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mikece

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WhatsApp Says Spyware Maker NSO Group Is Still Targeting Its Users

engadget.com
6 points·by mikece·last month·0 comments

Melia: A Privacy-First, Modern Desktop Email Client Made Just for Linux

itsfoss.com
4 points·by mikece·last month·0 comments

Anthropic's Project Glasswing Update

schneier.com
40 points·by mikece·last month·5 comments

HP Now Sponsoring the Linux Vendor Firmware Service / Fwupd

phoronix.com
5 points·by mikece·2 months ago·1 comments

Patches Trying to Bring Mainline Linux Support for the Infineon XMM6260 Modem

phoronix.com
5 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

Claude Managed Agents on Cloudflare

blog.cloudflare.com
6 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

Microsoft Now Has a Fedora-Based Linux Distro

itsfoss.com
1 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

What the AI hype gets wrong about software engineering

stackoverflow.blog
2 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

Bug bounty businesses bombarded with AI slop

arstechnica.com
4 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

The Invisible Burden: How AI Is Redefining Developer Productivity in 2026

sdtimes.com
2 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

Someone Vibe-Coded Adobe Lightroom CC into Running on Linux

itsfoss.com
3 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

UK Online Safety Act Used to Censor Reform UK Video

reclaimthenet.org
3 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

Fragnesia Made Public as Latest Linux Local Privilege Escalation Vulnerability

phoronix.com
44 points·by mikece·2 months ago·19 comments

Farewell, Jeeves: Ask.com shuts down

techcrunch.com
3 points·by mikece·2 months ago·0 comments

Ubuntu Rust Coreutils Audit Revealed 113 Issues

phoronix.com
9 points·by mikece·3 months ago·0 comments

Linux 7.1 Is a Big Win for Intel Panther Lake with Fred Now Enabled by Default

phoronix.com
2 points·by mikece·3 months ago·0 comments

Show HN: Rustobol – Compile Rust to COBOL

github.com
5 points·by mikece·3 months ago·0 comments

The US government just banned consumer routers made outside the US

theverge.com
3 points·by mikece·4 months ago·1 comments

A rogue AI led to a serious security incident at Meta

theverge.com
173 points·by mikece·4 months ago·142 comments

FBI admits buying Americans' location data from data brokers

proton.me
10 points·by mikece·4 months ago·0 comments

comments

mikece
·2 months ago·discuss
Very neat project! I am curious if it can support other AI CLI tools as well.
mikece
·2 months ago·discuss
And if not for the rise of AI it's possible that WASM as a machine-level compilation target for all languages might have happened. As much as Gary predicted he didn't see AI coming.
mikece
·2 months ago·discuss
Not really: ASM.js became WASM. What killed the possibility of WASM being The One Way to run everything is AI... the one wildcard that Gard Bernhardt didn't predict.
mikece
·2 months ago·discuss
I re-watch that presentation two or three times a year because it's a great example of how to give a presentation, how to structure your slide deck to complement your presentation, and a surprisingly educational tour of the permission rings architecture of operating systems.

And at some point we're going to have a period or war and our psychological attachments to old programming paradigms will be released so that we can move on to a more advanced way of doing things (but that won't stop your bank from running YavaScript for at least another 85 years).
mikece
·2 months ago·discuss
I still refer to it as YavaScript much to the confusion of junior devs. I just tell the new kids: "you had to be there..."
mikece
·2 months ago·discuss
I feel like the title of this post should have "for now" appended.
mikece
·2 months ago·discuss
Interesting that Colombia is currently powering more than 70% of their electrical consumption on hydropower. They currently have about 65 TWh of hydropower capacity; the total feasible generation potential is around 200 TWh. Makes then an interesting country to host such talks.
mikece
·2 months ago·discuss
The launch of Proton Meet officially eliminates the lazy excuse that securing real-time WebRTC media at scale is "too hard" for modern enterprise platforms. Hopefully this forces the hands of Slack, Teams, and Google to stop treating E2EE as a premium afterthought and start offering it as a standard option for the modern web.
mikece
·3 months ago·discuss
Sounds like a reason to just watch regular TV to me.
mikece
·3 months ago·discuss
What is the preferred/best way to rip CDs from the Linux CLI? Is there a way to apply track info (is CDDB still around?) and edit that as well?
mikece
·4 months ago·discuss
A good time to (re-)recommend the movie "The Social Dilemma".
mikece
·4 months ago·discuss
Do they think so-called AI is capable of self-awareness or abstract thought, that it's not a human-programmed mountain of if statements and strict logic?
mikece
·4 months ago·discuss
How much longer before Graphene OS is killed by Google?
mikece
·4 months ago·discuss
Yes, and according to Steve Ballmer (back in the day) Linux Torvalds was a terrorist. People are allowed to say stupid things.
mikece
·4 months ago·discuss
The best way to monitor the DLQ is by setting up CloudWatch alarms on the ApproximateNumberOfMessagesVisible metric. Set an alarm to trigger when the message count exceeds 0, paired with an SNS notification to alert developers via email, Slack, teams, Pager Duty, or whatever your preferred mode of being alerted is.
mikece
·4 months ago·discuss
First California, now Colorado. Are New York, Oregon, and Washington next?
mikece
·5 months ago·discuss
Alternate link: https://archive.is/whepR
mikece
·6 months ago·discuss
I seem to recall that the residents of Martha's Vineyard have killed multiple attempts at offshore wind, also claiming it to be a threat.
mikece
·6 months ago·discuss
In my experience Claude is like a "good junior developer" -- can do some things really well, FUBARS other things, but on the whole something to which tasks can be delegated if things are well explained. If/when it gets to the ability level of a mid-level engineer it will be revolutionary. Typically a mid-level engineer can be relied upon to do the right thing with no/minimal oversight, can figure out incomplete instructions, and deliver quality results (and even train up the juniors on some things). At that point the only reason to have human junior engineers is so they can learn their way up the ladder to being an architect and responsible coordinating swarms of Claude Agents to develop whole applications and complete complex tasks and initiatives.

Beyond that what can Claude do... analyze the business and market as a whole and decide on product features, industry inefficiencies, gap analysis, and then define projects to address those and coordinate fleets of agents to change or even radically pivot an entire business?

I don't think we'll get to the point where all you have is a CEO and a massive Claude account but it's not completely science fiction the more I think about it.
mikece
·6 months ago·discuss
What could possibly go wrong with allowing full access to the internet at thirteen?