AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

You Must Fix Your Asserts (Zig)

The post argues against disabling runtime asserts in production. Asserts reveal and protect against misbehavior; in Zig, std.debug.assert isn't a macro and may run expressions with side-effects. Zig's build modes (Debug, ReleaseSafe, ReleaseFast, ReleaseSmall) affect whether asserts crash or allow unchecked behavior. Disabling asserts creates 'gaslighting' where wrong assumptions go unchecked in prod, risking security and correctness. The author advocates keeping asserts on and, when performance matters, choosing build modes or optimizing with safe assumptions rather than turning asserts off. Some projects keep asserts on (TigerBeetle); others mix ReleaseFast for dependencies. The takeaway: fix your asserts, don’t disable them.

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Show HN: A CSS 3D Engine (no WebGL)

PolyCSS is LayoutitStudio’s CSS 3D engine for the DOM that renders polygon meshes with CSS matrix3d transforms. It loads OBJ/MTL, GLB/GLTF, and MagicaVoxel voxel (.vox), with textures, lighting, shadows, and animation, and works with React, Vue, or vanilla JS. Use the component model (PolyCamera, PolyScene, PolyMesh) or the imperative API; controls include PolyOrbitControls, PolyFirstPersonControls, and PolyTransformControls. A snapshot export can produce a standalone HTML document. Mesh loading via loadMesh(); packages include core, and framework bindings. MIT license; docs at polycss.com.

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KDE at 30

KDE marks its 30th anniversary with celebrations, events, and participation opportunities. The site explains funding—about 70% from private users via Supporting Members and one-time donations—to sustain development, infrastructure, contractors, travel, events, and outreach while preserving independence. It invites a 30-for-30 environmental challenge and ideas submissions. A concise history highlights milestones: Qt origin (1995), KDE announced (1996), KDE e.V. (1997), KDE 1–4 releases, 1M commits (2009), Plasma 5 (2014), Plasma Mobile, Steam Deck support (2021), Plasma 6 (2024), KDE Linux (2025), plus trivia and merchandise.

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I made my phone slow on purpose

Guilherme Campos describes building VineWall, an iOS app that slows internet access for selected apps to curb doomscrolling. The idea compares endless scrolling to cookies: a pocket machine that bakes cookies—if the bakery is far away, you eat less. By throttling speed, videos become blocky, images fade to gray, and loading spinners dominate, making scrolling less appealing. The goal is to make the 'cookie' less appetizing and encourage users to stop doomscrolling, using speed as the Achilles heel of many apps. It's a thought experiment and product concept.

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The Dirt That Refused to Die

French biochemist Sébastien Fontaine and colleagues showed that sterilized, irradiated soil kept emitting carbon dioxide and absorbing oxygen for six years, even with no detectable life. Using sealed soil microcosms, mass spectrometry, enzyme additions, and a fuel cell, they demonstrated metabolism-like electron flow and Krebs-cycle intermediates in dirt, suggesting nonbiological catalysts—especially metals in soil—can drive energy-yielding reactions without enzymes. This supports a prebiotic view that metabolism may precede life, though some scientists remain skeptical and say enzymes or contamination could explain results. The work—spanning 2013–2025—reorients origins-of-life thinking.

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Radxa Dragon Q8B: A Laptop Cosplaying as an SBC?

Radxa Dragon Q8B is a SBC featuring a laptop-class Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 SoC, offered in 4/8/16/32GB RAM variants. It aims to combine PC-grade performance with SBC form factor, competing strongly against SBCs like Orion O6N and Raspberry Pi 5. Early review shows exceptional CPU benchmarks and storage/I/O (4x PCIe Gen3 lanes, dual 2.5GbE, M.2 bays), but software support is still catching up: Radxa OS lacks full Ethernet, UFS issues, BIOS quirks; Windows on ARM works; Debian/Armbian builds available. Power/thermals can spike; prices range from $149 to $569. Overall, impressive but early-stage and software‑stability dependent.

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"The Apple Boogie" 1987 Mac Promo Album Cassette Tape [video]

Could not summarize article.

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Linux Basics for Hackers

A GitHub repository for a structured course, Linux Basics for Hackers by OccupyTheWeb, compiled as notes and modules for beginners. It divides the book into modules (Getting Started, Terminal Basics, Text Manipulation, Networks, Software Management, Permissions, Process Management, Environment Variables, Bash Scripting, Archiving/Compression, Filesystem/Storage, Logging, Services, Security/Anonymity, Wireless Networking, Kernel Modules, Automation, Python Scripting). Each module provides plain-English explanations, commands with examples, quick reference tables, diagrams, and practice exercises. Includes requirements (VMs like VirtualBox/Kali Linux), extra resources (LabEx, OverTheWire, TryHackMe, Hack The Box), and an educational-use disclaimer.

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The Pirate Bay Remains Resilient, 20 Years After the Raid

On May 31, 2006, Swedish police seized The Pirate Bay’s servers, but co-founders Fredrik Neij and Gottfrid Svartholm saved the site with a full backup, letting it rebound within three days and gain fame as “The Police Bay” before adopting a Phoenix logo. FOIA-funded disclosures later show US pressure via the MPA to act against TPB. The raid triggered trials and prison sentences for early operators, but the site endured, later operating anonymously and remaining online as the galaxy’s most resilient torrent site.

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Sysadmining Like It's 2009

Will Sinatra announces Legacy Labs Summer Camp (LLSC), a two-month, curiosity-driven retro-computing/permacomputing project inspired by OCC. Participants pick any retro or forward-thinking topic to explore deeply, with no rigid constraints. Sinatra will build a small modern lab (Incus on Alpine) to run Windows Server 2008 R2 core services (AD, File, DHCP, Hyper-V) and a Vista domain/client setup, plus related tooling (Syteline ERP, Mikrotik devices, Nebula/Saltext). The aim is to learn by building, document the process, share ideas, and invite others to contribute from their own angles. The post also recounts OCC history and his Vista-era inspirations.

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No Raise, No Promotion: 1 in 4 White-Collar Workers Are Stalling Out

WSJ English Edition 404 page: the requested page can’t be found; users are advised to check the URL or email support. The page also features popular articles—including “Bill Gates Spent Years Crafting His Image. Now It’s Cracking.” and “Nobody Can Agree How to Keep the Sharks Out of South Africa’s New Club Med”—and a list of latest podcasts such as “TNB Tech Minute: Nvidia Unveils Laptops Designed For Running AI Agents,” “Strike Threatens to Stall GM’s Truck Output,” and “PCs Go Agentic.”

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CS336: Language Modeling from Scratch

Stanford CS336 Language Modeling from Scratch (Spring 2026) teaches building language models end-to-end—from data collection to deployment—via intensive Python/PyTorch coding (5-unit, minimal scaffolding). Instructors: Tatsunori Hashimoto, Percy Liang, with T. Brunborg, Marcel Rød, Steven Cao. Classes Mon/Wed 3–4:20 pm; YouTube recordings; office hours listed; Slack for course questions; email for personal matters. Prereqs: Python, DL, linear algebra, probability, ML. Assignments A1–A5 (Basics, Systems, Scaling, Data, Alignment) plus optional Part 2; late days, regrades, honor code on AI tools. Schedule covers tokenization to RLHF and guest lectures, with multiple GPU compute options.

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Flipper Zero Zig Template

Flipper Zero Zig Template is a production-ready starter for developing Flipper Zero apps in Zig. It links Zig with the Flipper SDK via a two-stage build: Zig compiles source to ARM Cortex‑M4 objects, then UFBT packages them into .fap files. It supports macOS/Linux, includes an interactive setup, and provides commands to zig build, zig build fap, and zig build launch. The repo includes a minimal Hello World example, a Flipper app manifest, and a typical project layout. This is unofficial, MIT‑licensed, and targets STM32WB55.

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Windows GOG DOS Games on M-Series Macs

The post explains how to run GOG DOS games on Apple Silicon Macs using DOSBox for Mac. Since many DOS-era titles shipped Windows installers, the author describes installing DOSBox on macOS, downloading the HoMM2 installer from GOG, copying installed files to the Mac, creating a DOSBox config to mount the game and its CD, and making a run-script to launch it. It notes that some titles are Windows-only; virtualizing Windows is slow on M-series Macs, so this DOSBox workaround (with DOSBox-X as an alternative) lets HoMM2 run on M2 Macs. Tweaks like windowed mode and scaler can be adjusted.

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Nvidia Cosmos 3

Cosmos 3 unifies physical AI reasoning and generation in a single open model with two towers: Reasoner (vision–language reasoning) and Generator (diffusion-based generation) that produces future observations and actions. Available Nano (16B) for real-time robotics and Super (64B) for datacenter workloads. Open-sourced: Cosmos 3 checkpoints on Hugging Face, six synthetic data generation (SDG) datasets for robotics, driving, and warehouses, post-training recipes (SFT and action post-training), and NVIDIA NIM microservices for deployment. Benchmarks show state-of-the-art performance; evaluation via NVIDIA Cosmos Human Evaluation (HUE). Tutorials and code on GitHub.

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Only 17% of all 64-bit Integers are products of two 32-bit integers

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NPM packages from RedHat have been compromised

GitHub issue reports [SECURITY]: Malicious npm releases detected across the @redhat-cloud-services/ scope. Opened Jun 1, 2026 by sailikhith-stepsecurity. Describes malicious releases across numerous Red Hat Cloud Services packages, listing affected packages and versions (e.g., @redhat-cloud-services/chrome 2.3.1; frontend-components 7.7.2; notifications-client 6.1.4; rbac-client 9.0.3; etc.) with links to a StepSecurity blog and OSS security feed. No assignee yet.

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MacBook Pro Rival with the Nvidia Powered Surface Laptop Ultra

Microsoft unveiled the Surface Laptop Ultra, a flagship Windows on Arm laptop powered by NVIDIA RTX Spark (20-core NVIDIA Grace CPU + Blackwell RTX GPU) with up to 128GB unified memory and a 15-inch mini-LED display up to 2,000 nits. It features a dual‑fan cooling system, a large haptic touchpad, full HDMI/USB ports, and a replaceable SSD. The system runs Windows 11 on Arm optimized for RTX Spark and supports local AI up to 1 petaflop with Prism emulation for x86 apps. Availability expected fall 2026 at a premium price.

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LLMs Are Closer to Religion Than They Appear

An opinion piece arguing LLMs resemble religion: they rely on data to generate answers in their own internal universes, making them powerful, but easily corrupted or weaponized. The piece juxtaposes a Vatican encyclical critiquing AI’s impact on human dignity with a study claiming AIs don’t answer religious questions; the author criticizes the study for conflating religion with Christian fundamentalism and for political manipulation. It warns AI could become a proselytizing force or be used to push religious data into training, urging caution about what we believe and buy into.

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Movwin: My (Unpublished) TUI Framework

movwin is a Python-based TUI framework built atop ncurses, created after 2025 to avoid chasing shifting upstream frameworks. It aims for acceptable Unicode handling, using wcwidth/wcswidth to size characters, and uses ncurses as a framebuffer and input source while avoiding subwindows and pads. Performance is a priority, with a target startup under a hundred ms and low import overhead. The project emphasizes keyboard-driven interfaces, window management, popups, and widgets; mouse support is limited. Demos include tracktivity, bine (a hex editor), and a time-tracking tool. The author plans further work but won't publish the code yet due to licensing fears.

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