Article: 7 min
The article discusses the performance and size of a macOS virtual machine (VM) running on Apple silicon, specifically focusing on the Mac mini M4 Pro with macOS 26.4.1 as the host system. It compares the VM's performance against the host using Geekbench 6.7.1 scores for CPU, GPU, Metal, and CoreML tasks, finding that the VM performs at around 98% of the host's speed on single-core CPU tests, better than expected on multi-core CPU tests, and slightly slower on GPU and neural engine tasks.
Discussion (16): 2 min
The discussion revolves around the performance of Intel MacBook Air in running Safari smoothly, managing virtual machines on macOS with limited resources, and the complexity involved in setting up signing and notarization for macOS VMs. There is a general agreement that macOS can handle impressive workloads efficiently but there are differing opinions on memory usage optimization and the ease of VM setup.
Discussion (157): 35 min
The comment thread discusses the quality, performance, and pricing of Noctua fans compared to competitors like Arctic, BeQuiet, and Thermalright. Opinions vary on whether the premium price justifies the perceived benefits in terms of noise level, airflow efficiency, and reliability. The discussion also touches on personal preferences for color, design, and aesthetics, as well as concerns about environmental impact.
Article: 13 min
The article discusses the history of environment variables TMP and TEMP in operating systems, specifically focusing on their origins from CP/M to MS-DOS and Windows. It explains how these variables emerged as front-runners for specifying temporary file locations and how they are used differently by various programs.
Discussion (35): 7 min
The comment thread discusses the history and evolution of configuration methods in operating systems, with a focus on the importance of standardization. Users share opinions on patching code for configuration purposes and compare it to modern standards like XDG Base Directory Specification. There is also a discussion about elitist attitudes in software development communities.
Article: 7 min
DAC is an open-source Dashboard-as-Code tool that enables users to define, validate, and serve dashboards using YAML and TSX. It supports dynamic charts, tabs, loops, conditionals with TypeScript, built-in AI agent via Codex for live updates, and works with various databases including Postgres, MySQL, Snowflake, BigQuery, Redshift, Databricks, etc., through Bruin. The tool is designed to facilitate reliable and reviewable dashboard creation by AI agents.
Discussion (6): 2 min
Burak introduced DAC, an open-source tool for defining dashboards as code in Go, with features like version control, code-driven changes, semantic layer, and validation. The thread includes suggestions for improvements to the documentation and branding, comparisons with existing BIAC tools, and requests for clearer explanations about the tool's functionality.
Article: 5 min
Dotcl is a Common Lisp implementation that compiles to the Common Intermediate Language (CIL) and runs on the .NET Just-In-Time (JIT) compiler, enabling cross-platform execution across Windows, macOS, and Linux. It supports embedding Lisp in .NET applications, writing .NET code in Lisp, and accessing NuGet packages from Lisp.
Discussion (4):
The comment thread is overwhelmingly positive, with users praising the project's achievement and implementation quality, expressing anticipation for potential compatibility with other tools or platforms, and appreciating it as a new addition to their toolkit.
Discussion (0):
More comments needed for analysis.
Discussion (6): 2 min
The author has created a browser-based ecosystem for photometric data, including parsing standard luminaire files and rendering real urban scenes with actual streetlight behavior. The system is being showcased through the Skyglow Analysis demo, which allows users to adjust uplight percentages and observe changes in sky-glow grade and building illumination. Technical issues related to web rendering are being discussed, particularly on certain browsers, while there's also a concern about the representation of light pollution.
Article: 18 min
The article introduces the TI-84 Evo graphing calculator, highlighting its new features such as a faster processor, larger graphing area, USB-C port, simplified keypad, smarter menus, built-in help, and enhanced math tools. It also mentions the availability of accessories, support options, and color choices for customization.
Discussion (404): 1 hr 4 min
The TI-84 Evo is discussed in terms of its educational utility, with opinions divided on its processor speed and nostalgia for older calculator models. The lack of competition in the market is also highlighted as a factor affecting pricing and innovation.
Discussion (12): 4 min
The discussion revolves around a new AI assistant for PDF editing that operates client-side, ensuring privacy by keeping the document within the browser. The tool is open-source and allows actions like filling fields, adding or deleting pages directly in the PDF. There are concerns about data privacy when messages leave the local machine, but the developer has addressed this issue with an updated message prompt.
Article: 2 min
The article introduces Piruetas, a self-hosted diary app created for the author's girlfriend, emphasizing its simplicity, privacy features, and self-hosting capabilities. It offers daily entries, image uploads, data export options, and public share links.
Discussion (25): 2 min
A user shared their self-created journal app named Piruetas, which offers day-per-page diary features with rich text editing, drag-and-drop image uploads, auto-save, public share links, and a clean mobile UI. The app can be set up for Personal or Multi-user usage via docker compose deployment. There are discussions about the name 'Piruetas' being confusing in Spanish-speaking countries, concerns about demo functionality, and praise for the design.
In the past 13d 23h 16m, we processed 2445 new articles and 109348 comments with an estimated reading time savings of 45d 6h 14m