QPU World
The Best VPN Router Setup for Working Abroad in 2026 — Cyber Monday Deals & Step-by-Step Guide
Work remotely from anywhere in the world while appearing on a U.S. network — even on locked-down corporate laptops.This guide walks you through the exact router configuration used by digital nomads to stay connected overseas when their work devices cannot install custom VPN software.You’ll build a personal VPN tunnel at the router level using two devices:✅Recommended Router Pair🏠 Home Router (VPN Server)GL.iNet Flint 2 – GL-MT6000WiFi 6 AX6000Built-in WireGuard Server600–900 Mbps encrypted VPN s
The Adjacent Possible: How Innovation Actually Happens — and Why It Matters Now More Than Ever
A deeper look at Stuart Kauffman’s theory of human creativity, technological evolution, and how new ideas emerge from the edge of what already exists.Innovation often feels like magic. A sudden spark. A flash of brilliance. A breakthrough nobody saw coming. But according to theoretical biologist Stuart Kauffman, creativity actually follows a surprisingly predictable pattern — one that shapes everything from human discovery to technological revolutions.It’s a concept called the Adjacent Possible,
Forget Quantum Computing, Neuromorphic Cores Are The New Hotness!
Alongside the growth of quantum computing, several companies have been quietly figuring out better ways to improve processing power with Neuromorphic Cores.
Two Experts Say Justin Trudeau’s Description Of Quantum Computing Was Pretty Good
He Trudid it again.
Natalie Kruse- Nosek: Bridges in the Middle of Nowhere | Natalie Kruse- Nosek | TEDxDIT
Who is Natalie Kruse- Nosek? Natalie is passionate linguistic with a love for individualized language coaching. She is the founder of a language school that focuses on teaching individuals English. She graduated with her M.A in Linguistics from the University of Göttingen. Natalie's strengths are to embrace creative learning methods to boost stu...
Natalie Kruse- Nosek: A Way to make Immersive Studying more Efficient and Accessible
With a passionate ambition to facilitate more immersive studying for both school students and adults, Natalie likes to dive deep into the neuroscience of studying and implement it in practice with great success. Natalie is a passionate linguist with a love for individualized language coaching. Language and communication training is her specialty...
Nazuk Thakkar: What will terrorism look like in the future?
The Talk explores the nature of terrorism and how it will evolve in the future
Show HN: FlowTask – AI to bootstrap project setups
For years, I was stuck. Trapped in a loop. Every new project, every team initiative – it began with the same soul-crushing setup.Hours. Gone. Not on the actual work, mind you. But on the meta-work. Defining tasks. Sketching forms. Mapping workflows. Hunting for that 'perfect' template that never quite fit. Just trying to get to zero. To a starting line where meaningful work could actually begin.Most project management tools? They're brilliant once things are up and running. Tracki
Show HN: Fuzzy-redirect- preventing 404s by auto-redirect to closest valid route
needed this for some of my own websites so I made my very first npm library today :)the idea is pretty simple but useful - if a user lands on your website and encounters a 404, this uses a basic fuzzy URL matching to redirect to the closest valid URL
very low effort to set up, just 46kb, no dependencies and I'm quite happy with it !happy to hear feedback/ potential improvementshttps://www.npmjs.com/package/fuzzy-redirect
https://github.com/Kuberwastak
Ask HN: Best practice for using AI coding tools in a team?
I have been using AI assistive tools for coding like Cursor, codex, Claude code for quite a while now. Particularly for my own personal project. I rarely use Git when I am working on my own project, and I sometimes let LLMs generate bunch of code I don't read closely as long as they work as intended. I could create a fully working full stack web app within days with Cursor.Now I am working with a startup, and clearly this would not be a working strategy. LLM just generates so big of chunk o
Tell HN: ChatGPT is freaking amazing and I don't get the negativity
tl;dr: I love AI chatbots because they allow you to look up the web without any intrusive content.ChatGPT has become my favorite way to search through the web. It redefined the way I engage with the internet: the www is the content, traditional search engines are the shelves & aisles, and the chatbot is the librarian.It's a shame that so much debate revolves around validating our preconceived fears. So many people are looking for one gotcha to dismiss AI altogether. If you use a default
Ask HN: Advice for feeling like a failure in PhD?
I am doing a PhD in R1 public uni on Computer Engineering in the USA. PhD is something I really wanted to do because it allows me to dive deep into stuff. Turns out what I thought initially was not the whole story.I am nearing the end of second year of my PhD. My advisor is in HPC but doesn't do hot research and I want to do efficient hardware AI research (faster kernels, ML systems etc). But whenever I read papers and see the authors and what they have accomplished and the team behind them
Codex can read sensitive files outside the CWD without approval
If you directly ask Codex to read ~/.ssh/id_rsa, it will usually decline due to "safety concerns". However, the sandbox which the agent is running in doesn't restrict reads outside the working directory in any way and you won't even be asked for approval - it's just a prompt (injection) away. The Codex developers close issues related to this problem and simply suggest running Codex "in a docker container or VM" [1].To quote the Codex security document
Show HN: I built an MCP server to connect AI agents to your DWH
Hi all, this is Burak, I am one of the makers of Bruin CLI (https://github.com/bruin-data/bruin). We built an MCP server that allows you to connect your AI agents to your DWH/query engine and make them interact with your data.A bit of a back story: we started Bruin as an open-source CLI tool that brings together data ingestion, transformation, quality and governance. You can build data pipelines using SQL and Python, ingest data from many sources, run data quality checks
Show HN: A "Cram tests" script for windows shells
It's quite limited but does the job, I invite anybody not aware of what cram tests are to give them a try, being on Unix with the original cram or Windows with this one ;)
Show HN: Generate documentation sites from Git repositories
I’m sharing an MVP of a tool for building documentation sites directly from Git repositories: https://brodocs.io with auto conversion of PlantUML and draw.io diagrams.All repos appear on left tree menu, but you can also create sites with top menu structure where each menu item directs to subsite with own left menu structure. Examples: https://brodocs.io/94c8be738065bd0c559/Backlog/Intakebacklog..., https://brodocs.io/21a3986b137fb8f4ff8/Back
Alex Kipman: A futuristic vision of the age of holograms
Explore a speculative digital world without screens in this fanciful demo, a mix of near reality and far-future possibility. Wearing the HoloLens headset, Alex Kipman demos his vision for bringing 3D holograms into the real world, enhancing our perceptions so that we can touch and feel digital content. Featuring Q&A with TED's Helen Walters.
Kevin Kelly: Technology's epic story
In this wide-ranging, thought-provoking talk, Kevin Kelly muses on what technology means in our lives -- from its impact at the personal level to its place in the cosmos.
Helen Czerski: The fascinating physics of everyday life
Physics doesn't just happen in a fancy lab -- it happens when you push a piece of buttered toast off the table or drop a couple of raisins in a fizzy drink or watch a coffee spill dry. Become a more interesting dinner guest as physicist Helen Czerski presents various concepts in physics you can become familiar with using everyday things found in...
Harry Cliff: Have we reached the end of physics?
Why is there something rather than nothing? Why does so much interesting stuff exist in the universe? Particle physicist Harry Cliff works on the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, and he has some potentially bad news for people who seek answers to these questions. Despite the best efforts of scientists (and the help of the biggest machine on the pl...