| 31. | Autonomously navigating the real world: lessons from the PG&E outage | (waymo.com) |
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At Waymo, our mission is to be the world’s most trusted driver. We know trust is built through consistent behavior over time—earned through every mile we drive and every interaction we have with the community. This past Saturday, as a widespread PG&E outage cut power to nearly one-third of San Francisco, our service was put to the test. With power now restored, we want to share an account of our operations during the outage and how we are evolving to better serve the city. | |
| 8 points by scoofy 1 day ago | 1 comments |
| 32. | Keystone (YC S25) is hiring engineer #1 to automate coding | (ycombinator.com) |
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About Keystone We're building AI-native error monitoring that automatically investigates production issues and generates code fixes. Think Sentry, but built from the ground up for a world where AI can actually understand your codebase, trace through logs, and tell you exactly what broke and how to fix it. We're starting here and expanding until we're the default tool for building product, period. Our mission is to free engineers from the drudgery of digging through logs, setting up systems, and debugging- so they can focus on understanding users and designing great products. We're in-person in SoMa, San Francisco. We raised a $5.2M seed from True Ventures, Twenty Two Ventures, Pear VC, and Ritual Capital- plus the founders of YC, Dropbox, Supabase, Eight Sleep, Graphite, Resend, RocketMoney, and more. Early design partners include teams at Perplexity and Lovable. About the Role You'd be the first engineering hire, working directly with me (the founder) to build the core product. You'll have more ownership and influence over the product, culture, and technical direction than you'd get almost anywhere else. Example projects: 2-week sprint to build a new product vertical from scratch Design a new interface for engineering workflows that wasn't possible until a model advancement that came out yesterday You might be a great fit if you: Have shipped products end-to-end (frontend to infra) and obsess over the details Work fast and comfortably with ambiguity- we're figuring things out as we go Get excited about hard problems at the intersection of AI and developer tools Want to be genuinely early, not "early at a 50-person series B" Stack: TypeScript, React (Next.js), Python, Postgres, Redis, AWS Comp & benefits: Top-of-market salary + significant equity, full health/dental/vision, all meals covered, equipment budget | |
| 1 point by pablo24602 16 hours ago | comments |
| 33. | Google 2025 recap: Research breakthroughs of the year | (blog.google) |
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This year saw new AI models, transformative products and new breakthroughs in science and robotics. | |
| 5 points by Anon84 1 day ago | 0 comments |
| 34. | My 2026 Open Social Web Predictions | (timothychambers.net) |
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Predictions for 2026 include growth forecasts for various social media platforms, advancements in federated technologies, and anticipated shifts in how … | |
| 3 points by todsacerdoti 21 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 35. | Avoid Mini-Frameworks | (laike9m.com) |
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| 5 points by laike9m 1 day ago | 2 comments |
| 36. | I Left YouTube | (zhach.news) |
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What was the road like when I left? | |
| 7 points by dhashe 15 hours ago | 1 comments |
| 37. | LimeWire re-emerges in online rush to share pulled "60 Minutes" segment | (arstechnica.com) |
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Redditor jokes LimeWire is now a "champion against the darkness." | |
| 6 points by smurda 1 hour ago | 1 comments |
| 38. | Some Epstein file redactions are being undone with hacks | (theguardian.com) |
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Un-redacted text from released documents began circulating on social media on Monday evening | |
| 6 points by vinni2 1 day ago | 1 comments |
| 39. | Microsoft please get your tab to autocomplete shit together | (ivanca.github.io) |
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What do you think is gonna happen after I press tab when looking at this screenshot? | |
| 9 points by AmbroseBierce 14 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 40. | Your Inbox Is a Bandit | (parentheticallyspeaking.org) |
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| 3 points by zdw 3 days ago | 0 comments |
| 41. | Making a game on a custom bytecode VM in 7 days and 3kB | (laurent.le-brun.eu) |
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Laurent Le Brun's blog | |
| 3 points by laurentlb 6 days ago | 0 comments |
| 42. | Quake's Player Speed According to John Romero (2017) | (rome.ro) |
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Quake 1 Stories | |
| 5 points by klaussilveira 1 day ago | 0 comments |
| 43. | 2D Signed Distance Functions | (iquilezles.org) |
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Tutorials and articles of Inigo Quilez on computer graphics, fractals, demoscene, shaders and more. | |
| 3 points by nickswalker 15 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 44. | Two ancient humans, including famed 'Iceman,' had cancer-causing virus | (science.org) |
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| 5 points by rolph 10 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 45. | Map: Operator[] Should Be Nodiscard | (quuxplusone.github.io) |
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Lately libc++ has been adding the C++17 [[nodiscard]] attribute aggressively to every header. (I’m not sure why this month, but my guess is that libc++ just dropped support for some old compiler such that all their supported compilers now permit the attribute even in C++11 mode.) libc++ is following the trail that Microsoft STL has blazed since VS 15.6 in late 2017. | |
| 3 points by jandeboevrie 5 days ago | 0 comments |
| 46. | When Compilers Surprise You | (xania.org) |
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Sometimes compilers can surprise and delight even a jaded old engineer like me | |
| 8 points by brewmarche 1 day ago | 1 comments |
| 47. | Spaced Repetition for Efficient Learning | (gwern.net) |
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Efficient memorization using the spacing effect: literature review of widespread applicability, tips on use & what it’s good for. | |
| 10 points by tsenturk 16 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 48. | X-ray: a Python library for finding bad redactions in PDF documents | (github.com) |
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A tool to detect whether a PDF has a bad redaction - freelawproject/x-ray | |
| 10 points by rendx 1 day ago | 3 comments |
| 49. | Don't Become the Machine | (armeet.bearblog.dev) | |
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I was recently recommended a YouTube video with the following title: | 11 points by armeet 1 day ago | 2 comments |
| 50. | How GNU Guile is 10x better (2021) | (draketo.de) |
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| 4 points by Tomte 3 days ago | 0 comments |
| 51. | Super Mario Bros. and Yoshi Games (Yields) Reduced Burnout Risk | (games.jmir.org) |
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Background: Unrelenting pressure and an “always-on” culture can leave no time for genuine rest among young adults. While playing video games has been noted to afford cognitive escapism and relaxation, critical questions remain about the influence of popular video games, such as Super Mario Bros., and their potential effects on young adults’ burnout risk. Objective: This study examined the extent to which, if at all, popular video games such as Super Mario Bros. and Yoshi could foster childlike wonder. It also investigated the potential of these games to reduce burnout risk among young adults. Methods: We used a mixed methods approach. First, qualitative data were collected through 41 exploratory, in-depth interviews (women: n=19, 46.3%; men: n=21, 51.2%; prefer not to disclose sex: n=1, 2.4%; mean age 22.51, SD 1.52 years) with university students who had experience playing Super Mario Bros. or Yoshi. Second, quantitative data were collected in a cross-sectional survey (N=336) of players of Super Mario Bros. and Yoshi to examine the games’ affordance of childlike wonder, overall happiness in life, and burnout risk. Results: Insights from in-depth interviews showed that players appreciated the ability of Super Mario Bros. and Yoshi games to instill childlike wonder, enhance happiness in life, and reduce burnout risk. Quantitative analyses showed that the games’ affordance of childlike wonder positively affected young adults’ happiness (b=0.30, SE=0.04, t=6.80, 95% CI 0.21-0.38; P<.001). In turn, overall happiness significantly reduced the risk of burnout (b=–0.48, SE=0.05, t=–9.55, 95% CI –0.572 to –0.377). Results showed that happiness fully mediated the impact of childlike wonder on burnout, as the direct effect of childlike wonder on burnout risk became insignificant (b=–0.08, SE=0.04, t=–1.88, 95% CI –0.16 to 0.01; P=.06), while the indirect effect of childlike wonder on burnout risk was significant (b=–0.14, bootstrapped SE=0.03, 95% CI –0.20 to –0.09). Conclusions: The findings showed the significant positive effect of popular video games such as Super Mario Bros. and Yoshi on fostering players’ childlike wonder, increasing happiness, and reducing burnout risk. This study was among the first to identify childlike wonder as an emotional pathway through which mainstream video games could enhance well-being and reduce burnout. By moving beyond escapism and nostalgia, it offers a new perspective on how well-designed, globally familiar games can function as accessible, resilience-building digital microenvironments. These findings contributed to research bridging gaming and mental health and have practical implications for game designers, educators, and health professionals interested in promoting mental wellness through everyday play. Trial Registration: | |
| 7 points by azalemeth 23 hours ago | 2 comments |
| 52. | Salmon Recipe | (waveinscriber.com) |
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Code Breakdown of IOCCC28 Winner Salmon Recipe | |
| 3 points by vitalnodo 13 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 53. | GraphicsMagick Image Processing System | (graphicsmagick.org) |
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GraphicsMagick is a robust collection of tools and libraries to read, write, and manipulate an image in any of the more popular image formats including GIF, JPEG, JPEG-2000, PNG, PDF, and WebP. With GraphicsMagick you can create GIFs dynamically making it suitable for Web applications. You can also resize, rotate, sharpen, color reduce, or add special effects to an image and save your completed work in the same or differing image format. | |
| 3 points by exvi 16 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 54. | Spice: A 40-year old open-source success story (2011) | (edn.com) |
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| 5 points by stmw 20 hours ago | 1 comments |
| 55. | Coding Intelligence Asymptotics | (fi-le.net) |
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fi-le.net, the Fiefdom of Files | |
| 4 points by fi-le 6 days ago | 0 comments |
| 56. | Permission Systems for Enterprise That Scale | (eliocapella.com) |
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Permission checks that query on every request will break at scale. Learn how pre-computing permissions at write-time enables fast reads, with working SQL examples and an interactive demo. | |
| 3 points by eliocs 1 day ago | 0 comments |
| 57. | AMD entered the CPU market with reverse-engineered Intel 8080 clone 50 years ago | (tomshardware.com) |
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In 1975, AMD could make these processors for 50 cents and sell them for $700, providing a great financial springboard to establish the company in PC CPU making. | |
| 3 points by ksec 23 hours ago | 1 comments |
| 58. | Open source USB to GPIB converter (for Test and Measurement instruments) | (github.com) |
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Versatile, cheap and portable USB to GPIB converter (USBTMC class based) - xyphro/UsbGpib | |
| 3 points by v15w 1 day ago | 0 comments |
| 59. | Fabrication Techniques Using Myco-Materials | (encyclopedia.pub) |
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| 3 points by andsoitis 3 days ago | 0 comments |
| 60. | Scaling Go Testing with Contract and Scenario Mocks | (funnelstory.ai) |
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Mocks aren't the enemy; bad tests are. We scale Go testing using "Tactical Pairs": Contract Tests for truth, Scenario Mocks for logic. | |
| 3 points by preetamjinka 6 days ago | 0 comments |