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Bloom (YC P26) Is Hiring

2026-04-20 @ 17:00:45Points: 1

We Accepted Surveillance as Default

2026-04-20 @ 16:34:25Points: 108Comments: 38

Palantir Wants to Reinstate the Draft

2026-04-20 @ 16:19:20Points: 158Comments: 155

Deezer says 44% of songs uploaded to its platform daily are AI-generated

2026-04-20 @ 15:41:02Points: 127Comments: 139

I'm never buying another Kindle, and neither should you

2026-04-20 @ 15:30:17Points: 112Comments: 94

Kimi K2.6: Advancing Open-Source Coding

2026-04-20 @ 15:28:13Points: 276Comments: 128

I prompted ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, and Gemini and watched my Nginx logs

2026-04-20 @ 15:22:01Points: 97Comments: 18

Show HN: Alien – Self-hosting with remote management (written in Rust)

2026-04-20 @ 15:18:57Points: 35Comments: 6

In my previous startup, I heard the same question from every single enterprise customer over and over again: "My data is sensitive. Can I deploy your product to my own cloud account?"

Self-hosting is becoming very popular because it lets users keep their data private, local, and inside their own environment. Unfortunately, self-hosting breaks down when someone starts paying for your software. Especially if it's an enterprise customer.

Customers usually don't actually know how to operate your software. They might change something small — Postgres version, environment variables, IAM, firewall rules — and things start failing. From their perspective, the product is broken. And even if the root cause is on their side, it doesn't matter... the customer is always right, you're still the one expected to fix it.

But you can't. You don't have access to their environment. You don't have real visibility. You can't run anything yourself. So you're stuck debugging a system you don't control, through screenshots and copy-pasted logs on a Zoom call. You end up responsible for something you don't control.

I think there's a better model of paid self-hosting: the software runs in the customer's environment, but the developer can actually operate it. It's a win-win: for the customer, their data stays private and local, and the developer still has control over deployments, updates, and debugging.

Alien provides infrastructure to deploy and operate software inside your users' environments, while retaining centralized control over updates, monitoring, and lifecycle management. It currently supports AWS, GCP, and Azure targets.

GitHub: https://github.com/alienplatform/alien

Getting started: https://alien.dev/docs/quickstart

How it works: https://alien.dev/docs/how-alien-works

Excited to share Alien with everyone here – let me know what you think!

Qwen3.6-Max-Preview: Smarter, Sharper, Still Evolving

2026-04-20 @ 14:05:34Points: 297Comments: 172

Ask HN: How to solve the cold start problem for a two-sided marketplace?

2026-04-20 @ 13:42:37Points: 92Comments: 99

About to launch the MVP and hitting the classic chicken-and-egg problem.

Travelers won't sign up without packages to carry, senders won't post without travelers available. Every marketplace founder says "focus on one side first" but nobody gets specific about how they actually did it, especially when you can't fake supply like you can with a SaaS landing page.

For those who've built P2P platforms or two-sided marketplaces: what actually worked for your first 50-100 transactions? Did you manually match people? Subsidize one side? Constrain to one route/city?

All phones sold in the EU to have replaceable batteries from 2027

2026-04-20 @ 13:41:25Points: 622Comments: 498

Sauna effect on heart rate

2026-04-20 @ 13:40:28Points: 261Comments: 156

ggsql: A Grammar of Graphics for SQL

2026-04-20 @ 12:51:20Points: 225Comments: 54

Atlassian Enables Default Data Collection to Train AI

2026-04-20 @ 12:23:39Points: 317Comments: 75

WebUSB Extension for Firefox

2026-04-20 @ 11:51:04Points: 107Comments: 90

M 7.4 earthquake – 100 km ENE of Miyako, Japan

2026-04-20 @ 10:04:40Points: 202Comments: 84

NSA is using Anthropic's Mythos despite blacklist

2026-04-20 @ 10:00:35Points: 361Comments: 264

GitHub's Fake Star Economy

2026-04-20 @ 08:26:52Points: 539Comments: 290

OpenClaw isn't fooling me. I remember MS-DOS

2026-04-20 @ 07:49:48Points: 201Comments: 243

Claude Token Counter, now with model comparisons

2026-04-20 @ 00:56:40Points: 194Comments: 77

10 years ago, someone wrote a test for servo that included an expiry in 2026

2026-04-19 @ 19:19:48Points: 115Comments: 70

Chernobyl's last wedding: The couple who married as a nuclear disaster unfolded

2026-04-19 @ 05:42:48Points: 28Comments: 6

SDF Public Access Unix System

2026-04-18 @ 20:48:35Points: 156Comments: 75

What if database branching was easy?

2026-04-18 @ 06:29:55Points: 60Comments: 41

Focused microwaves allow 3D printers to fuse circuits onto almost anything

2026-04-17 @ 21:03:09Points: 121Comments: 23

Up to 8M Bees Are Living in an Underground Network Beneath This Cemetery

2026-04-17 @ 20:14:30Points: 147Comments: 24

Larry Tesler: A Personal History of Modeless Text Editing and Cut/Copy-Paste (2012)

2026-04-17 @ 13:20:31Points: 19Comments: 6

IPC medley: message-queue peeking, io_uring, and bus1

2026-04-17 @ 02:34:54Points: 32Comments: 0

I Made the "Next-Level" Camera and I love it

2026-04-16 @ 18:19:24Points: 193Comments: 66

Epicycles All the Way Down (2025)

2026-04-16 @ 15:09:10Points: 34Comments: 14

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