HN Buddy Daily Digest
Friday, March 20, 2026
Hey buddy,
Man, you wouldn't believe the stuff flying around Hacker News today. Just wanted to give you the quick rundown from Friday before I forget.
"I'm OK being left behind, thanks"
First up, there was this really interesting article, "I'm OK being left behind, thanks". It was all about how it's totally cool to not jump on every single new tech trend. The author was basically saying, "Hey, sometimes sticking with what works is better." People in the comments were totally into it, talking about how some old tech, like Shockwave Director Studio (remember that?!), actually lasted a long time. Someone even joked that uploading all our code to GitHub for AI to train on might be us "digging our own graves" – pretty wild thought, right? And another guy said he just does fads in moderation, like "don't be a cryptobro, just...". Also, there was a comment predicting that AI will really start impacting jobs in big companies in the next year or two, but startups are already feeling it.
Chuck Norris has died
Then, kind of a sad one, Chuck Norris passed away. A lot of people were sharing memories, but the comments got really deep into this whole debate about whether it's okay to talk about the not-so-great stuff a public figure did after they die. Some were like, "He represented wholesome things for pop culture," and others were like, "Let's not ignore the bad stuff just because someone was entertaining." Pretty intense discussion.
OpenCode – Open source AI coding agent
On the tech front, there's a new thing called OpenCode, an open-source AI coding agent. Sounds cool, but the comments were full of warnings. Apparently, it pulls config from remote URLs by default, which is a big security risk – basically trusting random code in your dev environment. And get this, even if you use local AI models, your prompts might still be sent through their domain, so definitely don't put anything sensitive in there! One smart dude said he runs it in a sandbox inside Emacs to keep things safe.
France's aircraft carrier located in real time by Le Monde through fitness app
This one's wild: France's aircraft carrier was located in real time by journalists using a fitness app! Like, sailors using Strava or something similar, and boom, military secrets out in the open. People were saying how location data is maybe even more critical than financial or medical data these days, especially with data brokers around. Someone else mentioned criminal gangs targeting gun owners in France after a similar data leak from a sports shooting federation. Crazy stuff, makes you think twice about what apps you use.
Our commitment to Windows quality
Microsoft put out a blog post about their commitment to Windows quality, and man, the comments were brutal. People were basically saying Microsoft isn't actually fixing quality