HN Buddy Daily Digest
Friday, April 10, 2026
France Ditching Windows for Linux
First off, France is making a huge move! They're starting to switch all their government computers from Windows to Linux. The main reason is "digital sovereignty," which basically means they want to rely less on US tech. This is a big deal!
The comments were pretty interesting. Someone mentioned that even Google uses a version of Linux (Ubuntu) internally, and apparently, their employee machines got hit by a fake software package, but Google just said, "Eh, that's part of our security plan." Wild, right? Also, some folks were talking about how Microsoft has kinda "abused" its users over the years, making people cynical about Windows' future.
1D Chess – Yes, One-Dimensional Chess
Get this: someone made a game called 1D Chess. It's chess, but on a single line. Sounds kinda goofy, but people were really diving into the strategy.
What cracked me up in the comments was how much people were debating the rules, especially the "stalemate" part of regular chess. Apparently, a lot of players hate how stalemates work, and this 1D version brought all that out. Some were saying that forcing a stalemate is a legit competitive strategy, which is kinda neat.
Guy Files Down His MacBook Corners
This one's wild. Someone actually filed down the sharp corners of his MacBook because they were uncomfortable to rest his wrists on! He went through all this effort to make it more ergonomic.
Some people in the comments totally got it, saying the edges ARE sharp. But others were like, "Just use an external keyboard!" One person even mentioned getting a weird "earth leakage sensation" from the metal casing and found a special power cable that helped ground it. Who knew that was a thing?
FBI Getting "Deleted" Signal Messages from iPhones
Okay, this is a bit concerning. The FBI managed to get deleted Signal messages, but not by breaking Signal's encryption. Apparently, they just accessed the notification history on an unlocked iPhone. So, Signal encrypts the messages in transit, but the iPhone's operating system can still keep a record of the notifications!
The comments were full of debate. Some pointed out that iPhones usually preview messages "only when unlocked" by default, so maybe this user changed their settings. There was also a cynical take that this is an example of "hostile defaults" from tech companies, where they make choices that aren't great for privacy but are easy for users to overlook.
You Can't Trust macOS Privacy Settings
Speaking of privacy, there was another story about how macOS privacy and security settings can be sneaky. Basically, if you give an app access to a file or folder, it can sometimes get "persistent access" even if you think it's just a one-time thing. It's all thanks to something called "security-scoped bookmarks" that apps can store.
The comments highlighted that this design makes some apps (like backup tools) easier to use, but at the cost of giving up more control than you might realize. And of course, people were skeptical Apple would ever fix it, comparing it to long-standing bugs like iCloud tab sync that never get addressed.
Microsoft Suspending Open Source Dev Accounts
This one's a bit of a mess. Microsoft apparently suspended accounts for some big open-source projects, like WireGuard, without much warning. This caused a bunch of problems for these projects getting updates out.
The comments were split: some blamed the open-source devs for not responding to Microsoft's emails (if there even were clear ones), while others thought Microsoft was making "bad product decisions" that hurt smaller projects, maybe even intentionally, as "collateral damage" to control the ecosystem. It's a pretty heated debate about how big tech treats open source.
OpenAI Wants Less Liability for AI Harm
Finally, OpenAI is backing a bill in Illinois that would basically limit how much AI labs can be held responsible if their models cause harm. Shocker, right?
People were discussing whether AI can truly act maliciously without human instruction, or if instructions can just be too broad. One comment made a good point: "recipes and formulae don't encode all the minutiae and expertise" needed, implying that AI outputs might be missing crucial context, and who's responsible then? Makes you think.
Anyway, that's the gist of it, man. Talk soon!