Super HN

New Show
121. The browser catches homograph attacks. Your terminal doesn't
Your browser catches homograph attacks. Your terminal doesn't. Tirith guards the gate — intercepts suspicious URLs, ANSI injection, and pipe-to-shell attacks before they execute. - sheeki03/tirith
122. Stanford's Fake Disability Crisis Is America's Future
123. Palantir declares itself the guardian of Americans' rights
124. Hexagonal Grids
Amit's guide to math, algorithms, and code for hexagonal grids
125. Anthropic is Down
Updog By Datadog lets you spot issues with Anthropic early, backed by real impact across Datadog customer base. No status page updates.
126. Advancing AI Benchmarking with Game Arena
We’re expanding Game Arena with Poker and Werewolf, while Gemini 3 Pro and Flash top our chess leaderboard.
127. Petition for Recognition of Work on Open-Source as Volunteering in Germany
Open-Source-Software builds the foundations of digital infrastructure in big parts - in administration, economy, science and daily life. Even the current coalition agreement of the Federal Government mentions Open-Source-Software as a fundamental building block for the achievement of digital sovereignty. However, the work done by thousands of volunteers for this goal is not recognised as volunteering, neither fiscally nor in terms of funding. This imbalance between societal importance and legal
128. Pretty soon, heat pumps will be able to store and distribute heat as needed
Researchers have developed a heat storage unit that takes up less space than a regular hot water tank. It charges when electricity is cheap and releases heat when needed.
129. Jeffrey Epstein made lucrative investment in crypto exchange Coinbase
130. Hacking Moltbook: The AI Social Network Any Human Can Control
Learn how a misconfigured Supabase database at Moltbook exposed 1.5M API keys, private messages, and user emails, enabling full AI agent takeover.
131. GitHub experience various partial-outages/degradations
Welcome to GitHub's home for real-time and historical data on system performance.
132. Library of Juggling
133. Rust in the NetBSD Kernel, and other odd decisions
134. Bruce Schneier: AI and the scaling of betrayal
135. A few thoughts about PayPal, nearly 12 years after I left
136. 2 in 5 Americans did not read a single book in 2025
Comprehensive collection of 50+ reading statistics for 2026. Discover data on books read per year, audiobook market size, literacy rates, and reading trends with authoritative sources.
137. The Hot Mess of AI
138. Linux from Scratch Ends SysVinit Support
139. Phenakistoscopes (1833)
A popular Victorian parlour toy, generally marketed for children, which is widely considered to be among the earliest forms of animation and the precursor to modern cinema.
140. 50 Years of the Jetsons: Why the Show Still Matters
Although it was on the air for only one season, The Jetsons remains our most popular point of reference when discussing the future.
141. Nano-vLLM: How a vLLM-style inference engine works
When deploying large language models in production, the inference engine becomes a critical piece of infrastructure.
142. Contracts in Nix
143. Netbird a German Tailscale alternative (P2P WireGuard-based overlay network)
WireGuard®-based overlay network and Zero Trust Network Access in one platform for reliable and secure connectivity
144. China bans hidden car door handles
145. Ratchets in Software Development
146. xAI joins SpaceX
SpaceX designs, manufactures and launches advanced rockets and spacecraft. The company was founded in 2002 to revolutionize space technology, with the ultimate goal of enabling people to live on other planets.
147. Claude Code is suddenly everywhere inside Microsoft
Microsoft is increasingly adopting Claude Code, despite selling its own GitHub Copilot AI tool. Microsoft’s developers are now testing out both to compare them.
148. Zig Libc
149. My thousand dollar iPhone can't do math
150. Training a trillion parameter model to be funny
kimi k2 tuned to generate jokes with rubric RL