Article: 3 min
OpenCode is an open-source AI coding agent available in beta on macOS, Windows, and Linux. It supports various models from different providers like Claude, GPT, Gemini, and allows users to connect their existing accounts with OpenAI or GitHub.
Discussion (270): 49 min
The comment thread discusses various AI-powered coding tools, with a focus on comparing OpenCode and Claude Code. Opinions vary regarding pricing, development practices, and features of these tools. Users highlight both positive aspects such as remote coding capabilities and drawbacks like bugs and privacy concerns.
Article: 35 min
Mamba-3 is a new state space model (SSM) designed with inference efficiency as the primary goal, improving upon Mamba-2 by enhancing recurrence formula, adding complex-valued state tracking, and introducing multi-input, multi-output (MIMO) SSMs. The model outperforms previous models in language modeling tasks while maintaining similar prefill+decode latency.
Discussion (0):
More comments needed for analysis.
Article: 2 min
A French Navy officer's public fitness app activity revealed the real-time location of France's aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle in the Mediterranean Sea.
Discussion (413): 1 hr 15 min
The discussion revolves around the challenges and advancements in tracking military assets like aircraft carriers, particularly focusing on the role of technology such as satellite imagery and fitness tracking apps. There is a consensus that while an aircraft carrier's location isn't supposed to be secret, adversaries face difficulties in real-time tracking due to ocean size. The conversation also highlights concerns about the inadvertent disclosure of sensitive information by military personnel using fitness apps.
Article: 2 min
The article discusses 'molly guards' in computing, which are safety features designed to prevent accidental button presses, often named after an engineer's daughter who pressed a significant button out of curiosity.
Discussion (22): 4 min
The comment thread discusses various opinions on implementing 'molly-guarding' in software for safety purposes, with some advocating its use while others argue against it due to inconvenience and lack of necessity. The conversation also touches upon related concepts like poka-yoke principles and the distinction between physical and digital world safety measures.
Article: 15 min
The article discusses a project where the authors rewrote their Rust WASM parser in TypeScript due to perceived performance benefits but found that it was not faster than the original implementation. The main issue was the overhead of data transfer across the WASM-JS boundary, which outweighed any potential speed gains from using Rust.
Discussion (88): 16 min
The discussion revolves around the impact of algorithmic improvements versus language choice on performance, with a focus on the article's headline and its content. There are differing opinions on whether the headline accurately reflects the main points discussed in the article. The conversation also touches upon various technical topics such as WebAssembly boundary costs, LLM-generated UI components, and serialization challenges.
Article: 8 min
This article provides an overview of various chopstick etiquette mistakes, known as 'kiraibashi', that should be avoided when dining in Japan. It explains the cultural significance and taboos associated with improper chopstick usage.
Discussion (145): 28 min
The comment thread discusses various aspects of Japanese dining etiquette, comparing it to Western practices and exploring how these customs vary by region within Japan. Participants share personal experiences and insights on the evolution of traditional etiquette over time, as well as the cultural nuances that influence regional differences in dining habits.
Article: 8 min
Ghostling is a minimal terminal project built using libghostty C API, showcasing the flexibility of this library with Raylib for windowing and rendering. It demonstrates core terminal emulation features without aiming for full functionality.
Discussion (26): 8 min
The discussion revolves around the technique of embedding binary resources in C code using an autogenerated header, with opinions on its innovation and cross-platform suitability. Alternative libraries for resource bundling are discussed, along with a production-ready function for converting binary data to C code. The conversation also touches on license considerations and the efficiency of cross-compilation techniques.
Article:
This repository contains code examples and documents from the book 'Linux Application Development By Example - The Fundamental APIs' by Arnold Robbins, published in 2004 and updated in 2026. It includes errata, source code for various chapters, and a license file for author-written code.
Discussion (7):
The comment thread discusses the availability and usefulness of a book on Linux application development, with one user expressing interest in learning OCaml for Unix programming. Another user questions the choice of OCaml over traditional languages like C for Unix system programming.
Article: 24 min
This article provides an introduction to FFmpeg, a powerful tool for encoding, decoding, and transcoding multimedia files. It explains the components of FFmpeg, including its tools and libraries, and demonstrates how to use these features by walking through the process of reading a multimedia file, analyzing its content, demuxing audio and video streams, finding compatible codecs, allocating decoding contexts, extracting packets, and decoding them into raw data.
Discussion (0):
More comments needed for analysis.
Article: 25 min
The article discusses the Content Scrambling System (CSS), a cryptosystem used for protecting DVDs against illegal copying. It explains how CSS works, its implementation in DVD players and player manufacturers' keys, and the controversy surrounding it, including the development of DeCSS by Jon Johansen to decrypt the system.
Discussion (5): 2 min
The comment thread discusses the use of decryption tools for physical media, the shift towards collecting physical media due to streaming service issues, and the legal implications of using such tools.
In the past 13d 22h 52m, we processed 2699 new articles and 108361 comments with an estimated reading time savings of 54d 22h 6m