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July 04, 2026 at 04:38 PM
How working memory could give rise to consciousness
Hacker News (score: 19)How working memory could give rise to consciousness
crynta/terax-ai
GitHub TrendingLightweight (7MB) Terminal-first AI-native dev workspace
Astrophysicists Puzzle over Webb's New Universe
Hacker News (score: 44)Astrophysicists Puzzle over Webb's New Universe
Show HN: Forge β A JavaScript runtime built on Mozilla SpiderMonkey
Show HN (score: 5)Show HN: Forge β A JavaScript runtime built on Mozilla SpiderMonkey
Agentic coding notes from Galapagos Island
Hacker News (score: 63)Agentic coding notes from Galapagos Island
Soatok's Informal Guide to Threat Models
Hacker News (score: 44)Soatok's Informal Guide to Threat Models
Scientists discover guidance system for migratory songbirds
Hacker News (score: 17)Scientists discover guidance system for migratory songbirds
Show HN: Solitaire.Free - Play Klondike, FreeCell & Spider Solitaire Online
Show HN (score: 5)Show HN: Solitaire.Free - Play Klondike, FreeCell & Spider Solitaire Online
Apple 'Hide My Email' Vulnerability Reveals Peoples' Real Email Addresses
Hacker News (score: 10)Apple 'Hide My Email' Vulnerability Reveals Peoples' Real Email Addresses
The circuit that lets your brain think and see
Hacker News (score: 12)The circuit that lets your brain think and see
David Potter, the man who put Psion in the palm of your hand, logs off at 82
Hacker News (score: 12)David Potter, the man who put Psion in the palm of your hand, logs off at 82
GitFut β Your GitHub stats turned into a World-Cup-style player card
Hacker News (score: 33)GitFut β Your GitHub stats turned into a World-Cup-style player card
Software, from First Principles
Hacker News (score: 14)Software, from First Principles
Show HN: ContextCodeCache in Rust
Show HN (score: 8)Show HN: ContextCodeCache in Rust
Show HN: How clanker are you? A reverse Turing test
Show HN (score: 5)Show HN: How clanker are you? A reverse Turing test You write 8 text completions and open models score how predictable each word was too them. Predictable => clanker. You can share results with your friends.<p>The scoring checks every word you write against the model's logprobs. Right now I'm using Llama3.1, Deepseek v3 and Qwen3 to keep costs low. I tried to calibrate it so other models (chatgpt/claude) score 100% and interesting human responses score in the 10-30% range.<p>Totally free, no signup
Kagi Changelog (July 2): Heads, tails, and an AI toggle
Hacker News (score: 50)Kagi Changelog (July 2): Heads, tails, and an AI toggle
Show HN: Kontext β Move an AI chat's full context to another AI in one click
Show HN: StillUpTo β Keep track of the side projects if they are still alive
Show HN: Opbox β CRDT based sync for text files on disk
Show HN (score: 8)Show HN: Opbox β CRDT based sync for text files on disk Hi! Iβm one of the founders of s2.dev, and recently have been hacking on opbox, which is an open-source daemon that turns directories of text files (code, markdown, etc) into collaborative, multi-player workspaces.<p>This started as a bit of an intellectual curiosity, to see if it was possible to do real-time sync at the filesystem level (i.e., in an editor-agnostic way).<p>The idea is pretty simple:<p><pre><code> - Opbox workspaces are roughly analogous to git repositories (and can be used alongside existing git repos, to share live changes between commits) - When the opbox daemon is running in a workspace (ob start), it listens for local filesystem events within its directory (writes, deletes, new files), and translates them into operations (the titular βopβ) on shadow CRDT documents (Yrs) corresponding to each text file (as well as one doc for the namespace as a whole, which handles paths) - These shadow CRDT docs are maintained in a workspace-local sqlite db (Turso) - The ops, which represent diffs on a corresponding CRDT document, are then appended to a durable stream (S2) that acts as a shared journal for all sync participants - Opbox also reads from that journal, receiving ops from other participants, which are then used to update the local documents, first in the db, then by materializing them into actual files on disk </code></pre> This has worked surprisingly well for sharing things like Obsidian graphs in real-time.<p>Itβs most helpful in cases where you want the ability to edit local files from arbitrary editors, but still collaborate live. The experience is best from editors where you can configure an aggressive autosave policy, and where edits to an open file are reflected in the editor in a timely way.<p>To gain confidence in the correctness of the core opbox flows (particularly all the nuances around bidirectional sync) I invested in wiring up deterministic simulation testing using the turmoil library, which has been incredibly helpful (see the opbox-sim crate in the repo).
Show HN: Dockside β I turned unused space around the macOS Dock into a workspace
Show HN (score: 5)Show HN: Dockside β I turned unused space around the macOS Dock into a workspace