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Sunday, 16 February 2025
Show HN: Switch2Cursor – Smoothly Switch Between JetBrains IDEs and Cursor https://bit.ly/4b2fP2q
Show HN: Switch2Cursor – Smoothly Switch Between JetBrains IDEs and Cursor I've developed a JetBrains IDE plugin that enables developers to quickly switch between JetBrains IDEs and Cursor Editor. Key features: - Maintains cursor position sync for seamless context switching - Keyboard shortcuts (Mac: Option+Shift+P/O, Win: Alt+Shift+P/O) - Supports all JetBrains IDEs (2022.3+) - Open source Background: With the growing popularity of Cursor Editor, many developers frequently switch between JetBrains IDEs and Cursor. This plugin addresses the efficiency issues that arise from constant switching. Feel free to try it out and provide feedback! https://bit.ly/4b2fPPY February 17, 2025 at 06:43AM
Show HN: Fastimer, runtime-agnostic timer traits and utils for Async Rust https://bit.ly/3WZXv4g
Show HN: Fastimer, runtime-agnostic timer traits and utils for Async Rust https://bit.ly/430LAH0 February 17, 2025 at 12:43AM
Show HN: B2B SaaS Go-to-Market Checklist https://bit.ly/41jDbgP
Show HN: B2B SaaS Go-to-Market Checklist https://bit.ly/4i19N4s February 16, 2025 at 11:40PM
Show HN: I made a desk toy for people in long-distance relationships https://bit.ly/3Qrub2B
Show HN: I made a desk toy for people in long-distance relationships Hello Hacker News! I've spent the last 6 months or so designing and building this, The Attention Button. It's an IoT desk toy that lets you send a quick nudge to whoever you hold dear, letting them know you're thinking of them. Like a direct line to their attention. It is my first major electronics project and I have learnt so much making it. I'd love to hear what you guys think! https://bit.ly/4b431bV February 16, 2025 at 04:55AM
Saturday, 15 February 2025
Show HN: The news in the last 30, 14, 7, 3, or 1 days https://bit.ly/3EFzyJ6
Show HN: The news in the last 30, 14, 7, 3, or 1 days I made this for when I come back from vacation and want to catch up on news. It's a bit of a simplistic LLM transformation on headlines and URLs that I store from RSS feeds. So it bugs out sometimes. But I think it might be useful to me. You can check out some of the prompts in the "debug" links. What do you think? https://bit.ly/4hFKV2a February 16, 2025 at 06:54AM
Show HN: Tech Brief – AI enhanced news reading https://bit.ly/3QjC768
Show HN: Tech Brief – AI enhanced news reading I built this because I wanted it, and I now use it every day. It's a simple news site that gathers and summarises tech content and discussions, across multiple sources, providing tight, easily digestable summaries along with some simple tooling to support reading workflows. 1) Hourly updated homepage with the latest tech news across the web. 2) A simple < 3 min "News of the Hour", every hour, audio clip. 3) Summaries of HackerNews and Product Hunt, incl. comments and sentiment (more to come). 3) GitHub login with AI summaries of any releases made to your starred repos. 4) Read/Unread article status. 5) Simple swipe interface and keyboard support. 6) Simple Bookmark/Readling List, and Favourite tags (logged in) No Tracking. Fast. Mobile Friendly. Easy sharing. https://tech.brief.page/ February 16, 2025 at 01:28AM
Show HN: Blunderchess.net – blunder for your opponent every five moves https://bit.ly/41h0Qy8
Show HN: Blunderchess.net – blunder for your opponent every five moves blunderchess.net is an open source, peer-to-peer chess app where every five moves, players each get to make one blunder-move for their opponent https://bit.ly/4hXSUaL February 16, 2025 at 01:22AM
Show HN: Letting LLMs Run a Debugger https://bit.ly/4b2Bpnp
Show HN: Letting LLMs Run a Debugger Hey HN, I just built an experimental VSCode extension called LLM Debugger. It’s a proof-of-concept that lets a large language model take charge of debugging. Instead of only looking at the static code, the LLM also gets to see the live runtime state—actual variable values, function calls, branch decisions, and more. The idea is to give it enough context to help diagnose issues faster and even generate synthetic data from running programs. Here’s what it does: * Active Debugging: It integrates with Node.js debug sessions to gather runtime info (like variable states and stack traces). * Automated Breakpoints: It automatically sets and manages breakpoints based on both code analysis and LLM suggestions. * LLM Guidance: With live debugging context, the LLM can suggest actions like stepping through code or adjusting breakpoints in real time. I built this out of curiosity to see if combining static code with runtime data could help LLMs solve bugs more effectively. It’s rough around the edges and definitely not production-ready I’m not planning on maintaining it further. But I thought it was a fun experiment and wanted to share it with you all. Check out the attached video demo to see it in action. Would love to hear your thoughts and any feedback you might have! Cheers. https://bit.ly/3EAtLVg February 12, 2025 at 10:54AM
Friday, 14 February 2025
Show HN: Lightweight and robust CLI color converting utility https://bit.ly/4hF9Xi0
Show HN: Lightweight and robust CLI color converting utility I started this project because I found myself converting between Hex and RGB a lot. As I was frequently visiting various color picker websites, I began thinking more and more about how color conversions even work in the first place. What is a color space? Using any random color-picker online to go from RBG<->Hex works plenty fine, but, I think CLI tools are cool. I'm still pretty new to the Linux scene, and I really enjoy finding random command line programs to play with. I searched around a bit on Github and the AUR and couldn't find any CLI color conversion utilities, which I honestly found surprising (maybe I didn't look hard enough). I decided I'd really enjoy trying to make a simple command line program for RGB<->Hex, and the scope slowly expanded. I could see myself expanding it (maybe including more color formats, suggesting complementary colors) but for now, unless people discover ways to break it or offer any pull requests, I think I'll be moving on to other projects. It has no dependencies besides Python, and can be easily installed on mac/linux (see the README for more). I'm not certain how you'd set it up as a command line program on Windows, but you can just use Python in cmd to use the script anyway! https://bit.ly/4gKzwgr February 15, 2025 at 12:31AM
Show HN: VimLM – A Local, Offline Coding Assistant for Vim https://bit.ly/4jZQ3zF
Show HN: VimLM – A Local, Offline Coding Assistant for Vim VimLM is a local, offline coding assistant for Vim. It’s like Copilot but runs entirely on your machine—no APIs, no tracking, no cloud. - Deep Context: Understands your codebase (current file, selections, references). - Conversational: Iterate with follow-ups like "Add error handling". - Vim-Native: Keybindings like `Ctrl-l` for prompts, `Ctrl-p` to replace code. - Inline Commands: `!include` files, `!deploy` code, `!continue` long responses. Perfect for privacy-conscious devs or air-gapped environments. Try it: ``` pip install vimlm vimlm ``` [GitHub]( https://bit.ly/4i0lEzs ) https://bit.ly/4i0lEzs February 15, 2025 at 12:34AM
Thursday, 13 February 2025
Show HN: I made a tiny book using a pen-plotter and AI https://bit.ly/41eoRpF
Show HN: I made a tiny book using a pen-plotter and AI Hey HN, I want to share a personal project: I made a tiny pen-plotted book for my wife. I did everything myself—drawings (with some help from Midjourney), plotting, cutting, and binding. I even used a 3D printer to make a helper tool. It's absolutely over-engineered, but I enjoyed it a lot. Multi-disciplinary projects, especially those with a physical output, are a lot of fun for me. The post covers the process in detail, but if you're interested in anything specific, let me know. Cheers! https://bit.ly/4gIVFLQ February 10, 2025 at 06:52PM
Show HN: HackerVoice – An Experimental AI Podcast Covering Hacker News https://bit.ly/4hOowQ2
Show HN: HackerVoice – An Experimental AI Podcast Covering Hacker News Hey HN: What it does: HackerVoice automatically generates a daily podcast summarizing the top five trending Hacker News topics using AI. How it works: Uses a combination of Gemini and GPT-4o to analyze and summarize trending topics. Leverages OpenAI’s text-to-speech (TTS) engine to generate natural-sounding narration. Runs on an automated schedule (cron job at 16:00 UTC daily). Episodes are available for listening at: https://bit.ly/4hXtXvQ . https://bit.ly/4hXtXvQ February 14, 2025 at 01:35AM
Show HN: Dockershrink – AI Assistant to reduce the size of Docker images https://bit.ly/4gEY8XR
Show HN: Dockershrink – AI Assistant to reduce the size of Docker images For the past few months, I've been hacking around a project I call Dockershrink. It automates a simple task: Take a Dockerfile and optimize its code with the goal of reducing the size of the final Docker image. People don't realize that we can apply some very basic techniques to reduce, for eg, a 2GB image down to just ~100MB: - Multistage builds with light-weight base image for final stage - Remove unused dependencies - Optimizations specific to the tech stack And I feel like I've already done this optimization for my personal projects and backend apps at my job(s) a couple of times. The project currently uses GPT-4o (open source so you can run it locally) and only works for Nodejs projects. There are a couple of reasons why I think dockershrink can be better than using just Vanilla LLM or Github Copilot/Cursor: - Image optimization can benefit from a lot of custom prompting, especially when you have insights about specific tech stacks. Describing techniques deeply in the prompt gave better results than simply asking the LLM to "optimize code for bloat reduction". - A RAG approach will be truly beneficial. I plan on giving dockershrink access to up-to-date documentations of Docker, Bash and all programming languages out there. Additionally, it can be given a few suitable chunks of code to enhance the context. - Analysing custom base images: most orgs have their customized base images. Adding context about these can further help Dockershrink make better decisions. Try it out - "brew install dockershrink" Happy to hear your thoughts! https://bit.ly/4b3seTQ February 13, 2025 at 11:45PM
Show HN: Minimalist black and white drawing generator https://bit.ly/41gjmqF
Show HN: Minimalist black and white drawing generator https://bit.ly/4hzaceB February 13, 2025 at 03:55PM
Show HN: RAG Engine – Connect external data to LLM in minutes https://bit.ly/4gAw2Nf
Show HN: RAG Engine – Connect external data to LLM in minutes https://bit.ly/4k8jLCW February 13, 2025 at 03:15PM
Wednesday, 12 February 2025
Show HN: Make Easy Async Rust (Mea), runtime-agnostic primitives https://bit.ly/3EzsayS
Show HN: Make Easy Async Rust (Mea), runtime-agnostic primitives https://bit.ly/4hxvg5a February 13, 2025 at 01:49AM
Show HN: Auto rename downloads by AI and with your own naming rules https://bit.ly/42TpFkZ
Show HN: Auto rename downloads by AI and with your own naming rules Hii HN! We've built a Chrome extension called Cantrips.ai that auto generates meaningful filenames for pdf, txt, and docs downloads. It has tailored formats for major file types like papers, books, financial reports, etc. For example, a paper is always formatted as download date - title - first author's last name - area, so the filename would be 20250208 - Attention Is All You Need - Vaswani - LLM instead of 1706.03762 from arXiv. We are also developing a feature where users can add or adjust their file naming preferences. For example, if you like underscores and download meeting memos a lot, you can add meeting memos = interviewee's name_company_position_topic_date. The reason to build this extension is that my desktop is buried with meaningless and odd filenames, so I often can't find which is the one I want. I have to go to that website and download it again, sometimes the repetition number amounting over (10). More importantly, I desperately want my desktop/finder to look tidy. It feels great when everything is organized, but I don't want to handle the renaming in the mid of my research (and I become a bit lazy later :< Note that the extension hasn't supported downloads from some websites like Github due to technical complications. As a first-time dev, I just realized even a small tool can take much time... but we assume a similar preference feature can be applied to other productivity tools like folder organization or website bookmarks. Happy to get suggestions and learn if you really need such tools. If you want to try the extension, here's the link: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/cantripsai-auto-ren... https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/cantripsai-auto-rename-do/fnaemmlnchphilapbdjejjlhoomcpblk February 12, 2025 at 11:48PM
Tuesday, 11 February 2025
Show HN: I Applied to Y Combinator for the 3rd Time in a Row https://bit.ly/3WZV1mb
Show HN: I Applied to Y Combinator for the 3rd Time in a Row Join Open Community on Discord: https://bit.ly/3CKrMgu Follow on LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/4hUjd1n Follow me: https://bit.ly/4gKWiow https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gBU_MK5fqE February 12, 2025 at 06:18AM
Show HN: A lightweight and flexible open source bastion https://bit.ly/4huXpK3
Show HN: A lightweight and flexible open source bastion OneTerm is a simple, lightweight and flexible enterprise-class bastion host, designed and developed based on 4A compliant, i.e. Authen, Authorize, Account, and Audit, which ensures the security and compliance of the system through strict access control and monitoring features. https://bit.ly/4jN04Ae February 12, 2025 at 03:08AM
Show HN: HypeBridge – Your Dedicated AI-Agent Driven Influencer Marketing Agency https://bit.ly/4gxTivj
Show HN: HypeBridge – Your Dedicated AI-Agent Driven Influencer Marketing Agency https://bit.ly/4gB77cE February 11, 2025 at 10:02PM
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