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HN Buddy Daily Digest

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Hey buddy,

What's up? Just saw some cool stuff on Hacker News from Sunday, thought I'd hit you up real quick.

Mercedes-Benz bringing back physical buttons

First off, guess what? Mercedes is actually bringing back physical buttons! Remember how everyone was complaining about all those touchscreens in cars? Looks like they finally listened. One guy in the comments even said it makes customers more loyal 'cause they know what to expect. Smart move, right?

Haskell at Mercury

Then there was this super nerdy one about Mercury using a couple million lines of Haskell for their production stuff. Yeah, Haskell! Apparently, it's working great for them, even through crazy growth and the whole SVB crisis. Someone mentioned Jane Street uses OCaml, kinda similar, and apparently Mercury processed like $248 billion in transactions in 2025. That's a lot of Haskell!

AI diagnosing ER patients

Oh, and get this: OpenAI's new AI, 'o1', diagnosed ER patients better than actual doctors in a Harvard trial! Like, 67% accuracy versus 50-55% for human triage docs. Kinda wild to think about. People in the comments were talking about how it could help minimize false positives and negatives, and someone wondered what if doctors *had* these AI tools instead of just the AI working alone. Big implications there, huh?

Kimi K2.6 beating other AIs in coding

Speaking of AI, there's a new open-source Chinese model called Kimi K2.6 that apparently just kicked Claude, GPT-5.5, and Gemini's butts in a coding challenge. That's a big deal! People were debating if smaller, specialized AI apps are better than one giant model trying to do everything.

New Banksy statue in London

And totally different, Banksy might have a new statue in London. It's this suited guy, blinded by a flag, walking off a ledge. Super thought-provoking, as usual. Comments were all over the place, talking about nationalism and media gaslighting, and someone even quoted Einstein about nationalism being like "the measles of mankind."

BYOMesh – New LoRa mesh radio

Lastly, saw something cool about a new radio tech called BYOMesh, a LoRa mesh radio with like 100x the bandwidth. Could be huge for remote communication, maybe even for mountaineering or just when Starlink is too much. People were brainstorming uses like distributed signatures or just for remote weather sensors sending tiny bits of data.

Anyway, that's the quick rundown. Catch you later!

All Stories from Today

Mercedes-Benz commits to bringing back physical buttons (www.drive.com.au)

A couple million lines of Haskell: Production engineering at Mercury (blog.haskell.org)

DeepClaude – Claude Code agent loop with DeepSeek V4 Pro (github.com)

OpenAI's o1 correctly diagnosed 67% of ER patients vs. 50-55% by triage doctors (www.theguardian.com)

New statue in London, attributed to Banksy, of a suited man, blinded by a flag (www.smithsonianmag.com)

Kimi K2.6 just beat Claude, GPT-5.5, and Gemini in a coding challenge (thinkpol.ca)

BYOMesh – New LoRa mesh radio offers 100x the bandwidth (partyon.xyz)

Agentic Coding Is a Trap (larsfaye.com)

A desktop made for one (isene.org)

Why TUIs are back (wiki.alcidesfonseca.com)

Let's Buy Spirit Air (letsbuyspiritair.com)

Specsmaxxing – On overcoming AI psychosis, and why I write specs in YAML (acai.sh)

Metal Gear Solid 2's source code has been leaked on 4chan (www.thegamer.com)

Southwest Headquarters Tour (katherinemichel.github.io)

Maryland to ban A.I.-driven price increases in grocery stores (www.nytimes.com)

For thirty years I programmed with Phish on, every day (christophermeiklejohn.com)

Utah to hold websites liable for users who mask their location with VPNs (www.tomshardware.com)

The text mode lie: why modern TUIs are a nightmare for accessibility (xogium.me)

Open source does not imply open community (blog.feld.me)

A network smuggling Starlink tech into Iran to beat internet blackout (www.bbc.com)

How far behind is each major Chromium browser? (chromium-drift.pages.dev)

Show HN: Apple's SHARP running in the browser via ONNX runtime web (github.com)

Security through obscurity is not bad (mobeigi.com)

The 'Hidden' Costs of Great Abstractions (jdgr.net)

Bad Connection: Global telecom exploitation by covert surveillance actors (citizenlab.ca)

Investors pile into clean energy as Iran war drives push for energy security (www.ft.com)

Nuclear receptor 4A1 linked to health effects of coffee: study (sciencex.com)

LLMs Are Not a Higher Level of Abstraction (www.lelanthran.com)

Porsche will contest Laguna Seca in historic colors of the Apple Computer livery (newsroom.porsche.com)

Alert-driven monitoring (simpleobservability.com)