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HN Buddy Daily Digest

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Hey buddy,

Just finished scrolling through Hacker News from yesterday, Saturday. Saw some pretty wild stuff, figured I'd give you the quick rundown.

Chicago Politics and Immigration

First up, there was this big article, "I Want You to Understand Chicago". It got tons of comments, like, over 350! People were really going at it over immigration, specifically about whether ICE agents need warrants for arrests and if folks are being "abducted." Super political, lots of back and forth about rules potentially changing and how conservative messaging plays into it all. Some folks were pretty heated about the lack of warrants.

Heart Health Debates

Then, shifting gears completely, one that got everyone talking was "Ticker: Don't die of heart disease". This one sparked a huge debate about cholesterol, statins, and memory loss. Some folks in the comments were really pushing back on the idea that low cholesterol causes memory loss or that statins are the main culprit. There was also talk about promising new pills coming out from Merck that block PCSK9 to lower LDL cholesterol by a lot. It sounds like a lot of strong opinions on doctors and medical data.

Snapchat's New UI Framework: Valdi

On the tech side, Snapchat released a new UI framework called Valdi. They're saying it's cross-platform and delivers native performance. People in the comments were debating whether it's better to just "roll your own" UI stuff instead of using big frameworks, or comparing it to React Native. Someone even mentioned needing a "native escape hatch" for specific device APIs, which is a pretty common concern with these kinds of tools.

Weaknesses in AI Evaluation

Another big one was a study from Oxford about "weaknesses in how AI systems are evaluated." Basically, it's saying the way we measure AI intelligence might be flawed, especially when it comes to things like creativity. One cool comment pointed out that demos always look perfect, but then in real-world use, you start seeing weird stuff like "volume drift" and "random artifacts" in text-to-speech AI. It's like the models are capable, but our metrics for "intelligence" aren't quite there yet.

Accidentally Faking Ryzen Leaks

This one was pretty funny and a bit scary: "My friends and I accidentally faked the Ryzen 7 9700X3D leaks." Some guys just made up a CPU leak for a laugh, and it somehow got picked up by news sites. The comments were all over the "Gell-Mann amnesia effect" – you know, how you spot errors in news about your own field, but tend to trust everything else? Total reminder that news can be easily fooled, especially with AI potentially making it easier to generate fake info.

Apple's Notarization and Software Freedom

Classic Apple drama too: "Apple's 'notarisation' – blocking software freedom of developers and users." It's about Apple putting more restrictions on software, and people are obviously upset about developer freedom and user choice. Comments were pretty heated, with some defending Apple for "grandmas' safety," while others were calling it "consumer hostile and anti-competitive." Sounds like the usual fight over who controls your device.

Largest Cargo Sailboat Crosses the Atlantic

And for something completely different, the "Largest cargo sailboat completes first Atlantic crossing." How cool is that? A massive sailboat for shipping stuff, trying to be more eco-friendly. People in the comments were comparing it to old sailing vessels and even mentioning that China is building nuclear cargo ships. Talk about a mix of old and new tech solutions for shipping!

Anyway, that's the gist of it. Wild day on HN, as usual. Catch you later, man!

All Stories from Today

I Want You to Understand Chicago (aphyr.com)

Ticker: Don't die of heart disease (myticker.com)

Valdi – A cross-platform UI framework that delivers native performance (github.com)

Study identifies weaknesses in how AI systems are evaluated (www.oii.ox.ac.uk)

My friends and I accidentally faked the Ryzen 7 9700X3D leaks (old.reddit.com)

Apple's "notarisation" – blocking software freedom of developers and users (fsfe.org)

Marko – A declarative, HTML‑based language (markojs.com)

IP blocking the UK is not enough to comply with the Online Safety Act (prestonbyrne.com)

Ironclad – formally verified, real-time capable, Unix-like OS kernel (ironclad-os.org)

Largest cargo sailboat completes first Atlantic crossing (www.marineinsight.com)

Mullvad: Shutting down our search proxy Leta (mullvad.net)

Sam Altman's pants are on fire (garymarcus.substack.com)

Btop: A better modern alternative of htop with a gamified interface (github.com)

Immutable Software Deploys Using ZFS Jails on FreeBSD (conradresearch.com)

Cerebras Code now supports GLM 4.6 at 1000 tokens/sec (www.cerebras.ai)

52 Year old data tape could contain Unix history (www.theregister.com)

WriterdeckOS (writerdeckos.com)

Making Democracy Work: Fixing and Simplifying Egalitarian Paxos (arxiv.org)

Avería: The Average Font (2011) (iotic.com)

$1T in tech stocks sold off as market grows skeptical of AI (gizmodo.com)

US air traffic controllers start resigning as shutdown bites (www.thedailybeast.com)

I want you to understand Chicago (aphyr.com)

Cloudflare scrubs Aisuru botnet from top domains list (krebsonsecurity.com)

Always be ready to leave (even if you never do) (andreacanton.dev)

Near mid-air collision at LAX between American Airlines and ITA [video] (www.youtube.com)

Local First Htmx (elijahm.com)

Opencloud – An alternative to Nextcloud written in Go (github.com)

Firefox Forcing LLM Features (equk.co.uk)

An Algebraic Language for the Manipulation of Symbolic Expressions (1958) [pdf] (softwarepreservation.computerhistory.org)

Sam Altman Is Getting Desperate and It Is Starting to Show (tickerfeed.net)