In the preparation for transitioning away from Medium, we've launched Hacker Noon Community and are also sharing first details of our new publishing platform. https://hackernoon.com/state-of-the-noonion-q1-2019-the-launch-of-the-hacker-noon-community #hackernoon
State Of The Noonion Q1 2019: The Launch Of The Hacker Noon Community | HackerNoon

In the preparation for transitioning away from Medium, we've launched Hacker Noon Community and are also sharing first details of our new publishing platform.

As pandemic is starting to rage, the Hacker Noon team is grateful for their remote-first experience so far and has been making tremendous product initiatives. https://hackernoon.com/state-of-the-noonion-q1-2020-progress-in-spite-of-covid-19 #hackernoon
State Of The Noonion Q1 2020: Progress In Spite Of COVID-19 | HackerNoon

As pandemic is starting to rage, the Hacker Noon team is grateful for their remote-first experience so far and has been making tremendous product initiatives.

We’ve been building! HackerNoon shipped hundreds of product features, achieved impressive revenue figures and editorial milestones. Read all about it here. https://hackernoon.com/state-of-the-noonion-green-clock-strikes-noon #hackernoon
State of the Noonion: Green Clock Strikes Noon | HackerNoon

We’ve been building! HackerNoon shipped hundreds of product features, achieved impressive revenue figures and editorial milestones. Read all about it here.

We’ve been building! HackerNoon shipped hundreds of product features, achieved impressive revenue figures and editorial milestones. Read all about it here. https://hackernoon.com/state-of-the-noonion-building-selling-and-storytelling-hackernoon #hackernoon
State of the Noonion: Building, Selling and Storytelling @ HackerNoon | HackerNoon

We’ve been building! HackerNoon shipped hundreds of product features, achieved impressive revenue figures and editorial milestones. Read all about it here.

Q2 2022 marked important milestones when it comes to Revenue, Software Development, and Readership and Editorial Growth. https://hackernoon.com/state-of-the-noonion-a-new-era-for-brands-and-writers #hackernoon
State of the Noonion: A New Era For Brands and Writers | HackerNoon

Q2 2022 marked important milestones when it comes to Revenue, Software Development, and Readership and Editorial Growth.

From wins like exceeding sales OKRs and new strategic investments to tackling a spam attack, this is what the Hacker Noon team has been up to in the Q3 2020. https://hackernoon.com/state-of-the-noonion-2020-q3-the-good-the-bad-and-the-opportunities-ahead #hackernoon
State of the Noonion 2020 Q3: The Good, the Bad, and the Opportunities Ahead | HackerNoon

From wins like exceeding sales OKRs and new strategic investments to tackling a spam attack, this is what the Hacker Noon team has been up to in the Q3 2020.

What makes Hacker Noon truly stand out is the fact that we are independently-owned & community-driven. Our community drives our editorial, not just our traffic. https://hackernoon.com/hacker-noon-20-origin-story-and-raising-funds #hackernoon
Hacker Noon 2.0: Origin Story And Raising Funds | HackerNoon

What makes Hacker Noon truly stand out is the fact that we are independently-owned & community-driven. Our community drives our editorial, not just our traffic.

The Long Now of the Web: Inside the Internet Archive’s Fight Against Forgetting – HackerNoon

New Story, 1,290 reads

The Long Now of the Web: Inside the Internet Archive’s Fight Against Forgetting

by Bruce Li, January 12th, 2026

A Comprehensive Engineering and Operational Analysis of the Internet Archive

Introduction: The Hum of History in the Fog

If you stand quietly in the nave of the former Christian Science church on Funston Avenue in San Francisco’s Richmond District, you can hear the sound of the internet breathing. It is not the chaotic screech of a dial-up modem or the ping of a notification, but a steady, industrial hum—a low-frequency thrum generated by hundreds of spinning hard drives and the high-velocity fans that cool them. This is the headquarters of the Internet Archive, a non-profit library that has taken on the Sisyphean task of recording the entire digital history of human civilization.

Internet Archive’s office in San Francisco

Here, amidst the repurposed neoclassical columns and wooden pews of a building constructed to worship a different kind of permanence, lies the physical manifestation of the “virtual” world. We tend to think of the internet as an ethereal cloud, a place without geography or mass. But in this building, the internet has weight. It has heat. It requires electricity, maintenance, and a constant battle against the second law of thermodynamics. As of late 2025, this machine—collectively known as the Wayback Machine—has archived over one trillion web pages.1 It holds 99 petabytes of unique data, a number that expands to over 212 petabytes when accounting for backups and redundancy.3

The scale of the operation is staggering, but the engineering challenge is even deeper. How do you build a machine that can ingest the sprawling, dynamic, and ever-changing World Wide Web in real-time? How do you store that data for centuries when the average hard drive lasts only a few years? And perhaps most critically, how do you pay for the electricity, the bandwidth, and the legal defense funds required to keep the lights on in an era where copyright law and digital preservation are locked in a high-stakes collision?

This report delves into the mechanics of the Internet Archive with the precision of a teardown. We will strip back the chassis to examine the custom-built PetaBox servers that heat the building without air conditioning. We will trace the evolution of the web crawlers—from the early tape-based dumps of Alexa Internet to the sophisticated browser-based bots of 2025. We will analyze the financial ledger of this non-profit giant, exploring how it survives on a budget that is a rounding error for its Silicon Valley neighbors. And finally, we will look to the future, where the “Decentralized Web” (DWeb) promises to fragment the Archive into a million pieces to ensure it can never be destroyed.5

To understand the Archive is to understand the physical reality of digital memory. It is a story of 20,000 hard drives, 45 miles of cabling, and a vision that began in 1996 with a simple, audacious goal: “Universal Access to All Knowledge”.7

Part I: The Thermodynamics of Memory

The PetaBox Architecture: Engineering for Density and Heat

The heart of the Internet Archive is the PetaBox, a storage server custom-designed by the Archive’s staff to solve a specific problem: storing massive amounts of data with minimal power consumption and heat generation. In the early 2000s, off-the-shelf enterprise storage solutions from giants like EMC or NetApp were prohibitively expensive and power-hungry. They were designed for high-speed transactional data—like banking systems or stock exchanges—where milliseconds of latency matter. Archival storage, however, has different requirements. It needs to be dense, cheap, and low-power.

Brewster Kahle, founder of Internet Archive (with the PetaBox behind him)

Brewster Kahle, the Archive’s founder and a computer engineer who had previously founded the supercomputer company Thinking Machines, approached the problem with a different philosophy. Instead of high-performance RAID arrays, the Archive built the PetaBox using consumer-grade parts. The design philosophy was radical for its time: use “Just a Bunch of Disks” (JBOD) rather than expensive RAID controllers, and handle data redundancy via software rather than hardware.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The Long Now of the Web: Inside the Internet Archive’s Fight Against Forgetting | HackerNoon

Tags: Architecture, Brewster Kahle, California, Fight Against Forgetting, HackerNoon, Internet Archive, Long Now, Memory, PetaBox, San Francisco, Storage, World Wide Web, WWW
#Architecture #BrewsterKahle #California #FightAgainstForgetting #HackerNoon #InternetArchive #LongNow #Memory #PetaBox #SanFrancisco #Storage #WorldWideWeb #WWW

[Show GN: Agentic Patterns Snippets - AI 에이전트 설계 패턴 99개 카드 뷰어

해커뉴스에 게시된 AI 에이전트 설계 패턴 99개의 모음집을 카드 형태의 뷰어로 재구성하였습니다. 이 뷰어는 각 패턴을 ASCII 다이어그램과 요약으로 정리하여 에이전트 개발 시 참고하기 쉽게 제공합니다.

https://news.hada.io/topic?id=25637

#aiagents #designpatterns #awesomeresources #githubproject #hackernoon

Agentic Patterns Snippets - AI 에이전트 설계 패턴 99개 카드 뷰어

<p>해커뉴스에 올라왔던 awesome-agentic-patterns를 카드 형태로 훑어볼 수 있게 만들었습니다.</p> <p>원본은 AI 에이전트 실전 설계 패턴 99개 ...

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https://get.mypost.to/jY32Cy
How Ahrefs Became The Ouija Board of Digital Marketing
#digitalmarketing #ahrefs #seo #hackernoon
The SEO Metrics Snake Oil: How Ahrefs Became The Ouija Board of Digital Marketing | HackerNoon

How Ahrefs Became The Ouija Board of Digital Marketing - The $2,490 subscription that has apparently developed cataracts.