the hosts, and could help harvester ants by cleaning hard-to-reach areas. Further study needed.

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Show HN: MDV – a Markdown superset for docs, dashboards, and slides with data

MDV is a Markdown superset for documents, dashboards, and slides with embedded data and visualizations. It adds YAML front-matter, fenced data/visual blocks, and styled containers with an auto-generated TOC. Renders to self-contained HTML (inline SVG charts) and PDF, with live VS Code preview. Data can be inline or file-referenced, and themes/named styles are supported. Getting started: clone, install, build, then render or preview. Includes a VS Code extension and a pre-release status (v1).

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The electromechanical angle computer inside the B-52 bomber's star tracker

Before GPS, the B-52 used celestial navigation with the Astro Compass. The Angle Computer mechanically solved the navigational triangle to convert a star’s declination and local hour angle, plus the aircraft’s latitude, into azimuth and altitude. A star pointer on a spherical mechanism moved, while outputs were read by synchros. Air Almanac provided star data; the navigator could derive lines of position from multiple stars for a fix. The device mixed mechanical linkage with motors and electronic feedback, ultimately replaced by digital computers.

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Opus 4.7 to 4.6 Inflation is ~45%

An open-source token-cost calculator crowdsourcing real-input comparisons between Opus 4.6 and 4.7, producing anonymous community averages. It stores only anonymous submission IDs, isn’t affiliated with Anthropic, and is associated with billchambers.me.

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Sherry Turkle: "We're losing the raw, human part of being with each other"

MIT professor Sherry Turkle warns technology is hollowing out real human interaction, a shift she calls the "robotic moment." Her decades of study show people delegate intimate moments—childhood, aging, even disagreements—to robots or screens. In Alone Together she argues we seek connection online but grow lonelier offline, with children bonding to emotionally programmed robots, couples arguing via text, and parents distracted by devices. She hopes to reclaim genuine presence and privacy, even as online personas tempt us to present an ideal self.

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Amazon won't release Fire Sticks that support sideloading anymore

Amazon announced the Fire TV Stick HD and that all future sticks will run Vega OS, blocking sideloading of non‑Amazon apps. A developer update says starting with Fire TV Stick 4K Select, new sticks must use Vega, and apps must be published in the Amazon Appstore. Product pages warn that sideloading from unknown sources isn’t allowed. Consumer sideloading is blocked, though developers can sideload on registered devices. The move tightens security and piracy controls, risking frustration for users who relied on sideloading or related workarounds.

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Amazon is discontinuing Kindle for PC on June 30th

Amazon will discontinue Kindle for PC on June 30, 2026, and release a new standalone Kindle for PC app that will require Windows 11 and be available only from the Microsoft Store. The current app will stop working on that date, even if downloaded from third-party sites. The move follows its 2009 launch and ongoing DRM/piracy battles, with Amazon shifting Mac and other platforms to store-based distribution to tighten control over Kindle software.

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80386 Memory Pipeline

An look at the 80386 memory pipeline, explaining how virtual memory is kept fast through segmentation caches, parallel address calculations and limit checks, and a hardware page walker. It covers early-start techniques that overlap address generation with prior instruction, giving ~1.5 clock paths for common cases, and the impact of paging on misses. The non-multiplexed bus and the 82385 cache controller shore up memory bandwidth, with no on-chip cache but usable external caches. Real-mode unreal mode and protected-mode descriptor caches are discussed. Author maps this pipeline to an FPGA 386 core with SDRAM, exploring two-phase clocks and L1 caches.

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Fuzix OS

Fuzix 0.4 preserves the kernel core, fixes bugs, and modularizes networking for possible address-space isolation on 8‑bit hardware. Executable formats are unified: 8080/8085/Z80 binaries interoperate; 6803/68HC11 ABI allows cross‑binaries; 32‑bit uses a.out with small relocation maps. Building improved with make diskimage; still advisable to run make clean/kclean for cross‑targets. N8VEM becomes Retrobrew; RC2014 becomes RCbus. Pentagon and Scorpion dropped. Supported processors include 6303/6803, 6502/65C02/65C816, 6809, 68HC11, 68000–68EC020, 8080/8085, ARM M0/M4, ESP8266, NS32K, Z80 family; see per‑platform READMEs for details.

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Sumida Aquarium Posts 2026 Penguin Relationship Chart, with Drama and Breakups

Overview of Sumida Aquarium's 2026 penguin relationship chart.

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Binary Encodings for JSON and Variant

Binary encodings dramatically speed repeated JSON lookups by avoiding re-parsing. This design presents a minimal binary JSON: VarType enum, a self-contained VarNode (type, length, payload) and VarMetaEntry offsets for O(1) array access and O(log N) object lookups with sorted keys. Booleans encode in the type; null is zero; numbers remain as original strings. Benchmarks show a 2,346x speedup: twitter.json lookups drop from ~136,784 ns to ~58.3 ns. BSON’s tradeoffs are noted; Parquet VARIANT and lakehouse work favor binary representations, with shredding and key-deduplicated trees. Conclusion: binary encodings are standard for retrieval; LLMs also use JSON-like formats such as TOON.

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Migrating from DigitalOcean to Hetzner: From $1,432 to $233 With Zero Downtime

Migration from DigitalOcean to Hetzner AX162-R achieved zero downtime while moving 248 GB across 30 MySQL databases, 34 Nginx sites, GitLab EE, and Neo4j. Costs dropped from $1,432 to $233/month. Six phases: prepare new server (exact stack), rsync web files, MySQL master→slave replication with mydumper/myloader, TTL-reduced DNS, convert old Nginx to reverse proxy, and DNS cutover; test with hosts file, fix SUPER privileges, update GitLab webhooks. Takeaways: rely on MySQL replication, script everything, and consider dedicated servers for steady-state workloads.

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Flock Condemns False Child Predator Allegations, Yet Calls Critics Terrorists

IPVM reports Flock is under intense pressure: cities cancel contracts, lawsuits mount, and lobbying rises amid scrutiny over a Dunwoody incident. A Flock blog defended employees who accessed cameras at the Marcus Jewish Community Center, calling allegations of wrongdoing false and warning that accusing someone of spying on children is life-altering. IPVM agrees there’s no evidence of malicious intent; the access was a sales demo and contradicts Flock’s FAQ. Critics who called employees child molesters should apologize. Flock’s CEO has branded privacy advocates as terrorists, a rhetoric pattern IPVM says harms credibility and staff.

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A Dumb Introduction to Z3

Abdul Rahman Sibahi's article introduces z3 and SMT solvers, framed for beginners using Rust bindings. It covers core ideas (solvers, sorts/types, constraints, free vs interpreted constants, SMT-LIB2), then walks through practical examples: solving x+4=7, a two-variable system, real vs int, obtaining multiple solutions for x^2=4 and circle, a coin-change optimization with and without non-negativity constraints, and using push/pop. It also demonstrates applying solvers to Sudoku and page-layout problems, and ends with caveats and resources.

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Why Japan has such good railways

Japan’s railways are the world’s finest thanks to a privatized, city-building model: competing legacy railways and JR groups vertically control tracks, stations, and land; land readjustment and liberal zoning enable dense, station-centered development; rail firms run real estate, retail, and services to capture transit’s value; parking is privatized and roads are funded by tolls and taxes, internalizing costs. Fare caps keep rail affordable while permitting capital subsidies for expansion. Public policy, not culture, drives success and is broadly replicable through regulation, privatization, and land development around rail corridors.

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The quiet disappearance of the free-range childhood

Big Think examines how vague neglect laws and safety anxieties have expanded government reach into everyday parenting, shrinking childhood independence. In Georgia, a 6-year-old’s unsupervised park ride led to a DFCS investigation and a later reversal of a neglect finding; that case echoes a broader push for "reasonable childhood independence" (RCI) laws, now in 11 states, that require "blatant disregard" for neglect. Proponents argue unsupervised time builds resilience; critics warn overprotection worsens anxiety and mental health. The piece underscores the need for triage in child welfare and a rebalancing of risk, autonomy, and safety.

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Loonies for Loongsons

Salvaged ML5A-MB1 motherboard with a Loongson 3A5000LL quad-core LoongArch CPU; the author builds a Debian box, tests cooling, RAM, and M.2 storage, and updates the socketed BIOS via Loongson firmware tools. After wrestling with BIOS/UEFI and a flaky Wi-Fi setup (ultimately bridging through an Airport Express), they install Debian 12, then upgrade to unofficial loong13/trixie for better support. Benchmarks show the 3A5000LL trails an Intel i5-3570 and Ryzen 3600X, landing around the 13th percentile, but Doom/Quake/Extreme Tux Racer run. The GPU (Vivante GC1000) supports OpenGL ES 2.0; overall the system is surprisingly normal for Loongson hardware.

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