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AI Tools

Unlocking Super Intelligence: tinyhumansai/openhuman AI Tool

Your Personal AI super intelligence. Private, Simple and extremely powerful.

Global · General · May 11, 2026
AI Tools

AI-Powered PDF Tools: SimplePDF.com Reviewed on Hacker News

AI Powered PDF Tools: A Review of SimplePDF.com on Hacker News Introduction In the ever evolving digital landscape, AI powered tools are increasingly essential …

Global · General · May 2, 2026
AI Tools

Trading System V2: AI's Role in Deterministic Execution

Thanks to the incredible feedback on my last post, I’m officially moving away from the "distributed veto" system (where 8 LLM agents argue until they agree to trade). For v2, I am implementing a strict State Machine using a deterministic runtime (llm-nano-vm). ​The new rule is simple: Python owns the math and the execution contract. The LLM only interprets the context. ​I've sketched out a 5-module architecture, but before I start coding the new Python feature extractors, I want to sanity-check the exact roles I’m giving to the AI. Here is the blueprint: ​1. The HTF Agent (Higher Timeframe - D1/H4) ​Python: Extracts structural levels, BOS/CHoCH, and premium/discount zones. ​LLM Role: Reads this hard data to determine the institutional narrative and select the most relevant Draw on Liquidity (DOL). ​2. The Structure Agent (H1) ​Python: Identifies all valid Order Blocks (OB) and Fair Value Gaps (FVG) with displacement. ​LLM Role: Selects the highest-probability Point of Interest (POI) based on the HTF Agent's narrative. ​3. The Trigger Agent (M15/M5) ​100% Python (NO LLM): Purely deterministic. It checks for liquidity sweeps and LTF CHoCH inside the selected POI. ​4. The Context Agent ​LLM Role: Cross-references active killzones, news blackouts, and currency correlations to either greenlight or veto the setup. ​5. The Risk Agent ​100% Python (NO LLM): Calculates Entry, SL, TP, Expected Value (EV), and position sizing. ​The state machine will only transition to EXECUTING if the deterministic Trigger and Risk modules say yes. The LLMs are basically just "context providers" for the state machine. ​My questions for the quants/architects here: ​Does this division of labor make sense? Am I giving the LLMs too much or too little responsibility in step 1 and 2? ​By making the Trigger layer (M15/M5) 100% deterministic, am I losing the core advantage of having an AI, or is this the standard way to avoid execution paralysis? ​Would you merge the HTF and Structure agents to reduce token constraints/hallucinations, or is separating them better for debugging? ​Would love to hear your thoughts before I dive into the codebase.

Global · Developers · Apr 30, 2026
AI Tools

AI-Powered App Transforms Weight Loss Journey with Photo Tracking

Hi everyone, I wanted to share my progress. For years, I failed every diet because I hated the 'administrative' part of it. Logging every single snack into a database felt like a chore that reminded me of my struggle every day. Being a developer, I decided to build something for myself to lower the barrier. I built an app where I just take a photo of my plate, and it uses AI to identify the ingredients and estimate the calories. It removed the 'friction' that usually made me quit after three weeks. I’m now 173 lbs down and I’ve never felt more in control. I realized that for me, the key wasn't a stricter diet, but a simpler way to stay accountable. I’m sharing this because I’m looking for a few more people who are currently on their journey and feel overwhelmed by manual tracking. I’d love for you to try the tool I built and tell me if it helps you stay as consistent as it helped me. Keep going, it’s worth it!"

Global · General · Apr 30, 2026
AI Tools

AI's Impact on Business: Speed vs. Smart Decision-Making

I’ve been thinking about this for a while, especially with all the discussions around AI replacing jobs. One thing that feels consistently misunderstood: AI doesn’t improve the quality of decisions by itself. It increases the speed at which existing decision logic operates. That has a simple consequence: Good systems become better. Weak systems fail faster. But there’s another layer that is often ignored. Right now, many companies are reacting to AI by reducing headcount. Some of that is rational: - there is real slack in certain roles - some work can already be automated or simplified In those cases, AI acts as a kind of cleanup mechanism. But this is where it gets more complex. If companies reduce people too quickly, they don’t just cut cost — they also remove: - domain knowledge - informal networks - context that is not documented anywhere This kind of knowledge is not easily replaced by AI. So you end up with a paradox: AI increases speed, but the organization loses the very knowledge needed to make good decisions at that speed. At the same time, layoffs are not always a signal of weak systems. Strong organizations can also reduce roles because they: - increase productivity per employee - reallocate work - shift toward new capabilities The difference is what happens next. Some organizations use AI to scale and create new opportunities. Others mainly use it to cut cost because they lack the structure to turn speed into growth. So instead of asking: “Will AI replace jobs?” A more relevant question might be: Is the organization structured in a way that can actually benefit from faster decision-making? Because if not, AI won’t make it smarter. It will just make it faster at being wrong.

Global · Founders · Apr 30, 2026
AI Tools

Comparing AI Models: Surprising Differences in Responses

I’ve been experimenting with different AI models lately (ChatGPT, Claude, etc.), and I tried something simple: Using the exact same prompt across multiple models and comparing the results. What surprised me most wasn’t that they were different — it’s *how* different they were depending on the task. For example: * Some models are much better at structured writing * Others explain concepts more clearly * Some give more “creative” responses, but less accuracy It made me realize there isn’t really a “best” AI — it depends heavily on what you're trying to do. One thing I did notice though is that manually comparing them is kind of a pain (copying prompts, switching tabs, etc.). Curious how others approach this: Do you stick to one model, or actually test multiple before deciding? And if you do compare — what’s your process like?

Global · General · Apr 27, 2026
AI Tools

Why People Turn to AI for Art: A Deeper Look

Why do people use AI for art? Before anything, this isn’t about debating whether AI art is “real” art. I’ve already shared my personal take on my last post. This is about something simpler and, I think, more human: why people are drawn to it in the first place. I’ll be honest. I used to mock people who used AI for art. I saw it as a shortcut, a lack of effort, even a lack of creativity. It felt easy to dismiss. But as someone who creates in a different medium, writing novels, I started wondering about the motivation behind it. Not the output, but the “why.” After spending time digging into discussions, patterns, and people’s own explanations, I started noticing something deeper. For many, it ties back to how they grew up. A lot of people didn’t have the freedom to explore creativity as kids. Academic pressure, strict expectations, or environments where only “practical” success mattered often pushed curiosity and artistic exploration aside. For some, even trying to pursue something creative was discouraged or punished. That kind of upbringing doesn’t just disappear. It follows people into adulthood. You end up with individuals who feel disconnected from creativity, not because they lack imagination, but because they were never given space to develop it. Trying to learn a creative skill later in life can feel risky, even uncomfortable, especially when it’s tied to the idea that it might not lead to financial stability. Then something like AI tools shows up. Suddenly, there’s a way to express ideas visually without years of training, without the fear of “wasting time,” and without revisiting that pressure. For some, it’s the first time they can take something from their imagination and actually see it exist. That experience can feel new, almost like rediscovering something they never got to have. So when you see a flood of AI-generated art online, it’s not just about technology. For many people, it’s about access. It’s about finally having a low barrier to expressing something internal. That doesn’t mean everyone using AI has the same background or reasons. But reducing it to “laziness” or “lack of creativity” misses a much bigger picture. In some cases, making fun of people for using these tools ends up hitting something more personal than we realize. Curious to hear what others think. What do you see as the main reasons people turn to AI for art?

Global · General · Apr 27, 2026
AI Tools

Auroch Engine: Revolutionizing AI Memory for Personalization

Auroch Engine is an external memory layer for AI assistants — designed to give models better long-term recall, personalization, and context awareness across conversations. Instead of relying on scattered chat history or fragile built-in memory, Auroch Engine lets users store, retrieve, and organize important context through a dedicated memory API. The goal is simple: make AI feel less like a reset button every session, and more like a tool that actually learns your projects, preferences, workflows, and goals over time. Right now, it’s in early beta. We’re looking for first users who are interested in testing a lightweight developer-facing memory system for AI apps, agents, and personal productivity workflows. Ideal early users are people building with AI, experimenting with agents, or frustrated that their assistant keeps forgetting the important stuff. DM for more information or better visit our site: https://ai-recall-engine-q5viks70j-cartertbirchalls-projects.vercel.app

Global · Developers · Apr 27, 2026
AI Tools

AI-Powered Form Builder for Startups: Tally Forms Review

Simple form builder used by startups and solopreneurs.

Global · Founders · Apr 26, 2026
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