HACKER Q&A
📣 penaazv

What's the best thing you came across on Hacker News?


I've started using HN pretty recently, and already impressed by some of the not-so-common and interesting topics and discussions here. Curious to know your favorites!


  👤 cyrialize Accepted Answer ✓
My favorite thing, which I don't know if I ever saved in my favorites, was a thread on your favorite HN comments.

A user linked to a thread (which I don't have saved sadly) of a different user talking about how they ordered a random unknown sweetener from somewhere internationally.

The package came by months later, and when the user opened it - white powder coated their kitchen, and their tongue.

They apparently loved the taste of it so much they carried the powder in a shaker with them everywhere. I remember them saying something along the lines of: "This stuff is so good that I haven't bothered to look up any health effects. I don't want to know. I'm fine with dying early, as long as I can keep on using this stuff."

I really wish I could find this comment again.


👤 qup
I often pick up a book recommendation or other recommendation from here.

I read Blindsight by Peter Watts after a comment recently, and it has really stuck with me. It's a sci-fi book about contact with an interstellar intelligence.

It's free online.

https://www.rifters.com/real/Blindsight.htm

For me the real gems are usually just on-topic comment threads for topics I want to read about. It's incredible when a domain expert shows up to give us the nitty gritty, and it happens--all the time.

There's also always this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35079


👤 Tomte
If you identify users with similar interests, look up their favorite comments pages.

Mine is: https://news.ycombinator.com/favorites?id=Tomte&comments=t

There is also "favorite submissions", if you leave off the &comments=t


👤 snarkyturtle
I'm almost certain these were posted back in the day but:

Adam Morse's updated color palette: https://clrs.cc/

This really cool color scale generator: https://hihayk.github.io/scale/#4/6/50/80/-51/67/20/14/1D9A6...


👤 botro
I made http://HNLikes.com to aggregate the most frequently posted links for videos, papers, code, Wikipedia articles and more in HN comments. It's a good way to discover the many classics HN users love to post.

Apologies that this is self promotion, I only share because it's relvant to the question you've asked.


👤 dieselgate
I saw a posting about the U.S. digital corps. It seemed cool and my recent college grad family member seemed to fit the criteria, after like 10 months of application, interview, etc the family member started the two year program last Monday.

👤 smlavine
This fun blog about infrastructure and living in Antarctica: https://brr.fyi

👤 beeburrt
It was in the comments, I can't find it now dangit, but it was a person talking about thier experience writing a game engine, I wanna say it was in Zig (maybe Rust) but it was about a certain game from when they were young and this game made them want to be a programmer and make games.

Then the person that had made that game long ago responded in the comments, so the (author? OP?) original commenter went on to thank that person in an authentic way and describe to that person how their game had inspired them to become a programmer.

It was really neat to read.


👤 dredmorbius
I'm going to pivot my answer: it's not the best thing I've found on HN, it's how I use HN to find things.

- Ask questions about things you're unsure of, even if it's just TLAs.[1] I also like to ask for references, and those can occasionally be real gems.

- Respond to others. Especially, respond in a "yes, and..." rather than a "no, but ..." style, where that's possible.

- Avoid tendentious arguments. I'll point out corrections, but try to keep those short where possible.[2] Changing minds is ... difficult at best. Leaving clues for other readers may have value.

- Skip the main page and hit the lists: <https://news.ycombinator.com/lists>. "Best", "Invited", and "Pool" especially are worth exploring.

- If you find someone interesting, check to see what they've submitted. Often individual's submissions are interesting curations of their own, though often these fail to survive the HN queue.

- Use search. I rely on HN somewhat to search terms or individuals of interest, and to look for commentary on articles I turn up to see if there's any illuminating relevant discussion (especially older articles). This isn't always successful, but it's virtually always worth the effort, particularly using DuckDuckGo's !bang search capability: "!hn ". A blank search with a date range serves as a "best of day/week/month/year" feature (see comment below).

- Try to read the article first, or at least early in your perusal of the comments thread. Comments ... often ... deviate from and/or are only very vaguely grounded in the article itself.

- There are a lot of people shooting from the hip. There are also some absolute domain experts and Internet legends who drop by. It's quite an eclectic crowd, though the gems may be well hidden.

- You can read an individual's comments and posts from their profile. Reading the dang's (HN's moderator) comments is a good way to familiarise yourself with HN's culture and norms: <https://news.ycombinator.com/threads?id=dang> You can also email mods (hn@ycombinator.com) with questions or concerns about the site and/or your account and activity.

- Karma and votes count for far less than you'd think, though they tend to filter out obvious crud pretty well.

If you're interested in things I've found interesting on HN, I've favourited far too many submissions. There might be some gems (and embarrassments) amongst those: <https://news.ycombinator.com/favorites?id=dredmorbius>

I've also been looking at HN's historical front-page activity and have a sense of the topics which are most covered (based on classifying the submitted site). The top 20 (+ "UNCLASSIFIED") of those represent 97.6% of all front-page posts, and are:

  Class                  Stories    Votes  (mean) Comments  (mean)
          UNCLASSIFIED:    63543 12353558  194.41  5492437   86.44
                  blog:    22711  4023053  177.14  1882979   82.91
          general news:    15144  2927086  193.28  1904722  125.77
             tech news:    13883  2254571  162.40  1261577   90.87
           programming:    12856  2814625  218.93   957105   74.45
       corporate comm.:     8655  2092856  241.81   981934  113.45
    academic / science:     8463  1451758  171.54   609273   71.99
                   n/a:     7294  1143594  156.79   848020  116.26
         business news:     5327   934668  175.46   695350  130.53
      general interest:     3846   683416  177.70   395366  102.80
          social media:     2151   707530  328.93   372925  173.37
              software:     2085   466503  223.74   188013   90.17
            technology:     1613   292982  181.64   133882   83.00
                 video:     1463   249221  170.35    94161   64.36
   general info (wiki):     1144   180039  157.38    72192   63.10
            government:     1009   274549  272.10   162660  161.21
        misc documents:      724   127352  175.90    54601   75.42
                   law:      720   183559  254.94    66061   91.75
       tech discussion:      702   128731  183.38    52805   75.22
          science news:      625    94731  151.57    48919   78.27
    general discussion:      609   180094  295.72    82509  135.48
                 Other:     4315
                 Total:   178882
(Data through 21-6-2023, code is sort of an evolving situation, and the tallies above fix some errors in other recent similar posts, though overall magnitude shifts are fairly small.)

Edits: A few late tweaks and additions partially based on my follow-up comment below.

________________________________

Notes:

1. Three letter acronyms. See also ETLAs (extended TLAs) and DETLAs (double-extended ...).

2. There are ... many ... exceptions to this. It's a goal and aspiration, not an accomplishment.


👤 Hackbraten
The “OSINT Amateur Hour” article from 2020.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23571886

The challenge was to figure out where in the world a given photo of a street corner shop was taken. I spent half a day on the challenge and managed to figure it out through what I believe was some combination of rookie naïvete, persistence, and sheer luck.

The moment when I found the solution felt like it was the most brilliant thing I’ve ever accomplished.


👤 brudgers

👤 ezedv
I had a project in mind and I found a Software factory that helped me build my idea! https://www.ratherlabs.com

👤 JimtheCoder
The love of public transit and battery-assisted bikes and the hatred of SUVs, Pickup trucks, and pretty much any vehicle larger than a Mini Cooper...

👤 joshxyz
startupschool.org and startip related threads

i have many failed attempts but i keep tryjng in being a founder, thank you hn i love u


👤 ryzvonusef
something fun from recent times:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36740357