Fox News Breaking News Alert
North Korea insists they made 'realistic proposal' about lifting sanctions after Trump-Kim summit collapses
02/28/19 9:34 AM
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Thursday, 28 February 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Successful projects that didn't receive well in HN?
Ask HN: Successful projects that didn't receive well in HN?
5 by johnx123-up | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Motivated by this thread https://ift.tt/2H7mZGL that talks about Redis, Dropbox, etc
5 by johnx123-up | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Motivated by this thread https://ift.tt/2H7mZGL that talks about Redis, Dropbox, etc
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Luke Perry hospitalized, rep says, following report actor suffered stroke
02/28/19 8:23 AM
Luke Perry hospitalized, rep says, following report actor suffered stroke
02/28/19 8:23 AM
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to be indicted on bribery, fraud and breach of trust, pending hearing
02/28/19 8:11 AM
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to be indicted on bribery, fraud and breach of trust, pending hearing
02/28/19 8:11 AM
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: How do I auto buy domain names?
Ask HN: How do I auto buy domain names?
3 by thedangler | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Hello, I'm wondering how to automatically by domain names. It seems like there are companies that swoop in and buy them faster than the manual process. I can't seem to find a reliable way to buy them automatically. Anyone have more insights on this? Edited - fixed title.
3 by thedangler | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Hello, I'm wondering how to automatically by domain names. It seems like there are companies that swoop in and buy them faster than the manual process. I can't seem to find a reliable way to buy them automatically. Anyone have more insights on this? Edited - fixed title.
Pakistan’s Leader Offers to Return Captured Indian Pilot

By SALMAN MASOOD, JEFFREY GETTLEMAN and MARIA ABI-HABIB from NYT World https://ift.tt/2H7Rhc9
via IFTTT
When It Comes to Negotiating, Kim’s Team Is More Experienced

By RUSSELL GOLDMAN, JIN WU, MOTOKO RICH and CHOE SANG-HUN from NYT World https://ift.tt/2H3euMO
via IFTTT
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Trump says he wasn't prepared to lift US sanctions on North Korea
02/28/19 12:36 AM
Trump says he wasn't prepared to lift US sanctions on North Korea
02/28/19 12:36 AM
New top story on Hacker News: Red Flags in Software Developer Job Descriptions
Red Flags in Software Developer Job Descriptions
93 by webappsecperson | 86 comments on Hacker News.
93 by webappsecperson | 86 comments on Hacker News.
New top story on Hacker News: Launch HN: Fuzzbuzz (YC W19) – Fuzzing as a Service
Launch HN: Fuzzbuzz (YC W19) – Fuzzing as a Service
146 by evmunro | 76 comments on Hacker News.
Hey HN, We’re Everest, Andrei and Sabera, the founders behind Fuzzbuzz ( https://fuzzbuzz.io ) - a fuzzing as a service platform that makes fuzzing your code as easy as writing a unit test, and pushing to GitHub. Fuzzing is a type of software testing that generates & runs millions of tests per day on your code, and is great at finding edge cases & vulnerabilities that developers miss. It’s been used to find tens of thousands of critical bugs in open-source software ( https://ift.tt/2fW71Bd ), and is a great way to generate tests that cover a lot of code, without requiring your developers to think of every possibility. It achieves such great results by applying genetic algorithms to generate new tests from some initial examples, and using code coverage to track and report interesting test cases. Combining these two techniques with a bit of randomness, and running tests thousands of times every second has proven to be an incredibly effective automated bug finding technique. I was first introduced to fuzzing a couple years ago while working on the Clusterfuzz team at Google, where I built Clusterfuzz Tools v1 ( https://ift.tt/2jAJEvW ). I later built Maxfuzz ( https://ift.tt/2IG5rDY ), a set of tools that makes it easier to fuzz code in Docker containers, while on the Coinbase security team. As we learned more about fuzzing, we found ourselves wondering why very few teams outside of massive companies like Microsoft and Google were actively fuzzing their code - especially given the results (teams at Google that use fuzzing report that it finds 80% of their bugs, with the other 20% uncovered by normal tests, or in production). It turns out that many teams don’t want to invest the time and money needed to set up automated fuzzing infrastructure, and using fuzzing tools in an ad-hoc way on your own computer isn’t nearly as effective as continuously fuzzing your code on multiple dedicated CPUs. That’s where Fuzzbuzz comes in! We’ve built a platform that integrates with your existing GitHub workflow, and provide an open API for integrations with CI tools like Jenkins and TravisCI, so the latest version of your code is always being fuzzed. We manage the infrastructure, so you can fuzz your code on any number of CPUs with a single click. When bugs are found, we’ll notify you through Slack and create Jira tickets or GitHub Issues for you. We also solve many of the issues that crop up when fuzzing, such as bug deduplication, and elimination of false positives. Fuzzbuzz currently supports C, C++, Go and Python, with more languages like Java and Javascript on the way. Anyone can sign up for Fuzzbuzz and fuzz their code on 1 dedicated CPU, for free. We’ve noticed that the HN community has been increasingly interested in fuzzing, and we’re really looking forward to hearing your feedback! The entire purpose of Fuzzbuzz is to make fuzzing as easy as possible, so all criticism is welcome.
146 by evmunro | 76 comments on Hacker News.
Hey HN, We’re Everest, Andrei and Sabera, the founders behind Fuzzbuzz ( https://fuzzbuzz.io ) - a fuzzing as a service platform that makes fuzzing your code as easy as writing a unit test, and pushing to GitHub. Fuzzing is a type of software testing that generates & runs millions of tests per day on your code, and is great at finding edge cases & vulnerabilities that developers miss. It’s been used to find tens of thousands of critical bugs in open-source software ( https://ift.tt/2fW71Bd ), and is a great way to generate tests that cover a lot of code, without requiring your developers to think of every possibility. It achieves such great results by applying genetic algorithms to generate new tests from some initial examples, and using code coverage to track and report interesting test cases. Combining these two techniques with a bit of randomness, and running tests thousands of times every second has proven to be an incredibly effective automated bug finding technique. I was first introduced to fuzzing a couple years ago while working on the Clusterfuzz team at Google, where I built Clusterfuzz Tools v1 ( https://ift.tt/2jAJEvW ). I later built Maxfuzz ( https://ift.tt/2IG5rDY ), a set of tools that makes it easier to fuzz code in Docker containers, while on the Coinbase security team. As we learned more about fuzzing, we found ourselves wondering why very few teams outside of massive companies like Microsoft and Google were actively fuzzing their code - especially given the results (teams at Google that use fuzzing report that it finds 80% of their bugs, with the other 20% uncovered by normal tests, or in production). It turns out that many teams don’t want to invest the time and money needed to set up automated fuzzing infrastructure, and using fuzzing tools in an ad-hoc way on your own computer isn’t nearly as effective as continuously fuzzing your code on multiple dedicated CPUs. That’s where Fuzzbuzz comes in! We’ve built a platform that integrates with your existing GitHub workflow, and provide an open API for integrations with CI tools like Jenkins and TravisCI, so the latest version of your code is always being fuzzed. We manage the infrastructure, so you can fuzz your code on any number of CPUs with a single click. When bugs are found, we’ll notify you through Slack and create Jira tickets or GitHub Issues for you. We also solve many of the issues that crop up when fuzzing, such as bug deduplication, and elimination of false positives. Fuzzbuzz currently supports C, C++, Go and Python, with more languages like Java and Javascript on the way. Anyone can sign up for Fuzzbuzz and fuzz their code on 1 dedicated CPU, for free. We’ve noticed that the HN community has been increasingly interested in fuzzing, and we’re really looking forward to hearing your feedback! The entire purpose of Fuzzbuzz is to make fuzzing as easy as possible, so all criticism is welcome.
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: How to be productive with big existing code base
Ask HN: How to be productive with big existing code base
134 by maheshs | 103 comments on Hacker News.
I have just started working with one of the client who have existing nodeJS code which they build in last 3 years. Is there any guiding principle which is beneficial while working with existing code base?
134 by maheshs | 103 comments on Hacker News.
I have just started working with one of the client who have existing nodeJS code which they build in last 3 years. Is there any guiding principle which is beneficial while working with existing code base?
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
No agreement after second nuclear summit
02/27/19 11:12 PM
No agreement after second nuclear summit
02/27/19 11:12 PM
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Trump sits down with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Vietnam
02/27/19 5:59 PM
Trump sits down with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Vietnam
02/27/19 5:59 PM
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Cohen says he has never been to Prague, refuting key Russia collusion claim of Steele dossier
02/27/19 10:49 AM
Cohen says he has never been to Prague, refuting key Russia collusion claim of Steele dossier
02/27/19 10:49 AM
Wednesday, 27 February 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN:Finding tech talent is getting harder. It's not a Bay Area problem only.
Ask HN:Finding tech talent is getting harder. It's not a Bay Area problem only.
20 by hichamin | 5 comments on Hacker News.
If you're a CTO for a growing startup, this might be a familiar challenge for you. On top of building the product, finding product engineers is becoming one of the hardest things for a CTO to do in 2019, especially in tech hubs like NY and London due to higher demand and competition. This problem is no longer exclusive to the Bay Area. Hiring is time-consuming and expensive, and many startups feel that they can’t compete with some of the top salaries and perks offered by deep-pocketed alternatives. It makes sense to rely on your network to hire the initial few developers, but this approach is not sustainable in the long run. Job boards are getting crowded. Recruiters are generally worse. I've read a lot of stories about using recruitment platforms. Few are great, but many are unpleasant. The flaw with many recruitment companies is they don't reliably deliver enough good candidates to build trust. Asking for profile A and getting profile B is a common frustration. For startups, this tends to be a deal-breaker because hiring the wrong candidate has a significant cost and impact on backlog and team. Is it that most recruiters or on-demand marketplaces aren't highly technical? Is it that they also suffer from talent shortage? Remote work has been getting a lot of love in recent years to bypass the talent war. Although it has come a long way, it's still hard to pull off, especially for companies that are trying to do both local and remote but are not remote-first (think infrastructure and payroll primarily). With that being said. How do startups in hubs currently find great engineers quicker? What's an approach that you have been investing in recently to hire product hackers?
20 by hichamin | 5 comments on Hacker News.
If you're a CTO for a growing startup, this might be a familiar challenge for you. On top of building the product, finding product engineers is becoming one of the hardest things for a CTO to do in 2019, especially in tech hubs like NY and London due to higher demand and competition. This problem is no longer exclusive to the Bay Area. Hiring is time-consuming and expensive, and many startups feel that they can’t compete with some of the top salaries and perks offered by deep-pocketed alternatives. It makes sense to rely on your network to hire the initial few developers, but this approach is not sustainable in the long run. Job boards are getting crowded. Recruiters are generally worse. I've read a lot of stories about using recruitment platforms. Few are great, but many are unpleasant. The flaw with many recruitment companies is they don't reliably deliver enough good candidates to build trust. Asking for profile A and getting profile B is a common frustration. For startups, this tends to be a deal-breaker because hiring the wrong candidate has a significant cost and impact on backlog and team. Is it that most recruiters or on-demand marketplaces aren't highly technical? Is it that they also suffer from talent shortage? Remote work has been getting a lot of love in recent years to bypass the talent war. Although it has come a long way, it's still hard to pull off, especially for companies that are trying to do both local and remote but are not remote-first (think infrastructure and payroll primarily). With that being said. How do startups in hubs currently find great engineers quicker? What's an approach that you have been investing in recently to hire product hackers?
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
President Trump and Kim Jong Un shake hands to kick off Hanoi summit
02/27/19 3:36 AM
President Trump and Kim Jong Un shake hands to kick off Hanoi summit
02/27/19 3:36 AM
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Pakistan shuts down airspace to all commercial flights
02/27/19 1:08 AM
Pakistan shuts down airspace to all commercial flights
02/27/19 1:08 AM
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Fox News Breaking News Alert
Pakistan says it downed 2 Indian warplanes, took pilot
02/26/19 11:01 PM
Pakistan says it downed 2 Indian warplanes, took pilot
02/26/19 11:01 PM
Tuesday, 26 February 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Hacker News Meetups?
Hacker News Meetups?
10 by lainon | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Are there any active HN meetups? Where are they announced? Also: Anyone in germany interested in a meetup? :)
10 by lainon | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Are there any active HN meetups? Where are they announced? Also: Anyone in germany interested in a meetup? :)











































