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Earth from Space: The Fate of a Giant

2026-01-16 @ 18:18:20Points: 4Comments: 0

OpenAI to begin testing ads on ChatGPT in the U.S.

2026-01-16 @ 18:06:06Points: 40Comments: 51

STFU

2026-01-16 @ 17:32:40Points: 188Comments: 79

Dell UltraSharp 52 Thunderbolt Hub Monitor

2026-01-16 @ 17:14:15Points: 47Comments: 39

Canada slashes 100% tariffs on Chinese EVs to 6%

2026-01-16 @ 17:05:28Points: 245Comments: 275

Zep AI (Agent Context Engineering, YC W24) Is Hiring Forward Deployed Engineers

2026-01-16 @ 17:00:29Points: 1

Launch HN: Indy (YC S21) – A support app designed for ADHD brains

2026-01-16 @ 16:20:21Points: 38Comments: 38

https://www.shimmer.care/indy). Indy is an ADHD app for structured planning, reflection, and self-awareness exercises. Here’s a demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDSDxyXv6i4.

We started Shimmer in 2022 after my adult ADHD diagnosis, and have shipped several iterations of ADHD support since then (1:1 coaching, web tools, body doubling, and AI-assisted coaching).

Across these launches and 80k coaching sessions, we kept running into the same constraint: “knowing what to do” is rarely the problem for people with ADHD. The harder problem is actually doing it consistently over time, especially when attention, motivation, and emotional state fluctuate.

That maps to a useful distinction that is explored in the literature (e.g. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4589250/): “cool” executive function (future-oriented planning, direction, values) vs. “hot” executive function (in-the-moment emotion, urgency, impulse, overwhelm). Most tools lean hard into managing the latter. Productivity apps push execution, general chatbots give advice, but neither reliably supports the interaction between hot + cold EF across weeks and months.

So we built Indy, an AI support system designed to support both. Here’s an overview of how it works:

Guided future mapping: users are guided to create a structured map of meaningful past experiences, current priorities, and upcoming future moments. This becomes the foundation for personalization so that everything that they do in the app helps move them closer to these goals

Daily + weekly check-ins: users engage in short, low-friction chat flows to set their priorities for the day (most popular use case is brain dumping priorities then having Indy help sort through them). The system does not assume consistency or linear progress, and adapts prompts based on prior behavior rather than enforcing a fixed routine.

Longitudinal insights: over time, Indy surfaces patterns across inputs so users can see trends in effort, focus, and blockers. This helps counter the common ADHD experiences of 1) forgetting what works / doesn’t work, and 2) feeling like “nothing changed”

Problem-solving when stuck: when users report feeling blocked, Indy uses structured, behavior-change-informed prompts to help identify what is actually getting in the way (e.g. energy, clarity, emotional load, environment) and narrow toward a concrete next step

Progress that includes effort: Indy tracks wins, effort, and insights separately, and helps users draw out positive ways that members showed up (e.g. effort, mindset) even on days where no objective outcome was achieved

Why use AI to do this? and why now? Two main reasons: (1) Affordability: Although continuous human support would mostly be better than a tech solution, that level of availability is too expensive for most people. Even weekly coaching (our core product) is still too expensive for many people. A tech solution allows some support rather than none. (2) Personalization: AI makes it possible to build systems that maintain continuity, personalize over time, and respond to context without relying on rigid templates or requiring constant human presence.

The main challenge we’ve experienced using AI for Indy is preventing it from collapsing into generic advice, productivity pressure, or over-automation/reliance. Instead, we’ve focused on using AI as scaffolding and capacity-building: something that supports reflection, problem solving, and accountability, while keeping agency with the user and clear boundaries around non-medical use.

Indy is free to try: https://www.shimmer.care/indy

If you’re building in applied AI, and/or if you have ADHD, we’d love to know: - what other AI tools you’ve tried for ADHD and things you liked vs. felt missing; -how you think about the role of AI vs. human support for ADHD in your life; - how the onboarding and first-use feels and any positive or critical feedback you have.

I’d love to hear your (ADHD) experiences or feedback on Indy.

6-Day and IP Address Certificates Are Generally Available

2026-01-16 @ 15:37:19Points: 179Comments: 100

Read_once(), Write_once(), but Not for Rust

2026-01-16 @ 15:04:22Points: 71Comments: 19

Can You Disable Spotlight and Siri in macOS Tahoe?

2026-01-16 @ 14:56:12Points: 56Comments: 42

Cursor's latest "browser experiment" implied success without evidence

2026-01-16 @ 14:37:49Points: 104Comments: 51

Scaling long-running autonomous coding - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46624541 - Jan 2026 (174 comments)

Cloudflare acquires Astro

2026-01-16 @ 14:25:54Points: 455Comments: 245

Michelangelo's first painting, created when he was 12 or 13

2026-01-16 @ 13:44:25Points: 184Comments: 121

Dev-owned testing: Why it fails in practice and succeeds in theory

2026-01-16 @ 13:39:31Points: 56Comments: 76

psc: The ps utility, with an eBPF twist and container context

2026-01-16 @ 13:20:20Points: 53Comments: 18

Show HN: mdto.page – Turn Markdown into a shareable webpage instantly

2026-01-16 @ 12:58:40Points: 32Comments: 19

I built mdto.page because I often needed a quick way to share Markdown notes or documentation as a proper webpage, without setting up a GitHub repo or configuring a static site generator.

I wanted something dead simple: upload Markdown -> get a shareable public URL.

Key features:

Instant Publishing: No login or setup required.

Flexible Expiration: You can set links to expire automatically after 1 day, 7 days, 2 weeks, or 30 days. Great for temporary sharing.

It's free to use. I’d love to hear your feedback!

Just the Browser

2026-01-16 @ 12:03:52Points: 360Comments: 195

Why DuckDB is my first choice for data processing

2026-01-16 @ 10:57:38Points: 98Comments: 38

Interactive eBPF

2026-01-16 @ 08:01:02Points: 167Comments: 8

How to wrangle non-deterministic AI outputs into conventional software? (2025)

2026-01-16 @ 06:54:55Points: 4Comments: 2

OpenBSD-current now runs as guest under Apple Hypervisor

2026-01-16 @ 03:10:36Points: 371Comments: 48

Show HN: Aventos – An experiment in cheap AI SEO

2026-01-16 @ 02:57:37Points: 3Comments: 3

Aventos is an experiment we're doing after spending ~6 weeks working on various projects in the AI search / GEO / AEO space.

One thing that surprised us is how most tools in this category work. Traditionally, they simulate ChatGPT or Perplexity queries by attempting to reverse engineer the search process. Over the past year, many have shifted to scraping live ChatGPT results instead, since those are signficantly cheaper and reflect more real outputs.

Building and maintaining scrapers is tedious and fragile, so recently a number of SaaS products have emerged that effectively wrap a small number of third-party ChatGPT/Perplexity/Google AIO/etc scraping APIs. What felt odd to us is that many of these still tools charge $70–$200+ per month, despite largely being wrappers around the same underlying data providers.

So we wanted to test a simple idea: if the core cost is just API usage and commodity infrastructure and software costs are lower because of AI, can we be a successful startup if we price near our costs?

What we have so far:

1. Analytics similar to other tools (tracking AI citations, AI search results, and competitor mentions)

2. Content creation features (early and still being improved)

We’d love feedback- especially from a non-marketing perspective on:

* bugs

* confusing terminology or tabs

* anything that feels hand-wavy or misleading

There’s a demo account available if you want to poke around:

username: divit.endal4@gmail.com password: password

Happy to answer questions about what other things we've built in the space, how these tools work, etc.

List of individual trees

2026-01-16 @ 00:05:01Points: 304Comments: 102

The Alignment Game

2026-01-15 @ 23:56:26Points: 8Comments: 0

Briar keeps Iran connected via Bluetooth and Wi-Fi when the internet goes dark

2026-01-15 @ 19:38:02Points: 533Comments: 330

Show HN: 1Code – Open-source Cursor-like UI for Claude Code

2026-01-15 @ 19:20:48Points: 20Comments: 10

https://1code.dev), a local UI for Claude Code.

Here's a video of the product: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sgk9Z-nAjC0

Claude Code has been our go-to for 4 months. When Opus 4.5 dropped, parallel agents stopped needing so much babysitting. We started trusting it with more: building features end to end, adding tests, refactors. Stuff you'd normally hand off to a developer. We started running 3-4 at once. Then the CLI became annoying: too many terminals, hard to track what's where, diffs scattered everywhere.

So we built 1Code.dev, an app to run your Claude Code agents in parallel that works on Mac and Web. On Mac: run locally, with or without worktrees. On Web: run in remote sandboxes with live previews of your app, mobile included, so you can check on agents from anywhere. Running multiple Claude Codes in parallel dramatically sped up how we build features.

What’s next: Bug bot for identifying issues based on your changes; QA Agent, that checks that new features don't break anything; Adding OpenCode, Codex, other models and coding agents. API for starting Claude Codes in remote sandboxes.

Try it out! We're open-source, so you can just bun build it. If you want something hosted, Pro ($20/mo) gives you web with live browser previews hosted on remote sandboxes. We’re also working on API access for running Claude Code sessions programmatically.

We'd love to hear your feedback!

Pocket TTS: A high quality TTS that gives your CPU a voice

2026-01-15 @ 05:14:08Points: 582Comments: 140

Training my smartwatch to track intelligence

2026-01-14 @ 22:19:36Points: 105Comments: 46

Lock-Picking Robot

2026-01-12 @ 13:42:42Points: 155Comments: 67

Elasticsearch Was Never a Database

2026-01-11 @ 20:54:47Points: 19Comments: 22

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