May 2025 Archive
1591.
Ask HN: Is anyone else burnt out on AI?
1592.
Show HN: Astra – a new js2exe compiler (github.com)
1593.
Open-source AI platform for ear-based sensing applications (open-earable.teco.edu)
1594.
Unity is threatening to revoke licenses of developers with flawed data (old.reddit.com)
1595.
Nncp: Ad-hoc friend-to-friend delay-tolerant sneakernet-compatible darknet (nncpgo.org)
1596.
Circuitpainter: Create PCBs using a simplfiied graphics language (github.com)
1597.
Gemini Diffusion (deepmind.google)
1598.
Domain Theory Lecture Notes (liamoc.net)
1599.
Ruffle – open-source Flash player (ruffle.rs)
1600.
After 16 years, we're renewing the StackOverflow Brand (meta.stackexchange.com)
1601.
Some novelists are becoming video game writers and vice-versa (theguardian.com)
1602.
Ask HN: Selling software to company I work for as an employee
1603.
Launch HN: MindFort (YC X25) – AI agents for continuous pentesting
1604.
US Copyright Office: Generative AI Training [pdf] (copyright.gov)
1605.
Show HN: Model2vec-Rs – Fast Static Text Embeddings in Rust (github.com)
1606.
Mastering Vim Grammar (irian.to)
1607.
How Riot Games is fighting the war against video game hackers (techcrunch.com)
1608.
AI Won't Kill Junior Devs – But Your Hiring Strategy Might (addyo.substack.com)
1609.
London's National Gallery buys mysterious altarpiece for $20m (theartnewspaper.com)
1610.
Japan and the Birth of Modern Shipbuilding (construction-physics.com)
1611.
The accuracy of weather forecasts (abc.net.au)
1612.
Show HN: Hydra (YC W22) – Serverless Analytics on Postgres (hydra.so)
1613.
The Philosophy of Byung-Chul Han (2020) (newintrigue.com)
1614.
The fastest Postgres inserts (docs.hatchet.run)
1615.
The Fractured Entangled Representation Hypothesis (github.com)
1616.
From Finite Integral Domains to Finite Fields (susam.net)
1617.
Craft Basic (Windows 95 and up) (lucidapogee.com)
1618.
Maybe Zelenskiy Should Be Writing the Art of the Deal (bloomberg.com)
1619.
How async/await works in Python (2021) (tenthousandmeters.com)
1620.
Hegel 2.0: The imaginary history of ternary computing (2018) (cabinetmagazine.org)