NewsLab
Apr 28 20:38 UTC

Top Stories

500 items from Hacker News
  1. Ghostty is leaving GitHub (mitchellh.com)

  2. OpenAI models coming to Amazon Bedrock: Interview with OpenAI and AWS CEOs (stratechery.com)

  3. A playable DOOM MCP app (chrisnager.com)

  4. Warp is now Open-Source (github.com)

  5. Waymo in Portland (waymo.com)

  6. Your phone is about to stop being yours (keepandroidopen.org)

  7. Claude.ai unavailable and elevated errors on the API (status.claude.com)

  8. Patch applies fake diffs from commit messages (samizdat.dev)

  9. CJIT: C, Just in Time (dyne.org)

  10. GitHub RCE Vulnerability: CVE-2026-3854 Breakdown (wiz.io)

  11. Show HN: Drive any macOS app in the background without stealing the cursor (github.com)

  12. Intel Arc Pro B70 Review (pugetsystems.com)

  13. Infisical (YC W23) Is Hiring Full Stack Software Engineers (Remote) (jobs.ashbyhq.com)

  14. I have officially retired from Emacs (nullprogram.com)

  15. Localsend: An open-source cross-platform alternative to AirDrop (github.com)

  16. VibeVoice: Open-source frontier voice AI (github.com)

  17. Who owns the code Claude Code wrote? (legallayer.substack.com)

  18. UAE to leave OPEC (ft.com)

  19. AISLE Discovers 38 CVEs in OpenEMR Healthcare Software (aisle.com)

  20. Show HN: Live Sun and Moon Dashboard with NASA Footage (lumara-space.app)

  21. Laguna XS.2 and M.1 (poolside.ai)

  22. Warp is now open-source (warp.dev)

  23. GitHub Actions is the weakest link (nesbitt.io)

  24. Things C++26 define_static_array can't do (quuxplusone.github.io)

  25. Talkie: a 13B vintage language model from 1930 (talkie-lm.com)

  26. GitHub Copilot code review will start consuming GitHub Actions minutes (github.blog)

  27. A good AGENTS.md is a model upgrade. A bad one is worse than no docs at all (augmentcode.com)

  28. ASML became the chokepoint for cutting-edge chips (worksinprogress.co)

  29. FCC Funding Application Notes Paramount Will Be 49.5% Foreign-Owned Post-Merger (deadline.com)

  30. Bankruptcies increase 11.9 percent (uscourts.gov)