HN Buddy Daily Digest
Saturday, October 18, 2025
Man, Saturday's Hacker News had some interesting stuff. Lemme hit you with the highlights real quick while I got a minute.
Old School IDEs and What We Lost
First off, there was this cool article about IDEs we had 30 years ago. It was all about how back in the day, like with Turbo Pascal, things were super simple and immediate. You could just jump in and code without a ton of setup. People in the comments were talking about how modern Emacs modes like "Transient" are a pain, but one guy is actually building an Emacs project called "Casual" to bring back that easy discoverability. Also, someone was surprised to find out that Ctrl+Ins and Shift+Ins for copy/paste still works in Emacs and some terminals – apparently it's more universal than people think!
Ripgrep 15.0 Is Out
Then, the super popular search tool Ripgrep hit version 15.0. It's mostly bug fixes and small performance bumps, nothing groundbreaking, but people were still hyped. The creator even popped into the comments to chat about the 'smart case' feature. Everyone just loves this tool; it's like the first thing people install on a new machine.
DIY Wrist Computer: ./watch
There was a cool project called ./watch. It's about building your own open-source watch with a tiny ARM microcontroller. The idea is you can program it to do whatever you want. People were dreaming about a mass-produced version that's just the hardware, no firmware, so everyone could customize their own wrist computer. Someone even learned PCB design with KiCAD just for this project, which is pretty neat.
RIP Chen-Ning Yang
Some sad news, Nobel laureate Chen-Ning Yang passed away at 103. He was a huge deal in physics. The comments were full of respect, discussing his massive impact, like the "Lee-Yang to Yang-Mills" connection. Someone even brought up this old quote from Fermi about him: "where there's a Yang, there's a bang." Pretty cool history stuff.
Attention is the New Luxury
Seth Godin had a thought-provoking post titled "Attention is a luxury good." He's basically saying that with all the distractions, being able to focus is becoming a rare and valuable thing. The comments totally agreed, with people linking it to Stephen Wolfram's idea that time is the ultimate limiting resource for humans. It really makes you think about how we consume info these days.
AGI Hype vs. Reality
Gary Marcus, who's usually pretty skeptical, wrote an article called "AGI is not imminent, and LLMs are not the royal road to getting there." He's basically throwing cold water on all the AGI hype, saying LLMs aren't the magic bullet. There was a big debate in the comments about what "success" even means for AI and whether comparing it to how we build airplanes (not by mimicking birds) is a fair analogy. Some people think the AGI hype is just "ego threatening" to others.
Windows 10 Users Are Fleeing to Linux
Finally, there was a story about Windows 10 users ditching for Linux because support is ending. Developers are calling it their "biggest launch ever" for new Linux users. People in the comments were sharing their own experiences, some loving it, others still wrestling with things like wake-from-suspend issues on laptops. Also, a common complaint was how schools give kids tablets instead of actual PCs, which can make learning real computer skills harder.
Oh, and real quick, there's also a huge GitHub repo with tons of free programming books, if you ever need to brush up on something. People were recommending old classics in the comments, saying not to just download PDFs but actually read them!
Alright, gotta run! Talk soon!
Later!