17 comments

  • jcoughenour 5 hours ago
    The timestamp under each title seems to be the timestamp of when it was summarized and not when it was actually posted on HN. As a reader, I would prefer to see when it was posted. You already have a "updated x hours ago" at the top of the page so there is no reason to just repeat that updated timestamp on all the cards.
  • jimmySixDOF 1 hour ago
    How is this determining a comment is "Highly Upvoted" on HN where that is explicitly kept out of the ui/ux and new comments are a/b tested across users etc... it's not a thing you can know. I have had comments with a big number of descendents but very low upvotes so thats not a reliable indicator either. Genuinely curious.
  • prodigycorp 5 hours ago
    The number of new (less than one hour old) accounts with garbled names in this thread is odd, to say the least.
    • tayo42 4 hours ago
      At a glance though it's not obvious if theres something being sold. Its a hobby project? What is there to gain by gaming hn for this? Odd
      • FinnKuhn 3 hours ago
        Twitter/X Followers and relevancy.
  • rcarmo 1 hour ago
    Very nice indeed. I recently went through a similar process and built an RSS feed summarizer, but didn’t bother with comments because… well… it could go either way in terms of productivity and token usage (I prefer to grab the original article and summarize it when feasible).

    But I really like the output.

  • ugh123 2 hours ago
    I really like this. Although I see a lot of posts leading with "Non-technical post" which seems misapplied in a lot of cases and otherwise too much of a generalization for a technical audience to glean anything useful from.
  • MrCoffee7 2 days ago
    It seems like each article takes a lot of vertical space. What if you changed the UI so you just displayed a title for each article with a little icon next to it like a downward arrow that you could click on if you wanted to see more of that article? That way, you could display more titles on one screen so that the user could more quickly scroll to the articles they actually wanted to see?
    • 9vigugfgg 5 hours ago
      The arrows in the circles floating fixed at the bottom expand and collapse as you want.
  • Tempest1981 3 hours ago
    Very nice. Most posts are classified as "Non-technical post" these days.

    Was hoping for a way to filter on "technical", for when I need my dose of hacking and technology. (Filter on category could also help, but I assume there are many technical categories.)

    And maybe reverse sort, for when I'm tired of controversy.

  • winchester6788 4 hours ago
    Ooh, love the UX, the heat meter and contrarian detection are very nice ideas.

    I recently released https://trackernews.app/browse which surfaces out and groups content from hn, reddit .. for user defined topics and extracts user defined structured data along with summaries.

    a tangential take on similar problem with focus on grouping posts by topics.

    would love to get any feedback on the UX/ understandability of the interface

  • browningstreet 4 hours ago
    I have a Gemini gem for HN where I share a thread and it pulls out insightful comments, interesting links, and avoids that flame war stuff entirely. It's less compact than this format but has more actionable takeaways for me. Tips, tricks, insights, and links is what I want from a lot of these conversations. And there are some specific HN-isms that I've coded into the gem to restrict from the report.
  • kenreidwilson 5 hours ago
    Any chance this can go open source? I'd love to contribute and self host.
  • hyperjeff 2 days ago
    Nice. It’d be cool if you could tap on the subject tags to filter for the latest posts with that tag.
  • jrdnpsnc 5 hours ago
    Looks great Two things: - I second the whole vertical space thing of MrCoffee - I feel like clicking on the title should either take you to the post (I know there is a link but it feels un-intuitive).

    Gg otherwise!

  • mvkel 5 hours ago
    Really nice experience on mobile. I didn't think I'd like the "contrarian take" section, but it's actually useful to see what the main counterpoint is on a post, and how seriously others are taking it
    • fhutrr567 5 hours ago
      You like it, because that's pretty much the only way to get the contrarian take.

      As I said below, hn bans contrarians to curate consensus in the interest of harmony above reality, openness or the achievement of human potential.

      • nickthegreek 4 hours ago
        What BS.The contrarian view listed on the site is based off of the comments from HN. Throughout this thread, your brand new account is posting nonsense.
  • renewiltord 4 hours ago
    Cool stuff. You have tags but no filtering on tags sadly. I think that would be the most valuable.
  • nextstep 1 hour ago
    Israel used Palantir technologies in pager…

    “ Contrarian View(highly upvoted) Many argued the attack was a highly targeted, lawful military operation against Hezbollah's command, achieving military goals with remarkably low civilian harm compared to conventional warfare.”

    What a sad world we live in. This site really is a cesspool of American fascism, and the community is not doing enough to take a stance against that

  • 9vigugfgg 5 hours ago
    This is perfect for me. I want to stay updated on the same kind of information that is shared here, but i don't care about cred points and find the social networking aspect of hn to be a codified toxic echo chamber.

    Thus i love the contrarian take.

    I also love that you can switch the default analysis from the story to the comments.

    I think this is a good use of ai. Using ai a a creative crutch is dehumanizing like all division of labor as Adam Smith described in his magnum opus was a major problem with capitalism. As we see.

    However, as it is wise enough to browse the covers of magazines, but skip the detail inside, so too it's it sufficient and better for the mind, body, and soul to merely browse what happened than the radioactive details from the brainwashed miscreants inside.

    • kiba 5 hours ago
      What social networking aspect? The karma point is basically hidden from other posters.
      • fhutrr567 5 hours ago
        Look at the green blue and red bars on the what happened summaries. Almost everyone here agrees with each other (mostly green) even on the most controversial issues, which what happened let's you sort by.

        I can't wait for what happened IN THE WORLD!!!

        that green bar is not a coincidence in a codified echo chamber.

        Almost no one is allowed to disagree with the consensus here and then only in a particular way. Some dissent is outright banned.

        Like for example, try suggesting any of the following ideas: Trump is misunderstood, feminism is bad for women, mrna shots aren't vaccines, vc increases pain, suffering and failure, etc.

        No discussion like that, among countless other ideas will get your account immediately shadow banned.

        So it appears that there's consensus about what "truth" is, as proven now by what happened's green and red bars, but in reality contrarians are forced to lurk.

        And what I just said only touches the surface of the many significant issues with this community.

        Go deeper and you find some sinister tactics being used to control the narrative.

        Good luck seeing this post. I know it was a waste of time to write it.

        • dugidugout 4 hours ago
          If you look at the site in question closer, it states that the "green, blue, and red bars" mean "constructive, technical, and flame war".

          If I had to guess, you likely have some heavy premises that blind you from engaging with the content of a post. I'm not going to pretend there isn't some truth in your premises, however I would imagine there would be "many significant issues with [any] community" if we all operated this carelessly.

        • cwmoore 5 hours ago
          Please enumerate sinister tactics, I am lost in these allusions.