May 2025 Archive
91.
Precision Clock Mk IV (mitxela.com)
92.
Unity’s Open-Source Double Standard: the ban of VLC (mfkl.github.io)
93.
A simple 16x16 dot animation from simple math rules (tixy.land)
94.
Jules: An asynchronous coding agent (jules.google)
95.
Open Source Society University – Path to a free self-taught education in CS (github.com)
96.
FLUX.1 Kontext (bfl.ai)
97.
Show HN: My LLM CLI tool can run tools now, from Python code or plugins (simonwillison.net)
98.
Reservoir Sampling (samwho.dev)
99.
Ask HN: What are good high-information density UIs (screenshots, apps, sites)?
100.
How to live on $432 a month in America (shagbark.substack.com)
101.
Ground control to Major Trial (virtualize.sh)
102.
We fell out of love with Next.js and back in love with Ruby on Rails (hardcover.app)
103.
One-Click RCE in Asus's Preinstalled Driver Software (mrbruh.com)
104.
Show HN: Real-time AI Voice Chat at ~500ms Latency (github.com)
105.
The great displacement is already well underway? (shawnfromportland.substack.com)
106.
A Research Preview of Codex (openai.com)
107.
Show HN: I built a synthesizer based on 3D physics (anukari.com)
108.
Why Archers Didn't Volley Fire (acoup.blog)
109.
Deep Learning Is Applied Topology (theahura.substack.com)
110.
GitHub MCP exploited: Accessing private repositories via MCP (invariantlabs.ai)
111.
Mistral ships Le Chat – enterprise AI assistant that can run on prem (mistral.ai)
112.
A faster way to copy SQLite databases between computers (alexwlchan.net)
113.
Getting AI to write good SQL (cloud.google.com)
114.
Bus stops here: Shanghai lets riders design their own routes (sixthtone.com)
115.
Proton threatens to quit Switzerland over new surveillance law (techradar.com)
116.
DuckDB is probably the most important geospatial software of the last decade (dbreunig.com)
117.
I don't like NumPy (dynomight.net)
118.
India launches attack on 9 sites in Pakistan and Pakistani Jammu and Kashmir (reuters.com)
119.
InventWood is about to mass-produce wood that's stronger than steel (techcrunch.com)
120.
High tariffs become 'real' with our first $36K bill (blog.adafruit.com)