58 pointsby keepamovin11 days ago6 comments
  • keepamovin11 days ago
    After experimenting with cycling punctuation, and random capitalization I hit on the idea to use each word as a bit and map the original version of the word to 0 and the title-case-toggled version of the word to 1.

    Then just use the text file as a "counter nonce" and count from 0 until we find a counter that hashes to the vanity prefix we want.

    The advantage of this is flipping the capitalization of the first letter of each word doesn't drastically alter the visual appearance of the file (tho it may alter semantics!), and you get an easy to understand amount of entropy (number of states) to walk through.

    The C version linked only supports counting up to ~4 billion but it could be easily extended. A JS version using BigInt can go unlimited.

    For reference the included example text took a surprising 2 billion iterations to discover the correct 8 digit hash which is about what you'd expect from random (i.e., half the state space of 16*8 = (2*4)*8)

  • kazinator8 days ago
    Don't bother applying here if your github doesn't look like this:

      $ git log --oneline
      deadbeef5 (HEAD -> master): Revised documentation of frobozz widget.
      0cafef00d scrot_compress: fixed rare recursion case.
      5ca1ab1e1 image_convolve: use thread pool for better performance.
    • jagged-chisel8 days ago
      Sadly, you won’t get any senior applicants if you’re mistaking the website for the tool.
      • kazinator8 days ago
        Here, that touch is necessary for a hint of realism.
    • TZubiri8 days ago
      This is cute but it works in the opposite for me, looks very unprofessional and gives the impression you get distracted with nerdy internals instead of building product.
      • fyrn_7 days ago
        On the other hand, where I work we want people like that. Not every place is a CRUD slop shop with joined at the hip SPA that needs more meat for the ginder. Research and specialized optimization roles exist
    • actinium2268 days ago
      I don't get the last one?
      • ruffrey8 days ago
        "scalable"
      • 8 days ago
        undefined
    • coolThingsFirst8 days ago
      what?
      • frutiger8 days ago
        Read the commit sha prefixes as English
      • celegans258 days ago
        Look at the hashes of the commits
  • coolThingsFirst8 days ago
    Interesting, also this quote is as interesting as the code:

    "Your job, throughout your entire life, is to disappoint as many people as it takes to avoid disappointing yourself."

    • metadat8 days ago
      That took a second to process and sink in.

      Added to my shameful, neurotic HN profile.. haha, thank you!

  • susam8 days ago
    The SHA-256 hash of this sentence begins with 0573e7473.
    • orphea8 days ago
      The SHA256 for this sentence begins with: one, eight, two, a, seven, c and nine.
    • akoboldfrying7 days ago
      The SHA-256 hash of this sentence does not.
    • keepamovin7 days ago
      OK, that's a cool way to fuzz the digest rather than the text :)
    • xeckr8 days ago
      Nice one.
  • saulpw8 days ago
    Cool! I made a multithreaded version about 10 years that works for binary files like .zip files: https://github.com/century-arcade/src/tree/master/tools/vain...
    • keepamovin7 days ago
      Cool! How do you handle internal checks in the files? How does overwriting 8 zeroes not break stuff?
      • saulpw7 days ago
        Well it was intended/used to fill out a .zip file comment section, so those 8 zeroes were ignored anyway.
  • ranger_danger8 days ago
    [flagged]