Hacker News

Latest

TK, or the secret to effortless writing (2024)

2026-07-12 @ 15:58:42Points: 14Comments: 3

Why study Diophantine equations?

2026-07-12 @ 15:53:53Points: 16Comments: 1

How to Read More Books

2026-07-12 @ 15:47:16Points: 53Comments: 21

The power of collaboration: How we can reduce traffic congestion

2026-07-12 @ 15:35:36Points: 13Comments: 6

A no-brainer for protecting your brain

2026-07-12 @ 15:23:59Points: 38Comments: 25

Don't You Mean Extinct?

2026-07-12 @ 15:17:20Points: 31Comments: 10

Autoresearch, Claude and Constrained Optimization

2026-07-12 @ 14:32:00Points: 7Comments: 2

Show HN: Skillscript – A declarative, sandboxed language for tool orchestration

2026-07-12 @ 13:34:00Points: 7Comments: 6

The itch started with something small. I wanted my NanoClaw agent to run my morning brief the same way every day. Check overnight tickets, summarize the deploy pipeline, flag anything urgent. Every session, it would re-figure out how to do this from scratch, drift a little, and cost tokens for what's basically a fixed procedure. I could put it in a system prompt or an MD skill file, but those are still instructions the model reads and reasons about every time. And I wanted it to run autonomously and then hand it to the model to reason over the data.

The second thing that pushed me: I wanted to use small local models for the cheap stuff. They're capable, but if you just hand them the wheel, they wander. What I wanted was a way for the frontier model (or me) to write a specific procedure and hand it to the local model to execute, not interpret. The skillscript is the program; the model is the runtime.

Skillscript is that. A skillscript is a text file with named steps, variables, conditions, and calls out to tools (MCP connectors, a local model, and shell commands from an operator allowlist). It's deliberately minimal — no eval, no arbitrary imports, no subprocess, no unbounded loops. Bounded language, limited potential for damage. Everything a skillscript can do is in the file. You read it and know.

Where it is: pre-1.0 (0.30), MCP-native, self-hosted. Rough edges I know about: first-run setup takes more steps than it should, some of the grammar is still moving, and the local model integration currently assumes Ollama. It works well enough that I use it every day, but I wouldn't necessarily call it production-ready.

- Repo: [https://github.com/sshwarts/skillscript](https://github.com/sshwarts/skillscript)

- Site: [https://skillscript.ai](https://skillscript.ai)

- Docs: [https://skillscript.mintlify.app/docs](https://skillscript.mintlify.app/docs)

- npm: `skillscript-runtime`

I'd welcome critique on two things especially: the language design (is it too small? too big? wrong shape?) and the trust model around agent-authored skills. What would you want to see before you trusted this on your own machine?

AI Boosts Research Careers but Flattens Scientific Discovery

2026-07-12 @ 13:26:13Points: 86Comments: 70

Gina Gallery of International Naive Art

2026-07-12 @ 13:18:34Points: 25Comments: 11

Understanding the Odin Programming Language

2026-07-12 @ 12:08:07Points: 93Comments: 33

Unauthenticated RCE in Motorola's MR2600 Router

2026-07-12 @ 11:52:21Points: 55Comments: 17

Old and new apps, via modern coding agents by Terry Tao

2026-07-12 @ 11:09:42Points: 267Comments: 74

Ghostel.el: Terminal emulator powered by libghostty

2026-07-12 @ 08:52:59Points: 145Comments: 25

Show HN: Mindwalk – Replay coding-agent sessions on a 3D map of your codebase

2026-07-12 @ 05:51:32Points: 132Comments: 54

Mesh LLM: distributed AI computing on iroh

2026-07-11 @ 22:38:57Points: 313Comments: 72

RISCBoy is an open-source portable games console, designed from scratch

2026-07-11 @ 21:58:00Points: 192Comments: 28

Show HN: Ant – A JavaScript runtime and ecosystem

2026-07-11 @ 20:07:18Points: 311Comments: 142

I'm the author of Ant, a JavaScript ecosystem built around a runtime with its own JavaScript engine. Ant also includes a package manager, the ants.land package registry, a platform for deploying and hosting applications, and Ant Desktop for building native desktop apps with web technologies, similar to Electron.

The goal is for these pieces to work as one coherent platform while remaining compatible with the wider JavaScript ecosystem. It's still early, and I'd appreciate any feedback on the overall direction or what you'd like to see from an e2e alternative to the existing JavaScript stacks.

P.S. I’ve shared Ant here before as a runtime; since then, it has grown into the broader ecosystem you see today.

Nvidia, CoreWeave, and Nebius: Inside the Circular Financing of the GPU Boom

2026-07-11 @ 17:21:49Points: 342Comments: 150

Sixtyfour (YC P25) Is Hiring

2026-07-11 @ 17:00:35Points: 1

Vint Cerf, a “father of the Internet”, is retiring

2026-07-10 @ 00:06:59Points: 228Comments: 130

I Did Not Kill Stanley Lieber: How to Draw (With 9front)

2026-07-09 @ 14:10:04Points: 102Comments: 38

Relm – local LLMs as base-R objects, with interpretability

2026-07-09 @ 09:58:28Points: 5Comments: 0

Lessons from the Vasa Shipwreck

2026-07-08 @ 22:07:05Points: 17Comments: 14

Handsum: An LQIP Image File Format

2026-07-08 @ 12:07:59Points: 38Comments: 6

Protobuf-py: Protobuf for Python, without compromises

2026-07-08 @ 03:16:38Points: 112Comments: 29

An agent in 100 lines of Lisp

2026-07-07 @ 21:21:09Points: 213Comments: 65

Satteri: A Markdown pipeline forged in Rust for the JavaScript world

2026-07-07 @ 21:09:08Points: 27Comments: 5

Xbox 'OG' Adventures

2026-07-07 @ 04:35:55Points: 34Comments: 5

Ditching Zotero for a Text File

2026-07-06 @ 20:17:19Points: 42Comments: 27

Archives

2026

2025

2024

2023

2022