Published on April 05, 2026 at 18:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Artemis II crew see first glimpse of far side of Moon [video] (67 points by mooreds)
The article reports on NASA's Artemis II mission, where the crew aboard the Orion spacecraft described their first live view of the far side of the Moon as "absolutely spectacular." Astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen shared their awe and a photo, with Koch noting the unfamiliar perspective compared to the Earth-facing side. This mission is a key precursor to returning humans to the lunar surface.
Eight years of wanting, three months of building with AI (118 points by brilee)
A developer details how, after eight years of wanting a better SQLite devtool, he built "syntaqlite" in three months using AI coding agents. He provides a balanced, evidence-based analysis of the build process, explaining where AI significantly accelerated development and where it was a hindrance. The project fulfills a need for high-quality tooling around the ubiquitous SQLite database.
A Claude Code skill that makes Claude talk like a caveman, cutting token use (332 points by tosh)
This introduces a Claude Code skill called "caveman" that forces the AI to communicate using extremely simplified, caveman-like language (e.g., "why use many token when few token do trick"). The technique dramatically reduces token usage by approximately 75% while reportedly maintaining technical accuracy in responses, representing a viral hack for AI cost and efficiency optimization.
Finnish sauna heat exposure induces stronger immune cell than cytokine responses (135 points by Growtika)
A scientific study investigates the physiological effects of Finnish sauna heat exposure. The research finds that such exposure induces a stronger response in immune cells than in cytokine signaling molecules. This contributes to understanding how heat stress (hyperthermia) impacts the human immune system.
Someone at BrowserStack Is Leaking Users' Email Address (253 points by m_km)
A blog post reveals a data leak at BrowserStack, where a user's uniquely generated email address was shared without consent. The user traced the leak to the sales intelligence platform Apollo.io, which first falsely claimed it used a "proprietary algorithm" to guess the address, then admitted BrowserStack was the source. This highlights data privacy failures and misleading corporate responses to breaches.
Microsoft terms say Copilot is for entertainment purposes only, not serious use (15 points by jatins)
The article exposes a contradiction in Microsoft's AI strategy: while aggressively marketing Copilot, its terms of service state the AI is for "entertainment purposes only" and users should not rely on it for important advice. This legal disclaimer contrasts with its promotion for serious consumer and business use, highlighting potential liability and reliability concerns.
Japanese, French and Omani Vessels Cross Strait of Hormuz (73 points by vrganj)
The article reports that Japanese, French, and Omani commercial vessels have successfully crossed the geopolitically critical Strait of Hormuz. This follows Iran's blockade after U.S./Israeli airstrikes and its subsequent policy to allow passage only to ships it deems friendly, identified via ship signaling. The crossings are a tentative sign of resumed traffic for a fifth of global oil flows.
Friendica – A Decentralized Social Network (55 points by janandonly)
This presents Friendica, a decentralized social networking platform that emphasizes user ownership and control. It allows connectivity across different protocols (like ActivityPub and diaspora*) and offers features including private groups, expiration of content, and data export. It positions itself as a privacy-focused, federated alternative to centralized social media.
Lisette a little language inspired by Rust that compiles to Go (181 points by jspdown)
Lisette is a new programming language that adopts Rust's syntax and features—such as algebraic data types, pattern matching, and immutability—but compiles to Go code. It aims to provide a more expressive and safe developer experience while maintaining full interoperability with the existing Go ecosystem and runtime.
The threat is comfortable drift toward not understanding what you're doing (509 points by zaikunzhang)
A thought-provoking essay argues that the core threat of advanced AI tools like LLMs is not the machines themselves, but human "comfortable drift" into over-reliance. Using a parable of two graduate students—one who uses AI as a black box and one who learns fundamentals—it warns that this dependency erodes deep understanding and critical problem-solving skills, particularly in scientific fields.
Trend: AI as a Force Multiplier for Experienced Developers
Trend: The Pursuit of Extreme Token Efficiency
Trend: Growing Legal and Liability Shields Around AI Output
Trend: AI-Enabled Systems Amplifying Data Privacy Risks
Trend: The Risk of Skill Erosion and Epistemic Dependency
Analysis generated by deepseek-reasoner