AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

AI Job Grief: The Unnamed Psychological Crisis Hitting Tech Workers

AI Job Grief argues that AI-driven displacement creates a distinct grief-like response among knowledge workers, not just fear. As automation erodes roles, professionals experience identity erosion, anticipatory mourning, and a sense that the center of their field is dissolving. The authors describe AIRD—Artificial Intelligence Replacement Dysfunction—a proposed clinical construct (not an official diagnosis) for symptoms like anxiety, insomnia, and depersonalization. Reddit discussions map these experiences to Kübler-Ross stages, but acceptance is elusive because there is no final endpoint. Causes include speed of change, cognitive-work targeted by automation, and corporate rationales. The piece calls for public vocabulary and institutional support.

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It Takes Two Neurons to Ride a Bicycle

Matthew Cook’s 2004 NIPS paper shows a tiny two-neuron controller that can ride a bicycle in a physics simulator toward a sequence of goals. The first neuron converts heading error into a desired lean; the second uses that lean target to produce a handlebars torque, steering by leaning. The system relies on lean (gamma) as the key state, with theta and their derivatives as inputs. Reinforcement learning struggle and human insight helped identify this core variable. The controller works long-range but lacks low‑speed stabilization, suggesting automated learning and causal modeling for future work.

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Testing the WWI concrete ships and WWII concrete barges

Testing the WWI concrete ships and WWII concrete barges. The Crete Fleet is a blog/encyclopedia on World War I and II concrete ships and Mulberry Harbour components, with UK/US WWI and WWII sections, videos and photos, U.S. riverboats, and related topics. It features a Concrete Ship Encyclopedia and related blogs, and shows copyright © 2026 along with a cookies notice.

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Memory decline after menopause linked to loss of estrogen production in brain

A Northwestern Medicine preclinical study links estrogen loss in the brain to memory decline and higher Alzheimer's risk in older women. Researchers found that estrogen loss, aging, and female sex disrupt the brain’s extracellular matrix (ECM) in the hippocampus, a key memory center. In older female mice, brain-specific estrogen loss impaired memory, behavior, and gene expression, suggesting women may be uniquely vulnerable to estrogen declines. The findings point to ECM-focused therapies as a potential new approach, noting that hormone replacement therapy has shown mixed benefits in other studies. Further research is urged.

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Voxel Space

Voxel Space is a 2.5D terrain renderer used in the 1992 game Comanche. It renders with 1024×1024 height and color maps, rasterizing vertical columns from back to front to produce shading without real-time illumination. It cannot render full 3D geometry (no buildings or trees) but supports rotation by adjusting coordinates. Performance tricks include front-to-back rendering with a y-buffer and level-of-detail. The project is MIT-licensed open source; the height/color maps are reverse‑engineered from Comanche and excluded from the license.

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Corporate America Is Starting to Ration AI as Cost Skyrockets

WSJ page displays a 404 Not Found error and contact guidance if the URL is incorrect. It surfaces popular articles—“Inside Putin’s $26 Billion Quest for Longevity”; “A Famous Math Problem Stumped Humans for 80 Years. AI Just Cracked It.”; and “Americans Are Falling Behind on Their $1.25 Trillion Credit-Card Bill”—plus latest podcasts including “What’s News in Markets: Memory’s Gold Rush, Oil Slips, Ford Finds a New Lane” and “Why Corporate America Is Now Rationing AI.”

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Vibe Coding Is Not Engineering

The article argues that “vibe coding”—LLM-generated code—produces working demos but lacks the engineering decisions that ensure production safety and coherence. Engineering involves problem framing, requirements, system modeling, architectural design, non-functional requirements, risk, interfaces, and planning. It contrasts engineers' decisions with LLM outputs on invariants, identity, constraints, failure modes, coupling/sequencing, state transitions, interfaces/contracts, boundaries, and error handling. Without these, production systems become fragile (e.g., non-unique emails). Bottom line: vibe coding is a demo; true engineering yields robust systems. Before coding, decide invariants, identity rules, constraints, and failure modes.

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Navier-Stokes fluid simulation explained with Godot game engine

An in-depth step-by-step guide to implementing a CPU-based Navier–Stokes fluid simulation in Godot. The author adapts Stam’s real-time fluid dynamics for games, using a small grid with separate density and velocity fields and time-stepping with diffusion, advection, and velocity fading. Key techniques include backward-tracking (semi-Lagrangian) advection with bilinear interpolation, Gauss-Seidel relaxation for diffusion, boundary handling to act as walls, and a projection step solving a Poisson equation via iterative relaxation to enforce incompressibility. The post includes explanations, code sketches, project snapshots, and notes on future GPU shader approaches.

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Anthropic surpasses OpenAI to become most valuable AI startup

Anthropic has become the world’s most valuable AI startup, surpassing OpenAI after a $65 billion Series H that values the company near $1 trillion. Lead investors include Altimeter Capital, Dragoneer, Greenoaks and Sequoia; Amazon committed $5 billion. Anthropic’s Claude AI and Claude Code drive growth, with annual revenue up to $47 billion from about $10 billion last year. New Claude Opus 4.8 and Claude Mythos Preview target enterprise security. OpenAI was valued at about $852 billion in March after a $122 billion round; both firms are eyeing public listings, with Anthropic weighing an IPO.

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Macsurf, "modern" web browser for macOS 9

MacSurf is a modern web browser for Classic Mac OS 9 PowerPC. It delivers real CSS3, ES5 JavaScript, and native HTTPS via macTLS. Built with CodeWarrior on Carbon, it’s a NetSurf-based frontend running on PowerPC with Open Transport. It’s early alpha; not all modern sites will work, but it supports CSS Grid and ES5. The latest v1.3.1 Forward (2026-05-29) adds TLS 1.3 with X25519, P-256, P-384. Build from source with CodeWarrior 8 and Retro68; MacSurf.sit binary available.

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Adding Linux support back for the BASIC (free) version of Vivado

Could not summarize article.

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IXI's autofocusing lenses are almost ready to replace multifocal glasses

IXI is close to commercializing autofocusing glasses that eliminate multifocals by using cameraless eye-tracking and liquid-crystal lenses. A 22-gram prototype demonstrates lenses that automatically switch between prescriptions as eyes focus, with lightweight frames and a battery about AirPods size; a single charge lasts a day and charging is via the left hinge. Tracking uses LEDs/photodiodes and infrared light, consuming ~4 mW, no camera needed. The glasses can still function if power is out. Certification needed; partnership with Optiswiss; priced as luxury eyewear, launching next year.

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Openrsync: An implementation of rsync, by the OpenBSD team

openrsync is a BSD-licensed OpenBSD-oriented reimplementation of rsync, designed for portability across UNIXes. It is compatible with modern rsync (tested with 3.1.3; protocol 27) but accepts a subset of command-line args. It runs as a client–server pair (via ssh or a daemon) using a sender/receiver model and a block-exchange protocol. A sorted file list and per-block Adler-32 and MD4 hashes drive data transfer. Security is enhanced by pledge(2), unveil(2), and arc4random seeding. Documentation is via rsync(5) and related manpages.

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Leo's first encyclical attacks technological messianism

Could not summarize article.

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Understand Anything – Graphs that teach the codebase

Understand Anything is a knowledge-graph-based code understanding tool that maps codebases to real business domains, processes, and flows rather than just showing structure. It presents interactive graphs with hierarchical drill-down, fuzzy/semantic search, and community-clustered views across 26+ file types (Dockerfiles, Terraform, SQL, Markdown, etc.). Features include a dependency path finder, guided AI-generated tours, export/share options (PNG/SVG/JSON), and business-knowledge modes that reveal authentication flows, payment pipelines, and user lifecycles. It aims to help AI coding assistants understand codebases, with live demos, community tours, and multi-language/tool support (Claude, Codex, Gemini, etc!).

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Show HN: Helios – what plug-in solar could generate for any address in Britain

South London Scientific’s guide and calculator assess whether balcony plug‑in solar is worth it in the UK. It lets you enter postcode, floor, balcony orientation, annual electricity use, kit size (0.4–0.8 kWp), tariff and costs, and self‑consumption. The tool models shading with OS/LIDAR data and PVGIS, showing estimated annual generation and payback, plus caveats about horizon shading. UK rules cap inverter output at 800 W; DIY kits cannot claim the Smart Export Guarantee, so exports earn little. They’re tracking regulatory status and offer email alerts for updates.

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Proposed new US funding rules: We can cancel any grant at any time

Ars Technica reports that the Office of Management and Budget plans new grant rules that would privatize decision-making. Peer review would become advisory; political appointees would decide funding, with grants potentially cancelable at any time if not in the 'national interest.' The rules would ban funding on certain culture-war topics, limit international collaborations, and block publication and conference travel costs without agency approval. They would apply a domestic-first framework, and the OMB is pursuing formal rulemaking after court defeats. Public comment is open.

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What Happened to the Locusts?

Locusts: a collection of writings, but no articles were found.

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Pandoc Templates

A catalog of Pandoc templates and themes for converting Markdown into PDF, LaTeX, HTML, EPUB, and DOCX. The collection spans academic theses, letters, resumes, IEEE/JASA papers, lecture notes, slides, novels, recipes, invoices, and more, with templates featuring LaTeX or Pandoc tweaks (e.g., Eisvogel, pandoc-letter, Markdown Resume, JHAP templates). Each entry lists author, formats, GitHub link, stars, and last update. The page highlights ongoing growth of the Pandoc template ecosystem as of 2026.

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Floor and Ceil versus Denormals on CPU and GPU

Explores floor, ceil, trunc, and round for floating-point numbers and the special case of denormals. Denormals can be preserved or flushed to zero by platforms, which changes floor/ceil results for tiny values (e.g., -1.175e-38 yields -1.0 or -0.0 depending on preservation). Tests: CPU (Windows x86-64, VS2022) preserved denormals for floor/ceil; GPUs differ: Nvidia RTX 4090 and Intel Arc flush by default, AMD RX 6800 XT flushes unless -denorm preserve. DirectX spec requires flushing on input/output. For deterministic behavior, provides HLSL routines using bit tricks to implement floor/ceil that preserve denormals across platforms.

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