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What the Success of Coding Agents Teaches Us about AI Systems in General

2026-01-29 @ 23:06:34Points: 5Comments: 2

Grid: Forever free, local-first, browser-based 3D printing/CNC/laser slicer

2026-01-29 @ 22:38:57Points: 44Comments: 14

Cutting Up Curved Things (With Math)

2026-01-29 @ 22:34:54Points: 11Comments: 1

Retiring GPT-4o, GPT-4.1, GPT-4.1 mini, and OpenAI o4-mini in ChatGPT

2026-01-29 @ 21:02:31Points: 125Comments: 183

The WiFi only works when it's raining (2024)

2026-01-29 @ 20:47:36Points: 34Comments: 11

The Hallucination Defense

2026-01-29 @ 19:45:12Points: 36Comments: 98

Flameshot

2026-01-29 @ 19:30:35Points: 94Comments: 37

PlayStation 2 Recompilation Project Is Absolutely Incredible

2026-01-29 @ 18:55:38Points: 200Comments: 77

County pays $600k to pentesters it arrested for assessing courthouse security

2026-01-29 @ 18:48:09Points: 259Comments: 128

My Mom and Dr. DeepSeek (2025)

2026-01-29 @ 18:45:27Points: 113Comments: 72

AI's impact on engineering jobs may be different than expected

2026-01-29 @ 18:00:10Points: 78Comments: 145

Project Genie: Experimenting with infinite, interactive worlds

2026-01-29 @ 17:02:39Points: 398Comments: 205

Reflex (YC W23) Senior Software Engineer Infra

2026-01-29 @ 17:00:42Points: 1

Launch HN: AgentMail (YC S25) – An API that gives agents their own email inboxes

2026-01-29 @ 16:42:33Points: 106Comments: 123

https://agentmail.to), the email inbox API for agents. We’re not talking about AI for your email, this is email for your AI.

Email is an optimal interface for long-running agents. It’s multithreaded and asynchronous with full support for rich text and files. It’s a universal protocol with identity and authentication built in. Moreover, a lot of workflow critical context already lives in email.

We wanted to build email agents that you can forward your work to and get back a completed task. The agents could act entirely autonomously as you wouldn't need to delegate your identity. If they did get stuck they could just send you, or anyone else, an email.

Using Gmail, we kept getting stuck on the limitations of their API. No way to create inboxes programmatically. Rate and sending limits. OAuth for every single inbox. Keyword search that doesn't understand context. Per-seat pricing that doesn't work for agents.

So we built what we wished existed: an email provider for developers. APIs for creating inboxes and configuring domains. Email parsing and threading. Text extraction from attachments. Realtime webhooks and websockets. Semantic search across inboxes. Usage-based pricing that works for agents.

Developers, startups, and enterprises are already deploying email agents with AgentMail. Agents that convert conversations and documents into structured data. Agents that source quotes, negotiate prices, and get the best deals. Agents that emulate internet users for training models on end-to-end tasks.

Here's demo of Clawdbots communicating using AgentMail: https://youtu.be/Y0MfUWS3LKQ

You can get started with AgentMail for free at https://agentmail.to

Looking forward to hearing your thoughts and feedback.

Show HN: Kolibri, a DIY music club in Sweden

2026-01-29 @ 16:19:19Points: 28Comments: 7

We run it through a small Swedish company. We pay artists, handle logistics, and take operations seriously. But it has still behaved like a tiny cultural startup in the most relevant way: you have to build trust, form a recognisable identity, pace yourself, avoid burnout, and make something people genuinely return to, without big budgets or growth hacks. We run it on the last Friday of every month in a small restaurant venue, typically 50–70 paying guests.

What we built isn’t an app. It’s a repeatable local format: a standing night where strangers become regulars, centred on music rather than networking.

We put up a simple anchor site with schedule + photos/video: https://kolibrinkpg.com/

What you can “try” on the site:

  * Photos and short videos from nights (atmosphere + scale)
  * A sense of programming/curation (what we book, how we sequence a night)
  * Enough context to copy parts of the format if you’re building something similar locally
How it started: almost accidentally. I was doing one of many remote music sessions with a friend from London, passing Ableton projects back and forth while talking over FaceTime. One evening I ran out of beer and wandered into a nearby restaurant (Mitropa). A few conversations later we had a date on the calendar.

That restaurant is still the venue. It’s owned by a local family: one runs the kitchen, another manages the space. Over time they’ve become close to us, so I’ll put it plainly: if they called and needed help, we’d drop everything.

Maria was quickly dubbed klubbvärdinnan (hostess), partly as a joke. In Sweden in the 1970s, posh nightclubs sometimes had a klubbvärdinna, a kind of social anchor. She later adopted it as her DJ alias, and the role became real: greeting people, recognising newcomers who look uncertain, and quietly setting the tone for how people treat one another.

The novelty (if there is any) is that we treat the night like a designed social system:

  * Curation is governance. If the music is coherent and emotionally “true”, people relax. If it’s generic, people perform.
  * The room needs a host layer. Someone has to make it socially safe to arrive alone.
  * Regulars are made, not acquired. People return when they feel recognised and when the night has a consistent identity.
  * DIY constraints create legitimacy. Turning a corner restaurant into a club on a shoestring sounds amateurish, but it reads as real.
  * Behavioural boundaries are practical. If newcomers can’t trust the room, the whole thing stops working.
On marketing: we learned quickly that “posting harder” isn’t the same as building a local thing. What worked best was analogue outreach: we walked around town, visited local businesses we genuinely like, bought something, introduced ourselves, and asked if we could leave a flyer. It’s boring, but it builds trust because it’s human, not algorithmic.

A concrete example: early on we needed Instagram content that could show music visually without filming crowds in a club. We started filming headphone-walk clips: one person, headphones on, walking through town to a track we chose. It looked good, stylised, cinematic, and that mattered more than we expected. People didn’t just tolerate being filmed; many wanted to be in the videos. Then we’d invite them for a couple of free drinks afterwards as a thank-you and a chance to actually talk. That was a reliable early trust-building mechanism.

At one point we were offered a larger venue with a proper budget. It was tempting. But we’d just hosted our first live gig at Mitropa and felt something click. We realised the format works because it’s small and grounded. Scale would change the social physics.

US cybersecurity chief leaked sensitive government files to ChatGPT: Report

2026-01-29 @ 16:12:19Points: 376Comments: 192

Drug trio found to block tumour resistance in pancreatic cancer

2026-01-29 @ 16:11:04Points: 200Comments: 96

Is the RAM shortage killing small VPS hosts?

2026-01-29 @ 15:42:57Points: 97Comments: 137

Deep dive into Turso, the "SQLite rewrite in Rust"

2026-01-29 @ 14:51:56Points: 97Comments: 91

How to choose colors for your CLI applications (2023)

2026-01-29 @ 14:49:08Points: 142Comments: 80

Run Clawdbot/Moltbot on Cloudflare with Moltworker

2026-01-29 @ 14:43:07Points: 137Comments: 46

Waymo robotaxi hits a child near an elementary school in Santa Monica

2026-01-29 @ 14:08:56Points: 273Comments: 490

Claude Code daily benchmarks for degradation tracking

2026-01-29 @ 13:59:07Points: 506Comments: 258

A lot of population numbers are fake

2026-01-29 @ 13:36:54Points: 233Comments: 211

Compressed Agents.md > Agent Skills

2026-01-29 @ 13:08:11Points: 96Comments: 54

The passive in English (2011)

2026-01-25 @ 22:03:24Points: 6Comments: 1

The Value of Things

2026-01-25 @ 10:31:14Points: 46Comments: 20

Box64 Expands into RISC-V and LoongArch territory

2026-01-25 @ 06:51:49Points: 30Comments: 2

Where to Sleep in LAX

2026-01-23 @ 17:17:40Points: 31Comments: 19

EmulatorJS

2026-01-23 @ 06:26:40Points: 84Comments: 13

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