HackerLinks

Issue / 2026-04-17

7 interesting things surfaced from HN on 2026-04-17

A daily board of tools, apps, and references that Hacker News readers pulled into view on 2026-04-17. Each row keeps the original HN thread close to the claim.

01
Claude Design
anthropic.com

Anthropic's design-generation feature that turns prompts into mockups and layouts.

Agency users said it can replace long reference-hunting and 45-minute calls by producing a usable mockup in about 30 seconds, though several noted it still will not replace Figma.

02
Smol machines
github.com

Portable VMs with container-like ergonomics and subsecond cold starts.

The founder described it as a Docker replacement with Firecracker-inspired isolation, and commenters praised the comparison table, self-contained binary packaging, and overall design.

03
Healthchecks.io
blog.healthchecks.io

A long-running monitoring service moved to self-hosted object storage to keep infrastructure simple.

Users called Healthchecks.io fantastic, praised the one-person two-drive rsync setup, and pointed to Garage and Versity S3 as viable self-hosted storage options.

04
Garage
garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr

Open-source, self-hosted S3-compatible object storage recommended in the Healthchecks discussion.

A commenter explicitly told S3 self-hosters to check out Garage and linked the project as a viable alternative.

05
PanicLock
github.com

A small macOS utility that disables Touch ID after lid close so password unlock is required.

People called it a great idea and a 2026 version of a boss key; one comment said it solves the discomfort of typing passwords in public.

06
Stage
stagereview.app

An AI-assisted code review app that keeps humans in the loop while summarizing changes.

Commenters compared it with devon.ai and ReviewStack, debated whether local tools beat SaaS, and said they still wanted the code itself more than another AI summary.

07
NeoGeo AES+
heise.de

SNK is reissuing the Neo Geo AES without emulation, reviving a classic cartridge-based console.

Commenters called it extremely cool, discussed cartridge pricing versus the used market, and compared the approach with FPGA alternatives like MISTerFPGA.