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Hacker News

Vercel, a cloud platform for app development and deployment, disclosed a breach of its internal systems discovered on Sunday, April 19, 2026. The company confirmed unauthorized access to certain internal systems and says a "limited subset of customers" was impacted, with those customers being contacted directly. Vercel has engaged an incident response provider, notified law enforcement, and is actively investigating. The company has not specified which systems were compromised or the total number of affected customers. Online posts have linked the breach to ShinyHunters, a threat group known for combining social engineering and vulnerability exploitation to target organizations, then monetizing access by selling stolen data or making financial demands of victims. Vercel offers a broad range of developer and enterprise services, including offerings focused on agentic AI workloads.

Comments: Commenters note this story is a duplicate, pointing to an earlier Hacker News thread with more discussion. They also highlight that Vercel published its own security bulletin directly, which contains substantially the same information as the third-party reporting. No additional technical details or independent analysis were offered in the comments beyond these pointers.

BYTE Magazine, launched in 1975, was a foundational publication for the early personal computing community, running until the 1990s. Issue #1 is preserved on the Internet Archive, where it has accumulated nearly 18,500 views. The magazine was notable for its book-like heft — often 300–500 pages — and an overwhelming ad-to-editorial ratio of roughly 3:1. Its editorial range spanned technical deep-dives like assembler programming and IC recycling to hardware kit guides, reflecting an era when computing was transitioning from hobbyist curiosity to mainstream inevitability. Regular columns included Steve Ciarcia's hands-on hardware work and Jerry Pournelle's polarizing "Chaos Manor," which drew both devoted fans and sharp critics. The magazine was founded by Wayne Green, whose ownership was later lost to his wife in a divorce. BYTE's August 1981 Smalltalk issue became iconic, and its cover art by Robert Tinney, who died in February 2026, is widely remembered. Full archives are available at both archive.org and vintageapple.org, with a refined reader interface at byte.tsundoku.io.

Comments: Commenters paint BYTE as a lifeline for isolated young technologists in the 70s and 80s, describing pilgrimages to libraries and newsstands, copying listings by hand, and photocopying articles for long bus rides home. For those in rural areas, it served as primary technical education. Jerry Pournelle's "Chaos Manor" column divides opinion — some call it the highlight, while others found his access to company CEOs and personalized support deeply out of touch with average readers. Steve Ciarcia's column is warmly remembered. The August 1981 Smalltalk issue is specifically celebrated, with multiple users proudly noting physical ownership. The magazine's massive size and dense advertising are recalled as distinctive qualities. Wayne Green's founding story, including the divorce that cost him ownership, is recounted by a commenter who knew him personally at the Atlantic City hamfest where Apple also debuted. Users point to vintageapple.org and byte.tsundoku.io as superior browsing experiences, and at least one commenter still owns hundreds of physical issues and offers to ship them.

The Nanopass Framework is an embedded domain-specific language (DSL) designed to simplify compiler construction by encouraging many small, focused passes and numerous intermediate representations (IRs). Its central promise is reduced boilerplate, making compilers easier to understand and maintain. Users debate whether this many-pass philosophy is universally sound: real-world experience from compilers like Vale and Mojo suggests that misplaced logic across passes can compound tech debt, sometimes making a smaller number of larger passes the more pragmatic choice. The optimal pass count is seen as language-dependent — Scheme, for example, naturally decomposes into stages like lexing, parsing, macro expansion, alpha renaming, CPS transformation, closure conversion, and codegen. Some question whether more passes inherently slow compilation regardless of output quality, arguing that fewer, heavier passes are more performant in theory.

Comments: Users are split on the many-passes philosophy central to Nanopass. Those with hands-on compiler experience warn that features placed in the wrong pass create compounding complexity, citing Vale and Mojo as cases where fewer, larger passes would have been cleaner — drawing a parallel to microservices over-decomposition. Others agree that multiple passes aid maintainability in principle but stress that the right number is language-specific: Scheme-like languages suit deep pass pipelines naturally, while others may not. A performance concern is also raised — more passes likely mean slower compile times regardless of output quality, favoring a design that maximizes work per pass. One user notes the project's website is outdated, pointing to an unlisted video resource not reflected there.

A feature built into HD Audio codecs — called jack retasking — lets software silently reconfigure a headphone or speaker port as a microphone input without any hardware changes. Researchers exploited this on Realtek ALC-series chips, embedded in the vast majority of consumer PCs, to capture intelligible audio through standard output-only speaker hardware. The underlying physics makes this possible: a speaker driver is electromagnetically identical to a microphone capsule, and the same coil-in-magnetic-field mechanism that produces sound when driven with current will generate current when driven by sound. The attack, presented at USENIX WOOT 2017 under the name SPEAKE(a)R, is most threatening against air-gapped machines assumed safe precisely because they lack a dedicated microphone. Because jack retasking operates at the codec level and audio drivers offer minimal visibility into port configuration state, the conversion is difficult to detect through normal OS-level monitoring.

Comments: The thread drew on decades of DIY audio knowledge to validate the physics instantly — engineers and hobbyists have long known speakers and microphones are the same transducer running in reverse, and some wired intercoms this way since the 1970s. The professional recording world calls it the subkick, a woofer used as a kick drum microphone in major studios. Commenters with Linux audio experience noted jack retasking is fully exposed through ALSA, making it a documented API that is simply invisible to users. The security angle sharpened when someone cited CIA Vault 7 disclosures confirming intelligence agencies already exploit speaker hardware for eavesdropping. Unexpected deployment environments came up repeatedly: hotel televisions, drive-thru kiosk intercoms, and smart displays were named as surfaces where speakers double as ambient microphones without users suspecting it. The consensus was that the threat model is narrow but real — most attackers have easier options, but for targeted surveillance of a genuinely air-gapped machine, this is an underappreciated vector.

Seven foundational "ur-languages" underlie all modern programming: ALGOL (imperative sequences, loops — parent of C, Python, Java); Lisp (parenthetical prefix syntax with macro systems enabling language redefinition — parent of Clojure, Scheme); ML (first-class functions, Hindley-Milner typing, recursion-based iteration — parent of Haskell, OCaml); Self (pure message-passing without classes — inspiration for JavaScript, Smalltalk); Forth (stack-based reverse-Polish notation with replaceable parsers — parent of PostScript, Factor); APL (n-dimensional array operators so terse symbol sequences become labels — parent of J, K, NumPy); and Prolog (fact-and-rule logic executed as search — parent of SQL, Mercury). Crossing ur-language boundaries requires building new neural pathways, unlike switching within a family. All programmers should master an ALGOL language first, then SQL as practical Prolog, then one new ur-family per year — Haskell, PLT Racket, gForth, K, and OCaml suggested in rough priority order. ALGOL has historically absorbed features from other families, including Self-derived classes in the 1980s and ML-derived type inference since 2010.

Comments: Commenters embrace the framework while proposing corrections and additions. Several suggest proof languages (Lean, Agda) as a distinct family via Curry-Howard correspondence, where type-checking supersedes execution. Others propose scripting/pipeline languages (AWK, shell, Perl, PowerShell) as their own ur-family, noting SQL fits there in practice despite logical Prolog roots. One disputes classifying Ruby under ALGOL, arguing its Smalltalk-derived message-passing and fully object-oriented design place it in the Self family. Another flags an error: the article incorrectly calls CaML "Cambridge ML" — it stands for Categorical Abstract Machine Language. Further proposed families include Verilog, Petri nets, dataflow networks, process calculi, reactive, term rewriting, constraint solvers, and probabilistic programming. Commenters note the taxonomy echoes Bruce Tate's "7 Languages in 7 Weeks." University PL courses covering most of these families reportedly made learning later languages far easier. C++ template metaprogramming and Datalog are suggested as worthy additions, while one commenter dismisses multi-language learning as increasingly redundant in the LLM era.

Pausing a video game is deceptively complex, with developers using a wide range of techniques. Many engines support pausing by setting timescale to zero, but some developers avoid engine edge cases by using an extremely small number like 0.000000001 instead. A common trick is taking a screenshot at pause-time, hiding all game objects, and displaying that image behind the pause menu — freeing memory while maintaining visuals, though sometimes causing a one-frame delay. Games also have multiple distinct pause types: standard menus, inventory, controller disconnect, and OS overlays each require different handling, and conflicts between them produce bugs. Developer war stories include Mario Sunshine's pause misaligning collision logic modulo 4, a Dota 2 bug where clicking skill-up buttons advanced the game one frame per click during pause, and Microsoft Flight Simulator's "active pause" shipping broken for years — freezing the plane but leaving physics, fuel, and instruments running. A common beginner mistake is having every object poll a paused flag each frame, tanking performance; the better pattern gates an entire object hierarchy from a single top-level node.

Comments: Commenters add substantial technical depth. One developer described Warcraft's grayscale palette-swap pause — updating only 768 bytes rather than redrawing the screen — and reusing it as a network-stall indicator. Godot's per-node process mode is cited as a cleaner architectural approach. Unity coroutines compiling to opaque state machines make pause and save-state support painful, often pushing developers back to hand-written state machines. NES-era sprite disappearance on pause is noted as a side effect of main loops skipping sprite-building code. The Nintendo Switch OS-level suspend is praised as a hardware solution bypassing developer implementation. Flight Simulator's broken active pause is detailed: momentum, fuel, and instruments kept running while the plane was frozen, causing dangerous unpause jumps — unfixed for years. Dragon's Dogma's mid-combat item pause is praised as thoughtful design. Several commenters note CPU/GPU usage should drop to near-zero on pause, with a single textured quad under the pause menu being the correct optimization over redundant full-frame rendering.

A web-based CRT shader studio offers a layered properties panel with extensive real-time controls including scanline intensity, mask scale, barrel distortion, convergence, vignette, phosphor beam focus, chroma retention, shadow lift, persistence, noise, flicker, glitch speed, and bloom parameters for radius, softness, intensity, and threshold. The tool targets creative users wanting to apply retro CRT visual effects, with a floating-window UI and video export capability. Performance is a noted limitation, and the tool has been compared to the established shaders.com platform.

Comments: Users find the interface visually appealing but flag significant performance issues, with lag making experimentation difficult. One user reports Firefox crashing consistently when adding an image source layer and filed a bug report. Another notes it works on Firefox/Mac without issues. The tool's design language is characterized by multiple commenters as "vibe coded," suggesting AI-assisted or rapid-prototype origins needing further polish. A similar niche tool exists for Binding of Isaac shader mods. Users request FPS display, resolution switching, and clearer canvas/void distinction. Basement Studio, linked to the project, is noted as a credible font vendor. Some users see a resemblance to shaders.com, raising concerns about originality.

The pairwise order of a sequence applies the sign function to successive differences, producing a sequence of -1, 0, and 1 values that captures local ordering relationships. Formally defined as Order(X) = ⟨sgn(ΔX)_i | 1 ≤ i < |X|⟩, it is analogous to a discrete derivative and works over any strict weak ordering, not just numbers. Key properties include: sorted sequences have no -1 values; reverse-sorted sequences have no 1 values; sequences of distinct elements have no 0 values. Several disorder measures — Runs (count of descending neighbor pairs), Mono (count of monotonic runs minus 1), and Amp — can all be redefined purely in terms of the pairwise order, reducing their analysis to studying changes among -1, 0, and 1 values. Equal elements, often ignored in literature following Mannila's axioms, are handled naturally: the 0 values they contribute to the pairwise order are irrelevant to Mono and Amp, meaning Mono(Unique(X)) = Mono(X) and similarly for Amp. This equivalence simplifies comparisons between measures, and the author plans to use the framework to fully analyze the relationship between Mono and Amp in a future article.

Comments: Nothing to summarize!

Skiplists are randomized structures offering O(log n) operations via layered "express lane" linked lists. Antithesis hit a practical problem: tree traversal in Google BigQuery, which is optimized for parallel scans but slow at point lookups. Walking parent-pointer trees requires serial point lookups BigQuery handles poorly, but splitting data across two databases would require two-phase commit. Their solution — "skiptrees" — stores a tree as a hierarchy of SQL tables at different node densities, each row tracking its nearest higher-level ancestor and all intermediate nodes. This enables ancestor queries with ~40 fixed JOINs instead of recursive queries, scanning roughly twice a single table's data total due to geometric table sizing. The key insight: skiplists' naive implementations still perform adequately, making the approach viable in SQL where a naive B+ tree would fail. The SQL queries were kilobytes long and generated by a JavaScript compiler. They later found skiptrees resemble the established "skip graphs" distributed structure, and eventually built their own analytic database with native tree query support.

Comments: Redis sorted sets, SingleStore's rowstore storage, and Java's ConcurrentSkipListMap are prominent real-world skiplist deployments. Skiplists' main advantage over balanced BSTs is simpler lock-free concurrency — operations are local and composable, making custom metadata augmentation easier than modifying a BST. Skeptics counter that skiplists offer little practical benefit on modern hardware due to pointer-heavy access patterns that miss cache compared to B+ trees doing more work per I/O. The article's core thesis — naive implementations have adequate performance — is identified as the critical insight: a naive B+ tree in SQL would perform worse than recursive CTEs, while probabilistic promotion converts rebalancing complexity into simpler writes with acceptable variance. Some question whether B-trees, graph databases, or a proper HTAP system would have been more natural solutions; one commenter suggests storing fuzzer seeds with leaf nodes for deterministic replay at query time as an alternative. Broader concern is raised that AI-assisted development may erode engineering expertise in advanced data structures over time.

Turtle WoW, a popular WoW private server running eight years, announced a complete shutdown after Blizzard won a copyright injunction from a September lawsuit. Servers close May 14; forums and social media follow October 16. All servers were fast-forwarded to the final patch so players can experience new raids before closure. Developer Torta called the project "the highlight of our lives." Turtle WoW offered a "Classic Plus" experience — new raids, zones, playable races, and dungeons in vanilla WoW's pre-expansion era without raising the level cap or incorporating modern lore. Court documents show defendant AFKCraft Ltd. allegedly generated millions between 2018–2026, strengthening Blizzard's case. The shutdown echoes Nostalrius, shuttered in 2015 just before Blizzard announced WoW Classic. The team's plea for a fan-server licensing framework, akin to EverQuest's Project 1999 or City of Heroes's Homecoming, went unanswered.

Comments: Commenters largely see the shutdown as legally foreseeable, citing AFKCraft Ltd.'s commercial revenue — millions earned over 2018–2026 — as the key factor distinguishing Turtle WoW from hobbyist operations. Many still admire the server's creativity, arguing its roguelike mechanics and unique gameplay loop surpassed anything Blizzard has produced for Classic WoW recently. Some question why projects like PokeMMO continue operating, pointing to the commercial element as the likely differentiator. A hopeful subset speculates that settlement terms may include Blizzard acquiring Turtle WoW's custom assets for an upcoming Classic+ release, though nothing confirms this. Critics argue Blizzard lacks the creative energy community developers have demonstrated, while others note the irony of the company still pursuing fan servers after so many years. The Nostalrius parallel is implicitly echoed, with cautious optimism that this shutdown could precede an official Classic+ announcement.

FSB Colonel Dmitry Kovalev defended Russia's doping program before Swiss arbitrators while working within the FSB directorate responsible for Novichok poisonings of Navalny, Skripal, and others. After whistleblower Dr. Rodchenkov exposed the Sochi 2014 scheme — where FSB officers swapped urine samples through a "mouse hole" — Russia relocated its doping operation to Signal Scientific Research Centre, which shares personnel, address, and director (Maj. Gen. Bogdanov) with the assassination program. Victor Tarachenko, linked to the Skripal poisoning, runs Signal's lab covering both nerve agents and performance drugs. Kovalev's FSB 8th Department has operatives embedded across Russian sports federations, with contacts saved in phones as "Andrey Doping." Phone records show Kovalev calling Bogdanov during both 2020 Navalny poisoning attempts while preparing arbitration testimony. His partner Veronika Loginova now leads RUSADA, publicly positioning it as a model organization despite whistleblower allegations of her 2014 cover-up role. The Court of Arbitration found Russia guilty of "deliberate, sophisticated and brazen" manipulation, imposing a two-year ban.

Comments: Commenters draw connections to broader Kremlin political violence patterns, noting Nemtsov and Navalny as part of a continuing series and speculating about future targets. One references the 1999 political transition, suggesting Lukashenko could have led Russia under different circumstances — contextualizing Putin's ruthless consolidation of power. Others express frustration at systemic misallocation of Russian institutional resources toward poisonings, doping cover-ups, and deception. The FSB's Second Service is noted as also managing Russian internet influence operations, suggesting the same apparatus extends beyond physical assassination into information warfare.

NIST scientists developed a 3D-stacked photonics chip integrating lithium niobate and tantalum pentoxide (tantala) on silicon wafers to generate a full color spectrum from a single laser. Lithium niobate handles electro-optic color conversion and high-speed switching; tantala—deposited at room temperature to avoid thermal damage—outputs visible and infrared wavelengths simultaneously. The result is ~50 fingernail-sized chips with 10,000 photonic circuits each on a beer-coaster wafer, every circuit outputting a unique color. Key applications include quantum computers and optical atomic clocks, which require precise wavelengths matched to atomic transitions (780nm for rubidium, 461nm for strontium)—currently requiring bulky, expensive lasers confined to specialized labs. Portable optical clocks could enable GPS alternatives, earthquake prediction, and dark matter research. NIST also sees potential in AI chip interconnects and VR displays. The team collaborated with Octave Photonics, a Louisville startup, to scale production. Research appeared in Nature on April 15, 2026.

Comments: Commenters flag that the wafer's rainbow photo is misleading—it's optical diffraction, unrelated to the chip's actual output. On performance, users clarify photonics' main advantage over electronics is bandwidth, not latency, since both transmit information near light speed. Ion-trap quantum computing researchers note practical relevance, as current wavelength-specific laser setups are expensive and finicky. Display enthusiasts speculate tunable laser primaries could represent any CIE colorspace color, surpassing fixed RGB. A safety concern is raised: broadband laser sources undermine wavelength-specific laser safety goggles used by pilots and soldiers. Proliferation risk is questioned—whether the technology could enable AVLIS or SILEX isotope separation. Several ask whether output color is fixed at fabrication or dynamically tunable. One commenter pushes back on framing, noting this is nonlinear integrated optics, not a general-purpose computing platform—no Boolean logic or memory storage demonstrated. Others ask about extending range to microwave or X-ray wavelengths.

Cornell German instructor Grit Matthias Phelps introduced a manual typewriter assignment in spring 2023 after students used generative AI and translation tools to produce perfect but personally unwritten work. She sourced old typewriters from thrift shops, banning screens, dictionaries, spellcheckers, and delete keys, with her young children serving as "tech support" to keep phones away. The exercise forced deliberate thinking, acceptance of imperfection, and peer interaction—freshman Catherine Mong embraced odd spacing to write in E.E. Cummings' style despite a broken wrist, while CS sophomore Ratchaphon Lertdamrongwong found it transformed his classroom interactions, prompting him to ask classmates for help rather than delegating to AI or Google. Most students' pinkies proved too weak for touch-typing, and errors were marked with X's rather than deleted. The typewriter revival reflects a broader national trend toward in-class pen-and-paper exams and oral tests to prevent AI-assisted cheating.

Comments: Commenters are split on whether analog workarounds are the right response to AI in education. Many note that handwritten, proctored in-person exams were already standard at many institutions and remain the simplest solution. Others argue schools should instead embrace AI—teaching students to verify outputs, detect hallucinations, and produce more ambitious work, drawing parallels to the calculator debate where one school mandated calculators and redesigned tests around them. A university professor notes AI struggles with introspective, personalized assignments and flags declining social skills as a more serious concern than AI use. Several commenters point out the typewriter workaround is trivially defeated by drafting with AI then transcribing, and one raises Google Docs' event-log structure as an existing detection mechanism. Broader skepticism exists about college's value if AI replicates white-collar output, with some predicting growth in trades. A minority holds that oral "teach-back" exams—where students must explain and defend learning to the class—are the most robust solution.

Making speed the top organizational priority systematically destroys cross-team communication, shared infrastructure, and code quality. When deadlines are tight, teams skip expert input, bypass consensus, and eject from shared systems like design systems or codebases—creating duplicative, incompatible components that accumulate technical debt. Resolving system gaps requires the very conversations that speed culture eliminates, so teams duplicate and diverge, hiding time bombs for future engineers. AI tools worsen this dynamic because LLMs always say yes while colleagues might say no, letting engineers avoid difficult human conversations entirely. Documentation, security, performance, and developer satisfaction all erode under sustained speed pressure. Engineering Management's real job is aligning teams toward users and shared goals—not maximizing ticket throughput—and the counterintuitive antidote is slowing down to talk, which enables faster and more durable delivery.

Comments: Commenters broadly validate the piece from lived experience. One describes a team decimated by layoffs and burdened with speed mandates and mandatory AI adoption, where fear drives communication underground into DMs, debugging slows because everything changes at once, and exhaustion feeds further isolation. Others invoke "slow is smooth, smooth is fast" as a direct counter to move-fast-break-things culture. Some highlight that discussing what to build is not wasted time—it's one area where humans still hold an advantage over AI. Practical suggestions include encoding guardrails proactively in AGENTS files and commit hooks so teams can move faster within safe boundaries. One commenter notes that aligned, cooperative teams exhibit healthy behaviors naturally without mandate. A philosophical aside observes that cognitive load degrades communication while physical cooperative activities like trail running can facilitate deep conversation—raising questions about modern knowledge-work environments.

A community tool comparing anonymous token usage between Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7 finds 4.7 consumes 35–45% more tokens for identical prompts due to a new tokenizer mapping the same text to more tokens at the same per-token price. Anthropic's benchmark data shows 4.7 costs ~11% less overall due to fewer output tokens, but real-world users report dramatically faster limit consumption — some exhausting weekly quotas in hours. The tokenizer change compounds with more verbose output and invisible thinking tokens, pushing effective cost deltas closer to 1.5–2x. On reasoning-heavy tasks 4.7 may be cheaper (reasoning costs dropped ~50%), but lighter tasks cost more. Many users find quality improvements marginal for fine-grained coding, while others note genuine intelligence gains in conversational and design contexts. The situation sparked debate about whether pricing reflects real capability improvements or a de facto price hike through model versioning.

Comments: Users are sharply divided on Opus 4.7's value. Many report alarming limit consumption — exhausting weekly Max plan quotas within hours or just a few prompts — attributing this to the new tokenizer (~35–45% more tokens), verbose output, and invisible thinking tokens compounding to an effective 1.5–2x cost increase. API developers report unit economics breaking down, with a $10,000 bill becoming $13,500. Some prefer Opus 4.5 or 4.6 for better adherence to scoped instructions, and 4.7's default "xhigh effort" draws criticism for slower, costlier, sometimes worse results than 4.6 on medium effort. Others find 4.7 genuinely smarter — more self-critical and direct — and argue complaints reflect failure to adjust workflows per Anthropic's documented effort levels. A recurring concern is Anthropic's communication: alleged silent limit cuts, a temporarily degraded model before 4.7's launch, and contradictory messaging. Developers are evaluating Codex, open-source models, and Chinese alternatives like Qwen and GLM, with one multi-agent engineer noting Opus 4.7 and GPT-5.4 consumed identical weekly budget shares in a 10-hour parallel run.

Adobe's dominance faces pressure as competitors go free or slash prices. Autograph (After Effects rival) relaunched free for individuals after Maxon's acquisition. Canva made Cavalry free and merged Affinity Designer 2, Photo 2, and Publisher 2 into a single free app (previously $69.99 each). DaVinci Resolve 21 added Lightroom-rivaling photo editing and Affinity file support. Apple's $12.99/month Creator Studio bundles Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Pixelmator Pro, and more — a fifth of Adobe's $69.99 Creative Cloud Pro — while still offering one-time purchases. Blender, Figma's free tier, and Procreate (one-time, anti-AI, coming to Mac) further erode Adobe's ecosystem lock-in. Adobe continues charging $69.99/month for Creative Cloud Pro and $34.49/month for standalone After Effects, with subscription exit penalties. Aggressive cloud integration, ToS changes, and subscription-only pricing have alienated casual and power users, though Lightroom's masking tools remain technically competitive.

Comments: Users contrast Adobe's economics sharply: CS6 bought in 2012 for $549 lasted nine years, while a year of Creative Cloud Pro costs nearly the same now. Photographers acknowledge Lightroom's masking tools remain best-in-class and the $120/year bundle is tolerable, but new users face no switching costs. Rivals like Blackmagic and Canva are using pro software as loss leaders, while AI accelerates capable open-source alternatives. Hobbyists quietly paying monthly for years represent a poorly-defended revenue base. Adobe's 50% exit penalty on early subscription cancellation is flagged as a dark pattern. Some caution Maxon has its own user-trust issues with ZBrush. One user notes Adobe's revenue is up 12% YoY to $6.4B, suggesting enterprise retention remains strong. Others predict the real shift comes when students default to non-Adobe tools, mirroring Microsoft's consumer erosion. Linux creative tooling remains a gap.

Joe Armstrong, creator of Erlang, describes a minimal ticketing system invented by his colleague Peter Högfeldt in 1986. The system stores numbered text files with structured headers (ticket number, owner, status, title) checked into CVS version control, and generates reports simply by running grep against the files and piping to wc. Its longevity stems from its radical simplicity: users learn it quickly, bugs were ironed out decades ago, and it never tries to be everything to everyone. Armstrong contrasts this with bloated modern software that constantly changes and grows complex, arguing that a small, stable, well-understood tool outperforms feature-rich alternatives over time. The shell script shown — a one-liner grepping for 'status:open' across all ticket files — exemplifies this philosophy of composing small Unix tools rather than building monolithic systems.

Comments: Commenters debate what truly constitutes the "minimal" ticketing system, noting it actually depends on a broad stack: text files, an undefined encoding convention, implicit status rules in every user's head, a filesystem, shell with piping and globbing, grep, wc, CVS, and out-of-band social processes for ownership changes — raising the question of where the system boundary really lies. Others appreciate that such simplicity leads to longevity and trust, contrasting it with modern software that changes constantly. One commenter wishes the construction industry had similarly standardized issue tracking. The Unix philosophy discussion surfaces naturally, with users noting that composability works well for narrow tools but gets complicated for domain-rich software like financial tracking (e.g., GnuCash), where the "do one thing" principle breaks down when users reasonably expect bank integration and automation of tedious manual entry.

A browser-based demo converts natural language diagram descriptions into Excalidraw drawings using Gemma 4 E2B, running entirely client-side in Desktop Chrome 134+. The key optimization is the TurboQuant algorithm — combining polar quantization and QJL — which compresses the KV cache ~2.4×, enabling longer conversations within GPU memory limits. Rather than outputting raw Excalidraw JSON (~5,000 tokens), the LLM generates compact intermediate code (~50 tokens), dramatically reducing output length. The algorithm is implemented in WGSL compute shaders for GPU execution at 30+ tokens/second, while a companion npm package (turboquant-wasm) delivers the same algorithm via WASM+SIMD for CPU-side vector search. The demo requires WebGPU subgroup support and ~3GB RAM, which excludes Safari, iOS, and Firefox; mobile browsers cap well below the memory threshold.

Comments: Users find the demo technically impressive but encounter real-world barriers. One user on Chrome 147 — above the stated 134+ requirement — with an NVIDIA GTX 1060 (6GB VRAM) and 4GB+ free RAM still receives an "Unsupported browser/GPU" error, suggesting the WebGPU subgroup requirement is stricter than VRAM or Chrome version alone. Others note the absence of Firefox support as a limitation. Technical curiosity extends to whether alternative open models like Qwen would perform differently from Gemma. A recurring frustration among browser-based ML demo users is having to re-download large models for each separate demo, with a request for a shared CDN or fast downloader to eliminate redundant downloads across projects.

Before GPS, the B-52 used an electromechanical Astro Compass for celestial navigation, with the Angle Computer performing spherical trigonometry mechanically. It physically modeled the celestial sphere on a 2 5/8-inch half-sphere, positioning a star pointer via declination, local hour angle, and latitude inputs, then reading azimuth and altitude through synchro transmitters. The 19-component system tracked stars with a photomultiplier-tube telescope stabilized by gyroscopes, with navigators sourcing star data from the Air Almanac. Coordinate conversion used the "navigational triangle," linking fixed celestial coordinates to local horizontal ones via Greenwich and Local Hour Angles. The system also supported lines of position: comparing measured vs. expected star altitude let navigators draw positional lines, and three-star intersections yielded a location fix. Digital computers were rejected in 1963 as too expensive and unreliable; resolvers were rejected for size. The final design merged mechanical gearing, vacuum tubes, transistors, synchros, and servo amplifiers — soon obsoleted by digital technology.

Comments: Commenters highlight the analog-vs-digital inflection point of the early 1960s, when mechanical computers outperformed digital ones on cost, speed, and reliability. Parallels are drawn to naval fire control tables and Nike missile guidance — all following the same arc from human-cranked mechanisms to all-electric I/O. One commenter with B-52 knowledge notes angle computers were removed from H-models in the early-to-mid 1990s, replaced by inertial navigation systems. Technical questions arise about the asymmetric declination range (±90° vs. −47°) versus latitude limits, with speculation about pitch compensation. The spiral search pattern footnote — ±4° bearing, ±2.5° altitude — drew particular admiration. Related resources cited include a CuriousMarc YouTube series on the Astro Tracker, an Ars Technica piece on WWII battleship fire-control computers, and the Minuteman ICBM guidance system. The author's explicit "no AI" disclosure was broadly appreciated.

The binary GCD algorithm, rooted in ancient China and rediscovered by Josef Stein in 1967, avoids slow integer division by using only bitwise shifts, comparisons, and subtractions. While Euclid's algorithm spends ~90% of its time on the idiv instruction, the binary approach replaces divisions with __builtin_ctz (count trailing zeros) to strip all trailing even bits at once, nearly halving iterations via the geometric series argument. The naive branchy recursive implementation is actually slower than std::gcd, so three key optimizations are applied: stripping all powers of 2 up front with ctz, handling the even-even case only once at entry, and recognizing that after entering the odd-odd subtraction branch the result is always even, allowing the loop to stay exclusively in that branch. The resulting implementation runs in 116ns vs std::gcd's 198ns. A further critical-path optimization moves the __builtin_ctz call to operate on diff = b - a directly — since trailing zeros are sign-independent — decoupling it from the abs computation and shortening the dependency chain, bringing runtime to 91ns. The optimizations were originally developed by Daniel Lemire and Ralph Corderoy in 2013.

Comments: The single comment links to Daniel Lemire's original 2013 blog post describing this optimization, corroborating the article's acknowledgment that the core ideas originate from Lemire and Corderoy's Christmas 2013 work.

An airline employee was arrested in Dubai after sharing images of March 2026 Middle East bomb damage in a private WhatsApp group with colleagues. Police accessed the closed chat via "electronic monitoring operations," saved the evidence, then lured him to a meeting before arresting him. He faces charges of publishing information harmful to state interests—maximum two years—and remains in detention with the case escalated to State Security Prosecution. Advocacy group Detained in Dubai's CEO stated police explicitly confirmed conducting surveillance capable of detecting private WhatsApp messages. The UAE holds majority stakes in telecoms Etisalat and Du, giving security services broad network monitoring power. The UAE has also deployed Pegasus spyware, which can infiltrate devices via unanswered WhatsApp calls without user interaction, accessing all messages and contacts. Other tourists and airline crew have reportedly been detained merely for receiving content they never publicly shared.

Comments: Users debate whether Pegasus spyware, telecom-level surveillance, or an informant inside the group exposed the worker, noting UAE state ownership of telecoms already grants broad interception capability. The charge—publishing information harmful to state interests—is widely seen as suppression of embarrassing military damage footage, with observers noting such images would be public-interest journalism elsewhere and that Iran already has satellite-based damage assessment anyway. Many warn that Dubai grants visitors effectively zero rights despite heavy PR spending obscuring this. Privacy advocates argue the case reveals WhatsApp's practical limits in hostile jurisdictions, recommending hardened alternatives like SimpleX or Briar on GrapheneOS. A minority argue the law was publicly known and airline staff should have been briefed. Others note the arrest is counterproductive—it suppresses safety dialogue while making the damage far more widely known than it otherwise would have been.

A developer found a cheap USB RFID card reader and needed to capture its input exclusively, preventing it from spamming keypresses to other applications. USB RFID readers present themselves as HID keyboards, so without intervention their scanned output goes to whatever app has focus. The Linux kernel's EVIOCGRAB ioctl provides exclusive device access, and while Python libraries wrap it, the author preferred a dependency-free Go implementation. The device is located via /dev/input/by-id/, opened as a file, and grabbed with a raw syscall.Syscall to SYS_IOCTL. The program then reads binary inputEvent structs (matching the kernel's input_event layout: timestamps, type, code, value), filters for EV_KEY press events (value==1), maps Linux key codes to characters via a hardcoded keyMap, and buffers runes until KEY_ENTER (code 28) signals end-of-card, at which point the full RFID string is printed. On exit, EVIOCGRAB is released by passing a nil pointer as the third argument.

Comments: Nothing to summarize!

A New York-based blogger visiting SF for two weeks finds injectable GLP-1 drugs — retatrutide and tirzepatide from gray-market Chinese suppliers — have replaced AI as the dominant social currency at Bay Area parties. At a "spring gay peptide party," founders were building peptide companies, guests injected each other, and jello shots were served in syringes. Saying you "work in AI" now carries the same unimpressive weight as saying you work in tech. Extreme right-wing politics, once fashionable, have become widely embarrassing over six months, with figures like Curtis Yarvin ostracized. Tesla FSD reportedly improved dramatically and now beats human drivers, though still trails Waymo. SF's social dynamics are compared to high school cliques and a feudal system of tech "Great Houses." A SoMa warehouse doubles as a co-working space for young founders chanting to AI chatbots to escape the "permanent underclass." The city's culture of excess is attributed to high sincerity, where ideas escalate to radical extremes. The author prefers building an AI startup in NYC, arguing it enables focus on results over trend-chasing hype.

Comments: Critics argue the piece extrapolates a single social experience into sweeping cultural commentary. Longtime SF residents push back, noting they've lived there over a decade without encountering peptide parties, emphasizing the city is diverse and not defined by its tech scene. Commenters note the peptide trend follows a long pattern — nootropics, research chemicals, modafinil, steroids — and flag that bragging about injecting weight-loss drugs into people who don't need them is harmful, not quirky. One commenter draws parallels to SF's 1990s tech-party scene of heavy drug use, noting the culture has remained consistent across decades. Parallels to Joan Didion's 1967 "Slouching Towards Bethlehem" are invoked. The observation that SF rewards dangerously opinionated AI practitioners while NYC allows focus on actual results was cited as the most useful insight. Some question whether "sincere" is the right word, proposing "credulous" as more accurate. The framing of peptide users as cool rather than reckless drew pointed criticism from multiple readers.

Japan leads the world in rail at 28% of passenger kilometers—France manages 10%, Germany 6.4%, the US just 0.25%—driven by policy, not culture. The core model is "railway-as-city-builder": companies like Tokyu own housing, retail, and entertainment along corridors, capturing spillover value pure rail operators miss, a model pioneered by Hankyu founder Kobayashi Ichizo. Japan banned roadside parking in the 1950s and requires proof of off-street space before buying a car, starving city centers of parking. Liberal zoning and land readjustment—two-thirds of landowners can authorize replanning—enabled dense urban cores and easy station-area development. JNR's 1988 privatization into vertically integrated regional companies cut workforce by half, eliminated 83 loss-making lines, and freed JR companies to emulate the city-builder model. Fare maximums are set generously to preserve profit incentives; capital subsidies target specific public goods like level crossing removal. The article argues these policies are replicable: 19th-century American railroads used the same model before cars, restrictive zoning, and excessive price controls dismantled it.

Comments: Commenters agree privatized parking is underappreciated, recommending Donald Shoup's "The High Price of Free Parking." One commenter highlights that JR infrastructure is leased from agency JRTT—not privately owned—calling the system "hybridized" and pointing to FILP government loans as hidden state support; vertical integration is compared to Switzerland's fiber broadband model. Liberal zoning draws strong praise as the most replicable lesson for Western cities. Several challenge the framing: Japan's narrow geography concentrates population along a single corridor, giving structural advantages hard to replicate. Critics note China's metro expansion since 2005 is absent—11 of the top 12 metro systems by length are now Chinese. Some push back on pro-privatization framing, citing Argentina's collapsed rail. Others argue American railroads actively chose freight over passengers early in the 20th century, making decline a deliberate industry choice. US ideological opposition to conglomerate-owned transit and Japan's cross-party infrastructure consensus are cited as hard-to-transfer preconditions. Rural line closures and low Japanese wages also surface as downsides glossed over.

A software engineer with roughly a decade of experience has launched a solo consultancy targeting SMEs struggling with back-office operations—spreadsheet automation, brittle workflows, poor reporting, awkward integrations, and AI that works in production rather than just demos. Rather than building a generic agency, the founder wants to work with businesses that already feel operational pain. To attract initial clients, they're offering 10 free hours to the first five clients, and asking the community how they landed early consulting projects—whether through personal networks, content marketing, cold outreach, partnerships, or subcontracting.

Comments: Commenters overwhelmingly agree that personal networks and warm referrals are the most reliable path to early clients, with many saying first projects came from former colleagues or acquaintances. Community engagement in technical Slack groups and Discord also proved effective, with consistent helpfulness generating organic referrals. On Upwork, writing proposals as free mini-consultations—describing the client's exact problem and solution—outperformed competing on rate alone, enabling one consultant to raise rates from $70 to $95/hr after reviews landed. Open source contributions gave several consultants credibility and inbound interest. Experienced consultants caution against free-hours offers, suggesting a free initial consultation followed by paid discovery instead. The market is described as significantly more crowded post-COVID, with cold outreach seen as largely ineffective. Differentiating through deep niche expertise, showing a human face on the website, and video outreach were highlighted as trust-builders. Several veterans emphasize that consulting requires marketing, sales, and admin overhead beyond technical work, and that without a network, success is very difficult.

IPv6 was never merely "IPv4 with more addresses" — it was a radical redesign intended to eliminate Layer 2 bridging, MAC addresses, ARP, DHCP, and broadcast domains entirely. The mess began when IP was grafted onto bus-topology LANs, requiring MAC addresses, ARP to map IP destinations to hardware, and DHCP for address assignment. Bridging emerged as a hardware-fast workaround for interconnecting LANs, creating a largely undebuggable parallel infrastructure alongside IP routing. IPv6 designers in the early 1990s recognized all of this and aimed to obsolete it, but fatally neglected mobile IP — keeping sessions alive across address changes. The root flaw is TCP/UDP's 4-tuple (src IP, src port, dst IP, dst port) crossing Layers 3 and 4, tying sessions to addresses. The fix would be Layer-4-only session UUIDs so sessions survive address changes; QUIC's connection IDs already approximate this. Meanwhile, LTE keeps mobile IP working only by tunneling all traffic to a central bridged megaLAN — costly and high-latency. Until TCP/UDP are replaced and IPv4 retired, bridging, ARP, NAT, and SDN remain necessary crutches, preventing the elegant internet IPv6 originally promised.

Comments: Commenters largely find the networking history illuminating, with several calling it among the best blog posts on the subject and noting the author is Tailscale's CEO. One commenter defends ARP, arguing it usefully enables LAN IP networking without a mandatory router. A sharp critic challenges the mobile IP solution, noting the server can't route return packets to a client whose Layer 3 address changed until receiving an updated packet, that UUID session IDs without authentication invite DoS floods, and the fix ultimately requires the same QUIC-style encryption-first design anyway. Another notes IPv6 already supports stateless autoconfiguration via MAC addresses, questioning the framing. The observation that "layers are only ever added, never removed" resonates widely, with users lamenting entrenched legacy makes clean redesigns nearly impossible. The article's own footnote — clarifying the roaming fix needs neither IPv6 nor NAT elimination — is seen as a significant concession. One commenter notes IPv6 was conceived around 1990 yet only recently crossed 50% adoption, illustrating how slowly internet-layer change propagates.

A writer reflects on traveling to New York with friends she met through repeated viewings of Operation Mincemeat, a Broadway musical about British WWII spies who fooled Hitler with a fake corpse and forged documents. What began as solo theatergoing evolved into a Twitter community, Discord, and WhatsApp group, culminating in a transatlantic trip with dozens of like-minded fans. She draws a parallel between the show's theme — misfits pursuing an unlikely plan — and her own experience of unlikely friendship through shared obsession. She pushes back against cultural pressure to appear detached and ironic, arguing enthusiasm is mistaken for immaturity when deep caring is how meaningful connection happens. Quoting a reworked Tennyson, she argues it's better to care about something you can't control than to care about nothing, especially in a cynical era. Her core message: find something you love, find others who love it too, and refuse to apologize for it.

Comments: Commenters largely embrace the post's message while sharpening its edges. Several note the real mechanism is self-selection: people willing to fly across the world for a niche interest are precisely the most motivated, passionate people worth befriending — one commenter recounts flying from Australia to Eurovision and accidentally co-founding a national fan community. Others push back on framing, arguing "cool" by definition means detached, so the post is better read as "it's good, not cool, to care." A dissenting voice urges the author to interrogate why they like specific things rather than celebrating caring in the abstract. Others observe the internet makes niche obsession socially viable by connecting globally isolated fans. Several note the aloof persona is often a defensive adaptation against ridicule, and that the most interesting people share the trait of deep, specific passion regardless of subject. One commenter notes simply: "Went to the theatre and liked it."

A critical RCE vulnerability (GHSA-xq3m-2v4x-88gg) was disclosed in protobuf.js, a JavaScript Protocol Buffers library with ~50M weekly npm downloads. The flaw stems from the library building JavaScript functions by concatenating unvalidated schema-derived identifiers and executing them via the Function() constructor. An attacker supplying a malicious schema can inject arbitrary code executed when the app processes messages, enabling access to credentials, databases, internal systems, and lateral movement. Developer machines loading untrusted schemas locally are also at risk. Discovered by Endor Labs researcher Cristian Staicu on March 2, a patch landed on GitHub March 11 and npm April 4 (8.x) / April 15 (7.x). Users should upgrade to 8.0.1 or 7.5.5. The patch strips non-alphanumeric characters from type names; Endor recommends eliminating Function() for attacker-reachable identifiers entirely as a longer-term fix. No active exploitation has been observed, though a public PoC exists and exploitation is described as straightforward. Additional mitigations include auditing transitive dependencies, treating schema-loading as untrusted input, and using precompiled static schemas.

Comments: Users question the practical attack surface, asking how an attacker could realistically supply a malicious schema and whether that capability could simply be disabled — implying that loading untrusted schemas may not be a common deployment pattern. A separate viewpoint broadens the criticism beyond this specific flaw, characterizing JavaScript and TypeScript as fundamentally flawed languages and the npm ecosystem as a systemic security liability, though no technical specifics are offered to support that position.