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June 18, 2026 at 08:48 AM
Launch HN: TesterArmy (YC P26) – Agents that test web and mobile apps
Hacker News (score: 22)Launch HN: TesterArmy (YC P26) – Agents that test web and mobile apps Hey HN - we’re Oskar, Szymon, and Piotr, and we’re building TesterArmy (<a href="https://tester.army">https://tester.army</a>). TesterArmy is an agentic testing platform that runs end-to-end checks before deployment and in production. Instead of wasting hours on manual testing or maintaining static scripts, we let you specify your tests in natural language and handle everything in between. We've built the platform fully around agents. Our agent will reliably execute the tests, but your coding agent can manage everything in our platform, from defining tests in natural language to running them on your behalf.<p>Check out our demo video: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=291IkUbPrlk" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=291IkUbPrlk</a>.<p>We started TesterArmy because testing is still far too painful. AI coding tools have made it dramatically faster to write and ship code, but testing is still a bottleneck. Traditional E2E tests are slow to set up and expensive to maintain. Managing auth and test users is painful. Setting up staging environments is painful. Running tests reliably is painful.<p>We think most teams do not actually want to spend their time writing selectors or maintaining test infrastructure. They just want confidence that their core flows work. With TesterArmy, an engineer can sign up, give an agent our CLI, and let it handle creating tests and running them on schedule or on GitHub.<p>When something breaks, TesterArmy alerts your team through Slack or Discord.<p>Over the past few months, we scaled from 0 to 30+ teams using our product every day. We caught bugs in critical flows, including onboarding, checkout, and AI chat. We've got many of our customers migrating from already established competitors to us because of the quality and reliability of our agents.<p>Here are a few of the recent bugs that our agent found (there were quite a lot of them!):<p>1) Timezone bug that affected the booking flow in one of our clients' apps, the dashboard was very complex and hard to catch by a human. 2) Regression in agent orchestration that caused a sandboxed environment to be stuck on loading, thanks to TesterArmy, the team was able to resolve it before it hit production. 3) Incorrectly counting the order amount in a complex dashboard flow with checkout, thanks to TesterArmy, the team was able to resolve it before it affected revenue 4) Catching a regression in an AI chat flow that would result in a user not being able to retrieve their data due to broken tool calling.<p>And many more, mostly related to some incorrect API calls, 404s, unhandled errors, etc.<p>If this sounds useful, we would love your feedback at <a href="https://tester.army">https://tester.army</a>. We have a bunch of free test runs for you to try. And don’t worry, we won’t make you do sales calls, and we don’t have long onboarding or annoying setup. Our goal is an it-just-works experience.<p>If you're looking for an end-to-end testing solution, we'd love to hear your feedback!
Has W Social switched to closed source?
Hacker News (score: 113)Has W Social switched to closed source?
LibreTranslate/LibreTranslate
GitHub TrendingFree and Open Source Machine Translation API. Self-hosted, offline capable and easy to setup.
Lightricks/LTX-2
GitHub TrendingOfficial Python inference and LoRA trainer package for the LTX-2 audio–video generative model.
owainlewis/awesome-artificial-intelligence
GitHub TrendingA curated list of Artificial Intelligence (AI) courses, books, video lectures and papers.
Kong/insomnia
GitHub TrendingThe open-source, cross-platform API client for GraphQL, REST, WebSockets, SSE and gRPC. With Cloud, Local and Git storage.
zai-org/GLM-5
GitHub TrendingGLM-5: From Vibe Coding to Agentic Engineering
I found 10k GitHub repositories distributing Trojan malware
Hacker News (score: 211)I found 10k GitHub repositories distributing Trojan malware
Advanced Compilers: The Self-Guided Online Course
Hacker News (score: 114)Advanced Compilers: The Self-Guided Online Course
A Modern Proxmox Docker Architecture with Disposable VMs, VirtIO-FS, and ZFS
Hacker News (score: 12)A Modern Proxmox Docker Architecture with Disposable VMs, VirtIO-FS, and ZFS
.gitignore Isn't the Only Way to Ignore Files in Git
Hacker News (score: 101).gitignore Isn't the Only Way to Ignore Files in Git
Show HN: Attagram, a tiny printer that gives kids a magical daily digest
Show HN (score: 5)Show HN: Attagram, a tiny printer that gives kids a magical daily digest I’m building Attagram: a small printer that lives in the kitchen and prints a daily paper digest for kids.<p>The idea came from an emerging family dynamic I kept noticing. My daughters (A, 9 and J, 8) are becoming increasingly independent, but as parents, we hold an enormous amount of invisible state in our heads and phones: what day a project is due, who needs cleats, what's for lunch, which kid has library day, what chores need to happen before screens, how many days until the camping trip, what Grandma wanted them to know, what changed after school, etc.<p>Kids live downstream of that system, and their experience of it is repetitive nagging:<p>"Brush your teeth." "Pack your folder." "Don't forget your cleats." "Don’t forget your water bottle." "Did you pack your cleats?" "Please pack your cleats."<p>Even if the tone is kind, the repetition makes it feel like a nag. And all of the information is trapped behind screens, which isn't great if you're trying to limit your kids' screen time, all while trying to give them more ownership in the process.<p>Attagram tries solve for that. It turns that invisible family state into a small daily artifact a kid can own.<p>Every morning, the printer wakes up and prints a parent-curated morning edition newspaper. It has sections like: today’s plan, a todo list, a countdown to an event, a joke, a riddle, a note from a grandparent, and lots more. It's something kids can tear off, pin to their bulletin board, shove in their pocket, or punch through a spike.<p>All of this is managed through, yes, an app. BUT! The app is for the parents. Its job is to be the best in the world at turning family logistics, rituals, and affection into a screen-free paper experience. The paper remains the hero, and how a kid experiences Attagram.<p>Technically, Attagram is pretty simple. It uses off-the-shelf parts to connect to a cloud service so daily digests can be generated and printed at scheduled times. It also allows trusted family members to send one-off notes as needed. The magic is in the experience overall and how it feels to hold the paper in your hands.<p>This is my first hardware project, and as a software person, I have really appreciated (and respected) how much there is to learn. It's a lot of work to make sure this product is perfect on day one, because there's no easy way to update hardware. Software is so forgiving!<p>We have a nationwide private beta program in homes now, and the feedback has been really positive. More than one family has told me that their kids park themselves in front of the printer each morning, waiting for it to print at the scheduled time. I'm planning to ship a few more units for free to really ensure we're getting all the input we can before going into more scaled production. If you think you'd be interested in one, drop me a line at myke@halfcorp.co.<p>Our modest plan is to reach 100 paid reservations before scaling manufacturing, partly to test whether strangers actually want this enough to pay rather than just say "cute idea." <a href="https://www.attagram.com/order" rel="nofollow">https://www.attagram.com/order</a><p>I’d value HN's experience on:<p>1. Industrial design: what stands out as being "bad design" in the current iteration? Also, if this is something you'd want to work on, I'd love to chat!<p>2. Mechanical engineering: what are the best ways to "harden" a device like this so it's reliable, but easy to manufacture. Also, if this is something you'd want to work on, I'd love to chat!<p>3. Manufacturing: when do you engage with a contract manufacturer in China? What do you try to avoid? Also, if this is something you'd want to work on, I'd love to chat!<p>4. HN Parents: is this something you could see yourself buying, or it just cute? If the former, but you wouldn't pre-order, why not?
[x86] AI Compute Extensions (ACE) Specification
Hacker News (score: 13)[x86] AI Compute Extensions (ACE) Specification
Midjourney Medical
Hacker News (score: 236)Midjourney Medical <a href="https://www.midjourney.com/medical" rel="nofollow">https://www.midjourney.com/medical</a><p>Video: <a href="https://x.com/midjourney/status/2067422898407837797" rel="nofollow">https://x.com/midjourney/status/2067422898407837797</a>
Storied Colors – a catalogue of named colors
Hacker News (score: 58)Storied Colors – a catalogue of named colors
Leaked financial docs show OpenAI is losing billions of dollars a year
Hacker News (score: 189)Leaked financial docs show OpenAI is losing billions of dollars a year
AI chemist improves a challenging reaction in medicinal chemistry
Hacker News (score: 26)AI chemist improves a challenging reaction in medicinal chemistry
Show HN: Relaymux, a tmux-based meta-harness for local coding agents
Show HN (score: 6)Show HN: Relaymux, a tmux-based meta-harness for local coding agents Hey HN,<p>There’s been a lot of interest recently in meta-harnesses, loops, and multi-agent orchestration. Obviously, there are already a lot of good tools: Conductor, cmux, the native Codex / Claude Code apps, etc.<p>For my own use cases, I’ve felt that the orchestration layer tends to feel overengineered. I mostly wanted a simple local harness (i.e Pi) for running and tracking CLI agents with the ability to hop in (via tmux). Relaymux is my opinionated attempt at that.<p>A few design principles:<p>- The frontend is just Telegram / iMessage / CLI. If I want more visibility, I hop into tmux.<p>- Subagents are normal interactive CLI agents running in tmux windows, usually with their own worktrees.<p>- The harness owns the tmux session, so each longer task becomes a named tab/window. Subagents report back to the orchestrator via CLI when they’re blocked or done. Then the orchestrator just messages me on Telegram / iMessage<p>- It works with any CLI agent that has an interactive terminal mode, so I don’t need special print-mode/non-interactive support. This means I don’t need to stress about the Agent SDK / claude -p billing limitations.
Show HN: An 8-bit live gamecast for baseball
Hacker News (score: 134)Show HN: An 8-bit live gamecast for baseball Hey HN, I built a website to watch live baseball games in an 8-bit broadcast. It takes live MLB data streams and converts them into near real-time pixel art gamecasts.<p>Been waiting to share this for when there’s actually a good slate of games happening since the site is pretty bare otherwise.<p>Here is today's schedule:<p>Mets @ Reds - 9:40am PDT <a href="https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/824503" rel="nofollow">https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/824503</a><p>Royals @ Nationals - 10:05am PDT <a href="https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/822721" rel="nofollow">https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/822721</a><p>Marlins @ Phillies - 10:05am PDT <a href="https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/823450" rel="nofollow">https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/823450</a><p>Tigers @ Astros - 11:10am PDT <a href="https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/824178" rel="nofollow">https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/824178</a><p>Padres @ Cardinals - 11:15am PDT <a href="https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/823044" rel="nofollow">https://ribbie.tv/watch/game/823044</a><p>..and another 14 games throughout the later day.<p>I'm still early on in this project, but I've tried to add little details with actual stadiums, day and night modes, between inning graphics and interstitials, live scoreboards, etc.<p>Would love any feedback and ideas. Thanks for checking it out!