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HN Buddy Daily Digest

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Hey buddy,

Man, what a Wednesday on Hacker News! Just wanted to give you the quick download on some of the interesting stuff from October 1st. Grab a coffee, here we go:

Big News: Jane Goodall Passed Away

First off, the really sad news. Jane Goodall died. Lots of folks were sharing stories about her incredible work with chimpanzees. One comment that really stuck out was about a niece dressing up as Jane for Halloween, and Jane actually sent her a super nice note complimenting the costume. Just shows what kind of person she was. A true legend, you know?

Read more about Jane Goodall

Tech for Good: Autism Simulator

Then there was this "Show HN" project called the Autism Simulator. Sounds pretty wild, right? It's basically trying to help people understand what it might be like to experience the world with autism. The comments were really deep, with people talking about "masking" – how autistic people often hide their struggles – and how simple things like making breakfast can be super challenging when they're burnt out. Sounds like a really eye-opening tool.

Check out the Autism Simulator

Massive Scale: 30 Petabytes of Hard Drives!

Someone posted about "Building the heap," where they were racking up 30 petabytes of hard drives for pretraining some AI stuff. That's just an insane amount of storage! The comments were full of people debating the cost of doing this yourself versus just using AWS. A lot of folks felt AWS costs are "insane" and that upper management often doesn't get the long-term planning needed for self-hosting hardware. Classic tech company struggle, I guess.

See how they built the heap

Google's New File Transfer Tool

Google open-sourced something called CDC File Transfer on GitHub. It's for fast, efficient file transfers, especially for big files or when you only need to sync changes. People in the comments were immediately comparing it to rsync and talking about clever ways to chunk files for even better performance. Always cool to see Google putting out useful tools like this.

Explore Google's CDC File Transfer

Gmail Dropping POP Support

Big news for email nerds: Gmail is apparently stopping support for checking emails from other accounts via POP. This means if you had, say, a custom domain email forwarding to Gmail and Gmail fetching it, that's going away. People were pretty annoyed, with some saying Gmail is becoming an "anti-pattern" and others noting how Google seems to be moving away from storing personal data in general. Some folks are already ditching Gmail for other services.

Read about Gmail's POP deprecation

The Google Sheets Superfan

There was a funny post titled "I only use Google Sheets." The author basically laid out why they do everything in Sheets, even stuff you wouldn't expect. The comments confirmed it's not just them – people are running entire businesses, and even keeping machine learning datasets in Sheets! One person brought up how GDPR clauses about machine-readable data exports are often ignored, which is a good point about vendor lock-in with these kinds of tools.

See why someone only uses Google Sheets

US Government Shutdown

And on the non-tech side, the US government shut down after the Senate couldn't pass a funding plan. As you'd expect, the comments section was a lively political debate. People were talking about the strategies behind it, historical precedents, and even the "Paradox of Tolerance" in online discussions. Always a hot topic when that happens, and HN was no exception.

Follow the news on the US government shutdown

Anyway, that's the gist of it for today. Talk soon!

All Stories from Today

Jane Goodall has died (www.latimes.com)

Show HN: Autism Simulator (autism-simulator.vercel.app)

Don't avoid workplace politics (terriblesoftware.org)

CDC File Transfer (github.com)

I only use Google Sheets (mayberay.bearblog.dev)

Building the heap: racking 30 petabytes of hard drives for pretraining (si.inc)

Unix philosophy and filesystem access makes Claude Code amazing (www.alephic.com)

TigerBeetle is a most interesting database (www.amplifypartners.com)

Gmail will no longer support checking emails from third-party accounts via POP (support.google.com)

Our efforts, in part, define us (weakty.com)

Solar leads EU electricity generation as renewables hit 54% (electrek.co)

OpenTSLM: Language models that understand time series (www.opentslm.com)

U.S. Lost 32,000 Private-Sector Jobs in September, Says Payroll Processor (www.wsj.com)

Codeberg Reaches 300k Projects (codeberg.org)

Category Theory Illustrated – Natural Transformations (abuseofnotation.github.io)

Type Theory and Functional Programming (1999) [pdf] (www.cs.cornell.edu)

Ask HN: Who is hiring? (October 2025) (news.ycombinator.com)

US government shuts down after Senate fails to pass last-ditch funding plan (www.bbc.com)

Cormac McCarthy's personal library (www.smithsonianmag.com)

An informational website about why I went to prison (prison.josh.mn)

The gaslit asset class (blog.dshr.org)

Detect Electron apps on Mac that hasn't been updated to fix the system wide lag (gist.github.com)

The Company Man (www.lesswrong.com)

DuckDuckGo Donates $25,000 to The Perl and Raku Foundation v2025 (www.perl.com)

Cursor 1.7 (cursor.com)

F3: Open-source data file format for the future [pdf] (db.cs.cmu.edu)

ICE Is Buying a Tool to Track Phones, Without Warrants (olgalautman.substack.com)

Minimal files and config for a PWA (github.com)

Evaluating the impact of AI on the labor market: Current state of affairs (budgetlab.yale.edu)

The RAG Obituary: Killed by agents, buried by context windows (www.nicolasbustamante.com)