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Show HN: Swarm – Program a colony of 200 ants using a custom assembly language Published: 2026-03-06 | Origin: Hacker News Of course! Please provide the content you would like me to summarize. |
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System76 on Age Verification Laws Published: 2026-03-06 | Origin: Hacker News The content reflects on the evolution of access to information and technology over the years, comparing the author's childhood experiences with the current capabilities of their child. In 1990, the author felt bored during long car rides and wished for entertainment options, like a TV, and had limited access to encyclopedias. Fast forward to today, the author's under-13 child confidently discusses topics like jellyfish and their immortality, showcasing how much more information is readily available now. Additionally, an anecdote illustrates |
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devenv 2.0: A Fresh Interface to Nix Published: 2026-03-06 | Origin: /r/programming The excerpt discusses the Nix development experience and the improvements made with the release of devenv 2.0, which aims to enhance usability while maintaining Nix's powerful reproducibility features. Users previously faced a cumbersome experience where waiting for evaluations and builds caused terminal freeze-ups and disruptive rebuilds. With devenv 2.0, the developer experience is made more interactive and user-friendly. It provides a live terminal interface that clearly shows what Nix is evaluating, the status of derivations, |
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Where things stand with the Department of War Published: 2026-03-06 | Origin: Hacker News Dario Amodei from Anthropic announced that the company's designation by the Department of War as a supply chain risk to U.S. national security will be legally challenged in court. He argues that the designation is not legally sound and that it primarily affects customers using their AI model, Claude, in contracts with the Department. Amodei emphasizes that the law is meant to protect the government and does not restrict unrelated business activities with Anthropic. He notes that productive discussions were ongoing with the Department regarding ways |
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Anybody know what happened to the GNU site? Published: 2026-03-06 | Origin: /r/programming The GNU Operating System, supported by the Free Software Foundation, is a collection of free software that serves as a foundation for creating and using operating systems. It emphasizes user freedom and collaborative development. |
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Stop Using Grey Text (2025) Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: Hacker News The author urges web designers to stop using grey text, particularly on off-white backgrounds, as it diminishes readability and professionalism. They question the rationale behind using low-contrast colors and suggest that it limits audience accessibility. The author encourages designers to support the prefers-contrast CSS media query to improve readability instead of imposing their choices on users. They argue that higher contrast not only enhances user experience but also increases the information density of content. The message emphasizes that poor design choices can lead to frustration and misunderstanding among |
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Labor market impacts of AI: A new measure and early evidence Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: Hacker News The rapid adoption of AI is prompting research on its effects on labor markets, yet past forecasting methods have often fallen short. Notably, a significant study indicated that around 25% of U.S. jobs were at risk due to offshoring, yet most of those jobs still experienced employment growth a decade later. Government projections have offered limited predictive accuracy, mainly extrapolating from existing trends. The labor market's response to past economic disruptions, like the introduction of industrial robots and the impact of trade |
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Announcing Rust 1.94.0 Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/programming The Rust team has released version 1.94.0 of the Rust programming language, designed to help users create reliable and efficient software. Users with previous versions can update via rustup, while new users can install rustup from the official website. This release introduces the `array_windows` method for slices, which provides a way to iterate over fixed-length windows, enhancing efficiency and usability. Additionally, Cargo now supports an `include` key in configuration files for better organization and the option to mark include |
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Ruby Users Forum Monthly Update - February Wrap-Up & March Preview Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/ruby In February, the Ruby Users Forum welcomed 87 new members and generated 181 posts, fostering a lively community. Key developments included the creation of a forum logo, the introduction of topic tags (with "getting-started" being the most popular), gif support in posts, and GitHub login integration. The team expressed gratitude for member engagement and highlighted popular posts. Looking ahead to March, new community challenges and Ruby learning resources will be launched, along with improvements for smoother participation. Members are encouraged to |
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Pony Networking, Take Two Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/programming The Pony programming language's standard library includes a networking package that functions adequately for simple TCP servers or clients but presents significant limitations when building more complex systems. These constraints become evident when attempting to implement advanced features like real protocol logic, backpressure control, or upgrading TLS mid-connection. The author, who had similar experiences at Wallaroo, explains that they created a new library called "lori" after forking the standard library's TCP code due to these constraints. The standard library's networking uses |
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GPT-5.4 Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: Hacker News Failed to fetch content - HTTP Status - 403 |
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The Brand Age Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: Hacker News Of course! Please provide the content you'd like me to summarize. |
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Beating Bellard's Formula Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/programming Robert Smith discusses Fabrice Bellard's formula for calculating the nth hexadecimal digit of \(\pi\) without needing the previous digits. This method, known as Bellard's formula, is a significant improvement over the earlier Bailey-Borwein-Plouffe (BBP) formula, which led to the classification of these methodologies as BBP-type formulas. Over the years, many such formulas have been developed, with Bailey providing a technique to discover new ones through integer-relation algorithms. Smith conducted |
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From 40 Minutes to 4 With Tests Parallelization Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/ruby Last month, a significant upgrade was completed for a client’s application, addressing two main issues: the outdated Rails 2.3 LTS and Ruby 2.5, and a lengthy test suite that took 40 minutes to run, hindering code merges and feedback loops. The upgrade upgraded the app to Rails 8.1.1 and Ruby 3.4.7, which led to an impressive reduction in test suite runtime from 40 minutes to about 4 minutes. The application |
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But How Does a Computer Actually Work? (from scratch, no prior knowledge... Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/programming Of course! Please provide the content you would like me to summarize. |
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The Illusion of Building Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/programming AI has significantly reduced the cost of producing superficial software that appears functional, leading to a common misconception that simply creating an app equates to comprehensive software engineering. Many viral posts showcase individuals claiming to have built apps without any coding experience, celebrating the creation moment while neglecting the complexities of operating and maintaining functioning systems. This phenomenon is likened to a viral video where creators make a model Bugatti out of clay; it looks like a Bugatti but lacks the engineering necessary for its performance. This illustrates |
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Migrating from Heroku to Magic Containers Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/programming The author, a long-time fan of Heroku, praises its pioneering role in platform as a service, particularly highlighting the ease of deployment through "git push heroku master." Heroku significantly shaped the deployment experience for many developers, allowing them to build production apps without the complexities of EC2 instances. However, on February 6, 2026, Heroku announced a shift to a sustaining engineering model, ceasing new features and enterprise contracts. For those looking to transition away from Heroku |
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Charting app Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/ruby Failed to fetch content - HTTP Error - Failed to open TCP connection to :80 (Connection refused - connect(2) for nil port 80) |
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How to Think About Time in Programming Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: /r/programming The article discusses the complexities of time handling in software programming, a topic often met with apprehension by developers. While some suggest standard advice like "just use UTC," this can lead to bugs in programs requiring precise timekeeping or user-facing datetime interactions. It introduces two key concepts: "durations," which represent lengths of time (e.g., how long an event takes), and "instants," which mark specific points in time (e.g., the moment an event occurs). Absolute time refers to |
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Relicensing with AI-Assisted Rewrite Published: 2026-03-05 | Origin: Hacker News The author, not a legal expert, discusses recent challenges in open source licensing, particularly involving the project "chardet," a Python character encoding detector. Originally licensed under LGPL, the project encountered difficulties due to the requirement of unanimous consent for relicensing, which is hard for legacy projects. Recently, the maintainers rewrote the codebase and released version 7.0.0 under the MIT license. However, the original author raised concerns about a potential GPL violation, arguing that modifications must adhere |