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Hacker News

Deezer reports AI-generated tracks now make up 44% of all new uploads, with nearly 75,000 arriving daily — up from 10,000/day in January 2025 when its detection tool launched. Despite the surge, actual consumption is just 1-3% of total streams, and 85% of those are flagged as fraudulent and demonetized. AI-tagged tracks are excluded from algorithmic recommendations and editorial playlists, and Deezer has stopped storing hi-res versions of AI tracks. The platform has tagged over 13.4 million AI tracks since becoming the first major streamer to do so in June 2025. A Deezer survey found 97% of listeners couldn't distinguish AI music from human-made, 52% felt AI songs shouldn't appear in mainstream charts, and 80% wanted clear labeling. An AI track recently topped iTunes charts in five countries. French rival Qobuz announced AI-tagging plans in February, while Spotify and Apple Music rely on distributor-led transparency with low-quality filters. Deezer CEO Alexis Lanternier urged the broader music ecosystem to act to safeguard artists' rights and promote transparency.

Comments: Users observe AI music flooding across platforms — roughly 20% of SubmitHub promotion submissions are AI-generated, with 25% of those attempting to hide origins using scripts that scrub audio artifacts to bypass detectors. Detection methods discussed include identifying compression artifacts from training data. Despite alarming upload numbers, users argue practical impact is limited: 85% of AI-track streams are bot-driven and demonetized, so real listeners rarely encounter them organically — similar to obscure human artists with under 50 monthly listeners. The winner-take-most nature of streaming means high upload volume doesn't translate to audience exposure, a reality communities like r/SunoAI are learning. Users frame unlabeled AI uploads as scammer behavior and anticipate a trend toward verified-human platforms where artist humanity is formally established. Some expect traditional publishers to reassert their role as curators, and others question whether Spotify and Apple Music have clear stances on AI-generated content at all.

A CMU study (ICSE 2026) identified ~6 million suspected fake stars across 18,617 repos via 301,000 accounts, with AI/LLM repos the largest non-malicious category. Stars sell for $0.03–$0.85 each on Fiverr, dedicated websites, and Telegram, with aged-account packages surviving GitHub's detection. VCs explicitly use star counts as sourcing signals: Redpoint found the seed median is 2,850 stars, creating manipulation ROI up to 117,000x. An independent analysis of 20 repos found manipulated projects with 52–81% zero-follower accounts and fork-to-star ratios as low as 0.017 versus Flask's 0.235 baseline. Union Labs topped Runa Capital's ROSS Index with 47.4% suspected fake stars; FreeDomain's 157,000 stars yielded just 168 watchers. The FTC's 2024 rule bans fake social influence metrics ($53,088/violation), and SEC wire-fraud precedent from HeadSpin exposes founders who inflate fundraising metrics. GitHub removes flagged repos but leaves 57% of fake accounts intact. Researchers recommend network-centrality-weighted metrics — a fix GitHub has not implemented.

Comments: Commenters broadly question why VCs rely on GitHub stars, comparing it to drafting athletes by Instagram followers; most evaluate repos via commit recency, issue quality, and code review. Several share firsthand accounts: one watched a Series B startup lose 80% of its star count after GitHub revocations post-raise; another's genuine 6,000-star project is now indistinguishable from manipulation. Goodhart's Law dominates — once stars become a target they cease to be useful — and the same dynamic is noted across npm downloads and social media followers. Commenters debate the fork-to-star heuristic, noting most software is consumed via package registries, not forks. Some suggest GitHub implement PageRank-style weighted metrics or simply purchase stars from vendors to ban involved accounts. The VC incentive structure is defended as rational herd behavior, though published benchmarks (2,850 seed stars) are seen as a manipulation price list. One notes AI tools already default to querying star counts when assessing projects, amplifying the problem.

Posit has released an alpha of ggsql, a standalone visualization tool blending SQL syntax with the grammar of graphics popularized by ggplot2. Using clauses like VISUALIZE, DRAW, PLACE, SCALE, and LABEL, users build plots incrementally rather than choosing predefined chart types. It targets SQL-focused analysts who lack R or Python expertise, offering a reproducible alternative to GUI-based BI tools. Backends include DuckDB and SQLite; output renders via Vega-Lite. A key advantage is efficiency: the full data pipeline executes as a single SQL query per layer, fetching only aggregated values rather than raw rows — viable for billion-row datasets. Written in Rust, it embeds more easily into third-party tools than bundling a language runtime, and its sandboxable nature suits agentic AI workflows. LLM compatibility is a stated goal, as models already generate SQL well. Posit says ggplot2 development will continue alongside ggsql. Planned additions include a Rust-based high-performance writer, theming, interactivity, spatial data support, and a full language server.

Comments: Commenters express enthusiasm but also confusion — the documentation does not clearly explain whether ggsql runs queries inside an actual database or uses SQL-like syntax handled client-side, with the FAQ and homepage giving conflicting signals. One commenter eventually concluded it is a standalone app with DuckDB/SQLite backends rendering via Vega-Lite. Others question whether extending ggplot2 to support dbplyr table objects would have achieved the same goal without a new language. The CLI producing only Vega-Lite JSON without a built-in renderer is flagged as a gap. Several users draw parallels to their own work: a graph query language (GFQL) built for similar LLM-friendly analytics, a SQL-described dashboarding tool (TaleShape), and a Slack analytics bot. The potential for ggsql to become a DuckDB extension is raised as a compelling direction. Questions about ggplot2 extension ecosystem compatibility, Excel export, and the backend architecture (noting absence of D3/Vega in Cargo.toml) reflect deeper curiosity about deployment. The general consensus is that the layered approach solves real problems and the tool fills a genuine gap for SQL-native analysts.

A blog post analyzed wearable data from 256 users across ~59,000 daily records to examine sauna's same-day effect on nighttime heart rate, using a within-person design where each user served as their own control. The key finding: minimum nighttime HR dropped ~3 bpm (~5%) on sauna days, surviving controls for activity level. The leading hypothesis is elevated parasympathetic tone from post-sauna cooling carrying into sleep. A notable sex-based finding: in women, the effect only exceeded Cohen's d > 0.2 during the luteal phase, not follicular. Major limitations include no data on sauna type, duration, temperature, session timing, or dose-response; reverse causation and selection bias (health-conscious wearable users) were also flagged. Surprisingly, the effect exceeded what the same users showed on comparable-intensity exercise days.

Comments: Commenters flagged that using "n=59,000" in the headline is misleading — n traditionally denotes participants, making the real sample of 256 far less impressive. Critics said the work wouldn't pass peer review due to underspecified methodology and unaddressed confounders, especially hydration (sauna users drink more water, and hydration directly affects HR). Others questioned whether lower nighttime HR is a meaningful goal versus merely a proxy. Practical comparisons noted that consistent rope-jumping dropped one user's resting HR by 6 bpm, and that exercise typically raises short-term HR before recovering. The luteal/follicular sex-difference finding drew curiosity. Some challenged Finland's sauna reputation by noting Norway and Japan have higher life expectancies, arguing weight remains the dominant longevity factor. A few dismissed the post as AI-written, and one commenter asked why it was a blog post rather than a peer-reviewed paper.

A magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck Japan and was later revised up to M7.7, with no major tsunami materializing despite the Japan Meteorological Agency forecasting waves up to 3 meters (10 feet); initial recorded waves reached only 40cm. The quake was felt across multiple prefectures, including Tokyo and Aomori, where office workers received cellphone early warnings seconds before shaking arrived. Experience varied sharply by location and elevation — on Tokyo's 14th floor the shaking felt notably strong and prolonged, while some at street level barely noticed it at all. The motion was widely described as slow and rolling, like being on mildly choppy water, rather than violent. Japan's NERV app provided push notifications with animated epicenter shockwave displays and countdown timers, giving one user 45 seconds of advance warning before shaking began. The event coincided with RubyKaigi 2026 beginning in Hakodate, Hokkaido, roughly 200–250 km from the affected region. Observers note that M7.0+ earthquakes occur in Japan several times per year, and with this one centered in the ocean, significant damage is unlikely.

Comments: Users across Japan reported sharply varied experiences — those on upper floors in Tokyo felt sustained, strong shaking, while others at street level noticed nothing without checking the news. Aomori residents received cellphone early warnings before shaking arrived, which caught foreign colleagues experiencing their first Japanese earthquake off guard. One user credited Japan's NERV app with providing up to 45 seconds of advance warning via animated shockwave displays and wave countdown timers, describing it as sci-fi in practice. The quake was initially reported as M7.4 before revision to M7.7; the JMA forecast up to 3-meter tsunami waves, but actual recorded waves peaked at just 40cm with no major tsunami. Users emphasize M7.0+ earthquakes are routine in Japan several times annually, and the oceanic origin limits expected damage. RubyKaigi 2026 attendees heading to Hakodate were wished safety. Commenters also raised whether the Richter scale or moment magnitude scale was being used — the Richter scale is largely obsolete in modern seismology — and at least one user joked that seeing "M 7.4" triggered thoughts of AI model naming.

A developer instrumented nginx to capture user-agent, Accept header, referrer, and IP, then prompted ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, and Gemini with unique query strings to test live-fetch behavior. ChatGPT-User/1.0 fetched live with a Chrome-style Accept header, skipped robots.txt, and arrived from multiple Azure IP ranges — single-IP rate limiting undercounts it. Claude-User/1.0 checked /robots.txt first on every run from Anthropic's 216.73.216.0/24 range, then fetched with a wildcard Accept. Perplexity-User fetched directly with no Accept header or referrer; a separate PerplexityBot handled robots.txt, and Perplexity can also answer from its own index. Gemini sent zero requests; Google has no retrieval-specific user-agent — Gemini grounds on the Googlebot-populated index, making it indistinguishable from ordinary Search. Blocking Google-Extended gates Gemini training eligibility but does not block Googlebot. The author defines three distinct bot classes — retrieval agents, search-indexing crawlers, and training crawlers — warning that conflating them corrupts AI-traffic metrics.

Comments: Readers widely suspect the article was written by an LLM, citing vague phrasing and non-sequiturs. One notes the piece implies "silence from Google is not evidence of no fetch," yet zero log entries plainly is evidence of no live fetch — the distinction matters for understanding how current Gemini answers will be. Others flag that listed IPs fall in reserved/bogon ranges (e.g., 203.0.113.0/24), suggesting undisclosed obfuscation. One humorously distills findings: ChatGPT is a distributed multi-IP requester, Claude is the polite rule-follower, Perplexity occasionally shows up, and Google was already in your house via prior crawls. A reader asks whether any assistant negotiates text/markdown Accept headers (the article says no). One notes it's trivially easy to serve prompt-injection text to ChatGPT-User requests. Several users argue AI-scraping debates lack nuance: live retrieval agents acting on user queries differ fundamentally from training crawlers in both intent and appropriate response, and conflating them produces misleading metrics.

A Firefox extension called "awawausb" adds WebUSB support by pairing a browser add-on with a native messaging stub written in Rust, bridging Firefox's lack of built-in WebUSB. Installation requires both the .xpi extension and a platform-specific binary (available for macOS x86_64/ARM64, Linux x86_64/aarch64, Windows AMD64/ARM64), with an install script that registers a native manifest so Firefox can locate the stub. The manifest is a JSON file placed in OS-specific directories or, on Windows, pointed to via registry keys under HKLM/HKCU. Building from source uses cargo build, with Linux targeting musl libc for broad distro compatibility and Windows targeting mingw-w64/UCRT. Known limitations include issues with shared NFS home directories across CPU architectures and Windows roaming profiles, stemming from absolute paths in the native manifest design. macOS 10.15+ is required (12+ recommended), Windows 10+, and Linux kernel 4.8+ with udev and specific USBDEVFS capabilities. The architecture is documented separately in Documentation/architecture.md.

Comments: Users highlight a real-world motivation: flashing GrapheneOS on a Pixel is already fully doable via WebUSB in Chromium, but requires launching Chrome — exactly the Chrome-exclusivity problem this extension addresses. Supporters argue WebUSB enables cross-platform hardware access without platform-specific drivers, and that combined with Web Serial (which just reached Firefox mainline), these APIs could eliminate the need for Chrome entirely. IoT developers note WebUSB and Web Bluetooth together would allow purely web-based device apps, bypassing app store friction. Critics raise significant concerns: websites accessing USB hardware feels like an overreach, the spec is still in draft, sandboxing is unproven, and software longevity is questionable — hardware drivers written today may not work in 10–15 years. Some users question the use case of web-managed hardware that could disappear if a service shuts down, and note that back-button hijacking already isn't reliably prevented, making full USB access seem premature. The native stub approach is acknowledged as a useful proof-of-concept but not a long-term solution. Firefox Android support was raised as a desired target.

On April 26, 1986, Iryna and Serhiy married in Pripyat while Chernobyl reactor four exploded 4km away, releasing 400x more radiation than Hiroshima. Soviet authorities suppressed information and told residents to proceed with planned events; children went to school and the wedding went ahead, the couple dancing out of rhythm as anxiety mounted. Hours after their wedding night, friends warned them of a 5am evacuation train — Iryna ran barefoot in her wedding dress through puddles. Days later, doctors found Iryna three months pregnant; despite radiation warnings, she delivered a healthy daughter who became a mother herself. Engineer Nikolai Solovyov witnessed colleagues die of acute radiation sickness; the official toll is 31, though broader estimates reach tens of thousands. Estonian liquidators cleared radioactive roof debris in 20kg lead suits, working one-minute shifts. A concrete sarcophagus was built in seven months; a £1.3bn metal dome replaced it in 2016 but was compromised by a Russian drone strike in 2024. Russian forces occupied the plant in 2022; a missile struck their daughter's Kyiv flat, prompting their move to Berlin — displaced twice, by nuclear disaster and war.

Comments: The sole comment highlights Serhiy sleeping on a kitchen mattress the night before his wedding, remarking on it as emblematic of cramped Soviet-era living conditions — a small but vivid cultural detail grounding the story in the material reality of USSR life.

Moonshot AI has open-sourced Kimi K2.6, focused on long-horizon coding, multi-agent orchestration, and autonomous execution, available via API at $0.95/$4.00 per million tokens. K2.6 autonomously optimized a Zig-based inference engine over 12 hours and 4,000+ tool calls, boosting throughput from ~15 to ~193 tokens/sec, and overhauled an 8-year-old financial matching engine in 13 hours with 1,000+ tool calls, achieving a 185% medium throughput gain. The Agent Swarm now scales to 300 concurrent sub-agents across 4,000 coordinated steps—up from K2.5's 100/1,500—enabling parallel delivery of documents, websites, and slides. New "Claw Groups" lets heterogeneous human and AI agents across any device collaborate in a shared workspace coordinated by K2.6. Benchmarks show SWE-Bench Verified 80.2, LiveCodeBench v6 89.6, BrowseComp 83.2, and AIME 2026 96.4, broadly matching Claude Opus 4.6 and GPT-5.4 on most agentic and coding tasks while trailing on reasoning and vision.

Comments: Users express surprise Kimi hasn't gained more mainstream attention, with K2.5 praised for design tasks but noted as weak on backend work. The $0.95/$4.00 pricing draws strong interest, with observers saying it could undercut Anthropic if performance holds. Several users flag that key benchmarks—including HLE and internal ones like Kimi Code Bench and Claw Bench—are proprietary and hard to independently reproduce. Hardware requirements are questioned, with users assuming full-precision unquantized weights beyond consumer hardware; HuggingFace weights and Unsloth GGUF quants (in progress) are already linked. Some draw DeepSeek parallels, framing K2.6 as a potential "Chinese AI moment" for open-source frontier parity. One commenter notes the irony of China leading open-source AI while US labs close their models. A philosophical observation flags that K2.6's self-optimization demo—iteratively improving its own inference code—edges toward LLMs improving themselves. Users frustrated with Anthropic's quota reductions and KYC requirements see K2.6 as a viable alternative.

A developer compares OpenClaw/NemoClaw's security model to MS-DOS, arguing both bolt security on from outside rather than building it in foundationally. Using an anecdote about Walmart running payment card data on shared-password DOS machines (breached 2006, disclosed 2009), the author argues OpenClaw's workarounds — binding Ollama to 0.0.0.0 across a network namespace, pairing identity through the chat channel, approving outbound connections at the network boundary — are symptoms of a design that didn't separate concerns early. The author contrasts this with Wirken.AI, their own gateway, which keeps inference on loopback, isolates each channel as a separate Ed25519-keyed process, runs the vault out-of-process, and enforces permissions at the tool dispatch layer. A step-by-step comparison table shows Wirken avoids most NemoClaw setup complexity because the agent runs as a host process. Audit log excerpts demonstrate hash-chained attestation, a read-only rootfs sandbox, and tier-based command approval. The piece concludes Unix's 1973 principles — process separation, user separation, file permissions — remain the correct model for agent security.

Comments: Users largely agree OpenClaw's security posture is immature. One notes DOS lacked CPU rings and MMU support at the hardware level, making the analogy imperfect but the lesson valid. Others frame both DOS and OpenClaw as tech-debt-by-design — shortcuts that ship fast then persist too long. Practical users report running OpenClaw on cheap VPS instances with read-only credentials and finding genuine productivity value, though acknowledging it's a security risk. A recurring concern is prompt injection enabling data exfiltration: even strong tool-layer sandboxing doesn't protect an agent that reads both private data and the open internet. Several commenters criticize the curl-pipe-bash install despite signature verification, arguing only GPG-signed releases from airgapped keys are trustworthy — and noting the author critiques OpenClaw's security while distributing via curl-pipe-sh. The $180/month local inference cost draws skepticism. Others propose workflow-engine architectures where each AI task deploys as a minimally privileged separate app. The consensus is that tool-granularity sandboxing is the right direction, but the ecosystem broadly hasn't adopted it.

Palantir's 22-point manifesto, summarizing its 2025 book "The Technological Republic" by CEO Alexander Karp and Nicholas Zamiska, argues Silicon Valley owes a "moral debt" to the U.S. and must build AI weapons and assist domestic policing. It frames consumer tech (iPhones, free email) as cultural "decadence" and dismisses ethical debates over AI weaponization. It calls national service a "universal duty" while urging the public to defer to elites and stop "snickering" at billionaires, and endorses cultural stereotyping, calling some cultures "dysfunctional." Critics note Palantir's tools already power predictive policing and Gaza military operations, and that partner Thorn used its facial recognition to target sex workers. The newsletter also covers Reese Witherspoon's vague AI-adoption push, AI's growing authorship-attribution capability, and how the third-party doctrine erodes Fourth Amendment privacy protections.

Comments: Commenters largely reject Palantir's draft proposal, arguing conscription only works within a functioning social contract the U.S. currently lacks—given inadequate healthcare, education, and economic stability. Several insist war hawks like Karp should lead from the front rather than advocate others' sacrifice. Others agree that shared risk leads to more restrained war-making, and that full transparency on war costs—historically hidden through off-budget spending and unaudited Pentagon funds—would naturally reduce conflicts. Some view Palantir's "moral debt" framing as hypocritical, since the company surveils citizens for an anti-democratic elite and would likely reverse its stance under a redistributive government. A few question what real value Palantir provides the government, suggesting the draft push may be a bid for cheap tech labor. The consensus is that the manifesto serves oligarchic interests, with some calling Palantir itself a greater threat to democracy than foreign adversaries.

A founder building a P2P crowdshipping marketplace — where travelers carry packages between cities for senders — faces the classic chicken-and-egg bootstrapping problem ahead of MVP launch. Travelers won't join without packages, and senders won't post without travelers. The founder seeks concrete tactics from two-sided marketplace builders to achieve their first 50–100 transactions, asking whether manual matching, subsidizing one side, or geographic constraint worked in practice. Existing competitors mentioned include Roadie and Uship. Commenters raise serious legal and safety concerns around drug trafficking, customs liability, and package contents — noting that unlike ridesharing, couriers bear risk for unknown items. Competing on price against FedEx is also structurally difficult given volume advantages, and without geographic density even large user bases produce no matches.

Comments: Commenters converge on three tactics: be one side of the market yourself (as DoorDash and Uber's founders did), constrain to a single route or city first, and manually match the first 50–100 transactions before automating. Multiple founders recommend "The Cold Start Problem" by Andrew Chen. The Infura cofounder shares bootstrapping a blockchain API marketplace by focusing supply-side first with an existing customer base, growing to 40+ providers over two years. Others suggest seeding via small business outreach (auto shops, event planners, medical equipment) and subsidizing the harder-to-recruit side. Drug trafficking risk is flagged repeatedly as a potentially disqualifying concern unique to this model, and several commenters warn that organic bootstrapping without capital is extremely difficult in 2026.

Rice University engineers developed the Meta-NFS (metamaterial-inspired near-field electromagnetic structure), solving a decade-old printed electronics bottleneck: curing conductive ink on heat-sensitive surfaces without damage. Acting like a microwave magnifying glass, it concentrates energy into under 200 micrometers, heating only the deposited ink above 160°C while surroundings stay cool. Unlike furnace or laser sintering, it heats from within the ink, achieving 79.5% power transfer versus 8.5% for standard probes, using graphene absorbing up to 50% of microwave energy. Real-time power tuning programs nanoparticle crystal structure mid-print, varying silver ink resistivity across three orders of magnitude. The team printed onto a living leaf, plastic, silicone, paper, and bovine femur bone — including a wireless strain sensor. Medical applications include sensors on ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (used in hip/knee implants) monitoring wear without structural changes; a silicone-encapsulated circuit survived submersion for over 300 seconds. Future targets include ingestible diagnostics, organ-interfacing bionics, and soft robotics.

Comments: Users note that printing electronics directly onto bone and living tissue surpasses most sci-fi imaginings, with some pointing to related prior work from Applied Science on YouTube as complementary context. A key practical question raised is whether the technique handles full circuit components — resistors, ICs, and the like — since the demonstrated examples appear limited to passive structures like antennas, grids, and microsprings rather than complete circuits. Others are curious about the timeline for consumer desktop PCB fabrication, given the paper's claim of a "desktop-size printer." A few comments are more whimsical, joking about microwave cooking analogies and speculating about electronic tattoos as a near-term application.

Amazon's decision to cut Kindle Store access for pre-2013 devices starting May 20, 2026 — including a factory-reset lock that renders devices unusable — has prompted a sharp critique of the Kindle ecosystem. The author argues Amazon has shifted from reader-focused hardware to a storefront portal, with a UI unchanged since 2018 that buries personal libraries under Kindle Unlimited ads. Amazon's AI reading assistant roadmap raises privacy concerns, as the platform tracks page-turn speed, skipped sections, and highlights to feed LLMs. By contrast, Kobo partners with iFixit for repairability, supports native OverDrive/Libby library integration, and uses the open ePub format, while Boox devices run full Android with Google Play and superior Carta 1300 e-ink panels. Amazon now allows DRM-free ePub/PDF downloads for select publisher-opted titles since January 2026, and the author recommends Calibre with DRM-removal plugins to preserve existing Kindle libraries locally. The verdict: Kobo for best reading experience, Boox for an open e-ink tablet, and Calibre to truly own your books.

Comments: Commenters are divided. Some push back, noting pre-2013 devices received over a decade of support — longer than most consumer electronics — and that there's no guarantee competitors will fare better long-term. Several users question whether the "paperweight" claim is accurate, asking if books can still be managed via amazon.com and sent to older devices, and whether library borrowing via Libby will still function. Kindle Unlimited is cited as a key reason to stay, with users noting that manually tracking down and transferring ePubs is a poor substitute. Others who have tested Boox and Kobo report noticeably laggy UIs — ironic given Kindle's own performance limitations — and one user remains loyal to physical page-turn buttons Amazon no longer supports. A recurring structural critique targets ebook price parity with physical books as the root cause of e-reader market stagnation. A minority fully agree with the article's conclusion and recommend Kobo outright, while one user has already switched to a Boox Page. DRM is widely seen as the underlying problem driving poor experience across all platforms.

Database seeding is portable but drifts from production, misses real edge cases, requires ongoing maintenance, and slows as data grows. Traditional branching involves full pg_dump/pg_restore cycles that double storage costs and take hours. Copy-on-write (CoW) changes this: a new branch shares parent storage blocks and only writes new blocks when data changes. Neon uses WAL-level CoW (branch = pointer to a WAL position), while Xata uses block-level CoW via volume snapshots, booting a new Postgres instance from a shared snapshot. Branch creation takes seconds and cost scales with post-branch writes, not database size. The key use case is migration rehearsal on realistic data — running a migration on millions of rows reveals issues like needing CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY that a 200-row seed never exposes. The pattern also supports per-PR preview environments, staging-based debugging, and safe destructive experimentation. Seeding remains better for small predictable unit test fixtures, offline workflows, and rapidly changing schemas. Privacy requires data scrubbing or built-in anonymization when branching production-like data.

Comments: Users note the indexing justification for branching is weak — modern hardware indexes millions of rows in seconds, and engineers already know to use CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY in production; HypoPG can simulate indexes without building them. A better example would be validating large schema changes like normalizing JSON blobs. Enterprise storage arrays with always-on deduplication already provide similar block-level capabilities. Some users note that vanilla Postgres with BTRFS or ZFS already supports CoW cloning, questioning why Xata needs a separate Postgres instance per replica and a network filesystem. Dolt is cited as a prior Git-like DB branching attempt that proved complex and slow. Neon is praised as a production-ready alternative. One user recalls a 25-year-old Oracle setup with isolated per-developer database playgrounds reset in minutes. Datomic and XTDB are mentioned as immutable databases where temporal branching is natural. At least one commenter flags the post as AI-generated content marketing.

Three Linux kernel IPC proposals are making their way through the community with varying levels of maturity. First, Mathura Kumar proposes mq_timedreceive2(), a new system call extending POSIX message queues with a MQ_PEEK flag (non-destructive read) and an index argument to access messages by queue position — useful for monitoring tools and CRIU checkpoint/restore — though the series needs more review attention. Second, Daniel Hodges proposes a native io_uring IPC mechanism using shared ring buffers and channel-based SEND/RECV operations aimed at high-bandwidth, low-copy IPC similar to D-Bus; maintainer Jens Axboe endorsed the concept but flagged signs of LLM-assisted code, missing features like credential management, and unanswered questions, leaving the work as an incomplete proof-of-concept needing significant polish. Third, David Rheinsberg revives bus1 — a D-Bus-like kernel IPC subsystem he originally proposed in 2016 — now reimplemented in Rust, stripping the design to basics and trading refcount/lifetime complexity for C-to-Rust bridge challenges; Rheinsberg is currently focused on improving the Rust integration before broader kernel community exposure.

Comments: Nothing to summarize!

SDF (Super Dimension Fortress) Public Access UNIX System, established in 1987 and named after the Macross anime series, is a nonprofit (501(c)(7)) that provides free public shell accounts on a network of NetBSD servers. Users connect via SSH to a menu system, with access to vintage operating systems including VMS and Plan 9. The system offers web hosting, a radio station, gopher, IRC, and personal homepages, positioning itself as a living museum of internet culture and old-school computing. Its FAQ notes the network delivers 21.1 GFLOPS of combined processing power — a figure dwarfed by a single 2017 consumer GPU like the GTX 1080 Ti at ~11,300 GFLOPS, underscoring how much compute has advanced. SDF is notably run by Stephen Jones, also associated with the Vintage Computer Festival PNW in Seattle, and has preserved hardware from the Living Computer Museum before its closure.

Comments: Users express deep affection for SDF as a rare "old-school web" stronghold, praising its community, reliability, and breadth — including vintage OS access (VMS, Plan 9), web hosting, and a radio station. Some have run their own similar public UNIX shells (notably an IPv6-only OpenBSD system) inspired by SDF's model. One user notes an unresolved SSL certificate issue affecting validated accounts. A security concern was raised by a user who found a shell escape vulnerability for unverified accounts and reported it twice via email and IRC without response, now considering public disclosure. Commenters also highlight SDF's connection to Macross anime lore, its preservation of Living Computer Museum hardware, and operator Stephen Jones's reputation in the retro computing scene. Nostalgia runs throughout, with users recalling early DEC Alpha days and the compute gap between SDF's 21.1 GFLOP cluster and modern GPUs. A reported vulnerability disclosure dilemma — wait longer, retry, or publish — drew no direct advice from the thread.

A filmmaker built a homemade depth-of-field adapter — "Lampone" — for extreme shallow focus using a Charles Beseler 18" Series III projector lens (~125mm aperture, 457mm focal length) bought for ~€200. Wide apertures require large lenses that zoom heavily, and combining wide field-of-view with huge aperture is physically impossible without dismantling a camera. The workaround: a "fake sensor" of Lee Filters 251 Quarter White Diffusion film sandwiched in glass in a 40×30cm picture frame receives the projected image, which a regular camera then photographs — sidestepping the need for a physically impossible 42×29cm sensor. Bellows blocking stray light were hand-folded from IKEA SCHOTTIS curtains; a 40×30cm Fresnel lens corrects vignetting. After testing paper, wax, baking paper, frosted window film, and diffusion film, the Lee filter gave the best results. The finished rig is ~120cm long, loses ~3 stops of light, has a long minimum focus distance, and shows some diffusion texture and Fresnel pattern — all flagged for improvement. Results were used in a short film.

Comments: Users note that commercially available lenses like the 7Artisans 50mm f/1.05 offer strong bokeh affordably without custom builds. The wax diffusion experiment draws curiosity but concern — wax's low melting point risks problems during hot shoots or heating cycles. Several debate the cultural fixation on shallow depth of field, noting cinema historically pursued deep focus, making this reversal philosophically interesting. Nikon Z's wide throat is cited as more aperture-friendly than Sony's narrow mount. Alternatives proposed include a scanner back (eliminating the diffusion screen) and a hypercentric lens. One user catches a critical typo: "we're not able to get an usable image" should read "we're now able," reversing the sentence's meaning. Skeptics note that large-format cameras with scanner backs already achieve this aesthetic commercially, framing the project as a rediscovery. A retrofocus wide-angle design is raised as a counterpoint to the claim that wide-angle plus large aperture is physically impossible. Mobile users report images failing to load entirely.

Paid self-hosting creates a support paradox: customers run software in their own environments but lack the expertise to operate it, while developers are held accountable for failures they can't diagnose or fix without direct access. Small misconfigurations — Postgres version bumps, environment variable changes, IAM or firewall edits — cascade into outages that customers blame on the product. Alien attempts to resolve this by giving developers centralized control over deployments, updates, monitoring, and lifecycle management inside the customer's own infrastructure, currently supporting AWS, GCP, and Azure. The pitch is mutual benefit: customer data stays local and private, while the developer retains operational visibility and control.

Comments: The sole community reaction cuts to the core security concern: granting a third-party developer operational access into a customer's cloud environment is effectively inviting remote code execution. Users see this not as a win-win but as a fundamental trust and security boundary violation, suggesting the model may be a non-starter for security-conscious enterprise customers — the very audience the product targets.

A developer updated their Claude Token Counter tool to enable cross-model comparisons, revealing that Opus 4.7's new tokenizer uses significantly more tokens than 4.6. Testing a system prompt showed Opus 4.7 consuming 1.46x more tokens—above Anthropic's stated 1.0–1.35x range—translating to roughly 40% higher costs despite identical pricing ($5/M input, $25/M output). High-resolution images (3456x2234px) showed a 3.01x token increase, attributed to Opus 4.7's expanded vision support (up to 2,576px long edge vs. prior models' limits), while small images (682x318px) showed virtually no difference. A 15MB, 30-page PDF showed only a 1.08x multiplier. The tool supports Opus 4.7, Opus 4.6, Sonnet 4.6, and Haiku 4.5 via the Claude token counting API, and also accepts image inputs for comparison.

Comments: Users highlight tokenizer opacity and language bias—English prompts consume fewer tokens than equivalent Spanish or Chinese content due to BPE design, differentially raising costs. Speculation about Anthropic's change ranges from a morpheme-aware tokenizer (decomposing affixes and capitalization markers, increasing counts but improving reasoning) to a byte-latent architecture replacement. No official explanation has been published, though users note the tokenizer could be reverse-engineered via the free counting API (~2M req/day on Vertex AI). The cost increase is pushing some toward local LLMs for routine tasks. Practical tips shared include selecting models by task complexity, reducing context re-ingestion, capping output tokens, and disabling unused MCP servers. In agentic workflows, failed action retry loops re-send full context, potentially tripling token costs per failure. The unresolved question is whether the denser tokenizer delivers sufficient quality gains to offset costs on a per-dollar basis.

LLMs are sophisticated pattern-fitters rather than understanding engines — Gold's theorem shows training on positive examples cannot guarantee convergence on the correct generative program. Transformer experiments on Elementary Cellular Automata and wave functions showed models approximating rather than learning rules, echoed by an orbital mechanics paper where models predicted positions without inferring F=GMm/r². Reasoning (chain-of-thought, RL with rubrics, tool use) helps but shifts the induction problem up one level, since reasoning patterns are themselves learned. Failures resemble flash crashes — high-dimensional and alien — while successes reflect the low-dimensional nature of correct solutions. Consciousness is treated skeptically: LLM behavior mimics conscious output but lacks continuity, making it categorically different, perhaps closer to market intelligence than individual cognition. Alignment resembles regulating complex systems — requiring rules, supervision, and co-evolution. Scale may help but is unlikely alone to bridge the gap between pattern interpolation and robust generator discovery.

Comments: Commenters correct the epicycle analogy: historically it was Copernicus, not medieval astronomers, who added epicycles, and Kepler's elliptical orbits were the true conceptual break; Aquinas is quoted showing epicycle theories were already understood as instrumentally useful rather than literally true. One commenter flags the essay as already outdated, suggesting a November 2025 timestamp. On the force-equation experiments, users note that decimal-heavy formulas are an obvious overfitting signal and symbolic regression should penalize complexity; chess benchmarks are also questioned, since LLMs lack persistent neural memory and haven't been trained on optimal play, with a future architecture that fine-tunes weights mid-inference via self-simulation proposed as a fix. Countering the essay's pessimism, one commenter cites LLMs recently producing multiple independent solutions to Erdős problem 1196 — a combinatorics problem worked on by experts for years — as evidence the current paradigm still has meaningful reasoning headroom beyond mere pattern recall.

NASA's Artemis program is advancing toward human Mars exploration through Moon missions using the Space Launch System (SLS), the most powerful rocket NASA has ever built, paired with the Orion spacecraft. Artemis I launched November 16, 2022, as an uncrewed test, with Orion reaching 268,563 miles from Earth before splashing down December 11, 2022. Artemis II was the first crewed mission, carrying NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Hammock Koch, along with CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen, on a lunar flyby. The SLS uses RS-25 engines and an Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage with a single RL10 engine producing 24,750 pounds of thrust. NASA completed a penultimate RS-25 hot fire test in June to certify new engine production. Artemis II has since achieved splashdown and recovery, with NASA merchandise facing supply shortages due to unprecedented public demand.

Comments: Users highlight additional NASA galleries covering Artemis II's launch, lunar flyby, and recovery phases. One commenter argues the mission's most emotionally compelling shot was informal iPhone footage from inside the capsule showing Earth eclipsed — contextualizing the Moon within the crew's actual vantage point — rather than polished DSLR photography. The argument is that iPhone optics are universally familiar, making the Moon feel more viscerally real at 4,000 miles distance than color-corrected mirrorless images. Users also recommend the Apollo 11 gallery for high-quality and lesser-seen Moon landing images. A recurring complaint is that published Artemis II images are disappointingly low resolution. One user reported visiting NASA's Space Shop on splashdown day and finding limited Artemis merchandise with delayed shipping due to unprecedented demand.