🛠️ All DevTools
Showing 1–20 of 4960 tools
Last Updated
June 07, 2026 at 04:44 PM
Anthropic, please ship an official Claude Desktop for Linux
Hacker News (score: 186)Anthropic, please ship an official Claude Desktop for Linux
Show HN: I made a better zsh autosuggestion tool that predicts your next command Hi everyone I just created Deja, a tool that instead of only surfacing commands that start with what you've typed, suggest what you actually want to run. I built it because I was using zsh autosuggestions but got tired of typing the same commands again and again. So Deja predicts your next command from your history.<p>Let me know what you think
Misguided Misstatements Continue to Dismantle Biomedical Research in the U.S.
Hacker News (score: 28)Misguided Misstatements Continue to Dismantle Biomedical Research in the U.S.
Show HN: Lathe – Use LLMs to learn a new domain, not skip past it
Hacker News (score: 61)Show HN: Lathe – Use LLMs to learn a new domain, not skip past it Hey HN!<p>Lathe is an experiment in using LLMs to teach me something new, instead of doing the work for me. It generates a hands-on, source-backed tutorial for any technical topic you want to learn. Then you work through it yourself by reading and typing the code by hand (<i>gasp</i>) in a local UI built for exactly that.<p>It's a Go CLI plus LLM agent skills (Claude Code / Cursor / Codex). You prompt something like "/lathe build a 3D slicer in Erlang", run `lathe serve` to spin up a local webapp, and read it in your browser. Every tutorial comes with the things that have made self-learning a pleasant experience for me in the past:<p>- table of contents that follows along as you scroll - side-notes that nudge you to think - exercises for the reader - sources backing up the content that you can use to take you deeper<p>To help make up for the lack of human brainpower behind the tutorial, you can also ask questions about the content, have another LLM verify the tutorial actually compiles and runs, or extend it with another part (no more "Part 4 of 6" that hasn't seen an update since 2021).<p>I didn't build lathe to replace human-written tutorials. I built lathe because I _love_ human-written tutorials, but wanted to learn technical domains where no good human-written tutorial exists yet (building a 3D slicer from scratch, making embedded Zig approachable, etc). There's a longer story in the README about how I got started with programming through PSP homebrew tutorials, and why losing that to LLMs bugged me enough to build this.<p>I'm not here to sell you anything (there's nothing close to a VC-backed startup here :D). It's an LLM, and its output is usually good but not perfect by any means. So far, my experience is that because you're the one typing and actually engaged, you catch the weird stuff (and I'm finding that pushing back on it is its own kind of learning). And yes, it's vibecoded, because it's low scope, low risk, and scratching a personal itch. I run it on Claude Code + macOS personally, other setups should work but I haven't been able to verify them yet.<p>If you can find resources to learn something that was written by a human, read that first. But Lathe is here to fill in the gaps when that isn't the case, and I hope it serves as an example where LLMs can help us think better, rather than less.<p>Repo: <a href="https://github.com/devenjarvis/lathe" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/devenjarvis/lathe</a><p>Would love your feedback if you decide to check it out!
Scientists ejected from diabetes conference for distributing journal reprints
Hacker News (score: 93)Scientists ejected from diabetes conference for distributing journal reprints
Automated QA and Testing with AI
Hacker News (score: 11)Automated QA and Testing with AI
Efficient and Training-Free Single-Image Diffusion Models
Hacker News (score: 10)Efficient and Training-Free Single-Image Diffusion Models
The 29th International Obfuscated C Code Contest (IOCCC) 2025 Winners
Hacker News (score: 83)The 29th International Obfuscated C Code Contest (IOCCC) 2025 Winners
The circus freaks of open source
Hacker News (score: 60)The circus freaks of open source
DoD Officially Drops 180 Faiths from Military's Recognized Religion List
Hacker News (score: 13)DoD Officially Drops 180 Faiths from Military's Recognized Religion List
Show HN: A beautiful and local-first PDF reader for studying dense things
Show HN (score: 5)Show HN: A beautiful and local-first PDF reader for studying dense things Recently, I found myself having to read the book "C++ primer" and I just couldn't do it. Maybe my attention span is too little now with Claude and Codex, maybe I'm lazy... but I just couldn't get myself to focus.<p>While reading, I needed something to do. I wanted to talk to the text, I wanted to leave notes, I wanted to use to use my keyboard to quickly flip through pages.<p>The only good available option on a Mac was "Preview" and it was ok, but definitely not there. So I built Quincy primarily for myself.<p>With it you can - "Talk" to the page you're reading, create a quiz about the page, and get a good summary - "Read" the page out-loud. Have your Mac read to you while you follow along. This helps with comprehension. - Copy text (to paste into an LLM), leave notes, bookmarks, etc.... - Anything else you'd want with a nice PDF reader<p>It's fully local. No cloud-sync (yet). All LLM calls are based on your keys. And TBH, you don't even need to use the AI features for this to be useful.<p>Try it out. Let me know what you guys think. This has been a quick project, so very rough around the edges. I plan on keeping it going (still haven't finished my book), and potentially open-sourcing down the line.
Sem: New primitive for code understanding – not LSPs, but entities on top of Git
Hacker News (score: 30)Sem: New primitive for code understanding – not LSPs, but entities on top of Git
Ntsc-rs – open-source video emulation of analog TV and VHS artifacts
Hacker News (score: 25)Ntsc-rs – open-source video emulation of analog TV and VHS artifacts
santifer/career-ops
GitHub TrendingAI-powered job search system built on Claude Code. 14 skill modes, Go dashboard, PDF generation, batch processing.
nginx/nginx
GitHub TrendingThe official NGINX Open Source repository.
danielmiessler/Personal_AI_Infrastructure
GitHub TrendingAgentic AI Infrastructure for magnifying HUMAN capabilities.
Show HN: Ccgs – Collaborative Claude Code sessions, stored in Git branches
Show HN (score: 5)Show HN: Ccgs – Collaborative Claude Code sessions, stored in Git branches My team uses Claude Code daily, and the sessions have become some of the most useful artifacts we produce. But they're trapped in ~/.claude/projects/ on whichever laptop they happened on. There's no good way to hand a colleague "the session where I untangled the migration" so they can claude --resume it and keep going from where I left off. Enter ccgs: Share Claude Code sessions through an orphan branch (@ccgs/<name>) in your existing repo's remote<p>- Session files carry the author's absolute paths. On pull, ccgs rewrites the working dir back to your path so resume actually works — surgically editing only the structural cwd field, not a blind find-and-replace that would happily corrupt the transcript.<p>- Everything goes through git plumbing (hash-object/commit-tree/update-ref) against a throwaway index. It never touches your working tree, index, or current branch, and it's fine with a dirty tree. It will not git checkout something behind your back.<p>To try it without installing: `npx claude-git-sessions`. This also incidentally allows you to move a directory and carry the claude code transcripts with it (just push first, then move the directory, then pull)<p>IMPORTANT CAVEAT: Unless you have a very good security hygiene, your Claude Code sessions are likely full of sensitive information such as environment secrets. Use with caution and avoid using on public repositories. Branches used by ccgs are prefixed by `@ccgs/` so you can easily filter them out.<p><i>This project was written by and with Claude Code. This Show HN was not.</i><p>(Reposted with URL fixed)
Running Python code in a sandbox with MicroPython and WASM
Hacker News (score: 48)Running Python code in a sandbox with MicroPython and WASM
Trees to Flows and Back: Unifying Decision Trees and Diffusion Models
Hacker News (score: 28)Trees to Flows and Back: Unifying Decision Trees and Diffusion Models
Show HN: StructOCR – API for parsing global passports, invoices, and containers Hi HN,<p>I built an AI-powered OCR API designed to extract highly structured JSON data from complex documents like global passports, IDs, receipts, and shipping containers. We recently rolled out our Python and Node.js SDKs.<p>Just wanted to share it with the community.