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HN Buddy Daily Digest

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Hey buddy,

How's it going? Just wanted to give you a quick rundown on some of the cool stuff I saw on Hacker News from Saturday. Man, there was some interesting stuff popping up!

Crazy Interactive Art Thing

First up, you gotta check out this site called Floor796. It's basically one giant, animated image – like a massive GIF, but not really a GIF. It's super detailed, with tons of little scenes and characters doing stuff. Someone in the comments pointed out that the name "796" is actually a code for G-I-F (the 7th, 9th, and 6th letters in the alphabet). Apparently, the guy who makes it is from Belarus and just keeps adding new rooms. It's wild!

Nvidia's Sketchy Deal

Then there was this whole thing about Nvidia buying a company for like $20 billion, even though that company totally missed its revenue targets. The article was basically saying it looked like Nvidia paid way over market rate for tech they could probably build themselves, maybe as some kind of "antitrust loophole" or regulatory dodge. People in the comments were debating about shareholder duties and how hard it is for smaller shareholders to sue over these massive deals, even when billions are at stake. Sounds a bit shady, right?

Social Media Killed Communication

There was a thought-provoking post titled "How we lost communication to entertainment." It talks about how social media started as a way to connect but turned into this one-way entertainment machine. Some folks in the comments were like, "Duh, I never thought of social media as actual communication anyway." Others were saying that people just prefer looking at screens because the "real world" can be boring, but still, we should probably be more careful about screen time.

Apple's 3D Photo Magic

Apple actually released something cool: an open-source model that can instantly turn 2D photos into 3D views. How neat is that? The comments got into a big debate about what "open source" really means for AI, like whether the "weights" of the model count as source code, or if the training data is the real "source." Some people were also a bit miffed about the licensing, which apparently says you can't use it to compete with Apple for a few years. Classic Apple, I guess.

FFmpeg, but Easy?

Someone made a new tool called Ez FFmpeg, which lets you do video editing with FFmpeg using plain English commands. This is HUGE because FFmpeg is super powerful but its command line arguments are a nightmare to remember. People were stoked about this, with one person even wishing for an interactive script that builds the commands for you. Sounds like a lifesaver for anyone who touches video.

GPG.fail & Open Source Woes

There was a site called Gpg.fail that got a lot of buzz. It seems to be about the struggles and complexities of GnuPG, which is that encryption tool. The comments got into a deeper discussion about open-source licensing, like GPL versus MIT, and how big corporations sometimes take open-source projects, fork them, and then make their own proprietary versions without sharing improvements. Someone even mentioned a "schism" where GnuPG apparently abandoned the OpenPGP standard to do its own thing. Wild stuff in the open-source world.

Publish Your Work, Get Lucky

Finally, there was an article about how publishing your work increases your luck. The basic idea is that by putting your stuff out there, you open yourself up to unexpected opportunities. It's like the lottery, "you can't win if you don't play," as one commenter put it. But then others were worried about big corporations just taking people's published work and using it without giving royalties or credit. It’s a double-edged sword, I guess.

Anyway, that's the gist of it! Pretty interesting Saturday on the internet, huh? Talk later!

All Stories from Today

Floor796 (floor796.com)

Nvidia's $20B antitrust loophole (ossa-ma.github.io)

How we lost communication to entertainment (ploum.net)

Apple releases open-source model that instantly turns 2D photos into 3D views (github.com)

Show HN: Ez FFmpeg – Video editing in plain English (npmjs.com)

Gpg.fail (gpg.fail)

Publishing your work increases your luck (github.com)

QNX Self-Hosted Developer Desktop (devblog.qnx.com)

Janet Jackson had the power to crash laptop computers (2022) (devblogs.microsoft.com)

USD share as global reserve currency drops to lowest since 1994 (wolfstreet.com)

Say No to Palantir in the NHS (notopalantir.goodlawproject.org)

Nvidia just paid $20B for a company that missed its revenue target by 75% (blog.drjoshcsimmons.com)

Pre-commit hooks are broken (jyn.dev)

Toll roads are spreading in America (www.economist.com)

OrangePi 6 Plus Review (boilingsteam.com)

Employee commits suicide after MongoDB fired her during mental health leave (www.linkedin.com)

Rainbow Six Siege hacked as players get billions of credits and random bans (www.shanethegamer.com)

Inside the proton, the ‘most complicated thing you could possibly imagine’ (2022) (www.quantamagazine.org)

Richard Stallman at the First Hackers Conference in 1984 [video] (www.youtube.com)

CEO of health care software company sentenced for $1B fraud conspiracy (www.justice.gov)

Windows 2 for the Apricot PC/Xi (www.ninakalinina.com)

Scientists edited genes in a living person and saved his life (www.popularmechanics.com)

Pfizer ended up passing on my GLP-1 work back in the early '90s (2024) (www.statnews.com)

How we automated federal retirements (ndstudio.gov)

VSCode rebrands as "The open source AI code editor" (code.visualstudio.com)

Splice a Fibre (react-networks-lib.rackout.net)

An ounce of silver is now worth more than a barrel of oil (www.wsj.com)

CloudFlare is ruining the internet (for me) (2016) (www.slashgeek.net)

More dynamic cronjobs (george.mand.is)

The battle to stop clever people betting (www.economist.com)