Show HN: Tamper-evident audit trail for AI coding agent activity
3 by gclaramunt | 0 comments on Hacker News.
We released what I've been working in the last few months: an Openclaw plugin that ecords every session, tool invocation, and prompt exchange into a local SQLite database with SHA-256 hash chain integrity, so you can verify that no events were altered or deleted after the fact.
Hack Nux
Watch the number of websites being hacked today, one by one on a page, increasing in real time.
New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: Vet turned founder, AI lawn diagnosis
Show HN: Vet turned founder, AI lawn diagnosis
12 by andrewbr | 2 comments on Hacker News.
I know, it's kind of weird. What is a veterinarian doing creating an analysis tool for lawn problems? Frankly, the idea was born of my own lawn care struggles. Endless lawn care company fees without any actual improvement. Googling problems and finding generic solutions without regional considerations. One time I overseeded my grass not realizing I had to actually put soil down too. One day, I decided to run lawn pictures through AI and found some pretty helpful information. So I decided with my clinical background (the idea of treating the cause, not just the symptoms), as well as tech savvy, I would create an AI tool where homeowners can upload pictures of their lawn, enter their ZIP code, and get a diagnosis tailored to their location with actionable next steps in just 15 seconds. Completely free. The platform is monetized with affiliate sales (if a user elects to purchase through one of our Amazon or other links) and by selling exclusive rights to individual ZIP codes to lawn care companies seeking warm leads. Users can pursue their own DIY plan, purchase a lawn care subscription service, or contact a local lawn care system. I'd love if you'd test it out, toy with it, try to break it, and give me your feedback. Any feature requests would be super helpful. Thanks! Excited to hear your thoughts. Andrew
12 by andrewbr | 2 comments on Hacker News.
I know, it's kind of weird. What is a veterinarian doing creating an analysis tool for lawn problems? Frankly, the idea was born of my own lawn care struggles. Endless lawn care company fees without any actual improvement. Googling problems and finding generic solutions without regional considerations. One time I overseeded my grass not realizing I had to actually put soil down too. One day, I decided to run lawn pictures through AI and found some pretty helpful information. So I decided with my clinical background (the idea of treating the cause, not just the symptoms), as well as tech savvy, I would create an AI tool where homeowners can upload pictures of their lawn, enter their ZIP code, and get a diagnosis tailored to their location with actionable next steps in just 15 seconds. Completely free. The platform is monetized with affiliate sales (if a user elects to purchase through one of our Amazon or other links) and by selling exclusive rights to individual ZIP codes to lawn care companies seeking warm leads. Users can pursue their own DIY plan, purchase a lawn care subscription service, or contact a local lawn care system. I'd love if you'd test it out, toy with it, try to break it, and give me your feedback. Any feature requests would be super helpful. Thanks! Excited to hear your thoughts. Andrew
New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: I hate typing continue once my CC quota resets
Show HN: I hate typing continue once my CC quota resets
2 by pradeep1177 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by pradeep1177 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: Year of Linux Desktop is fun with LLMs
Ask HN: Year of Linux Desktop is fun with LLMs
2 by mirekrusin | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I'm wondering if others are also having recently blast using Linux desktop thanks to Claude/Codex/Grok CLIs? As 20y daily Mac user, occasionally using Linux as desktop, my personal daily OS now gravitated towards Linux desktop in recent months quite a lot. I attribute it purely to LLM CLIs. Even my old 2012 Intel iMac 27" on Linux became really good and pleasant machine to use. After dusting it off and setting it up I don't want to give it away anymore. Solutions to quirks/customizations seem to be few prompts away and it's actually fun to do as well. Things like brightness on Apple Studio/iMac not working are not only solved in few minutes but solved really well (native OSD indistinguishable from system volume, perfect latency, mapped to gamma 2.2 perceptual curve etc), Magic Keyboard/macOS key bindings muscle memory which normally was painful is solved in few minutes, Steam not starting C&C on old GPU/mismatched driver versions - sorted out in few minutes etc etc It goes deeper as well, ie. compiling KASAN kernel and reproducing some edge race on current hardware is something I'd never have time to do, investigating, learning so many specialized details etc. to get to the bottom of it, but now it feels fun. Anybody else experiencing something similar?
2 by mirekrusin | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I'm wondering if others are also having recently blast using Linux desktop thanks to Claude/Codex/Grok CLIs? As 20y daily Mac user, occasionally using Linux as desktop, my personal daily OS now gravitated towards Linux desktop in recent months quite a lot. I attribute it purely to LLM CLIs. Even my old 2012 Intel iMac 27" on Linux became really good and pleasant machine to use. After dusting it off and setting it up I don't want to give it away anymore. Solutions to quirks/customizations seem to be few prompts away and it's actually fun to do as well. Things like brightness on Apple Studio/iMac not working are not only solved in few minutes but solved really well (native OSD indistinguishable from system volume, perfect latency, mapped to gamma 2.2 perceptual curve etc), Magic Keyboard/macOS key bindings muscle memory which normally was painful is solved in few minutes, Steam not starting C&C on old GPU/mismatched driver versions - sorted out in few minutes etc etc It goes deeper as well, ie. compiling KASAN kernel and reproducing some edge race on current hardware is something I'd never have time to do, investigating, learning so many specialized details etc. to get to the bottom of it, but now it feels fun. Anybody else experiencing something similar?