Monthly Highlights
871.
Competition is not market validation (ablg.io)
872.
An autopsy of AI-generated 3D slop (aircada.com)
873.
Robert Duvall has died (nytimes.com)
874.
Arabic document from 17th-cent. rubbish heap confirms semi-legendary Nubian king (phys.org)
875.
We've freed Cookie's Bustle from copyright hell (gamehistory.org)
876.
Farewell, Rust for web (yieldcode.blog)
877.
NRC issues first commercial reactor construction approval in 10 years [pdf] (nrc.gov)
878.
Claude Code wiped our production database with a Terraform command (twitter.com)
879.
Why Objective-C (inessential.com)
880.
Working and Communicating with Japanese Engineers (tokyodev.com)
881.
Silicon Valley engineers were indicted for allegedly sending secrets to Iran (cnbc.com)
882.
Faster Than Dijkstra? (systemsapproach.org)
883.
Lean 4: How the theorem prover works and why it's the new competitive edge in AI (venturebeat.com)
884.
Stephen Colbert going down swinging (nytimes.com)
885.
What years of production-grade concurrency teaches us about building AI agents (georgeguimaraes.com)
886.
Coding Tricks Used in the C64 Game Seawolves (2025) (kodiak64.co.uk)
887.
Let's Get Physical (m4iler.cloud)
888.
Why isn't LA repaving streets? (lapublicpress.org)
889.
Tell HN: MitID, Denmark's digital ID, was down
890.
Nobody ever got fired for using a struct (feldera.com)
891.
A new Polymarket account made over $500k betting on the U.S. strike against Iran (twitter.com)
892.
New evidence that Cantor plagiarized Dedekind? (quantamagazine.org)
893.
Making frontier cybersecurity capabilities available to defenders (anthropic.com)
894.
Windows NT/OS2 Design Workbook (computernewb.com)
895.
The Future for Tyr, a Rust GPU Driver for Arm Mali Hardware (lwn.net)
896.
An interactive intro to Elliptic Curve Cryptography (growingswe.com)
897.
Good Bad ISPs (community.torproject.org)
898.
Voith Schneider Propeller (en.wikipedia.org)
899.
Show HN: I ported Manim to TypeScript (run 3b1B math animations in the browser) (github.com)
900.
In 1985 Maxell built a bunch of life-size robots for its bad floppy ad (buttondown.com)