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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Simon Willison의 Claude 4.5 Opus 리뷰
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## Claude Opus 4.5, 그리고 새로운 LLM 평가가 점점 더 어려워지는 이유

가격은 매우 만족
- 입력은 백만 달러당 5달러, 출력은 백만 달러당 25달러
- 이전 Opus의 15달러/75달러보다 훨씬 저렴함
- 또한 GPT-5.1 제품군(1.25달러/10달러) 및 Gemini 3 Pro(2달러/12달러, 또는 20만 토큰 이상 구매 시 4달…
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https://news.hada.io/topic?id=24612&utm_source=googlechat&utm_medium=bot&utm_campaign=1834

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I find it disillusioning to see the casual use of "AI" slowly creeping into our hacker circles. Most of the discussions about AI focus on the quality of its output. I think we're not doing a good job communicating its more fundamental dangers.

In this blog post I write about how tools shape who we are and why the resource intensiveness of AI is ingrained in its purpose. About the devaluation of skills, and power cycles.

Let me know what you think.

fokus.cool/2025/11/25/i-dont-c

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pro tip: every time you ask “but how do you select whether this pin should be an input or an output?” and the datasheet replies “don’t worry about it kitten, it’s automatic”, yeet it directly into the sun and never use the relevant silicon for anything, lest it destroy everything you love and hold dear.

case studies:

  • automatic bidirectional level shifters
  • whatever the fuck is going on with PCF8574
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RT @RnaudBertrand
In a normal world, this should be an immense scandal in Europe.

Le Monde has a long article (lemonde.fr/international/artic) describing the hellish life of Nicolas Guillou, a French judge at the ICC in The Hague, due to U.S. sanctions punishing him for authorizing arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant for war crimes in Gaza.

Guillou's daily existence has been transformed into a Kafkaesque nightmare. He cannot: open or maintain accounts with Google, Amazon, Apple, or any US company; make hotel reservations (Expedia canceled his booking in France hours after he made it); conduct online commerce, since he can't know if the packaging is American; use any major credit card (Visa, Mastercard, Amex are all American); access normal banking services, even with non-American banks, as banks worldwide close sanctioned accounts; conduct virtually any financial transaction.

He describes it as being "economically banned across most of the planet," including in his own country, France, and where he works, the Netherlands.

That's the real shocking aspect of this: the Americans are:
- punishing a European citizen
- for doing his job in Europe
- applying laws Europe officially supports
- at an institution based in Europe
- that Europe helped create and fund

and Europe is not only doing essentially nothing to protect him, they're actively enforcing America's sanctions against their own citizen - European banks closing his accounts, European companies refusing him service, European institutions standing by while Washington destroys a European judge's life on European soil.

Again, in a normal world, European leaders and citizens should be absolutely outraged about this. But we've so normalized the hollowing out of European sovereignty that the sight of a European citizen being economically executed on European soil for upholding European law is treated, at best, as an unfortunate technical complication in transatlantic relations.

lemonde.fr/international/artic

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