Kaiser nurses say AI scoring and strict call time limits are pushing them to cut corners on care.
What the article says
- Kaiser advice nurses say they are pushed to keep calls under 15 minutes, even for suicidal patients or callers needing an interpreter.
- Software tracks call length and flags nurses as unproductive, and Kaiser briefly tested AI that graded nurses on empathy and tone of voice.
- Kaiser says it does not use call time to judge performance, but nurses describe being pulled into meetings over long calls anyway.
- The nursing union is negotiating a new contract this month and wants more say over how these tools get used.
- Researchers who study call centers say this kind of constant monitoring raises stress and burnout among workers.
What HN is saying
- Many commenters say the real complaint is call center metrics and cost cutting, not AI, since the empathy scoring pilot was already scrapped.
- Health workers push back too, saying AI note taking and dictation have genuinely freed up time to actually listen to patients.
- The sharpest disagreement is whether AI is even the right target, since managers set these punishing metrics, not the software.
- One nurse described tracking that shrank patient visits from twenty minutes to a quick zip in and out, and blamed the metrics for it.
AWS billing glitched overnight and started showing customers bills in the billions, with zero warning it was a bug.
What the article says
- This is a self post, so these points are pulled from the post and comments rather than an article.
- A user normally spending under five dollars a month woke up to an estimated AWS bill of one point seven billion dollars.
- They filed an urgent support ticket and asked if anyone else was seeing the same thing.
- Amazon's status page later confirmed a billing outage and said fixing it meant rolling back a recent change to the billing system.
What HN is saying
- A former AWS engineer explained the likely cause. Billing sometimes confuses bytes with gigabytes, which can inflate a bill by roughly a billion times.
- Dozens of people shared their own numbers, some in the millions and some in the hundreds of billions, and said their first reaction was genuine panic rather than amusement.
- The running joke was blaming AI generated code for sneaking into a system nobody expected to break, though nobody could confirm that was actually the cause.
- A few commenters used the moment to air older grievances, describing past fights over AWS billing errors that took months and even a state attorney general to resolve.
A YC founder marks 15 years of the Recurse Center, the free programming retreat that HN helped build.
What the article says
- The founder recalls pivoting through failed startup ideas before landing on a self directed programming retreat where people build projects and learn together.
- An early HN launch post brought the first wave of applicants and has stayed the program's second biggest source of applicants ever since, after word of mouth.
- Paul Graham once warned it would never be a billion dollar business. The founder says that is fine. It has still reached over three thousand people.
- The post is a thank you to the HN community for helping shape both the program and the founder's career.
What HN is saying
- Alumni flood the thread with gratitude, describing lasting friendships, career changes, and jobs landed through the program.
- One skeptic asks how attending free stays realistic when it still means months of rent in an expensive city with no income, since only the well off can easily take that time off.
- Someone explains the free model. Companies pay to recruit graduates, so participants never see a bill, and the program deliberately keeps pricing low key so people choose it for the experience rather than the price tag.
- A few commenters wonder if the idea could expand to other cities or countries, and reminisce about how different the programming culture felt back when the retreat started.
The chip inside your calculator and old Game Boy just turned fifty, and it's still not fully retired.
What the article says
- The Z80 launched in July 1976, built by Federico Faggin after he left Intel frustrated with slow, cautious management.
- It was designed to run the same software as Intel's 8080 but needed only one power supply and far simpler supporting circuitry, so hobbyists could build a whole computer around it.
- It added new registers, block copy instructions, and flexible interrupt handling that made it faster and easier to program than its rivals.
- It powered early home computers, arcade machines, and the original Game Boy, and variants still show up in industrial gear and graphing calculators today.
- Zilog's owner, oil company Exxon, was reportedly one reason IBM chose Intel over Zilog for the original PC.
What HN is saying
- Commenters are full of nostalgia, many first learned to program on Z80 machines like the ZX Spectrum, ZX81, or TRS-80 as kids in the late seventies and eighties.
- Several people say they still remember opcodes and assembly tricks from forty years ago, and credit the chip with teaching them how computers actually work.
- One correction: the article calls the Z80 fully binary compatible with the 8080, but a commenter points out the parity flag behaves differently on some instructions.
- Someone notes the Z80 is technically not dead, since the eZ80 variant is still made and powers today's graphing calculators.
- A few swap fun trivia, including a Z80 core hidden inside the Game Boy Advance chip just to run old games.
Astronomers found gas around a rocky planet in a star's habitable zone, the closest hint yet of another living world.
What the article says
- Scientists spotted an atmosphere on LHS 1140b, a rocky planet circling a small, dim red star not far from us in cosmic terms.
- The only gas confirmed so far is helium, which alone could not support life, but researchers think other gases sit lower down.
- The planet's density suggests it could be a water world or an icy one, and its calm host star means the atmosphere is not being stripped away.
- This adds to the search for life beyond Earth, though a separate promising signal from a different distant planet was recently walked back as too weak to confirm.
What HN is saying
- Commenters push back on calling the planet Earth-like, noting red dwarf planets often get stripped bare, though others point out the star is unusually calm and inactive.
- A long thread spins out on interstellar travel, with people doing the math on just how far 48 light years actually is at our fastest current speeds.
- Several readers note this is not new excitement, atmosphere headlines about distant rocky planets keep appearing without a clear payoff.
- One user flags this as a likely duplicate of an earlier post on the same story.
- Lighter tangents include jokes about the practicality of sending a probe and a sharp exchange about whether space exploration curiosity is naive or genuinely creative.
A researcher's six year old finding, cheap cameras still hand over your home address to anyone nearby.
What the article says
- A TP-Link Kasa camera answers one unencrypted network request with your home's exact coordinates, no login needed.
- The same firmware stores your account password as a weak, unsalted hash, and one leaked key unlocks every device TP-Link makes.
- Factory resetting a camera before reselling it does not wipe this data, so a buyer can pull the previous owner's location and login straight from the box.
- TP-Link has known about this class of bug since 2020 and fixed it in other product lines but left cameras exposed until now.
- The disclosure process itself was rocky. A beta patch permanently bricked the researcher's test unit and the vendor initially misdescribed the bug it was supposed to be fixing.
What HN is saying
- One commenter argues the risk is overstated since the flaw only works on your own local network, and an attacker with that kind of access could probably find your location anyway.
- Others push back hard, saying that dismissal ignores how long security researchers have warned people off TP-Link gear.
- A broader thread argues no smart home device should touch the open internet at all, since cheap hardware keeps shipping with holes like this.
- That sparked a side debate about whether blaming Chinese manufacturing specifically is fair, given plenty of American IoT gear has the same track record.
- One reply notes most regular buyers will never set up a VPN just to keep their camera off the internet, so the convenient but risky setup is here to stay.
- The report's original author showed up to defend the seriousness of the finding, laying out the botched vendor response in detail.
One blogger's fix for notebook perfectionism sparked a huge thread on how people actually keep messy notes.
What the article says
- The article itself did not load, so this is inferred from the title and discussion.
- The writer describes starting a deliberately messy notebook, dubbed the dirt notebook, just for scribbling and scratch work.
- The idea is to have one place with zero pressure to look neat or organized, freeing you to actually write things down.
- It sits apart from any polished notes or journals kept elsewhere.
What HN is saying
- Commenters overwhelmingly relate, many say they deliberately scribble on a notebook's first page just to ruin its pristine feel and free themselves to use it.
- Several people trace a link between neat, precious notetaking and worse actual learning or test performance.
- A recurring workaround is switching to notebooks with removable pages or binders, so you get the mess without losing the ability to tidy up later.
- One counterpoint: for anything legally significant, a bound notebook beats loose pages, since courts distrust records that could have pages removed.
- A few readers pushed back that the whole idea is an old, overfamiliar observation about journaling culture.
Julia Evans learns the hard way that SQLite still needs real database babysitting, even for tiny sites.
What the article says
- Julia Evans has been running a Django site on SQLite and keeps discovering small operational gotchas.
- A search query on a tiny table took five seconds until she ran ANALYZE, which cut it to almost nothing by giving the query planner better stats.
- Bulk deletes can lock the database long enough that other workers time out and crash, so she now cleans up in small batches.
- She backs up with restic and is moving to Litestream for incremental backups, plus a dead man's switch to catch failed backups.
- She also splits data across multiple SQLite files instead of one, which has worked well for a side project running four years.
What HN is saying
- Commenters swap SQLite tips, including using the built in expert mode or EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN to understand slow queries without reading raw bytecode.
- Several people back up her batching advice, noting the same trick applies to Postgres and MySQL when deleting or updating millions of rows.
- A detailed thread explains what a dead man's switch actually is, since it only confirms a backup ran, not that it can be restored.
- Some argue SQLite handles concurrent writers better than people assume if you shard tables or split reads from writes, pointing to newer tools like Turso.
- One commenter calls the post poorly informed, but others push back, noting the author is an experienced engineer who writes in an approachable style on purpose.
A researcher built AI that chants Sanskrit verses correctly, meter and all, and people are stunned it works this well.
What the article says
- A professor at the Indian Institute of Science built a text to speech system that turns any Sanskrit verse into a proper chanted recitation, not just flat reading.
- It detects the poem's meter automatically and matches it to the right chanting style, since Sanskrit chants follow strict rhythm and pitch rules.
- The system was trained on about five hours of one voice reciting chants, then fine tuned further to nail tricky sounds like aspirated consonants and retroflex letters that usually trip up speech models.
- Experts rated the voice highly natural sounding, and it already narrates two huge projects, over five thousand verses of one epic and around eighteen thousand verses of another scripture.
- There is also a companion tool that listens to you chant along and tells you which syllables to fix.
What HN is saying
- Commenters were surprised how good the chanting sounds given how rough and vibe coded the website itself looks.
- Several people with linguistics background dug into why Sanskrit is hard for speech models, mainly that northern Indian languages drop vowels in ways Sanskrit does not, so the system routes text through a different script to avoid that trap.
- One user pushed back hard, arguing that mechanizing sacred chanting cheapens a tradition that is supposed to involve a real human presence.
- Others countered that most people already don't understand the chants they recite by rote, so a tool like this makes the language more accessible rather than replacing anything meaningful.
- A tester flagged the interface as clunky despite being impressed with the accuracy.
A new Chinese model just cost 25 cents to draw a pelican on a bike, and that number tells you a lot.
What the article says
- Moonshot AI released Kimi K3, a huge model with 2.8 trillion parameters, beating Claude Opus and GPT 5.5 on some benchmarks but trailing the very top models.
- Simon Willison ran his running joke test, asking it to draw a pelican riding a bicycle as an SVG.
- The drawing cost 25 cents because the model burned through thousands of hidden reasoning tokens before answering, and it only offers one reasoning setting, so you cannot dial that back.
- He argues the pelican test has stopped tracking overall model quality. Some smaller open models now draw better pelicans than the best labs' flagship models.
- What he still finds useful is that running the same silly prompt forces him to actually try the model and gives a quick read on cost and reasoning behavior.
What HN is saying
- Several commenters doubt pelicans are absent from training data given how often the meme gets reposted online, though Simon says that would make results worse, not better, since scraped pelican drawings are usually bad.
- A side debate breaks out over how Chinese labs get enough compute for models this large, with theories ranging from GPU smuggling through third countries to architecture efficiency rather than raw chip access.
- One thread pokes at token counting oddities. The prompt logged 95 input tokens when other tokenizers count far fewer, hinting at a hidden system prompt Kimi would not reveal.
- A few people push back on the format itself, joking that every model release now comes with an obligatory pelican post, while others defend it as a harmless tradition.
- Someone proposes testing models multiple times per prompt rather than once, since results seem to vary run to run almost as much as they vary between models.