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Show HN: Posts p/month more than doubled in the last year
2026-01-26 @ 11:16:17Points: 14Comments: 9
MapLibre Tile: a modern and efficient vector tile format
2026-01-26 @ 10:19:51Points: 56Comments: 4
San Francisco Graffiti
2026-01-26 @ 10:02:12Points: 19Comments: 16
UK House of Lords Votes to Extend Age Verification to VPNs
2026-01-26 @ 09:35:31Points: 102Comments: 87
The Holy Grail of Linux Binary Compatibility: Musl and Dlopen
2026-01-26 @ 07:41:52Points: 76Comments: 43
The browser is the sandbox
2026-01-26 @ 05:23:01Points: 173Comments: 98
Iran's internet blackout may become permanent, with access for elites only
2026-01-26 @ 04:18:19Points: 307Comments: 222
Running the Stupid Cricut Software on Linux
2026-01-26 @ 04:05:38Points: 19Comments: 2
Video Games as Art
2026-01-26 @ 02:07:34Points: 75Comments: 41
Clawdbot - open source personal AI assistant
2026-01-26 @ 00:27:41Points: 257Comments: 171
Scientists identify brain waves that define the limits of 'you'
2026-01-26 @ 00:10:42Points: 209Comments: 52
Ask HN: DDD was a great debugger – what would a modern equivalent look like?
2026-01-25 @ 22:47:55Points: 36Comments: 37
It made program execution feel visible: stacks, data, and control flow were all there at once. You could really “see” what the program was doing.
At the same time, it’s clearly a product of a different era:
– single-process
– mostly synchronous code
– no real notion of concurrency or async
– dated UI and interaction model
Today we debug very different systems: multithreaded code, async runtimes, long-running services, distributed components.
Yet most debuggers still feel conceptually close to GDB + stepping, just wrapped in a nicer UI.
I’m curious how others think about this:
– what ideas from DDD (or similar old tools) are still valuable?
– what would a “modern DDD” need to handle today’s software?
– do you think interactive debugging is still the right abstraction at all?
I’m asking mostly from a design perspective — I’ve been experimenting with some debugger ideas myself, but I’m much more interested in hearing how experienced engineers see this problem today.
Case study: Creative math – How AI fakes proofs
2026-01-25 @ 22:44:50Points: 94Comments: 61
The future of software engineering is SRE
2026-01-25 @ 22:18:38Points: 134Comments: 60
LED lighting undermines visual performance unless supplemented by wider spectra
2026-01-25 @ 21:44:10Points: 98Comments: 72
I was right about ATProto key management
2026-01-25 @ 19:31:23Points: 145Comments: 118
First, make me care
2026-01-25 @ 19:03:40Points: 621Comments: 185
Show HN: An interactive map of US lighthouses and navigational aids
2026-01-25 @ 18:06:26Points: 74Comments: 19
I was sick at home with the flu this weekend, and went on a bit of a Wikipedia deep dive about active American lighthouses. Searching around a bit, it was very hard to find a single source or interactive map of active beacons, and a description of what the "characteristic" meant. The Coast Guard maintains a list of active lights though, that they publish annually (https://www.navcen.uscg.gov/light-list-annual-publication). With some help from Claude Code, it wasn't hard to extract the lat/long and put together a small webapp that shows a map of these light stations and illustrates their characteristic with an animated visualization..
Of course, this shouldn't be used as a navigational aid, merely for informational purposes! Though having lived in Seattle and San Francisco I thought it was quite interesting.