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Curated from Hacker News, Lobsters, Krebs on Security, and other top sources. Updated every 6 hours.

30
ENG
0
SEC
0
AI
6513
TOTAL
Sun, Apr 19, 2026
26
4951ENG

Clojure: Transducers

97 points, 29 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsclojure.orgApr 19
4952ENG

Why Zip drives dominated the 90s, then vanished almost overnight

28 points, 25 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsxda-developers.comApr 19
4953ENG

Changes in the system prompt between Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7

42 points, 9 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newssimonwillison.netApr 19
4954ENG

In the UK, EVs are cheaper than petrol cars, thanks to Chinese competition

117 points, 95 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newselectrek.coApr 19
4955ENG

Tim Davis – Probabilistic engineering and the 24-7 employee

12 points, 3 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newstimdavis.comApr 19
4956ENG

Edit store price tags using Flipper Zero

144 points, 157 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsgithub.comApr 19
4957ENG

Why Musicians Are Manufacturing Sold-Out Shows

15 points, 4 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsbloomberg.comApr 19
4958ENG

Ask HN: How did you land your first projects as a solo engineer/consultant?

I’ve spent roughly the last decade and some change as a software engineer, and recently decided to start a solo consultancy. I’m focused on helping SMEs sort out the messy back-office parts of the business: spreadsheet glue, brittle internal workflows, poor reporting, awkward integrations, backend/platform problems, and AI workflows that need to do real work rather than just look good in a demo. I’m not really interested in becoming a generic agency. I’d rather work with businesses that already feel operational pain and need someone technical to help untangle it properly. For those of you who’ve made this jump: * how did you get your first real project? * what kind of outreach actually worked? * did your first few clients come from network, content, cold outreach, partnerships, subcontracting, or somewhere else? Also, if anyone knows SMEs or operators dealing with this sort of mess, I’d be glad to chat. As a gesture of goodwill, I’m offering the first 5 clients 10 hours free to help ge

Hacker Newsnews.ycombinator.comApr 19
4959ENG

SPEAKE(a)R: Turn Speakers to Microphones for Fun and Profit [pdf] (2017)

80 points, 33 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsusenix.orgApr 19
4960ENG

Binary GCD

Article URL: https://en.algorithmica.org/hpc/algorithms/gcd/#binary-gcd Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47822737 Points: 10 # Comments: 0

Hacker Newsen.algorithmica.orgApr 19
4961ENG

A Brief History of Fish Sauce

34 points, 8 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newslegalnomads.comApr 19
4962ENG

Modern Rendering Culling Techniques

72 points, 12 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newskrupitskas.comApr 19
4963ENG

The seven programming ur-languages (2022)

42 points, 13 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsmadhadron.comApr 19
4964ENG

Yojam: a macOS default-browser shim that routes URLs through a rule engine

Author here. Yojam replaces the default browser on macOS so every URL - clicks, Finder .webloc/.inetloc/.url files, Handoff, AirDrop, Share and Services menus, Safari/Chromium/Firefox extensions, and a yojam:// scheme - runs through one pipeline: global regex rewrites, tracking-parameter scrubbing, rule matching, per-browser rewrites, then open-or-pick. Technically interesting bits if you want to pick them apart: Rules can target specific browser profiles, not just bundle IDs. For Chromium this means shelling out with --profile-directory; for Firefox, -P with the profile name; for Safari/Orion, AppleScript because there's no profile CLI (because of course there isn't). Source-app filtering uses real originating bundle IDs where macOS actually gives them to us, and synthetic sentinels (com.yojam.source.handoff and friends) where it doesn't. Rules can key on either. The Share Extension, Safari Web Extension, and native messaging host are separate Xcode targets sharing an App Group contai

Lobstersgithub.comApr 19
4965ENG

The RAM shortage could last years

176 points, 178 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newstheverge.comApr 19
4966ENG

Bullshit About Bullshit Machines [pdf]

5 points, 1 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsaphyr.comApr 19
4967ENG

Keep Pushing: We Get 10 More Days to Reform Section 702

99 points, 15 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newseff.orgApr 19
4968ENG

Prefill-as-a-Service:KVCache of Next-Generation Models Could Go Cross-Datacenter

11 points, 0 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsarxiv.orgApr 19
4969ENG

Chernobyl's last wedding

31 points, 7 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsbbc.comApr 19
4970ENG

When compilers surprise you

Comments

Lobstersxania.orgApr 19
4971ENG

Garbage Collection Without Unsafe Code

10 points, 1 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsfitzgen.comApr 19
4972ENG

Windows Server 2025 Runs Better on ARM

5 points, 1 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsjasoneckert.github.ioApr 19
4973ENG

The world in which IPv6 was a good design

89 points, 26 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsapenwarr.caApr 19
4974ENG

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

Comments

Lobstersrighto.comApr 19
4975ENG

Anthropic Claude Code Leak Reveals Critical Command Injection Vulnerabilities

Comments

Lobstersbeyondmachines.netApr 19
4976ENG

MuJoCo – Advanced Physics Simulation

50 points, 8 comments on Hacker News

Hacker Newsgithub.comApr 19
Sat, Apr 18, 2026
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Aggregated from public RSS feeds & the Hacker News API · All links point to original sources · Clawship does not republish full articles