TLDR 2025-12-01
ChatGPT ads π°, Tesla ride π, opinionated agents π€
π
Science & Futuristic Technology
Achieving lasting remission for HIV (6 minute read)
Researchers have discovered a way to keep HIV under control long-term without constant treatment. Some individuals with long-term HIV eventually produce antibodies that can neutralize the virus. Scientists are now racing to find the most potent broadly neutralizing antibodies and engineer them into a functional cure. Two independent trials have already shown promise, with some participants maintaining undetectable levels of HIV for over a year after treatment without taking antiretrovirals.
Datacenters in space are a terrible, horrible, no good idea (14 minute read)
Putting data centers into space is a terrible idea and makes no sense. The components needed to make a data center work don't work in space. The reality of making space hardware actually function in space is not necessarily intuitively obvious. It is possible, but it would be disproportionately costly compared to Earth-based data centers and would offer mediocre performance at best.
π»
Programming, Design & Data Science
Pay for test coverage, not QA hours (Sponsor)
Scaling QA is hard to achieve purely in-house. QA Wolf is the
AI-native service that lets you pay for test coverage, not labor hours. Their automation-first approach delivers 5x faster tests, 15-minute QA cycles, human-verified bug reports, and 80% coverage in less than 4 months.
See how QA Wolf delivers resultsAgents Should Be More Opinionated (10 minute read)
The best agent products are the most opinionated. The goal in agent products is to give users a delightful experience. A good baseline for agents is that everything works reliably without tweaking too many settings. Good product design is the result of creators distilling their vision into an intuitive interface that just works.
How good engineers write bad code at big companies (10 minute read)
For engineers working on self-contained technical projects, the only explanation for bad code is incompetence. Other engineers operate more like plumbers or electricians, working on projects with awkward or surprising parts that are relatively new to them. In these cases, bad code is inevitable, but as long as the overall system works well enough, the project is a success. Engineers don't get to choose the type of work they end up doing - the mistakes made in an unfamiliar system are a deliberate tradeoff being made by the company, not the engineer.
Get the most interesting stories in startups, tech, and programming delivered in a free daily email.
Join 1,600,000 readers for
one daily email