OpenAI teases an Ultra mode for Codex that runs cooperating subagents on hard problems.
What the article says
- This is just a short tweet, so most of what we know comes from replies and a linked OpenAI post.
- The new Ultra mode goes beyond one agent working alone.
- It spins up subagents that can talk to each other while working, not just merge results at the end.
- It is meant to speed through complex tasks that trip up a single model.
What HN is saying
- Several commenters shrug and say this is nothing new. People already tell coding assistants to spin up subagents and it works fine today.
- Others compare it to OpenAI's existing Pro mode, where multiple agents worked separately and a final pass merged their answers. This is described as more collaborative.
- One thread gets sidetracked into whether OpenAI has quietly cut inference costs in half, with a swipe at Anthropic for treating efficiency tricks as secret weapons.
- A few people just want to know when it ships and whether regular subscribers, not just corporate accounts, will get access.
- One worker says their company pushed everyone to use tokens generously a couple months ago and is now begging staff to switch to cheaper models.
A crowdfunded open printer wants to kill ink subscriptions and DRM for good.
What the article says
- OpenPrinter is a crowdfunded project for an open hardware inkjet printer, built to avoid subscriptions and locked down cartridges.
- It uses standard off the shelf HP ink cartridges, since those already include the print head, which is the hardest part to build.
- You can feed it single sheets or a long paper roll, letting you print custom lengths instead of fixed page sizes.
- Open Tools plans to sell refill ink bottles directly, so you are not stuck buying pricey official cartridges.
- The design is still a landing page and prototype stage, not a finished shipping product yet.
What HN is saying
- Commenters warn inkjet printing is brutally hard to engineer well, and a landing page without a working demo is a red flag.
- Others note a recent prototype update claims successful color printing, which makes people cautiously more hopeful.
- Several say using off the shelf HP cartridges dodges the hardest engineering problem, though patents remain a real risk.
- Big complaints center on the license, which is noncommercial only and not actually open source despite the name.
- Many share printer horror stories about clogged heads and forced replacements, and wish the project offered a laser option instead.
A site that only shows you art nobody bothers to look at
What the article says
- The Art Institute of Chicago tags each artwork with a field called has not been viewed much.
- That flag just means fewer than two hundred people have looked at the piece online since 2010.
- A developer built a page that pulls up these ignored artworks one at a time.
- The point is simple curiosity. What gets skipped, and why does nobody notice it.
What HN is saying
- Commenters loved the format and compared it to other neglected corners of the internet, like Forgotify for unheard Spotify songs and sites that surface obscure Wikipedia pages.
- Several people shared specific pieces they stumbled on and loved, including a sketch of flying couches someone tried to track back down.
- One thread turned philosophical. Every click removes a piece from the neglected pool, so using the site to appreciate art quietly erodes the very thing that made it interesting.
- A few users hit loading errors traced to Cloudflare blocking image requests through certain VPNs.
A privacy focused offline maps app is booming, and its own fans are split over which fork to trust.
What the article says
- Organic Maps is a free offline app for hiking, biking, and driving, built on OpenStreetMap data.
- No ads, no tracking, no account needed, and it works with zero signal once maps are downloaded.
- It covers trails, elevation, turn by turn navigation, and even offline search.
- It just passed six million installs and is funded by donations and a couple of grants.
- The team traces back to the original creators of Maps.me, who left after that app went commercial.
What HN is saying
- Many commenters now recommend CoMaps instead, a fork created after concerns that Organic Maps made opaque decisions about money, partnerships, and closed off parts of its code.
- Some call Organic Maps a dying project losing its community, though others push back and say both apps work great.
- A running complaint is that Organic Maps map data itself isn't fully open source, unlike the app code.
- People swap other favorite tools too, like StreetComplete for improving map data, and OpenSeaMap for nautical charts.
- Several users share personal history with Maps.me, including frustration that a paid subscription years ago now gets buried under aggressive upsell pop ups.
A podcast app founder tried being a hands on, honest support person. Users hated it.
What the article says
- The guy who bought the podcast app Castro figured personal, thoughtful support would build loyalty and justify the subscription.
- Almost every honest answer backfired. Explaining pricing never satisfied anyone, even with extra free trial time offered.
- Bug reports were mostly a dead end too. Most couldn't be reproduced, so a caring reply just meant admitting nothing would happen.
- The needier a user got, the more they emailed, and the less their five dollars a month felt worth the time spent.
- He concluded that vague, upbeat replies work better than honest detail, and real loyalty comes from improving the product, not from customer service.
What HN is saying
- Several commenters thanked him for writing honestly about failure instead of the usual success story spin.
- One reader pushed back hard, saying the real problem is the subscription model and support that never really helps.
- Others defended him, saying refusing every feature request and not chasing unreproducible bugs is just realistic, not scummy.
- A commenter running his own support desk agreed point by point, calling difficult repeat askers frequent flyers.
- Someone suggested a quick phone call beats email for showing customers you actually considered their problem.
A study finds messy code doesn't make AI coding agents fail more, just work slower.
What the article says
- Researchers built matched pairs of repos, same architecture and behavior, but one clean and one messy.
- They ran Claude Code through hundreds of trials on both versions.
- The agent solved tasks at the same rate either way.
- But on messy code it burned more tokens and kept revisiting the same files.
- Their takeaway is that clean code still matters, it just shows up as cost and wasted motion rather than outright failure.
What HN is saying
- Commenters swap prompts that push agents toward cleaner, more idiomatic code, like asking for a refactor before starting real work.
- Several say linters and pre-commit hooks catch dead code and duplication better than hoping the agent notices on its own.
- Some push back on the study itself, arguing that using AI to build the messy repos undermines the comparison.
- Others note agents overdo it, forcing shared abstractions between functions that should stay separate.
- A recurring theme is that agents inherit the same good habits that help human engineers, just at faster speed and higher volume.
Cheap sensors are everywhere now. The real fight is over who writes the software for them.
What the article says
- A startup argues personal gadgets, watches, glasses, room sensors, desk gizmos, are flooding in whether or not developers get involved.
- Right now the maker of a device decides what it does once, ships it, and locks it down. You cannot easily change what your own watch runs.
- Agents increasingly want physical context, sound, motion, presence, which means running software on the device itself instead of in a browser.
- The author's company is building a tool that lets people write web style code once and compile it to run natively on tiny chips, phones, or full computers.
- They admit manufacturing, certification, and radio hardware stay genuinely hard. Their claim is narrower, just make the software layer open to more people.
What HN is saying
- One commenter had an AI design a circuit board and a matching case from scratch, and both worked on the first try with just cosmetic flaws.
- A reply agrees AI is often better at teaching you the process than just doing the work for you, making hobby hardware projects cheaper and more understandable.
- A skeptic doubts most people will ever write custom code for their gadgets. Most buyers will just take whatever features the vendor gives them.
- Someone with thirty years of tinkering pushes back hard, saying he is simply exhausted by debugging his own devices and now keeps everything stock.
- One line landed badly with a reader who called the article's closing argument AI slop, regardless of whether they agreed with its point.
A self-taught engineer with no degree spent three years finishing a CS degree online, entirely at night
What the article says
- He worked in tech for twenty one years without a degree and only enrolled to keep his options open for jobs overseas.
- The program runs through Coursera but is actually marked by a real university in London, with remote proctored exams.
- He could pay module by module, swap a few requirements for cheaper professional certificates, and finished in about three and a half years.
- Grading took months, group projects often meant carrying people who never showed up, and the exam software crashed often.
- The school later banned using AI to write assignments outright but still allows it for brainstorming if you say so.
What HN is saying
- Several commenters did the same Goldsmiths program and say it genuinely taught them things despite already working in the field.
- A big side debate breaks out over whether a computer science degree is worth it at all, with one veteran calling his own PhD a waste of time.
- Others push back, arguing the real value of a PhD is learning to grind through hard unsolved problems, not the coursework itself.
- People compare notes on cheaper respected online options like Georgia Tech and University of Texas over pricier alternatives.
- A few say hiring managers barely notice the missing degree once you already have solid work experience.
A solo dev spent eight years building a browser game platform where every game is open source.
What the article says
- Homegames lets you play, make and share simple games right in your browser, no account needed.
- Games run on the server, not your device, so every game gets multiplayer built in automatically.
- There is an in-browser editor, so you can write and publish a game without leaving the site.
- The whole platform is open source under a copyleft license, and you can self host it yourself.
- The maker says the goal is to keep the spirit of old sites like Newgrounds alive.
What HN is saying
- The launch got hugged by Hacker News traffic, and several people hit errors joining game sessions.
- Commenters asked why games need server sessions at all if they could just run locally in the browser.
- The creator explained the tradeoff, that server side games get free multiplayer but need a live connection.
- People asked for documentation, since the studio login screen gave no hint of what was inside.
- One thread turned nostalgic, comparing it to old Amiga and Commodore game making tools.
- The builder shared the origin story, a pandemic era side project that stalled, then restarted once AI coding tools sped up the work.
Sony killing game discs isn't the real problem. Killing ownership is.
What the article says
- Sony is ending disc production for new games starting in 2028, and the writer says everyone is arguing about the wrong thing.
- The real loss is being able to trade games. Selling or lending a disc to a friend goes away once everything is a locked digital license.
- It also threatens preservation. Delisted or shut down games vanish forever if nobody can rip or back them up.
- PC gaming stays fine because stores like GOG sell files with no lock, and even Steam games can be played offline without much effort.
- The writer thinks companies want to become like Netflix, charging forever for access instead of selling something you actually keep.
What HN is saying
- Commenters mostly agree that the word buy is misleading, since fine print already limits PS5 games to a license, not a purchase.
- Several people push back on the PC safe haven argument, pointing out Steam also bans transferring accounts and only GOG really offers no strings attached ownership.
- One long time game developer argues forcing companies to guarantee offline play would slow down development, especially for online heavy games.
- Others say piracy and cracks have become the real backup plan for keeping old games playable.
- A few worry regulation could backfire, letting shell companies fake a promise of ownership then quietly fold.