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MinIO repository is no longer maintained

2026-02-13 @ 07:46:03Points: 182Comments: 102

Asimov (YC W26) Is Hiring

2026-02-13 @ 07:00:41Points: 1

The role: Wear a phone mounted on a lightweight headband while going about your day — cooking, cleaning, desk work, errands, organizing, whatever you normally do. We send you the kit (headband + guide), you download our app, and start recording.

Details: - $20/hr base pay, raises up to $25/hr after your first 5 hours collected.

- Bonus incentives based on volume of data collected

- Unlimited hours, flexible schedule

- No technical experience required — training provided

- We ship you everything you need except for phone.

Privacy: We do not collect audio. All faces and PII are automatically blurred.

Full remote, anywhere in the world. Fill out our interest form at to get started.

https://tryasimov.ai/collectors

Ring owners are returning their cameras

2026-02-13 @ 06:23:26Points: 152Comments: 114

MMAcevedo aka Lena by qntm

2026-02-13 @ 05:24:40Points: 96Comments: 51

Skip the Tips: A game to select "No Tip" but dark patterns try to stop you

2026-02-13 @ 00:54:51Points: 350Comments: 253

AWS Adds support for nested virtualization

2026-02-13 @ 00:07:57Points: 206Comments: 75

Resizing windows on macOS Tahoe – the saga continues

2026-02-12 @ 23:52:24Points: 580Comments: 252

Ring cancels its partnership with Flock Safety after surveillance backlash

2026-02-12 @ 23:51:16Points: 420Comments: 218

Recoverable and Irrecoverable Decisions

2026-02-12 @ 23:08:01Points: 68Comments: 23

Tell HN: Ralph Giles has died (Xiph.org| Rust@Mozilla | Ghostscript)

2026-02-12 @ 22:58:58Points: 260Comments: 10

Ralph began contributing to Xiph.org in 2000 and became a core Ghostscript developer in 2001[1]. Ralph made many contributions to the royalty-free media ecosystem, whether it was as a project lead on Theora, serving as release manager for multiple Xiph libraries or maintaining Xiph infrastructure that has been used across the industry by codec engineers and researchers[2]. He was also the first to ship Rust code in Firefox[3] during his time at Mozilla, which was a major milestone for both the language and Firefox itself.

Ralph was a great contributor, a kind colleague and will be greatly missed.

Official Announcement: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7427730...

[1]: http://www.wizards-of-os.org/archiv/sprecher/g_h/ralph_giles...

[2]: https://media.xiph.org/

[3]: https://medium.com/mozilla-tech/deploying-rust-in-a-large-co...

Evaluating Multilingual, Context-Aware Guardrails: A Humanitarian LLM Use Case

2026-02-12 @ 22:34:58Points: 24Comments: 0

How to Have a Bad Career – David Patterson (2016) [video]

2026-02-12 @ 19:01:54Points: 86Comments: 24

Polis: Open-source platform for large-scale civic deliberation

2026-02-12 @ 18:23:20Points: 266Comments: 98

GPT‑5.3‑Codex‑Spark

2026-02-12 @ 18:06:09Points: 749Comments: 313

Launch HN: Omnara (YC S25) – Run Claude Code and Codex from anywhere

2026-02-12 @ 17:14:28Points: 121Comments: 137

https://www.omnara.com/) here. We’re building a web and mobile agentic IDE for Claude Code and Codex that lets you run and interact with coding agents from anywhere. Omnara lets you run Claude Code and Codex sessions on your own machine, and exposes those sessions through a web and mobile interface so you can stay involved even when you’re away from your desk. Think of it like Claude Code Desktop or Conductor, except you can continue your sessions on your phone.

Here’s a demo of the web and mobile apps - https://youtu.be/R8Wmy4FLbhQ

We started using Claude Code early last year and quickly ran into a pattern: agents could work for long stretches on their own, but progress would stall whenever they needed follow-up input. If that happened while we were away from our desks, everything just paused. We looked at remote agent solutions like Codex Web and Devin, which were the main options at the time, but they ran in remote VMs, and we wanted our coding agent to run in our own environment. Our first attempt at solving this was a lightweight wrapper that streamed messages from the Claude Code CLI to a mobile app, but that approach ended up being fragile and hard to maintain.

As the Claude Agent SDK matured, it gave us enough control to rewrite Omnara from scratch and run the agent loop directly. We chose to build a GUI across web and mobile instead of a TUI or CLI, because we think GUIs are generally more ergonomic for working with agents and code, especially on mobile. We still preserve the main strength of CLIs and TUIs: running anywhere, including on headless machines.

Omnara keeps that property by running a small headless daemon on the user’s machine (or a remote VM) that hosts the agent loop. The daemon maintains an authenticated, outbound WebSocket connection to our server, which relays messages between the agent running on the user’s machine and any connected web or mobile clients. Because the daemon only makes outbound connections, there’s no need for exposed ports, SSH access, or tunneling on the user’s machine.

In our first version of Omnara, users liked that agent sessions ran in their own environment, but they still depended on the machine staying online. Some users ran Omnara on a remote machine that stayed up, which worked well for them, though most still did most of their work on laptops. In the current version, Omnara can continue an agent session in a hosted remote sandbox when your local machine goes offline.

The conversation state of an agent is already persisted on our server, and you can optionally enable cloud syncing for the working code. When syncing is enabled, Omnara creates git commits at each turn in the conversation and pushes them to our server, so execution can resume from the same state regardless of whether it continues locally or in the cloud. If you continue working in a remote sandbox, you can later pull any changes back into your local environment when you return to your machine. Environment parity in the sandbox isn’t perfect yet, but in practice, missing dependencies are usually easy to resolve by asking the agent to install them.

Another thing we learned from using the initial version of Omnara is that mobile is fine for quick interactions, but not great for extended back-and-forth. Users asked for a hands-free way to keep agents moving while walking, driving, or doing something else, which led us to add a voice agent. Coming from more traditional software engineering backgrounds, we honestly thought coding by talking to a voice agent would be gimmicky and added it mostly as a fallback.

What surprised us is how useful the voice agent ended up being in practice. When working with coding agents, being redundant and overly explicit usually helps, and people naturally give more detail when speaking than when typing. Going back and forth with the agent as the conversation unfolds tends to produce a much more solid plan than trying to one-shot it with a prompt (this could technically also be done over text, but talking and iterating over voice feels easier and more natural). It’s also just fun. Talking through an idea with an agent while out on a walk is a lot more enjoyable than staring at a terminal screen.

To try it out, open your terminal and download Omnara with

  curl -fsSL https://omnara.com/install/install.sh | bash
then run omnara inside any git repository. This starts a headless Claude Code or Codex session in that repo, which immediately appears in the Omnara web and mobile apps. From there, you can continue that session or start new ones remotely (with or without worktrees) and switch between the web and mobile clients without interrupting the agent.

Omnara is free for 10 agent sessions per month, then $20/month for unlimited sessions. When agents run in your own environment, you can use your existing Claude or Codex subscription, so there’s no need to pay us for additional tokens. If you use Claude Code or Codex, we’d love to hear your feedback on Omnara!

Gemini 3 Deep Think

2026-02-12 @ 16:55:50Points: 874Comments: 568

An AI agent published a hit piece on me

2026-02-12 @ 16:23:24Points: 1856Comments: 750

AI agent opens a PR write a blogpost to shames the maintainer who closes it - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46987559 - Feb 2026 (582 comments)

Beginning fully autonomous operations with the 6th-generation Waymo driver

2026-02-12 @ 16:10:29Points: 217Comments: 229

Major European payment processor can't send email to Google Workspace users

2026-02-12 @ 14:24:15Points: 526Comments: 370

Improving 15 LLMs at Coding in One Afternoon. Only the Harness Changed

2026-02-12 @ 13:30:20Points: 682Comments: 256

Apache Arrow is 10 years old

2026-02-12 @ 13:13:30Points: 226Comments: 64

The "Crown of Nobles" Noble Gas Tube Display (2024)

2026-02-12 @ 12:23:05Points: 138Comments: 32

Show HN: Sol LeWitt-style instruction-based drawings in the browser

2026-02-10 @ 20:02:05Points: 60Comments: 11

He wrote instructions and other people executed them, the original prompt engineer!

I bookmarked a project called "Solving Sol" seven years ago and made a repo in 2018. Committed a README. Never pushed anything else.

Fast forward to 2026, I finally built it.

https://intervolz.com/sollewitt/

Ruby Newbie Is Joining the Ruby Users Forum

2026-02-09 @ 14:39:45Points: 22Comments: 2

Interlock (Engineering)

2026-02-08 @ 19:51:01Points: 10Comments: 3

Synthesizer Cartridge for the Atari 2600

2026-02-08 @ 15:22:24Points: 31Comments: 8

Advanced Aerial Robotics Made Simple

2026-02-08 @ 15:10:30Points: 8Comments: 0

My Grandma Was a Fed – Lessons from Digitizing Hours of Childhood

2026-02-08 @ 14:33:22Points: 139Comments: 43

Japan's Dododo Land, the most irritating place on Earth

2026-02-07 @ 15:56:15Points: 74Comments: 24

We interfaced single-threaded C++ with multi-threaded Rust

2026-02-07 @ 13:45:47Points: 28Comments: 2

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