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  • The Hacker News Launch Playbook: A Data-Driven Guide to a Winning 'Show HN'

    Marketing, Strategy, Community  · 08 Jul 2025

    A “Show HN” post on Hacker News is a unique cultural institution within the technology landscape. It is not merely a product launch platform or a marketing channel; it is, at its core, a peer-review process conducted in public, in real-time, by one of the most technically astute and discerning communities on the internet. To treat it as a simple traffic driver is to fundamentally misunderstand its purpose and court failure.

    Success on “Show HN” is measured not just in upvotes or concurrent users, but in the acquisition of a far more valuable currency: credibility. This guide deconstructs the anatomy of successful “Show HN” posts, providing a strategic playbook based on an analysis of what resonates with this unique audience.

    The Unwritten Social Contract of Hacker News

    The Hacker News community operates on a set of deeply ingrained, though often unwritten, values. A foundational understanding of this social contract is a prerequisite for any successful interaction. The platform is a space for “geeks to talk to other geeks,” where a high degree of technical literacy is the baseline expectation.

    The community’s collective attention gravitates toward demonstrations of intellectual curiosity, technical depth, and clever solutions to difficult problems.

    There is a pronounced appreciation for open-source projects, hardware hacking, and ambitious undertakings that push the boundaries of what is thought possible.

    Within this context, personal narratives can be exceptionally powerful. An analysis of the most popular posts reveals a pattern of creators sharing compelling stories about their motivations.

    However, the community’s appreciation is not for storytelling in the abstract; it is for the authenticity that the story reveals. The Hacker News audience possesses a finely tuned detector for manufactured narratives. A story succeeds only when it provides the genuine, verifiable context for a project’s creation, rather than serving as a marketing “angle” applied after the fact.

    For example, the post “Show HN: I got laid off from Meta and created a minor hit on Steam” was incredibly effective because the layoff was the direct, causal event that prompted the game’s development.

    Similarly, “Show HN: My wife is pregnant; naturally I made a baby-name app to prepare” presents a project that is a logical and authentic artifact of a real-life event.

    The community rewards the vulnerability, passion, and genuine human motivation that these stories expose. The project becomes tangible proof of the creator’s journey. Conversely, a post with a tenuous or inauthentic narrative would be quickly dismissed as manipulative. The key, therefore, is not to invent a story but to share the genuine one if it is integral to the project’s existence. The most effective posture on Hacker News is one that appears not to be marketing at all, but rather a sincere act of sharing one’s work with peers.

    The Three Pillars of a Winning “Show HN”

    Successful “Show HN” submissions are built upon three distinct but interconnected pillars. A truly viral success requires strength in all three areas; a weakness in one can undermine the others. A brilliant project with a poor pitch will be overlooked, while a great pitch for a mediocre project will be met with harsh criticism. This playbook is structured around a deep dive into each of these three pillars:

    1. The Pitch: This encompasses the title and the author’s crucial first comment. These two elements represent the first few seconds of interaction and are responsible for capturing interest and framing the entire subsequent discussion.
    2. The Project: This refers to the nature and substance of the work being shown. Certain categories of projects — from technical marvels to elegant problem-solvers — consistently resonate more strongly with the community’s core values.
    3. The Person: This is the creator’s engagement and interaction within the comments section. The author’s conduct after submitting the post is as critical to its success as the initial submission itself.

    Understanding how to optimize each of these pillars in concert is the key to transforming a simple submission into a resonant community event that can validate an idea, attract collaborators, and launch a project on a trajectory of success.

    The Anatomy of a Front-Page Pitch: Title and First Comment

    The first impression is paramount. An author has less than ten seconds to convince a scrolling user that their post is worth investigating. This critical window is governed entirely by two pieces of text: the title and the author’s first comment. Together, they form the pitch, and their careful construction is a strategic imperative.

    Crafting the Irresistible Title: Your First Five Seconds

    The title is the single most important element for generating initial interest. An analysis of hundreds of successful “Show HN” posts shows that the most effective titles are not clever, mysterious, or laden with marketing jargon. They are simple, direct, and descriptive. They answer the implicit question “What is this and why should I care?” with immediate clarity. While creativity is a factor, successful titles consistently fall into one of several identifiable archetypes. By understanding these patterns, a creator can strategically frame their project in a way that has a proven history of resonating with the Hacker News audience.

    Title Archetype Core Principle & Psychology Examples    
    The Bold Technical Claim Signals an impressive, difficult-to-replicate engineering feat that commands immediate respect and curiosity from a technical audience. “Show HN: I made an open-source laptop from scratch” “Show HN: I 3D scanned the interior of the Great Pyramid at Giza” “Show HN: Redbean – Single-file distributable web server”
    The Compelling Narrative Frames the project within a relatable human story, creating an immediate emotional connection and making the project an artifact of an inspiring journey. “Show HN: I got laid off from Meta and created a minor hit on Steam” “Show HN: My wife is pregnant; naturally I made a baby-name app to prepare” “Show HN: I’m 48 and finally learning how to be a game developer”
    The Elegant Solution Promises a simple, fast, or novel solution to a known problem, appealing to the community’s appreciation for efficiency, clever hacks, and minimalism. “Show HN: Web Design in 4 minutes” “Show HN: Make your site’s pages instant in one minute” “Show HN: A basketball hoop to maximize shots that go in [video]”
    The Niche Problem-Solver Clearly identifies a specific audience and their pain point, signaling immediate utility and relevance to a target group. “Show HN: I built a Rotten Tomatoes-style platform for durable products” “Show HN: GPT-4-powered web searches for developers” “Show HN: I made a site where you practice typing by retyping entire novels”
    The Intriguing Premise Poses a “what if” scenario or a novel concept that sparks intellectual curiosity and invites the reader to explore the idea. “Show HN: If YouTube had actual channels” “Show HN: I may have created a new type of puzzle” “Show HN: Spot the Drowning Child”

    The First Comment: Your Project’s Manifesto and Pre-emptive FAQ

    If the title is the hook, the author’s first comment is the substance that sets the tone for the entire discussion. A missing or perfunctory first comment creates an information vacuum that the community will invariably fill with skeptical questions, putting the author on the defensive from the outset. The most effective first comments are not merely descriptive; they are strategic trust-building documents. They demonstrate a deep respect for the community’s time and values by anticipating and proactively addressing the key questions, concerns, and points of skepticism that are hallmarks of the Hacker News audience. This act of transparency disarms criticism before it can gain momentum and frames the author as a thoughtful, community-aware peer rather than a detached marketer.

    A successful first comment functions as a pre-emptive FAQ, building a foundation of trust that elevates the entire discourse. For instance, when launching Obsidian Canvas, the author immediately addressed potential fears of data lock-in by highlighting the new open-sourced JSON file format and the local-first nature of the software.

    When launching an app to aggregate book recommendations from Hacker News, the author explicitly stated, “The amazon links are NOT sponsored. This app is free of monetization,” heading off any suspicion of commercial intent. Similarly, the creator of Beeper Mini, an iMessage client for Android, used the first comment to tackle the most pressing security concerns head-on, explaining that the app connects directly to Apple servers and does not use a Mac server relay.

    These authors understood that addressing the community’s core concerns — data privacy, vendor lock-in, monetization, and security — upfront is not a defensive measure, but a powerful gesture of respect and confidence.

    An analysis of top-performing posts reveals a consistent structure for the ideal first comment. It should contain the following elements:

    • The Origin Story (The “Why”): Briefly explain the motivation behind the project. Was it born from a personal frustration, a long-held passion, a weekend hack, or a life event? The author of the Steam hit “Ballionaire” rooted his project in his layoff from Meta, while the creator of an interactive flight logbook explained it grew from his professional requirements as an airline pilot. This context is crucial.
    • The Problem & Solution (The “What”): Clearly and concisely state the problem you are solving and how your project addresses it.
    • The Technical Details (The “How”): Briefly mention the core technology stack. For deeply technical projects, this is the place to provide a direct link to the GitHub repository or a detailed technical blog post. The author of Airmash, a multiplayer HTML5 game, explained his use of WebSockets and PIXI.js, while the Beeper Mini author linked to a full technical breakdown and a proof-of-concept on GitHub.
    • Honest Limitations & Future Plans: Acknowledging what the project doesn’t do yet or where its weaknesses lie is a powerful credibility-builder. It demonstrates self-awareness and humility. The creator of the book recommendation engine was upfront about the limitations of his Named Entity Recognition (NER) model, such as failing on ambiguous titles or misinterpreting negative sentiment. This honesty fosters trust.
    • The “Ask”: Be explicit about the type of feedback you are seeking. A generic “Let me know what you think” is acceptable, but a more specific request is better. The airline pilot who built flight visualizations asked for “ideas for other graphs or ways to present this type of data,” which led to a more focused and productive discussion.
    • The Trust-Builders: This is non-negotiable. Proactively address monetization, privacy, and data ownership. If the project is open-source, state the license. If it is a commercial product, be transparent about the business model. The author of Obsidian Canvas took care to note that the company is user-supported, has no investors, and is “explicitly avoiding the VC route,” reassuring users about the product’s long-term direction.

    The Project Itself: An Analysis of What Resonates

    Beyond the pitch, the substance of the project itself is what ultimately determines its reception. While a wide variety of projects can find success, an analysis of the all-time top “Show HN” posts reveals two primary, distinct paths to the front page. Projects tend to succeed either by being an undeniable feat of engineering that commands technical respect, or by being a clever, relatable solution to a common problem that earns widespread appreciation. Projects that fall into an indistinct middle ground — neither technically groundbreaking nor particularly novel or useful — often struggle to gain traction.

    This distinction presents a strategic choice for creators. It is not necessary to have built a new operating system from scratch to achieve a viral hit. However, if a project is technically simple, it must be exceptionally clever, useful, or well-presented to stand out. Conversely, a true technical marvel can afford to be rough around the edges, because the achievement of its creation is the main attraction. A creator should honestly assess their work: Is its primary appeal the technical difficulty of its construction, or the elegance and utility with which it solves a relatable problem? This assessment should inform the entire launch strategy, from the title’s framing to the focus of the first comment.

    Category A: The Technical Marvel

    Definition: These are projects whose primary appeal lies in the demonstration of exceptional, deep, and often arduous engineering skill. The immediate reaction they provoke in a technical audience is, “How did they even do that?”

    Hallmarks: These projects frequently involve hardware, low-level programming, systems architecture, reverse engineering, or processing data at a massive scale. The “wow” factor stems from the ambition and execution of the project itself. The utility, while often present, is secondary to the sheer technical prowess on display.

    Examples:

    • “Show HN: I made an open-source laptop from scratch”
    • “Show HN: A retro video game console I’ve been working on in my free time”
    • “Show HN: Redbean – Single-file distributable web server”
    • “Show HN: Sorting Two Metric Tons of Lego”
    • “Show HN: I 3D scanned the interior of the Great Pyramid at Giza”

    Strategy: For a Technical Marvel, the pitch can be direct and bold. The title should state the achievement plainly. The centerpiece of the submission is often not the project’s landing page, but its GitHub repository or a detailed technical write-up that allows the community to inspect the work. The author’s engagement in the comments must be prepared for a deep, technical cross-examination. As seen in the “Redbean” thread, the author was required to defend and explain complex design choices regarding portable executables, system calls, and performance trade-offs, which he did with expertise, bolstering the project’s credibility.

    Category B: The Elegant Problem-Solver

    Definition: These are projects that provide a novel, clever, or highly useful solution to a common or niche problem. They are defined by their utility and conceptual elegance.

    Hallmarks: This category is often populated by developer tools, single-purpose websites, productivity apps, and insightful data visualizations. The “wow” factor is not necessarily the complexity of the engineering, but the “Aha!” moment of seeing a familiar problem solved in a fresh and intuitive way.

    Examples:

    • “Show HN: I built a Rotten Tomatoes-style platform for durable products”
    • “Show HN: I made a site where you practice typing by retyping entire novels”
    • “Show HN: GPT-4-powered web searches for developers”
    • “Show HN: If YouTube had actual channels”
    • “Show HN: Spot the Drowning Child”

    Strategy: For an Elegant Problem-Solver, the pitch must clearly and concisely frame the problem being solved. The title and first comment should focus on the user’s pain point and the project’s unique value proposition. The user experience of the project itself is critically important; it must be polished, intuitive, and deliver on its promise immediately. The author’s engagement in the comments will naturally focus more on features, usability, bug reports, and the future development roadmap.

    The Hybrid: The Narrative-Driven Project

    Definition: This category describes a well-executed project, typically an Elegant Problem-Solver, that is elevated to viral status by a powerful, authentic, and compelling personal story.

    Hallmarks: In these cases, the story of the creator is inseparable from the project itself. The post creates a strong emotional connection with the audience, who become invested in the person as much as the product. These submissions often have an inspirational quality.

    Examples:

    • “Show HN: I got laid off from Meta and created a minor hit on Steam”
    • “Show HN: I’m an airline pilot – I built interactive graphs/globes of my flights”
    • “Show HN: My wife is pregnant; naturally I made a baby-name app to prepare”
    • “Show HN: I’m 12, learning JS, and wrote Wolfram’s cellular automaton”

    Strategy: The narrative must be front and center in both the title and the first comment. The project serves as the tangible, satisfying conclusion to the story being presented. The author must be prepared for the conversation to be highly personal. They will be asked questions about their journey, their motivations, and their life experiences, alongside the more typical technical and feature-related questions. The success of this approach hinges entirely on the authenticity of the story and the author’s willingness to share it openly.

    The Art of Engagement: Mastering the Comments Section

    A “Show HN” post is not a “fire and forget” activity. The launch is not over when the “submit” button is clicked; it has only just begun. The author’s behavior in the hours and days following the submission is as critical to its ultimate success as the quality of the project or the craft of the initial pitch. The comment section is where a static link is transformed into a dynamic community event.

    Be a Great Host: The Core Principles of Engagement

    The most successful authors treat the comments section of their post as if they are hosting an event in their own home. They are present, attentive, and gracious. This approach is built on three core principles:

    • Responsiveness: Time is of the essence. The authors of top-voted posts are consistently and highly active in the comments, especially within the first few hours when the post is gaining momentum. They make an effort to respond to a wide range of comments, not just the most upvoted ones. This signals to the entire community that the author is present and values all feedback.

    • Gratitude and Humility: A simple “Thank you for the feedback” or “Glad you like it!” goes a remarkably long way in fostering goodwill. Successful authors consistently thank users for their time, bug reports, and kind words.6 Furthermore, they often display a profound sense of humility, even in the face of incredible achievements. The creator of the homemade retro game console, despite his impressive work, admitted, “I also had zero experience with electronics (and I still don’t know as much as I should…),” which makes him far more relatable and his accomplishment even more inspiring.

    • Transparency: The trust established in the first comment must be maintained throughout the discussion. This means being open about challenges, future plans, and even personal details when appropriate. The creator of a puzzle game was transparent about the “potential epilepsy trigger” in his game’s reward animation and his plans to change it. The author of a typing practice site was open about his future plans to add features like dark mode and custom text uploads based on user requests. The creator of the book recommendation app even shared that his student visa status was the reason he could not monetize with affiliate links, a detail that adds a layer of genuine humanity to the interaction.

    A Playbook for Handling Feedback

    The comment section will inevitably contain a mix of praise, questions, bug reports, and criticism. How an author navigates this feedback determines whether the discussion becomes a constructive asset or a defensive liability.

    • Embracing Constructive Criticism: The Hacker News community can provide an unparalleled level of high-quality feedback. The best authors view criticism not as an attack, but as free consulting from experts. When users pointed out that the “Buy For Life” platform was missing a Terms of Service and had a broken search bar, the author’s response was a model of receptiveness: “You are right, I totally forgot… I will definitely fix that soon and give this task the required priority!”. This approach turns a potential negative into a demonstrated commitment to improvement.
    • Answering Technical Questions: This is an opportunity to showcase expertise and the depth of thought that went into the project. The detailed technical explanations provided by the creators of Meteor 20 and Redbean 8 added immense value to their respective threads. They didn’t just answer questions; they educated the community on their design philosophy, which built significant credibility for their frameworks.
    • Managing Negative or Dismissive Comments: Not all feedback will be constructive. The community has its share of dismissive or aggressive commenters. The most effective strategy is almost always polite clarification or, more often, simply ignoring the comment. Engaging in a protracted, defensive argument is a no-win scenario that derails the conversation and reflects poorly on the author.
    • The Counter-Example: The Absent Author: An analysis of the highly popular “Web Design in 4 minutes” post (#9 all-time) shows that the author was not present in the comments section.3 While the project itself was clearly compelling enough to reach the top, the discussion that followed lacked a central figure. The opportunity to answer questions, clarify design choices, and build a deeper connection with a highly engaged audience was lost. Active engagement transforms a post from a simple link into a memorable, shared experience.

    The “Hacker News Hug of Death” and Other Practicalities

    A successful “Show HN” can drive an enormous amount of traffic in a very short period. This sudden spike, affectionately known as the “Hacker News hug of death,” can easily overwhelm unprepared infrastructure. The story of the trend-detection app Trennd serves as a cautionary tale; after reaching the #1 spot, the site promptly “got the infamous ‘Hacker News hug’ and the site died”. Authors must ensure their hosting is robust or that they have a plan to scale resources quickly. The creator of the game Airmash commented during his launch that he was actively “trying to prevent servers from melting” due to the traffic, a testament to the real-time operational demands of a front-page post.

    Case Studies in Virality

    To synthesize these principles, this section presents a holistic analysis of three exemplary “Show HN” posts. Each was chosen to represent one of the distinct paths to success, demonstrating how the three pillars — The Pitch, The Project, and The Person — work in concert to create a viral hit.

    The Technical Marvel: “Show HN: I made an open-source laptop from scratch”

    This post is a quintessential example of a project succeeding on the basis of its sheer technical audacity.

    • The Pitch: The title is a perfect “Bold Technical Claim.” It is simple, direct, and makes an astonishing assertion that demands investigation. The author’s initial comment was a model of efficiency: a brief personal introduction, a quantification of the effort (“~6 months”), and a direct link to the GitHub repository. It provided just enough context before wisely letting the project’s documentation speak for itself.
    • The Project: This is a Category A (Technical Marvel) project in its purest form. The value is not in solving a market need but in the act of creation itself — engineering a functional, open-source laptop from the component level up. The project’s appeal is rooted in the deep respect the Hacker News community holds for complex, hands-on engineering.
    • The Person: The author’s engagement was flawless. Despite the incredible achievement, he demonstrated profound humility and gratitude throughout the thread. He answered detailed questions about the bill of materials, his personal background (no formal engineering training), and the technical challenges of high-frequency signaling. A highlight of the thread was his gracious and professional interaction with the founder of Framework Laptop, who appeared in the comments to offer praise and collaboration. This combination of extreme technical competence and a humble, engaged personality created an overwhelmingly positive and inspirational community response.
    • Synthesis: This case study demonstrates how an extraordinary technical achievement, when presented with a direct and confident pitch and supported by a humble and engaged creator, can capture the imagination of the Hacker News community.

    The Narrative-Driven Project: “Show HN: I got laid off from Meta and created a minor hit on Steam”

    This post is a masterclass in leveraging an authentic personal story to amplify a project’s launch.

    • The Pitch: The title is a masterstroke of the “Compelling Narrative” archetype. It combines a relatable, timely event (a tech layoff) with a triumphant outcome (“a minor hit on Steam”), creating an irresistible story arc. The author’s initial comment expanded on this narrative, providing specifics (tenure at Meta, the game’s inspiration) and quantifiable success (“~200,000 units in its first 10 weeks”). The comment concluded with a simple but brilliant engagement hook: “AMA?” (Ask Me Anything), explicitly inviting a Q\&A format.

    • The Project: This is a Category C (Hybrid) project. The game itself, “Ballionaire,” is a well-executed problem-solver (providing entertainment in the popular roguelike genre), but it is the narrative that elevates the post to legendary status. The game becomes the third act of a compelling story about resilience and creativity.

    • The Person: The author’s engagement was a clinic in transparency and relatability. He was candid about the financials (explaining the breakdown of gross sales), the personal sacrifices made during development, and his own self-doubt. He offered practical, actionable advice for other aspiring game developers and maintained a humorous, self-deprecating tone that resonated deeply with the audience.

    • Synthesis: This case demonstrates that a powerful, authentic human story can be the single most effective amplifier for a well-made project. It transforms a product launch into a cultural moment, inviting the community to celebrate not just the “what” (the game) but the “why” and “how” of its creation.

    The Elegant Problem-Solver: “Show HN: I built a Rotten Tomatoes-style platform for durable products”

    This post is the perfect playbook for a founder launching an early-stage product or MVP and seeking high-quality community feedback.

    • The Pitch: The title is a “Niche Problem-Solver” classic. The “Rotten Tomatoes-style” analogy provides an instant mental model for the platform’s function, while “for durable products” clearly defines its unique value proposition and target audience. The author’s initial comment was strategically sound: it explained the mission (helping people find sustainable products), highlighted a key differentiating metric (“average cost per month of ownership”), and was transparent about the project’s non-commercial, community-driven, and work-in-progress nature.

    • The Project: This is a classic Category B (Elegant Problem-Solver) project. It addresses a clear pain point for a specific community (conscious consumers) by applying a clever and familiar model (review aggregation) to a new domain. Its appeal is based entirely on its potential utility.

    • The Person: The author’s engagement is a model for any founder seeking feedback. He was incredibly responsive and treated every piece of criticism as a gift. When confronted with missing features (no ToS, a buggy search), his response was not defensive but appreciative and action-oriented. He publicly acknowledged suggestions and added them to his backlog in real-time. He maintained a collaborative, non-defensive tone throughout, effectively turning the Hacker News community into a high-quality focus group.

    • Synthesis: This case study shows how to successfully launch an MVP on Hacker News. By being transparent about the project’s early stage, explicitly asking for feedback, and engaging with that feedback with gratitude and a genuine desire to improve, a creator can leverage the community’s collective intelligence to validate, refine, and build momentum for their project.

    The Path Forward: Your Moment Awaits

    The Hacker News community is not a monolith to be conquered, but a living, breathing ecosystem of creators, builders, and dreamers who are actively seeking the next thing that will inspire them. Your project — whether it’s a technical marvel that pushes the boundaries of what’s possible, an elegant solution to a problem that has frustrated thousands, or a personal story that resonates with the human spirit — has the potential to become that next thing.

    This is not about gaming the system or manipulating an audience. It’s about understanding that you are part of a community that values authenticity, technical excellence, and genuine human connection above all else. The strategies outlined in this guide are not tricks or shortcuts; they are the distilled wisdom of hundreds of creators who have successfully shared their work with one of the most discerning audiences on the internet.

    Your launch is not a one-time event — it’s the beginning of a conversation. Whether your post reaches the front page or not, whether it generates thousands of upvotes or just a handful of thoughtful comments, the real value lies in the connections you make, the feedback you receive, and the validation that comes from putting your work in front of people who genuinely care about building things that matter.

    The Hacker News community has the power to transform your project from an idea into a movement. It can connect you with collaborators who share your vision, users who become evangelists, and mentors who can guide your next steps. But this power is not given freely — it must be earned through respect, transparency, and genuine engagement.

    **So take this playbook not as a formula to be followed mechanically, but as a framework for approaching one of the most important moments in your project’s journey. ** Whether you’re launching a weekend hack that solved a personal problem or a years-long labor of love that represents your life’s work, remember that you are not just sharing code or a product — you are sharing a piece of yourself with a community that has the capacity to amplify your impact beyond anything you could achieve alone.

    The front page is waiting. The community is ready. Your story deserves to be told.

    Now go build something worth showing.

  • Phase Shift: What Really Happens When You Get Knocked Out

    General  · 25 Jun 2025

    Phase Shift

    When I was a kid I lived way up north, above the Arctic Circle. Our apartment buildings had huge stairwells where we kids used to play all the time.

    One day I was playing alone, and it was fun to see how many steps I could skip jumping down the stairs. At some point, maybe around the fifth step, I suddenly found myself on the floor, lying down, and I couldn’t remember how it happened.

    Through some simple logical deduction I figured that, most likely, jumping from the fifth or sixth step, I hit my head on the ceiling — the wall above me.

    So yeah, that’s a phase shift. Or a concussion.

    Have you ever wondered why you lose consciousness when you hit your head? Turns out, there’s a pretty interesting explanation.

    In simple terms, our brains and neurons float in fluid, and during a concussion that fluid shakes in a way that suddenly changes the chemical balance between neural connections in the membranes, in the substance, between the axon thingies, and suddenly changes axonal conductivity.

    All of this affects different parts of the brain because electricity just doesn’t conduct as well anymore. Consciousness coherence gets disrupted.

    There’s a phase shift in neural oscillations (those beta and gamma rhythms) and a “collapse of the brain’s global workspace.”

    That’s the deal, folks. ChatGPT kept feeding me some bullshit about a protective mechanism against overload. I had to interrogate it.

    What interesting questions have you had for ChatGPT?

  • Those Eyes: The Viral Gadget Trend I Couldn't Escape

    General  · 16 Jun 2025

    Those Eyes 👀

    At first I noticed a ton of projects with these “eyes” in the Lopaka.app gallery — like every week someone was drawing them. I couldn’t figure out what the trend was for the longest time.

    Then I stumbled across videos of people making primitive robots with Arduino using the same eyes, and I thought, okay that’s pretty cool.

    Recently PostHog (the web analytics service) suddenly announced DeskHog—a small desktop gadget with eyes.

    And today I learned about Dasai Mochi and absolutely lost my mind: these things are super popular, people are lining up to get one of these little buddies for their dashboard!

    Inside there’s a gyroscope and the eye animation reacts to acceleration and turns. Plus they have a bunch of swappable cases for different themes and custom animations with sounds.

    It’s wild how simple toys totally hook people.

  • Why Great Posts Stay Trapped in My Head

    General  · 24 May 2025

    I suddenly realized that it’s way easier for me to think and write posts in my head. I can spend hours making plans, imagining what I’ll say, how I’ll write it, what the story will be, what jokes I’ll make — but it’s much harder to actually say it all out loud or write it down.

    Seems like there are some internal barriers. To get up, sit down, and write text, you need some strong impulse. Recently, after hearing yet another piece of advice to record ideas and notes by voice, I put a voice recorder on my phone’s lock screen. And here we are, several months later, and I haven’t recorded a single note. 🥲

    Then recently I got Limitless. It’s a pendant with a voice recorder that constantly records everything and transcribes it to text via a Bluetooth app. They started with an app that recorded your entire desktop, then they made the pendant. For me, it turned out to be super useful, primarily for calls and meetings, and secondly — for therapy sessions. Very convenient to highlight needed fragments and discuss them with GPT, make summaries, and do everything else you can do with text in GPT.

    Today I thought: damn, now I can start dictating my awesome post straight into Limitless — and couldn’t do anything at all. Because the post is in my head and in my fantasies — it’s very beautiful, big, interesting, but when I try to express it in words, it turns into mush.

    And even this post I could barely dictate into GPT, not the voice recorder, because I decided it would be short, and I didn’t plan it in advance, just wrote it quickly.

    And those truly brilliant interesting stories might never see the light of day. Ever happened to you?

  • Audio Snoop: Monitor Input Live Online Web App

    Stuff  · 13 Mar 2025

    I got myself an electric guitar and an amp for it six months ago. But I don’t want to make a lot of noise, so I didn’t bother with a combo and a head, I just turn on my headphones or more often I play on the built-in speakers. It’s enough for me to play for fun.

    What I lack is convenient monitoring in the system. I don’t know what it’s like on Windows, but on Mac I have to: start up Ableton, select a device, switch inputs and monitoring.

    It’s a hassle every time. As usual, all I could find was a piece of crap that is impossible to use.

    I decided to ease my suffering and in 5 minutes Lovable wrote me a perfect web application: it just works and does exactly what I need.

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