Article: 27 min
The article discusses how undefined behavior (UB) is prevalent and unavoidable in C/C++ programming, despite its inherent risks. The author argues that UB exists everywhere, even in seemingly simple operations like dereferencing pointers or casting between types, which can lead to crashes, security vulnerabilities, or unexpected behaviors on different architectures.
Discussion (72): 15 min
This comment thread discusses the complexities of undefined behavior in C/C++, focusing on compiler optimizations, potential exploitation, and the role of large language models in identifying and mitigating issues. Participants debate the reliability of modern compilers and the effectiveness of LLMs in code analysis.
Article: 2 min
Railway service disruption due to Google Cloud account blockage
Discussion (209): 34 min
This comment thread discusses various aspects related to cloud computing services, particularly focusing on the outage experienced by a startup using Google Cloud Platform (GCP). The discussion includes comparisons between GCP and other major cloud providers like AWS and Azure in terms of reliability, as well as strategies for managing cloud infrastructure. There is also debate around vendor lock-in, customer support issues, and the importance of having a multi-cloud strategy to ensure redundancy.
Article: 2 min
Ben Welsh created an index for all FiveThirtyEight articles available on the Internet Archive, covering a range of topics from pollster ratings to swing state analysis.
Discussion (39): 7 min
The comment thread discusses the deletion of FiveThirtyEight articles by ABC/Disney, the preservation efforts on the Internet Archive, and Ben Welsh's contributions to data journalism. Participants express concern over historical content loss and praise for the preservation work.
Article: 11 min
Google introduces Gemini 3.5, a new family of AI models designed for enhanced intelligence and action capabilities in agents and coding tasks. The release includes the first model, 3.5 Flash, which offers superior performance on complex benchmarks and excels at long-horizon tasks.
Discussion (523): 1 hr 42 min
The discussion revolves around the introduction of Gemini 3.5 Flash, a faster AI model from Google, which is compared to other leading models like Claude Sonnet and DeepSeek V4 in terms of performance and pricing. Users express concerns about the price increase for Gemini 3.5 Flash, noting that it makes the model less competitive against its competitors. There are also discussions on the model's performance issues such as tool use and knowledge cutoffs, with some users finding the output to be more human-like compared to previous models.
Article: 14 min
The article describes an extensive virtual museum featuring nearly every operating system from stored-program computing's inception in 1948 up until the present day. The collection is accessible through a custom launcher and includes pre-installed systems, snapshots for easy restoration, and hypervisor installers for Windows, macOS, and Linux users.
Discussion (164): 21 min
The discussion revolves around an impressive project that archives and makes available a vast collection of old operating systems. Users express nostalgia, appreciation for the preservation effort, and suggestions for improvements such as better searchability or additional features like dark mode. There is some debate about the inclusion of specific OSes and concerns regarding emulation quirks.
Discussion (88): 12 min
The comment thread discusses the security incident at Github where 3,800 internal repos were exposed and various opinions on read-only access policies, productivity vs. security, and Github's security practices are shared.
Article: 18 min
Remove-AI-Watermarks is a software library and CLI tool designed to remove visible and invisible AI watermarks from images generated by various AI models. It supports removal of watermarks, metadata, and 'Made with AI' labels, and includes features like batch processing, face protection, and analog humanization.
Discussion (138): 23 min
The discussion revolves around the need for clear markers on AI-generated content to prevent misinformation, with a focus on watermarking techniques and their limitations. Participants debate the effectiveness of watermarking in an arms race scenario and discuss broader implications for trust in media.
Article: 11 min
Google has introduced significant updates to its AI-powered search engine, including the new Gemini 3.5 Flash model and an enhanced Search box that integrates AI tools for better question formulation and multimodal searching.
Discussion (688): 2 hr 22 min
The comment thread discusses concerns and opinions regarding Google's integration of AI into its search engine, with users expressing dissatisfaction over perceived declines in search result quality and relevance. There is a sense of nostalgia for the original Google experience, and many are considering or have already switched to alternative search engines due to these changes.
Article: 16 min
Forge is a reliability layer for self-hosted Large Language Model (LLM) tool-calling, designed to enhance the performance of an 8B model on agentic tasks. It achieves this through guardrails and context management features, offering three ways to use it: WorkflowRunner, SlotWorker, and Guardrails middleware. Forge supports various backends including llama-server, Ollama, Llamafile, and Anthropic, with a focus on improving the reliability of multi-step workflows.
Discussion (168): 51 min
Forge is an innovative open-source tool designed to enhance the reliability of local large language models in various workflows, particularly for small models that struggle with reliability and efficiency when performing multi-step tasks. It achieves this through domain-agnostic nudges, retry mechanisms, step enforcement, error recovery, and VRAM-aware context management, improving completion rates, reducing error recovery time, and enhancing performance on long-running agentic coding tasks.
Article: 19 min
This article is a comprehensive guide to various electronic kit companies that were popular in the 20th century, with a focus on Heathkit and its extensive range of kits offered from 1947 through the early 1990s. The text also mentions other notable companies such as Allied Radio, EICO, EMC, Precise, Paco, Dynaco, and Stancor, detailing their histories, product lines, and eventual fates.
Discussion (6):
The user shares their nostalgic experience of building various electronics kits from Heathkit and EICO, their career in hardware, and appreciation for vintage audio equipment.
In the past 13d 23h 13m, we processed 2375 new articles and 108052 comments with an estimated reading time savings of 47d 12h 4m