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Show HN: Weather2Geo – Geolocate screenshots from weather widgets
11 by Elliott-Diy | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, I built an OSINT tool called Weather2Geo that helps locate where a screenshot was taken based on the weather widget data visible (e.g. temp, condition, and local time in the taskbar). People often post these without realizing how specific those values can be in combination. It works by comparing the given weather condition, temperature, and time against current data from thousands of cities. It’s timezone-aware, supports fuzzy matching, and groups results geographically to reduce noise. It’s most effective on recent screenshots, ideally taken within the last hour—since weather and daylight conditions change quickly. The tool helps pinpoint likely locations when screenshots lack EXIF data or other traditional OSINT clues. It’s open source here: https://ift.tt/gCQxqjm Would love feedback, bug reports, or to hear if you think this has other use cases. - Elliott
The Art of the Critic
6 by benbreen | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Learning C3
12 by lerno | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Why Is Everybody Knitting Chickens?
17 by mooreds | 0 comments on Hacker News.
The Maid Who Restored Charles II
13 by samclemens | 1 comments on Hacker News.
I started a little math club in Bangalore
5 by viveknathani_ | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Show HN: I wrote a modern Command Line Handbook
15 by petr25102018 | 2 comments on Hacker News.
TLDR: I wrote a handbook for the Linux command line. 120 pages in PDF. Updated for 2025. Pay what you want. A few years back I wrote an ebook about the Linux command line. Instead of focusing on a specific shell, paraphrasing manual pages, or providing long repetitive explanations, the idea was to create a modern guide that would help readers to understand the command line in the practical sense, cover the most common things people use the command line for, and do so without wasting the readers' time. The book contains material on terminals, shells (compatible with both Bash and Zsh), configuration, command line programs for typical use cases, shell scripting, and many tips and tricks to make working on the command line more convenient. I still consider it "an introduction" and it is not necessarily a book for the HN crowd that lives in the terminal, but I believe that the book will easily cover 80 % of the things most people want or need to do in the terminal. I made a couple of updates to the book over the years and just finished a significant one for 2025. The book is not perfect. I still see a lot of room for improvement, but I think it is good enough and I truly want to share it with everyone. Hence, pay what you want. https://ift.tt/N2VsZmu
ClickHouse raises $350M Series C
19 by caust1c | 3 comments on Hacker News.
A visual exploration of vector embeddings
12 by pamelafox | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Relive the 90s: Weather Channel Simulator
11 by adam_gyroscope | 0 comments on Hacker News.