Show HN: Countries where you can leave your MacBook at a random coffee shop
2 by canergl | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, I wanted to know which countries you can simply leave your laptop at a Starbucks, and where you can't. Feel free to click and vote.
Hack Nux
Watch the number of websites being hacked today, one by one on a page, increasing in real time.
New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: Before Open Source took over the server, what was the discourse like?
Ask HN: Before Open Source took over the server, what was the discourse like?
2 by mbgerring | 0 comments on Hacker News.
My understanding of the early Internet is that there was fierce competition among commercial, closed-source server and database software, and that the dominance of Linux, Apache, MySQL (and now PostgreSQL) etc were far from obvious or guaranteed. I think we’re in a similar moment with LLMs, and I’d love to read some stories, or see some examples of discourse on mailing lists, forums, or whatever on this subject from that earlier period. I think it would be helpful for grounding present-day discussions. What can you share from this era?
2 by mbgerring | 0 comments on Hacker News.
My understanding of the early Internet is that there was fierce competition among commercial, closed-source server and database software, and that the dominance of Linux, Apache, MySQL (and now PostgreSQL) etc were far from obvious or guaranteed. I think we’re in a similar moment with LLMs, and I’d love to read some stories, or see some examples of discourse on mailing lists, forums, or whatever on this subject from that earlier period. I think it would be helpful for grounding present-day discussions. What can you share from this era?
New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: Free OSS transcription app I made and found it's faster than wispr flow
Show HN: Free OSS transcription app I made and found it's faster than wispr flow
2 by fireharp | 0 comments on Hacker News.
title doesn't let nuance, ofc it's not the app that's faster but the way you can use it with Groq inference for example.
2 by fireharp | 0 comments on Hacker News.
title doesn't let nuance, ofc it's not the app that's faster but the way you can use it with Groq inference for example.
New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: tltv – Federation protocol for 24/7 TV channels
Show HN: tltv – Federation protocol for 24/7 TV channels
3 by tltv | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I spent six years trying to build a tv channel server. rewrote it eight times. flask, fastapi, ffmpeg, gstreamer, named pipes. every version got more complicated and none of them worked right. turns out I was building the wrong thing. the thing I actually wanted was a protocol. so tltv is that. a channel is an ed25519 key pair. you sign your metadata with it. you serve hls video from wherever you want. your public key becomes a tltv:// address that anyone can tune into. relay nodes can re-serve your stream but they can't modify it. they verify signatures on everything. you can move servers and keep your channel because the key is the identity, not the hostname. nodes find each other through peer exchange. no central registry. the cli is probably the fastest way to see what I mean: curl -fsSL timelooptv.org/install | sh tltv keygen tltv server test --name "my channel" -k TV*.key that's a fully compliant origin server. pure go, generates smpte bars with audio, no ffmpeg. one binary, ~20mb of ram. there's also a full gstreamer-based server (cathode), a web viewer (phosphor), and bridge/relay servers in the cli. everything mit licensed. live demo at https://ift.tt/HYGFJkT https://ift.tt/Ca5JwyI
3 by tltv | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I spent six years trying to build a tv channel server. rewrote it eight times. flask, fastapi, ffmpeg, gstreamer, named pipes. every version got more complicated and none of them worked right. turns out I was building the wrong thing. the thing I actually wanted was a protocol. so tltv is that. a channel is an ed25519 key pair. you sign your metadata with it. you serve hls video from wherever you want. your public key becomes a tltv:// address that anyone can tune into. relay nodes can re-serve your stream but they can't modify it. they verify signatures on everything. you can move servers and keep your channel because the key is the identity, not the hostname. nodes find each other through peer exchange. no central registry. the cli is probably the fastest way to see what I mean: curl -fsSL timelooptv.org/install | sh tltv keygen tltv server test --name "my channel" -k TV*.key that's a fully compliant origin server. pure go, generates smpte bars with audio, no ffmpeg. one binary, ~20mb of ram. there's also a full gstreamer-based server (cathode), a web viewer (phosphor), and bridge/relay servers in the cli. everything mit licensed. live demo at https://ift.tt/HYGFJkT https://ift.tt/Ca5JwyI
New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: The independent guide to agent orchestrators
Show HN: The independent guide to agent orchestrators
2 by manume | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hey HN! I built AgentMGMT.dev today to keep track of all those agent orchestration tools that keep popping up. I've tried a few and landed on Superset, which I'm extremely happy (and productive!) with - but I think this category of tools will be extremely important and interesting in the next couple years, so it's worth keeping an eye on all available tools and how they evolve. I will keep the site up-to-date, please help me by submitting new tools that are not yet in the list, or add any details that might help folks who are out shopping for their first/next agent orchestrator!
2 by manume | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hey HN! I built AgentMGMT.dev today to keep track of all those agent orchestration tools that keep popping up. I've tried a few and landed on Superset, which I'm extremely happy (and productive!) with - but I think this category of tools will be extremely important and interesting in the next couple years, so it's worth keeping an eye on all available tools and how they evolve. I will keep the site up-to-date, please help me by submitting new tools that are not yet in the list, or add any details that might help folks who are out shopping for their first/next agent orchestrator!