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HN Buddy Daily Digest

Monday, June 15, 2026

Hey buddy, Just wanted to give you a quick rundown of some cool stuff from Hacker News today. Lot of interesting things popping up!

Iroh 1.0

First up, there's this new thing called Iroh 1.0. It's basically a new way to do peer-to-peer connections, like sharing files directly between computers, but super modern. People are saying it's really clever how it uses something called QUIC, which big cloud companies use, to make these direct links. Someone in the comments even mentioned it can work inside huge data centers, which is kinda wild. But, of course, some folks are asking why they should pay for it when there's free stuff out there, you know?

LinkedIn Backdoor Job Offer

Then there was this wild story about a fake LinkedIn job offer. Some dude got a coding challenge, but it had a backdoor hidden inside! Super sneaky. Luckily, some people in the comments mentioned they always run security checks like `npm audit` before running code, which saved them. Others stressed the importance of using isolated virtual machines for these kinds of challenges. Good reminder to be careful out there!

Local LLMs for Coding

There was a big chat about whether anyone's actually replaced cloud AI models like Claude or GPT with local ones for daily coding. Most people are saying they're supplementing, not fully replacing, the big cloud ones. It's cool though, folks are running pretty capable models on their laptops with beefy GPUs, like M2 Max or RTX 5070 Ti, for simpler tasks. Sounds like we're getting closer to having powerful AI right on our machines.

TinyWind: Pixel Pirate Sailing Game

This one looked fun: TinyWind, a pixel pirate sailing game that claims to have real wind physics. People have already sailed over 380,000 kilometers in it! Actual sailors in the comments were debating how realistic the wind physics actually are, and some were asking for a windvane, haha. A few folks also wished it was a standalone game instead of needing website registration to save progress.

Curl Taking a Break from Vuln Reports

Okay, this is kinda unique. The team behind Curl (you know, that super essential command-line tool) announced they won't be accepting vulnerability reports during July 2026. Basically, they're taking a "summer of bliss" to recharge. It sparked some funny comments about how critical but thankless infrastructure like Curl often is, and how even the maintainers need a break from the constant security grind. Good for them!

What Happened to Nerds?

A more philosophical one, an article titled "What happened to nerds?". It's basically asking if the idea of "nerds" has changed, like if they've lost their integrity or are just focused on making a quick buck now. The comments were all over the place, debating everything from Bill Gates' "nerd cred" to whether nerds ever really had a positive image in the first place. Pretty thought-provoking stuff, honestly.

Salesforce Acquires Fin for $3.6B

And finally, some big business news: Salesforce is buying Fin (which used to be Intercom) for a whopping $3.6 billion. Fin is all about AI-powered customer support. The comments were pretty mixed on this. A lot of people were skeptical, saying AI customer support is still mostly just an extra hurdle and can't really help with complex issues. But some others shared positive experiences where AI bots did a great job handling basic support and improving customer satisfaction. Guess the jury's still out on how good AI really is for support.

Anyway, that's the gist of it! Talk soon!

All Stories from Today

Iroh 1.0 (www.iroh.computer)

A backdoor in a LinkedIn job offer (roman.pt)

Ask HN: Has anyone replaced Claude/GPT with a local model for daily coding? (news.ycombinator.com)

TinyWind: A pixel pirate sailing game with real wind physics (380k+ kms sailed) (tinywind.io)

Curl will not accept vulnerability reports during July 2026 (daniel.haxx.se)

What happened to nerds? (mrmarket.lol)

CrankGPT (crankgpt.com)

Apple Foundation Models (platform.claude.com)

Hetzner Price Adjustment (docs.hetzner.com)

Even more batteries included with Emacs (karthinks.com)

Banned Book Library in a Wi-Fi Smart Light Bulb (www.richardosgood.com)

Fox to buy Roku (www.wsj.com)

Typst 0.15.0 (typst.app)

Salesforce to Acquire Fin (formerly Intercom) for $3.6B (www.salesforce.com)

My Homelab AI Dev Platform (rsgm.dev)

Copper transport drug restores memory and clears toxic Alzheimer's proteins (www.monash.edu)

Hetzner increased dedicated server prices 3-4x (news.ycombinator.com)

I Love the Computer (michaelenger.com)

Anthropic's Safety Superpower (stratechery.com)

Openrouter Fusion API (openrouter.ai)

Improvement in advanced Alzheimer’s disease following high-dose psilocybin (www.frontiersin.org)

US battery manufacturing output continues to break records (fred.stlouisfed.org)

Game Engine White Papers: Commander Keen (forgottenbytes.net)

Peopleless economy? Not technically impossible (gmalandrakis.com)

What job interviews taught me about Kubernetes (notnotp.com)

The rich aren't your role models (theslowburningfuse.wordpress.com)

How TimescaleDB compresses time-series data (roszigit.com)

Show HN: I wrote a C++ ray tracer from scratch without AI (github.com)

Google Flight Simulator (developers.google.com)

21 years and counting of 'eight fallacies of distributed computing' (2025) (blog.apnic.net)