Published on November 26, 2025 at 18:00 CET (UTC+1)
Voyager 1 Is About to Reach One Light-Day from Earth (265 points by ashishgupta2209)
NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft is about to reach a distance of one light-day from Earth by November 2026, a significant milestone in its nearly 50-year journey. Having entered interstellar space in 2012, it is the most distant human-made object and continues to send data despite the harsh environment. Communication is now a slow, patient process, with radio signals taking a full 24 hours to reach it and another day for a response to return to Earth.
OpenAI needs to raise at least $207B by 2030 so it can continue to lose money (290 points by akira_067)
According to an HSBC estimate reported by the Financial Times, OpenAI needs to raise an enormous amount of capital—at least $207 billion by 2030—to continue funding its operations amidst ongoing financial losses. This highlights the immense and potentially unsustainable costs associated with developing and running advanced AI models. The article frames this massive funding requirement in the context of the company's current money-losing trajectory.
Cloudflare outage should not have happened (10 points by b-man)
This article presents a critical analysis of a recent Cloudflare outage, arguing that the company's official root cause analysis misses the fundamental lesson. The author contends that the outage, which caused widespread internet disruptions, was caused by an avoidable software flaw involving a database query that made incorrect assumptions. The critique suggests that the real problem is a systemic issue in software engineering practices, not just the specific technical bug.
I don't care how well your "AI" works (360 points by todsacerdoti)
The author expresses a strong, critical viewpoint on the pervasive integration of AI, particularly LLMs, into daily life and work, especially within programming communities. They observe a "devaluation of craft" among talented coders who have become overly reliant on AI coding assistants, which they liken to a harmful coping mechanism or addiction. The piece is a philosophical critique of the "LLM brainworm" and its impact on human skill, autonomy, and the meaning of work.
A cell so minimal that it challenges definitions of life (137 points by ibobev)
Scientists have discovered an incredibly minimal microbe whose genome is so stripped of essential functions, including metabolic genes, that it challenges the very definition of life. This parasitic organism represents a new frontier in biodiversity revealed by advanced genome sequencing techniques. Its existence forces biologists to reconsider the fundamental hallmarks of what constitutes a living cell.
Statistical Process Control in Python (143 points by lifeisstillgood)
This is a technical tutorial demonstrating how to implement Statistical Process Control (SPC) using Python. SPC is a method for monitoring and controlling a process through statistical analysis to ensure it operates at its full potential. The article guides the reader through using Python libraries like pandas and plotnine to measure variation in quality over time and identify when a process requires intervention.
Show HN: I turned algae into a bio-altimeter and put it on a weather balloon (16 points by radeeyate)
A high school student details his project, "StratoSpore," where he designed and built a payload to send algae to the stratosphere on a weather balloon. The experiment aimed to measure the fluorescence of the algae at high altitude, turning it into a novel "bio-altimeter." The project, funded through a program called Apex, showcases the fusion of biology, electronics, and programming by a young maker.
Slashdot Effect (22 points by firefax)
This Wikipedia entry explains the "Slashdot effect" (or "hug of death"), a phenomenon where a small website is overwhelmed by a massive, sudden surge in traffic after being linked to by a popular site. The influx can cause the site to slow down or crash, similar to a denial-of-service attack, due to insufficient bandwidth or server capacity. The article notes that while the original term came from Slashdot, the phenomenon is more generically known as a "flash crowd."
Is DWPD Still a Useful SSD Spec? (31 points by zdw)
This article questions the ongoing usefulness of Drive Writes Per Day (DWPD) as a primary specification for evaluating SSD endurance. It explains that while DWPD indicates how many times the entire drive's capacity can be written per day over its warranty period, the metric has limitations and can be misleading. The author suggests that modern, smarter methods are needed to truly assess and predict SSD lifespan under real-world conditions.
Show HN: KiDoom – Running DOOM on PCB Traces (293 points by mikeayles)
In a creative hardware project, Michael Ayles has managed to run the video game DOOM on a custom-designed Printed Circuit Board (PCB). The project, named KiDoom, uses the copper traces on the PCB itself as the core computational element to execute the game, demonstrating a novel and unconventional computing platform.
Trend: The Unsustainable Economics of Scale
Trend: Mounting Developer Skepticism and "Craft Devaluation"
Trend: The Critical Need for Reliability in AI-Dependent Infrastructure
Trend: Unconventional and Bio-Inspired Computing
Trend: Data Infrastructure Durability as an AI Prerequisite
Trend: The Rise of Statistical and Process-Oriented AI Management
Analysis generated by deepseek-reasoner