EPISODE · Apr 26, 2026 · 5 MIN
Hacker Newsroom for 26 April: 10 GbE USB, NSF Board Firings, Firefox Adblock, Quantum Slop
from Hacker Newsroom · host pod pub
Hacker Newsroom for 26 April recaps major Hacker News stories, moving through 10 gbe usb, nsf board firings, firefox adblock, quantum slop. 1. 10 GbE USB The next story is Jeff Geerling's look at a new wave of RTL8159-based 10 gigabit USB adapters, which he says are smaller, cooler, and cheaper than the bulky Thunderbolt boxes people used before. The post argues they make 10 gig networking far more accessible, though actual throughput still depends heavily on which USB generation your laptop or desktop really supports. Story link Hacker News discussion 2. NSF Board Firings The next story is about President Trump firing all 24 members of the National Science Board, the body that oversees the National Science Foundation and advises on national science policy. The reporting says the move strips out an independent board tied to roughly $9 billion in NSF spending, and the Hacker News thread treated it as part of a broader effort to politicize or hollow out U. Story link Hacker News discussion 3. Firefox Adblock The next story is Firefox quietly shipping Brave's open source Rust adblock engine inside the browser, even though the feature is still off by default and barely mentioned in the release notes. The article frames it as Mozilla borrowing a proven blocking core while it experiments with richer built-in content filtering. Story link Hacker News discussion 4. Quantum Slop The next story is a GitHub write-up arguing that a reported quantum attack on a tiny elliptic-curve key can be reproduced by swapping the IBM Quantum back end for /dev/urandom and letting the classical verifier do the real work. The post's point is not that quantum computing is fake, but that this specific Project Eleven prize result may not have demonstrated meaningful quantum advantage at all. Story link Hacker News discussion 5. Deep Learning Theory The next story is a new arXiv paper arguing that deep learning is moving from a bag of empirical tricks toward a real scientific theory, with the authors pointing to converging work on optimization, representations, scaling, and generalization. The paper does not claim the theory is finished, but it argues the field now has enough recurring structure to explain important parts of how neural networks train and behave. Story link Hacker News discussion 6. SSH Audio Interface The next story is a reverse-engineering post about a Rodecaster Duo audio interface whose firmware package turned out to be an easy-to-inspect tarball and whose device image had SSH enabled by default. The post walks through how the author grabbed the firmware, unpacked the update flow, and found a level of openness that is unusual for consumer hardware, even if it also exposes obvious security questions. Story link Hacker News discussion That's it for today, I hope this is going to help you build some cool things.
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Hacker Newsroom for 26 April: 10 GbE USB, NSF Board Firings, Firefox Adblock, Quantum Slop
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