HN Buddy

Daily digest of top Hacker News posts and comments

Subscribe to the HN Buddy Daily Digest

Your email will only be used for the HN Buddy Daily Digest. I will not share it with anyone.

HN Buddy Daily Digest

Saturday, October 11, 2025

Hey buddy,

Man, Saturday on Hacker News was pretty wild, lemme tell ya. I saw a few things that really caught my eye. Lemme give you the quick rundown.

The <output> Tag

First off, there was this article about the <output> HTML tag. Can you believe it? Apparently, it’s been around forever, but nobody uses it. It’s for showing results from calculations in web forms, like if you have a slider and you want to display the number you selected. Kinda neat, right?

One of the comments mentioned it’d be awesome if it could just attach directly to an <input> tag, like a range slider, and automatically show the result. That makes total sense, why isn't it like that already?

Microsoft's AI Photo Scanning

Then, this one really got me: Microsoft is apparently testing face-recognizing AI for photos in OneDrive, and get this, they only let you opt out of the scanning three times a year. Three times! People in the comments were calling it an "illusion of choice," saying companies always try to sneak these privacy-compromising features in. And honestly, after all the recent AI training controversies, who even trusts their disclaimers anymore?

Daniel Kahneman Opts for Assisted Suicide

There was a really heavy one too: Daniel Kahneman, the Nobel Prize winner, opted for assisted suicide in Switzerland. That sparked a huge discussion, as you can imagine. Lots of talk about the ethics of it, especially with things like late-stage Alzheimer's. One comment brought up how it might even affect incentives for life extension research, which is a pretty deep thought.

GNU Health

Something on the more positive side was about GNU Health. It’s an open-source project trying to build a health and hospital management system. Sounds like they’re trying to fix all the headaches doctors have with terrible proprietary software. Someone in the comments even referenced a New Yorker article about "Why Doctors Hate Their Computers," which just makes this project seem even more important.

Coding Agents in 2025

Another interesting one was about how this guy is actually using AI coding agents right now in October 2025. He calls them "Superpowers" and talks about giving them recursive skills to build stuff. Sounds pretty futuristic, right?

But here’s the kicker from the comments: a bunch of developers were saying their own experience with these AI coding tools has been pretty bad, and they often end up undoing all the AI's changes. So, maybe it’s not all sunshine and rainbows yet.

PS6 Chipset Rethink

For the gamers, there was news about AMD and Sony's PS6 chipset rethinking the graphics pipeline. They're teasing a new chip architecture for the PlayStation 6. Sounds like they're trying to shake things up in how games render visuals.

People were debating about the role of generative AI in future graphics, but some were skeptical about it delivering AAA quality at high frame rates by 2035. What really caught my eye in the comments was someone talking about the cool idea of the storage controller writing directly to memory without the CPU getting involved. That’s some smart engineering!

Meme Arrest in Tennessee

And finally, this one was just wild: a guy in Tennessee got arrested and slapped with a huge $2 million bond for posting a Facebook meme that authorities interpreted as a threat. Crazy, right?

The comments were a big debate about free speech, what actually constitutes a legal threat, and how online posts are being policed. A lot of people felt like the legal system is really struggling to understand the context of internet culture.

So yeah, that’s the gist of it. Hope you had a good one too! Catch ya later!

All Stories from Today

The Tag (denodell.com)

Microsoft only lets you opt out of AI photo scanning 3x a year (hardware.slashdot.org)

Daniel Kahneman opted for assisted suicide in Switzerland (www.bluewin.ch)

GNU Health (www.gnuhealth.org)

Superpowers: How I'm using coding agents in October 2025 (blog.fsck.com)

AMD and Sony's PS6 chipset aims to rethink the current graphics pipeline (arstechnica.com)

Tennessee man arrested, accused of threatening a shooting, after posting meme (reason.com)

People regret buying Amazon smart displays after being bombarded with ads (arstechnica.com)

AV2 video codec delivers 30% lower bitrate than AV1, final spec due in late 2025 (videocardz.com)

Firefox is the best mobile browser (kelvinjps.com)

Vibing a non-trivial Ghostty feature (mitchellh.com)

Windows Subsystem for FreeBSD (github.com)

Meta Superintelligence's surprising first paper (paddedinputs.substack.com)

Microsoft Amplifier (github.com)

LineageOS 23 (lineageos.org)

Rating 26 years of Java changes (neilmadden.blog)

How hard do you have to hit a chicken to cook it? (2020) (james-simon.github.io)

Discord hack shows risks of online age checks (news.sky.com)

Google blocks Android hack that let Pixel users enable VoLTE anywhere (www.androidauthority.com)

Japan's summers have lengthened by 3 weeks over 42 years, say resaerchers (english.kyodonews.net)

Learn Turbo Pascal – a video series originally released on VHS (www.youtube.com)

Peter Thiel's antichrist lectures reveal more about him than Armageddon (www.theguardian.com)

Climate goals go up in smoke as US datacenters turn to coal (www.theregister.com)

Indonesia says 22 plants in industrial zone contaminated by caesium 137 (www.reuters.com)

Datastar response to misunderstandings (data-star.dev)

Anthropic's Prompt Engineering Tutorial (github.com)

Ask HN: Abandoned/dead projects you think died before their time and why? (news.ycombinator.com)

TikTok removing posts for violating the "joy of TikTok" (twitter.com)

Hackers leak Qantas data on 5M customers after ransom deadline passes (www.theguardian.com)

Diane Keaton has died (www.nytimes.com)