Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I want this to happen to bad

HeartMuLa is an open-source AI music generation platform. Transform text prompts and lyrics into high-fidelity songs with controllable styles. Create professional music in minutes.

I installed Nova way back when the default android launcher was crap, nowadays it's not really any different. I guess I may as well uninstall it now

I run Claude in a Proxmox VM, generally the experience has been great. In my experience it also behaves better than gemini cli, that likes to create files all over the place if set loose (lesson learned to add that requirement to the relevant .md files)

>the last one, in the early 90s, took 202 years to pass [no not a typo]

I mean, it's not a typo, but it's also misleading. It wasn't an active campaign for 202 years. It was largely forgotten for most of that time.


This breaks the non-interactive mode the post want to achieve. Claude will not be able to install some things and will require user action, which is not desired here.

15 years ago, Enterprise FizzBuzz [1] was supposed to be satire. These days, it's not quite complex enough to capture "modern" web dev.

[1] https://github.com/EnterpriseQualityCoding/FizzBuzzEnterpris...


I'm doing this with a remote VM on exe.dev and it's quite nice. Well, actually with their own coding agent but they have Claude Code preinstalled too.

Syncthing works well for getting a local copy of a directory from the VM.


React is not simple (preact is) and what's worse, it gets more and more overengineered in order to solve the problems they have themselves created (accidental complexity in your video).

Sadly, accidental complexity is a common theme among react devs, not just ui libs, but also react-router, redux, redux-form, even tanstack useQuery() is way over-engineered and the core idea can be implemented in <50 lines and then you own the code and can make project-specific changes.

Maybe that's the biggest issue after all, people being lazy, expecting to do npm install and being able to reuse everything in any situation. Except that it almost never work like that and a lot of damage is done in the name of it... </rant>


Yep, it’s amazing how much knowledge and capability a country can develop when it has most of the worlds manufacturing.

Could you explain in layman terms how it would help with developing PCIE hardware / drivers? I can immediately imagine something like writing more robust unit tests and maybe developing barebones drivers before you get access to actual hardware, but that's where my imagination runs out of fuel.

There was something on HN recently about how to "trick" the open ones to help.

Good point.

Tangentially, you could ask: Are you addicted to being useful or to being recognized as useful.

One is your own need, the other often a covered contract where you lash out or silently resign if you don't get the recognition that you think you deserve.


That's an amazing book, and I highly recommend it, for anyone who isn't familiar.

> Look at it. It's beautiful.

Quite right too … I’m choosing HTMX over React for just that.


I see this with a bunch of python libraries too.

I imagine for some usecase, they are valuable. However, when reading advice on the internet you get comments from people that tell you what technology they used without consideration of the overhead required to use this technology and the problem at hand.


Latching on to this thread, but can you make as simple as possible of an example?

Something like just a single BAR with a register that printfs whatever is written


It seems a fair number of commanders have been resigning; a question to ask ourselves is: what have I been doing, beyond typing on HN?

Indirect Nuclear Fusion

Did ads on search appear in 2016? I vaguely remember the change to the “curated” pages with ads but I thought searching for a specific app and getting an ad for it (or something else) before the first search result was even newer.

I'm back in school part time for a bachelor's, and have recently had a class where I had a professor who really understood how to implement LLM's into the class.

Our written assignments were a lot of "have an LLM generate a business proposal, then annotate it yourself"

The final exam was a 30 minute meeting where we just talked as peers, kinda like a cultural job interview. Sure there's lots of potential for bias there, but I think it's better than just blindly passing students using LLM's for the final exam.


How about running Claude as a different user with very limited permissions?

Happy to answer anything technical, especially around flakiness, determinism, CI reliability, and where this breaks down today.

We’ve made tradeoffs and this won’t fit every team.


Strange considering how venerated Sony was by American business leaders. Steve Jobs even tried to convince Apple to adopt corporate uniforms like Sony's.

When I'm building apps that use LLMs I'm often looking up prices from the providers' websites, sometimes copying and pasting them into prompts ('calculate and display the costs for this model using this screenshot'). I'd rather tell Claude Code 'use toktab.com to get the current prices for gemini-3-flash-preview'. And now I can! This site is built every night from the open source pricing data from LiteLLM - https://github.com/BerriAI/litellm - which was the most comprehensive data I could find. I think the main weakness is lack of fuzzy searching, which is hard to achieve with a statically generated site, but I'm very open to suggestions.

Bluesky absolutely yes, something like React makes sense.

I think it depends on a few things but the two big ones in my mind are:

1) Interactivity. How rich do you need/want the interactivity to be? As this scales up the benefit of React also increases.

Of course you can get highly interactive vanilla HTML sites but it’s much easier to achieve with React.

2) Statefulness. The more UI state you have the more a tool like React helps you. Again, it’s not doing anything you cannot do with vanilla HTML/JS but the level of difficulty comparatively is night and day.

On top of that, React is widely adopted. The tooling is fantastic, the community is strong, the job prospects are very good, and if you’re hiring the talent pool for React is vast.


Why was this flagged ?

Isn't making 1200$/h while being self employed the goal for HNers ? Isn't HN supposed to be open minded ?

This is the most HN post we saw ou there in a while.

As if boasting how code was improved at GAFAMs despite actually thought challenging social implications, reduced wages and layoffs was the only point of this board.


Why couldn't a "code specialized" LLM/AI be added to the change flow, in the cloudflare process, and asked to check against all known implementations of name resolution stubs, dns clients, etc., etc. If not in such cases, then when?

I can give you examples. Just the other day I was updating an API that has been deprecated for a decade and a half but still worked. I never had to update a deprecated API in macOS, though I do. Maybe I got lucky in the ones I use, but either way the point stands.

One midpoint is traditional css frameworks like https://getbootstrap.com/.

Not as powerful, and you don't get this sweet 3rd-party pluggable component catalog, but it's much simpler and it's stable: there's no constantly evolving ecosystem.

Shadcn ecosystem might have calmed down by now, but when I used it years ago, the layers on top of it were super unstable, and I was annoyed every time I have to work on those projects until I got Opus 4.5 to refactor out of them.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: