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annjose | 20 days ago

Let's look at an example post in HN Companion. This is the post on singularity in the home page right now:

https://app.hncompanion.com/item?id=46962996

This post has 500+ comments with various viewpoints and you see the summary on the right side.

You are right that most of the time threads are organized into local groups. But in the above example, there are many comments that relate to the same topic, but are not under the same parent comment. HN Companion's summary surfaces this into a topic "Limitations of Current AI Models" which shows comments from up and down the post.

You can click on the author name in that topic in the summary panel, it will take you directly to the comment. This is what we meant by "continue the conversation there", i.e you are now in the main HN experience, so you can navigate to child/parent/sibling comments (through the link buttons or keyboard navigation).

We definitely don't want AI to write comments. Happy to elaborate if you need.

discuss

order

altmanaltman|20 days ago

Honestly, after checking out the link, seems like something I'll personally never use/want.

I'm okay with crawling through comments and taking in the various viewpoints instead of having an LLM summarize it for me.

It basically kills the entire tone/vibe of the place and makes everything seem like robot-written with no personality. Also it's kind of weird you're taking other people's words and then reframing it for them/others.

Also nowhere does that thread seem to be "overwhelming with information" like you originally claimed. Basically solving a non-problem.

georgeck|20 days ago

Fair enough. I completely understand that the experience and hunting for gems in the comments is the core appeal of HN for many and AI summaries definitely aren't for everyone.

That said, we are seeing a consistent daily user base who do find value in the summarization, so it seems to be solving a pain point for a specific segment of readers, even if not for all.

Apart from the AI features, we actually built HN Companion as a general power-user client. It supports keyboard-first navigation (vim-style J/K bindings for comment navigation), seeing context for parent/child comments without losing your place, and tracking specific authors across a thread.

You might find those utility features useful even if you ignore the summary sidebar entirely. In the browser extension, the summary panel is something the user have to activate - it doesn't show-up by default.