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June 03, 2026 at 04:00 PM
Show HN: Tired of duct-taping access control into agent prompts. Here's the fix
Hacker News (score: 10)[Other] Show HN: Tired of duct-taping access control into agent prompts. Here's the fix
Recovering Eric Graham's 1987 Amiga Juggler raytracer source code
Hacker News (score: 29)[Other] Recovering Eric Graham's 1987 Amiga Juggler raytracer source code
Capstone – multi-platform, multi-architecture disassembly framework
Hacker News (score: 17)[Other] Capstone – multi-platform, multi-architecture disassembly framework
Show HN: Clor – give your agent claws
Show HN (score: 8)[CLI Tool] Show HN: Clor – give your agent claws At my last job I spent a year building an agentic coding platform used by hundreds of thousands of people. Along the way I tried building a hosting service on OpenClaw, and also ran Hermes myself for a while. Both projects have some great feature ideas, but when I tried to use them for real work they failed more often than not, and their security models worried me. I just couldn't see either one becoming something I'd trust enough for myself/friends/family. After a lot of exploration I realized that what I really wanted all along was to create automations using the coding agent I already work in every day. It turned out coding agents were the best tool for automating anything, not just code, as long as they had the right environment and tools to work with.<p>I also spent 20 years leading Linux infrastructure and distributed systems teams. Anyone who's written service daemons knows that most of what we think of as "always on" is really just wake up, do some work, and go back to sleep, which is an efficient pattern to use and reason about. Cron has worked this way for decades.<p>So I built Clor, a CLI that lets your coding agent create "claws", which are background agents that automate anything on a schedule and run on your laptop, Mac mini, or a VM.<p>A claw can be defined and shared as a single CLAW.md file, which contains a bit of metadata (name, schedule, personality, etc.) and one or more ordered tasks. Each task is a real agent run with full tool use, or a plain bash step. Anything you can ask your agent to do once, a claw can do repeatedly. One of my claws tidies my inbox every few minutes, labeling obvious spam, rescuing legit email that got mislabeled, and starring threads I owe a reply to, etc. It's way smarter than Gmail's filters because it actually reads my mail instead of just matching rules.<p>Installing is the usual command on Linux/macOS in the terminal: curl -fsSL <a href="https://clor.com/install.sh" rel="nofollow">https://clor.com/install.sh</a> | bash. That will set up the CLI, a small scheduling daemon, and a skill that you can run from your agent, /claws in Claude Code or $claws in Codex.
MAI-Code-1-Flash
Hacker News (score: 148)[Other] MAI-Code-1-Flash <a href="https://microsoft.ai/models/mai-code-1-flash/" rel="nofollow">https://microsoft.ai/models/mai-code-1-flash/</a><p><a href="https://microsoft.ai/pdf/MAI-Code-1-Flash-Model-Card.PDF" rel="nofollow">https://microsoft.ai/pdf/MAI-Code-1-Flash-Model-Card.PDF</a><p>Launching seven new MAI models: <a href="https://microsoft.ai/news/building-a-hillclimbing-machine-launching-seven-new-mai-models/" rel="nofollow">https://microsoft.ai/news/building-a-hillclimbing-machine-la...</a>
MAI-Thinking-1
Hacker News (score: 18)[Other] MAI-Thinking-1 <a href="https://microsoft.ai/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/main_20260602_2.pdf" rel="nofollow">https://microsoft.ai/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/main_2026060...</a><p>Launching seven new MAI models: <a href="https://microsoft.ai/news/building-a-hillclimbing-machine-launching-seven-new-mai-models/" rel="nofollow">https://microsoft.ai/news/building-a-hillclimbing-machine-la...</a>
Show HN: RePlaya – self-hosted browser session replay with live tailing
Hacker News (score: 14)[Monitoring/Observability] Show HN: RePlaya – self-hosted browser session replay with live tailing Hi HN, I'm one of the founders of s2.dev. RePlaya (<a href="https://github.com/s2-streamstore/replaya" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/s2-streamstore/replaya</a>) is a self-hosted browser session replay tool using rrweb (<a href="https://github.com/rrweb-io/rrweb" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/rrweb-io/rrweb</a>).<p>It occurred to me that a durable stream per session would be a much neater architectural foundation for much of what you'd want from such a tool. As a unique feature, it also made live tailing straightforward because the player can read from the same stream the recorder is appending to.<p>The alternative architecture is likely an ingest firehose which is then indexed, with associated complexity and latency. You'd have to string together multiple data systems like a message queue, a metadata database, and blob storage and/or an OLAP database.<p>Here the only dependency is S2, which has an open source version you can self-host called s2-lite (<a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46708055">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46708055</a>).<p>How it works:<p>- one S2 stream per browser session<p>- large rrweb events (like a full snapshot) get framed across multiple binary S2 records and reassembled on read<p>- active sessions are tailed with an S2 read session, and bridged to the browser over SSE<p>- session listing relies on stream names encoding reverse timestamps, as S2 returns a lexicographic order listing<p>- relying on fencing tokens so a stopped session can't be written to again by a late recorder<p>- retention and GC are handled via S2 stream config, so no background job needed<p>Curious to hear from folks on the tool or the stream-per-session model!
QBE – Compiler Backend – 1.3
Hacker News (score: 44)[Other] QBE – Compiler Backend – 1.3
Show HN: I built a way to find and install Claude skills
Show HN (score: 5)[Other] Show HN: I built a way to find and install Claude skills I've been experimenting with ways to increase AI adoption for non-technical people. Basically, all companies are pushing for AI because it's all over the news and they feel left behind but most people have no clue where to start. I think 90% of people (ie non coders) are sufficiently well served by using cowork instead of claude code or something similar. If we can get people from sales, customer support, marketing, etc to collaborate with skills and cowork to form a company brain, I think it's gold. So I think there's opportunity for the community to share skills that work well for 1000s of use cases. However, it's currently quite hard to find good skills and figure out if they're worth it. Gstack has had immense success because of Gary's reach and credibility. Can something like Claudinho.xyz host skills built by the community? What are your thoughts / concerns?
Show HN: MetaBrain – A local document memory for AI agents
Show HN (score: 6)[Other] Show HN: MetaBrain – A local document memory for AI agents Hello there HN<p>I experimented with agentic coding recently and I felt the need to track more contextual data by project. Also I felt the need to be able to go beyond the 1D chat to communicate with agents.<p>So I created a local document memory, that is discoverable by agents themselves. The CLI is designed to be easy to pick up by agents. It allows humans to collaborate too by reading / searching / editing documents in the store.<p>I have a Mac native GUI in the review process, I hope it will show up in the App Store soon.<p>You can try it easily, instructions here: <a href="https://metabrain.eu/" rel="nofollow">https://metabrain.eu/</a> Here is the GitHub <a href="https://github.com/OpenCow42/metaBrain" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/OpenCow42/metaBrain</a><p>The project is also an experiment for me to build some swift project truly cross platform (Mac / Linux / Windows) It is open-sourced with the same license as LevelDB that I wrapped in swift to do this project.<p>The agents (and humans) can retrieve content quickly with a search, allowing to re-injecting specific knowledge in a specific context during agentic work. It’s funny, I’ve thought of "inference rule base" as something of a derelict idea of the old functional expert systems. Now that I start working with agents I feel more and more the need to go pick previously working solutions dynamically in such a base.<p>I’d be happy to get feedback. Product fit wise, would this be useful to you or is this just me who is happy with it ?<p>Finally I had fun with the compression of documents, it tries ZSTD quick, if it does not compress the data by more than 10 percent it stores data uncompressed, else it does a ZSTD level 9 compression on the data. I picked up this trick form OpenZFS.<p>Thanks
Rethinking Search as Code Generation
Hacker News (score: 46)[Other] Rethinking Search as Code Generation
chopratejas/headroom
GitHub Trending[Other] Compress tool outputs, logs, files, and RAG chunks before they reach the LLM. 60-95% fewer tokens, same answers. Library, proxy, MCP server.
1-Click GitHub Token Stealing via a VSCode Bug
Hacker News (score: 89)[Other] 1-Click GitHub Token Stealing via a VSCode Bug
[Other] Show HN: A searchable archive of declassified UAP/UFO files, news, and analysis Hey HN! Y’all are great. It is so fun to build things these days.<p>I wanna show off this archive that I conjured to run at home for consuming the recently releases of UFO files from the US government. This started as a Mac Mini-hosted project that I executed with my OpenClaw over Discord. After showing this to a few friends, I decided to get it online and find a catchy domain. Cloudflare was the perfect hosting choice.<p>There’s a lot of bonkers things out there going on, so I added human curated “Signals” - news, analysis and discussion of UFO and adjacent news. The backlog of signals was informed by the links shared between myself and my first tech boss. We have both seen things that these files help confirm.<p>As part of a reason to bring people back, I asked my assistant to do some digging into the data and come up with “Insights”, a dedicated section on the site that includes the responsible LLM in the byline. There a media pipeline for these insights using Remotion to generate social-media ready videos that I can upload to TT, IG, and YouTube.<p>I built this for fun. Mostly with Ollama-powered GLM 5.1. Runs on Cloudflare Workers, D1, R2. Keyboard navigation within the doc viewer is blazing fast. OpenClaw is my CMS.<p>Eventually, I hope to find some passive revenue through ethical ads if I get enough traffic. I think there is an audience for this. Right now, this is helpful with sharing the WTFs (and psyops) of the world with friends.<p>Hit me up with questions!<p>Stay rad, HN!
Show HN: Wikigraph – an interactive visualization of all of English Wikipedia
Show HN (score: 10)[Other] Show HN: Wikigraph – an interactive visualization of all of English Wikipedia Hi! This is a visualization I've always wanted but never quite found. It's a navigable map of the Wikipedia link graph structure, with search and shortest-path finding.<p>Offline, I parsed the May 2026 English Wikipedia full-text dump into a directed graph, used cuGraph on a GPU to run PageRank, Leiden clustering, and ForceAtlas2 for the layout. I did some post processing to get rid of lingering overlapping nodes and rendered a tiled map of raster base images (using Skia) and JSON metadata. Tiles are bundled into PMTiles. The frontend is Deck.gl.<p>Everything is hosted on Cloudflare. Search and shortest-path are served by a Rust backend in CF Containers which uses Tantivy and bidirectional BFS.<p>Happy to answer any questions!
Show HN: Build Your Own AI Agent CLI in 150 Lines
Show HN (score: 12)[Other] Show HN: Build Your Own AI Agent CLI in 150 Lines I can't tell if HN is the right kind of place for this stuff anymore since people are so advanced in their use but I thought it was interesting to leverage my existing Go microservices framework and turn it into the core of what would provide tools for an agent cli or whatever beyond that. Extensibility is key. Thought I'd share and get a conversation going.
Apple rejected my dictation app for using the accessibility API
Hacker News (score: 205)[Other] Apple rejected my dictation app for using the accessibility API
Show HN: NUA an agent that tests for product correctness
Show HN (score: 8)[Testing] Show HN: NUA an agent that tests for product correctness We’ve been using background Claude loops a lot recently, and we would wake up to PRs that didn’t solve the problem we wanted, made on assumptions that were wrong. Furthermore, the tests that the agents wrote were usually tautological, and didn’t test for intent. We wanted an agent that took all the context a company has, and writes tests that check for product correctness as well.<p>For example, we work in reg tech, so bugs aren’t always technical. What we often see is things like insider trading alerts that should’ve fired that didn’t. We wanted an agent that turns laws and regulations into tests.<p>For now, users can upload PDF, MD, TXT, and DOCX files, but we’re planning integrations like Slack, Notion, Linear, and Zoom in the future.<p>We’re early on, so we would love to know what you all think!
OpenAI frontier models and Codex are now available on AWS
Hacker News (score: 175)[Other] OpenAI frontier models and Codex are now available on AWS