Episode Details
Back to EpisodesHacker Newsroom for 19 April: Hetzner Migration, Opus Token Costs, Toxic Lunar Dust, Kdenlive 2026
Description
Hacker Newsroom for 19 April recaps major Hacker News stories, moving through hetzner migration, opus token costs, toxic lunar dust, kdenlive 2026.
1. Hetzner Migration
The next story is a real-world migration from DigitalOcean to a Hetzner dedicated server that cut monthly infrastructure spend from $1,432 to $233 without taking production offline. The post walks through rsync, MySQL replication, lowered DNS TTLs, and turning the old machine into a reverse proxy so 34 Nginx sites, GitLab, Neo4j, and live mobile traffic could move over with no visible outage.
2. Opus Token Costs
The next story is a community leaderboard comparing anonymous prompt token counts between Opus 4. 6 and Opus 4.
3. Toxic Lunar Dust
The next story looks at lunar dust and why every Apollo moonwalker reported some version of lunar hay fever after bringing the material back into the cabin. The ESA article says the dust is sharp, abrasive, and still poorly understood as a long-term health risk, which matters much more if future missions involve long stays or permanent bases.
4. Kdenlive 2026
The next story is Kdenlive's 2026 state-of-the-project update, which says the team spent the last year balancing new features with stability work, UI cleanup, OpenTimelineIO improvements, and faster audio workflows. The post highlights automatic masking, big waveform rendering gains, a more flexible docking system, and upcoming work on monitor mirroring, OpenFX support, subtitle refactors, and a dopesheet for keyframes.
5. Japan Rail Model
The next story is a long argument that Japan's rail system is exceptional less because of culture and more because of policy: private operators, rail-led development, liberal land-use rules, and fewer hidden subsidies for driving. The article says railway companies there behave like city-builders, capturing value through housing, retail, and station-centered real estate instead of relying on fares alone, while drivers face more of the real cost of parking and roads.
6. B 52 Star Tracker
The next story is Ken Shirriff's deep dive into the electromechanical angle computer inside the B-52 bomber's star tracker, a pre-GPS navigation system that used analog machinery to do trigonometry from celestial observations. The post explains how the system could search for, lock onto, and track stars automatically at a time when digital computers were not yet a practical fit for the job.
7. Interval Calculator
The next story is a Show HN project called Interval Calculator, which performs arithmetic over unions of intervals instead of single values so expressions can stay closed even around cases like division by ranges containing zero. The project pitches interval union arithmetic as a better way to represent