Posts

New ask Hacker News story: One Wikipedia page costs your AI agent 68,000 tokens

One Wikipedia page costs your AI agent 68,000 tokens 6 by arhamislam5766 | 1 comments on Hacker News. i use claude code daily and measured what pages cost it while doing research. an average wikipedia article, for instance, is 68,240 tokens of raw html (tiktoken); nike's homepage is 353,000. claude code's built-in webfetch handles the easy case well. it summarizes wikipedia to about 950 tokens and clears cloudflare on some sites like indeed and ticketmaster. but, and there's always a but, on js-rendered and some anti-bot pages it returns nothing. quotes.toscrape.com/js gives "no quotes found"; nike.com gives a 403. your agent then dumps the raw html back into context and still fails. (note: i have also had cases where i read through the chat at the end and saw that it failed and just pulled from either training data or stale caches from other sources) so i worked on building an open-source stealth browser (recompiled chromium) that runs as an mcp for claude cod...

New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: What data have the frontier AI companies not ingested yet?

Ask HN: What data have the frontier AI companies not ingested yet? 2 by lysace | 1 comments on Hacker News.

New ask Hacker News story: Request for Senior Developer and Senior Cybersecurity

Request for Senior Developer and Senior Cybersecurity 2 by essina | 1 comments on Hacker News. Hello, Reaching out because we're currently looking for a senior developer or senior solutions architect and a senior cybersecurity analyst with governance experience to assist in creating a technical architecture and security design for a trade compliance platform. If you have this experience, please send an email to muna@essinasolutions.com

New ask Hacker News story: Reality of Commercial AI World from a 16 Year Old's Perspective

Reality of Commercial AI World from a 16 Year Old's Perspective 2 by VanshAgenticAI | 0 comments on Hacker News. Let me tell you who I am first. I'm 16, a mad scientist. Started coding and AI at 12 — before ChatGPT existed. Built AI voice assistants in 2022 when nobody knew what AI was. Worked 10 hours a day at 12, building anonymously. I HAVE 1 THING: ASK ME TO BUILD ANYTHING — IMPOSSIBLE OR POSSIBLE — I WILL FIGURE IT OUT. AI, MATHS, SCIENCE, WHATEVER. THAT'S IT. At 15, I started selling AI automation and voice agents. Cold called, cold emailed, worked hundreds of hours for 4 straight months. Never got a single sale. Fine — selling wasn't my strength. Then I tried building real products — made an OpenClaw clone that ran on low-end laptops, built AI researchers. I'm not a salesman. I'm the guy who if you say "build Claude from scratch including model training" — I'll somehow do it. But "build something cool" — I freeze. Still, I tried...

New ask Hacker News story: Where'd Codex Go?

Where'd Codex Go? 2 by aleshh | 3 comments on Hacker News. I just clicked the "Update" button in the Mac Codex app, and the app quit and deleted itself. I went to download it from the download page, and it downloads a copy of the ChatGTP app. Am I doing something wrong, or is this OpenAI unifying things? https://ift.tt/h01Me8p

New ask Hacker News story: Fable July 12th disclaimer disappears from Claude Code

Fable July 12th disclaimer disappears from Claude Code 4 by gorgmah | 3 comments on Hacker News. The message: > Extended: Fable 5 is included in your weekly limit > Through July 12, you can use up to 50% of your weekly usage limit on Fable 5. If you hit your limit, you can continue on Fable 5 with usage credits. Fable 5 draws down usage faster than Opus 4.8. Run /model and select Fable to use it. Learn more (https://ift.tt/40ujBXy) seems to have disappeared from claude-code. Anyone else noticed?

New ask Hacker News story: Who has been caught out by this anti-pattern from Google?

Who has been caught out by this anti-pattern from Google? 2 by Monotoko | 0 comments on Hacker News. I travel quite infrequently these days, but I've been caught out by this antipattern from Google a few times... You search for a hotel, find one at a reasonable price, and go through to the website and book it. The wiser among us may actually glance at the dates and realize Google never asked us when we wanted to stay. Unfortunately I'm not wise, and got caught by this same thing a few years ago - usually it's in a string of bookings (flights, taxis, etc). It's like something in my brain assumes if it's not explicitly asked then it's forgotten about even though the dates are of course important... Anyone else, or is it just me who struggles with this? I've looked around and no-one else seems to complain despite this going for years