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Suspecting AI cheating, Ivy League prof ordered in-person final; scores fell 50%
2026-07-08 @ 23:11:28Points: 40Comments: 18
Rewriting Bun in Rust
2026-07-08 @ 21:49:59Points: 186Comments: 83
Open Source Barware: free, local-first bar inventory software (GPLv3)
2026-07-08 @ 21:43:07Points: 10Comments: 5
Separating signal from noise in coding evaluations
2026-07-08 @ 21:03:51Points: 126Comments: 55
The classifiers Anthropic puts in front of Fable are too zealous
2026-07-08 @ 20:41:33Points: 179Comments: 167
Turning a pile of documents into a searchable useable knowledge base
2026-07-08 @ 20:37:29Points: 47Comments: 8
Show HN: Onboard-CLI, a LLM powered and AST-based tool to visualize codebase
2026-07-08 @ 20:09:03Points: 18Comments: 3
FAANG Simulator
2026-07-08 @ 20:05:42Points: 224Comments: 85
Almost Always Unsigned
2026-07-08 @ 19:35:07Points: 22Comments: 25
New Sweden: the US's long-lost 'secret' colony
2026-07-08 @ 19:26:18Points: 29Comments: 2
Cloudflare Drop
2026-07-08 @ 19:18:26Points: 187Comments: 100
OpenMandriva: Statement regarding attempted distribution sabotage
2026-07-08 @ 18:21:53Points: 67Comments: 10
Grok 4.5
2026-07-08 @ 18:00:32Points: 434Comments: 481
Show HN: Microsoft releases Flint, a visualization language for AI agents
2026-07-08 @ 17:46:12Points: 169Comments: 71
But building AI agents that can generate visualizations reliably can be very tricky:
- simple chart specs can be reliable, but generated charts are often of low quality due to reliance on system defaults; - complex chart specs with explicit details can produce good-looking charts, but they are verbose and agents can struggle with reliability
We figured out it is a limitation on the language issue (not just AI capability thing) -- current visualization languages are a bit too low-level for AI agents, requiring them to explicitly make visual decisions that are supposed to be handled by a good compiler. Flint is a visualization intermediate language to address this issue, allow AI agents to solve this last-mile human-agent interaction problem. It provides a simple semantic-type based specification, and contains a layout optimization engine that can produce good-looking charts (filled with derived low-level details) from simple high-level specs. The result is also very human understandable and adaptable. Flint powers data formulator for generating visualizations (another open source project from microsoft https://data-formulator.ai/).
Flint is available open source, and we built a MCP server that you can directly plug flint in your favorite agent app to play with data.
GPT‑Live
2026-07-08 @ 17:03:19Points: 570Comments: 391
EU now one step away from reviving private message scanning rules
2026-07-08 @ 16:53:06Points: 341Comments: 134
SWE-1.7 Reach Near GPT 5.5 and Opus Intelligence
2026-07-08 @ 16:19:36Points: 244Comments: 127
Chatto is now open source
2026-07-08 @ 15:19:50Points: 671Comments: 184
Mistral's Robostral Navigate: a state of the art robotics navigation model
2026-07-08 @ 14:09:17Points: 394Comments: 93
OpenBSD has a use-after-free allowing local privilege escalation to root
2026-07-08 @ 13:24:52Points: 243Comments: 128
A bug which affected only left handed users
2026-07-08 @ 13:20:05Points: 74Comments: 39
Cloudflare Meerkat - Globally distributed consensus
2026-07-08 @ 13:18:03Points: 203Comments: 42
Decoding the obfuscated bash script on a Uniqlo t-shirt
2026-07-08 @ 08:46:06Points: 1270Comments: 203
Show HN: Yamanote.fun – A complete soundscape for Tokyo's Yamanote line
2026-07-07 @ 12:47:46Points: 29Comments: 9
But it wasn't until my second trip to Tokyo that I truly appreciated how much the door chimes, on-board announcements and train noise were contributing to the rich soundscape that I loved.
I returned home and found myself playing YouTube videos of Yamanote Line journeys as I worked. The combination of sonics, ambience and softly spoken Japanese was incredibly soothing to me.
But these recordings were often incomplete, poorly captured or out of date, and I wanted something far more comprehensive.
So I gathered up all of the constituent parts from Reddit threads, YouTube videos and Japanese fan sites, and set about recreating the experience of riding the Yamanote Line in Logic Pro X. Melody, door chimes and announcement, all stitched together under a bed of train noise and ambience.
I turned those soundscapes into an Alexa Skill (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Paul-Jackson-Yamanote-Line/dp/B07S1...) in 2019 and began to think about a companion website to share the soundscapes with a wider audience.
Seven years later and that website is Yamanote.fun: https://www.yamanote.fun/.
It's a small installable web app that plays the soundscapes like a playlist. All 30 stations and in both directions, since the inner and outer loops use different melodies. You can skip forward or back a station, and there's a scrub bar broken into melody / chime / ambience / announcement so you can jump straight to the bit you want. Each station has its own shareable link (yamanote.fun/jy13-ikebukuro-inner) that unfurls with the right station name and artwork when you share it.
It's a progressive web app too, so you can add it to your home screen and it behaves like a native app. There's an option to offline the audio too.
Under the hood it's relatively basic stuff: plain HTML, CSS & JS, audio served from Cloudflare R2 and the site hosted on Netlify. I was impressed to see how far I could get with the free tiers of these services. I designed the whole thing in Figma (I'm a Product Designer) and used Claude Code to architect and deliver the polished UI, PWA plumbing, offline caching and share-link infrastructure.
I would love feedback, particularly from anyone who's ridden the real thing.