What is Hackers' Pub?

Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.

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ICE, MSP, domestic terrorism

I was reading this report about the domestic terrorism inflicted upin the citizens of - it's truly scary.

donmoynihan.substack.com/p/dis

I saw this pop up on , read through some of the comments there, and the sentiment was: well this is serious but how do we know it't true?

This feels like tech bro escapism to me. Even if 1/10th of what we hear and see happen in MSP through citizen reports is true, we should all be afraid for our fellow citizens.

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Took me three taps of the send button to send an iMessage because while it showed visual response to my taps, it didnโ€™t actually perform an action ๐Ÿซ 

This should be embarrassing

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My evening thought:

ActivityPub/Mastodon works best for groups of people that share some common interest. Where people talk eye to eye, not from top to bottom. People with a "we" attitude.

Centralised social networks however have made many of us believe that all social networks focus on people with a "me first" attitude. The more egoistic people that base their value on metrics like followers and reach.

That's a fundamental dilemma that pops up every time people move from "there" to "here".

@jwildeboerJan Wildeboer ๐Ÿ˜ท:krulorange:

indeed. i keep having a similar discussion with web folks. "engagement" and "time spent on page" are easy metrics to measure but not always a good judge of quality. maybe the reason i have to spend 3x time on a page after an update is because you've made it much harder to use.

i like the fediverse meeting of equals or shared interest much better. yes, the "metrics" seem lower but the quality of the interactions is much more satisfying.

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My evening thought:

ActivityPub/Mastodon works best for groups of people that share some common interest. Where people talk eye to eye, not from top to bottom. People with a "we" attitude.

Centralised social networks however have made many of us believe that all social networks focus on people with a "me first" attitude. The more egoistic people that base their value on metrics like followers and reach.

That's a fundamental dilemma that pops up every time people move from "there" to "here".

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You know that thing where you say something to a friend and then a few minutes later you get an ad for it on your phone?

That has NEVER happened to me.

Another future is possible. Some of us are already living in it. More should join in. It's better here. More connective, less destructive.

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One of the biggest statistical biases one encounters when trying to assess the true success rate of AI tools is the strong reporting bias against disclosing negative results. If an individual or AI company research group applies their AI tool to an open problem, but makes no substantial progress, there is little incentive for the user of that tool to report the negative statement; furthermore, even if such results are reported, they are less likely to go "viral" on social media than positive results. As a consequence, the results one actually hears about on such media is inevitably highly skewed towards the positive results.

With that in mind, I commend this recent initiative of Paata Ivanisvili and Mehmet Mars Seven to systematically document the outcomes (both positive and negative) of applying frontier LLMs to open problems, such as the Erdos problems: mehmetmars7.github.io/Erdospro

As one can see, the true success rate of these tools for, say, the Erdos problems is actually only on the level of a percentage point or two; but with over 600 outstanding open problems, this still leads to an impressively large (and non-trivial) set of actual AI contributions to these problems, though overwhelmingly concentrated near the easy end of the difficulty spectrum, and not yet a harbinger that the median Erdos problem is anywhere within reach of tehse tools.

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You know that thing where you say something to a friend and then a few minutes later you get an ad for it on your phone?

That has NEVER happened to me.

Another future is possible. Some of us are already living in it. More should join in. It's better here. More connective, less destructive.

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This is probably not going to work, but I'll give it a try anyway.

Who wants to adopt this pet project? :boost_ok:
personal pickup only. It cannot be shipped.

I have this little pet project that has been sitting here for 6 years now. I made it as a prototype for girls day 2020, to teach girls about electronics. Of course girls day 2020 never happened. ๐Ÿ˜ž

Anyway. I spent a couple hundred euros making this thing. There's documentation and replacement parts galore.

For $REASONS I need to get rid of it now. For free.

It's a great project for learning how to code with an Arduino nano, and/or to learn about basic electronics. There's enough material to build a second cube.

I'll probably have to trash the hole thing if nobody wants it ๐Ÿ˜ž

an 8x8x8 LED cube with blue lights. it has a black electronics compartment with a sticker "code like a girl" and engravings "girls day 2020" on the front. there is also a button to switch animation modes.the bottom of the cube shows a transparent door which can be removed by sliding it out. through the transparent acrylic glass the PCB, Arduino nano and lots of rainbow cables are visible.
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RE: mastodon.social/@fromjason/115

My silly 2026 prediction is we'll see a mainstream politician and/or tech elite call for outlawing local compute. This really feels like big tech's end goalโ€”make AI critical infrastructure to run all of our apps, then work towards a cloud-tethered world where local compute is a thing of the past.

This isn't that, obviously. But we know where Bezos' head is at.

windowscentral.com/artificial-

Jeff Bezos said the quiet part out loud โ€” hopes that you'll give up your PC to rent one from the cloud
News By Jez Corden published January 13, 2026
Amazon's Jeff Bezos once revealed how he thinks of local PC hardware as antiquated, ready to be replaced by cloud options. Will DRAM prices make it come true?
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