- 459Vercel April 2026 security incident (bleepingcomputer.com)
- 132The Bromine Chokepoint (warontherocks.com)
- 19A Brief History of Fish Sauce (legalnomads.com)
- 322,100 Swiss municipalities showing which provider handles their official email (mxmap.ch)
- 5Show HN: How context engineering works, a runnable reference (github.com)
- 89Show HN: Faceoff – A terminal UI for following NHL games (vincentgregoire.com)
- 166Changes in the system prompt between Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7 (simonwillison.net)
- 32Prove you are a robot: CAPTCHAs for agents (browser-use.com)
- 29Six Levels of Dark Mode (cssence.com)
- 22Ex-CEO, ex-CFO of bankrupt AI company charged with fraud (reuters.com)
- 518Archive of BYTE magazine, starting with issue #1 in 1975 (archive.org)
- 33I wrote a CHIP-8 emulator in my own programming language (github.com)
- 268The seven programming ur-languages (2022) (madhadron.com)
- 161The RAM shortage could last years (theverge.com)
- 110Nanopass Framework: Clean Compiler Creation Language (nanopass.org)
- 14Scientific datasets are riddled with copy-paste errors (sciencedetective.org)
- 309Notion leaks email addresses of all editors of any public page (twitter.com)
- 57A. J. Ayer – ‘What I Saw When I Was Dead’ (1988) (philosopher.eu)
- 154SPEAKE(a)R: Turn Speakers to Microphones for Fun and Profit [pdf] (2017) (usenix.org)
- 255What are skiplists good for? (antithesis.com)
- 49Reverse Engineering ME2's USB with a Heat Gun and a Knife (github.com)
- 19Hot Wiring the Lisp Machine (scheatkode.com)
- 83Show HN: Prompt-to-Excalidraw demo with Gemma 4 E2B in the browser (3.1GB) (teamchong.github.io)
- 13Eliza a Play by Tom Holloway (mtc.com.au)
- 25C++26: Reflection, Memory Safety, Contracts, and a New Async Model (infoq.com)
- 25KTaO3-Based Supercurrent Diode (pubs.acs.org)
- 51Blue Origin's rocket reuse achievement marred by upper stage failure (arstechnica.com)
- 33Reading Input from an USB RFID Card Reader (kevwe.com)
- 132Show HN: Shader Lab, like Photoshop but for shaders (eng.basement.studio)
- 8Got an Old Kindle? It Might Not Work Anymore (nytimes.com)