Super HN

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151. Show HN: rari, the rust-powered react framework
rari is a performance-first React framework powered by Rust. Build web applications with React Server Components, zero-config setup, and runtime-accelerated rendering infrastructure.
152. Europe's $24T Breakup with Visa and Mastercard Has Begun
A 130-million-user payment system backed by 16 major banks just launched to challenge Visa/mastercard
153. DBASE on the Kaypro II
CP/M and dBASE were industry giants with everything to lose, and they did. For a time they were the power couple to beat.
154. Pure C, CPU-only inference with Mistral Voxtral Realtime 4B speech to text model
Pure C inference of Mistral Voxtral Realtime 4B speech to text model - antirez/voxtral.c
155. Welcoming Discord users amidst the challenge of Age Verification
Matrix, the open protocol for secure decentralised communications
156. Text classification with Python 3.14's ZSTD module
Python 3.14 introduced the compression.zstd module. It is a standard library implementation of Facebook’s Zstandard (Zstd) compression algorithm. It was developed a decade ago by Yann Collet, who holds a blog devoted to compression algorithms. I am not a compression expert, but Zstd caught my eye because it supports incremental compression. You can feed it data to compress in chunks, and it will maintain an internal state. It’s particularly well suited for compressing small data. It’s perfect for the classify text via compression trick, which I described in a previous blog post 5 years ago.
157. Should your developer company go open source?
A decision framework for founders who want leverage, not vibes
158. NetNewsWire Turns 23
NetNewsWire 1.0 for Mac shipped 23 years ago today! 🎸🎩🕶️ Here’s where things are on this particular February 11: we just shipped 7.0 for Mac and iOS, and now we’re working on NetNewsWire 7.0.1. After a big release, no matter how careful we are, there are often some regressions to fix and tweaks to make right away, so we’re working on those. Here’s the milestone with the current to-do list.
159. The Day the Telnet Died
On January 14, 2026, global telnet traffic observed by GreyNoise sensors fell off a cliff. A 59% sustained reduction, eighteen ASNs going completely silent, five countries vanishing from our data entirely. Six days later, CVE-2026-24061 dropped. Coincidence is one explanation.
160. So many trees planted in Taklamakan Desert that it's turned into a carbon sink
Huge-scale ecological engineering around the edges of one of the world's largest and driest deserts has turned it into a carbon sink that absorbs more CO2 than it emits, research suggests.
161. Rome is studded with cannon balls (2022)
Did you know that Rome is studded with cannon balls? Not many know that the city is full of sites where you can still see cannon balls. We’ll accompany you and share with you the story of the many cannon balls you can see around the city. Come and have a look for yourself! Come to Rome to see the city and its cannon balls.
162. Eight More Months of Agents
163. Mapping the Moon: The Apollo Transforming Printer
Using materials from the Geography & Map Division's Frederick Doyle Papers, this post explores the role NASA’s Apollo Transforming Printer played in creating maps of the moon from panoramic photographs.
164. FAA Halts All Flights at El Paso Airport for 10 Days
165. They Asked Me to Open ChatGPT During My Job Interview
166. Interlock (Engineering)
167. Pentagon Used Anthropic's Claude in Maduro Venezuela Raid
168. Driverless trucks can now travel farther distances faster than human drivers
CEO Chris Urmson called it a “superhuman” moment, adding that Aurora’s trucks can now carry freight 1,000 miles in 15 hours — faster than what a human driver can legally accomplish.
169. A Deep Dive into Apple's .car File Format
Reverse-engineering the .car file format used by Apple's asset catalogs and how to parse it without Apple's proprietary tools
170. Nobody knows how the whole system works
One of the surprising (at least to me) consequences of the fall of Twitter is the rise of LinkedIn as a social media site. I saw some interesting posts I wanted to call attention to: First, Simon Wardley on building things without understanding how they work: Here's Adam Jacob in response: And here's Bruce Perens,…
171. Ask HN: What would you recommend a vibe coder learn about how all this works?
172. RISC-V Vector Primer
Read chapters directly from this repo - do not use GitHub Pages link. - riscv-vector-primer/index.md at main · simplex-micro/riscv-vector-primer
173. The Feynman Lectures on Physics (1961-1964)
174. The Singularity will occur on a Tuesday
src={alwaysHasBeen.src} alt="Always has been astronaut meme" / "Wait, the singularity is just humans freaking out?" "Always has been." Everyone in
175. MIT Technology Review has confirmed that posts on Moltbook were fake
The viral social network for bots reveals more about our own current mania for AI as it does about the future of agents.
176. Ex-GitHub CEO Launches a New Developer Platform for AI Agents
Announcing Entire with $60 million seed round and shipping our first product, called Checkpoints.
177. Fast Properties in V8 (2017)
This technical deep-dive explains how V8 handles JavaScript properties behind the scenes.
178. UEFI Bindings for JavaScript
promethee - UEFI Bindings for JavaScript (Proof of Concept)
179. Fun With Pinball
Fun With Pinball small board assembly instructions explanations flipper solenoid stepper video
180. Thoughts on Generating C
wingolog: article: six thoughts on generating c