New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: Openleetcode – LeetCode runner where tests live in the repo

Show HN: Openleetcode – LeetCode runner where tests live in the repo
2 by therepanic | 0 comments on Hacker News.
You write a standard solution, just like on LeetCode, and run it through the CLI. It identifies the problem by ID or title, executes your code against local test cases, and shows the result. It currently supports around 800 problems and multiple languages, including Python, C++, Rust, Java, Go, TypeScript, Swift, and others. The project is still an MVP. System design, SQL, and concurrency problems are not supported yet, but support for more problem types is planned.

New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: Levee – a self-tuning circuit breaker and concurrency limiter for Go

Show HN: Levee – a self-tuning circuit breaker and concurrency limiter for Go
3 by code_martial | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Rate limiters and circuit breakers work wonderfully well when they’re configured for the load and available capacity. But load, capacity, and latency drift over time, and keeping those settings current requires continuous effort. So I built Levee to be a hands-off, adaptive, easy to configure traffic governor. Levee is configured with a success-rate target and timeout. It then continuously monitors the workload performance characteristics to detect downstream capacity exhaustion or failures. It can also spot a surge from growing concurrency before failures arrive. It runs in-process, uses a small, fixed amount of memory, has zero dependencies, and processes millions of requests per second. In a deterministic 10-node mesh simulation, Levee outscored carefully tuned static rate limiters/breakers deployed throughout the mesh, while recording fewer failures and no node crashes.

New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: My father died and I need to find my path

Ask HN: My father died and I need to find my path
4 by c4kar | 5 comments on Hacker News.
It's been 38 days and 6 hours since my father passed away. I was let go from my internship during the last month we spent at the hospital. I went to the hospital in tears and poured my heart out to my father. He told me something I can still hear ringing in my ears: "If, when I took the university entrance exam, I had the opportunity to get into the best university in the country, believe me, I would study day and night to get in. I'd find some way, study hard, and get in. Your profession matters so much. Having a good profession is crucial for your family's comfort and future." Those words became a pearl earring in my ear. After saying this, he kept giving me advice to pull me away from the uncertain path I was on. And now he's gone. For the past two years, I've been studying electrical and electronics engineering in my country (Turkey), and this semester I noticed that my interest in computer engineering has surpassed everything else. So I've decided to transfer, and with God's permission, I'll be switching to computer engineering next year — but I still don't know how I should navigate this field. I don't know which technologies I should learn. There are times when I even wonder whether I should switch at all. My fears have started to grow that by the time I graduate, AI will have replaced everyone. [1] If my father were here, I'd ask him. He'd find the best path for me, and I'd trust that it was truly the best. But he's not here anymore, and I'm alone. Along with my family, we're carrying on with our lives. This summer, my father was going to find me an internship — that's what I kept telling myself. I had no worries at all back then, but right now I feel like I'm drifting in a void, and I need someone to show me a path. I thought maybe someone on this forum could point me in a direction. My father's words keep echoing in my ears, and I want to have a good profession, just like he said. Maybe you can help me. [1] https://ift.tt/BzgQUJa Text was translated from Turkish with GLM-5.2

New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: The Quiet Map – Earth's quietest place, measured by seismometers

Show HN: The Quiet Map – Earth's quietest place, measured by seismometers
2 by theceka | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hey HN, This started as a personal curiosity and Claude helped me build it out. The Quiet Map reads 98 broadband seismometers from around the world every hour. Ground vibration in the 4–14 Hz band is usually done by human activity - traffic, trains, footsteps etc. Each station is compared against its own history at the same hour of day, and the map names the place currently furthest below its own normal: the quietest place on Earth right now. Hope you enjoy it and would love your feedback!

New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: We beat Cloudflare's bot detection (open-source stealth browser)

Show HN: We beat Cloudflare's bot detection (open-source stealth browser)
3 by armanluthra_ | 0 comments on Hacker News.


New ask Hacker News story: One Wikipedia page costs your AI agent 68,000 tokens

One Wikipedia page costs your AI agent 68,000 tokens
6 by arhamislam5766 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
i use claude code daily and measured what pages cost it while doing research. an average wikipedia article, for instance, is 68,240 tokens of raw html (tiktoken); nike's homepage is 353,000. claude code's built-in webfetch handles the easy case well. it summarizes wikipedia to about 950 tokens and clears cloudflare on some sites like indeed and ticketmaster. but, and there's always a but, on js-rendered and some anti-bot pages it returns nothing. quotes.toscrape.com/js gives "no quotes found"; nike.com gives a 403. your agent then dumps the raw html back into context and still fails. (note: i have also had cases where i read through the chat at the end and saw that it failed and just pulled from either training data or stale caches from other sources) so i worked on building an open-source stealth browser (recompiled chromium) that runs as an mcp for claude code, cursor, and claude desktop. essentially all i have to change form my end is add the mcp, and it returns the cleaned up tokens while also beating detection: the js quotes come back in 285 tokens, nike in about 700 instead of a 403. there is still stuff i am actively working on: there's no residential egress yet, and it won't beat kasada-style walls. it's for agents, qa, and research. repo and the reproducible benchmark: https://ift.tt/cVxHF1z i'm the author and here for feedback.