Don't miss how this works. It's not a server-side application - this code runs entirely in your browser using SQLite compiled to WASM, but rather than fetching a full 22GB database it instead uses a clever hack that retrieves just "shards" of the SQLite database needed for the page you are viewing.
I watched it in the browser network panel and saw it fetch:
It's reminiscent of that brilliant SQLite.js VFS trick from a few years ago: https://github.com/phiresky/sql.js-httpvfs - only that one used HTTP range headers, this one uses sharded files instead.
There was a UK government GitHub repo that did something interesting with this kind of trick against S3 but I checked just now and the repo is a 404. Here are my notes about what it did: https://simonwillison.net/2025/Feb/7/sqlite-s3vfs/
This is somewhat related to a large dataset browsing service a friend and I worked on a while back - we made index files, and the browser ran a lightweight query planner to fetch static chunks which could be served from S3/torrents/whatever. It worked pretty well, and I think there’s a lot of potential for this style of data serving infra.
I wonder how much smaller it could get with some compression. You could probably encode "This website hijacks the scrollbar and I don't like it" comments into just a few bits.
This is pretty neat! The calendar didn't work well for me. I could only seem to navigate by month. And when I selected the earliest day (after much tapping), nothing seemed to be updated.
Similar to Single-page applications (SPA), single-table application (STA) might become a thing. Just a shard a table on multiple keys and serve the shards as static files, provided that the data is Ok to share, similar to sharing static html content.
do you mean single database? it'd be quite hard if not impossible to make applications using a single table (no relations). reddit did it though, they have a huge table of "things" iirc.
> Next, we've got more than just two tables. The quote/paraphrase doesn't make it clear, but we've got two tables per thing. That means Accounts have an "account_thing" and an "account_data" table, Subreddits have a "subreddit_thing" and "subreddit_data" table, etc.
One interesting feature of DuckDB is that it can run queries against HTTP ranges of a static file hosted via HTTPS, and there's an official WebAssembly build of it that can do that same trick.
So you can dump e.g. all of Hacker News in a single multi-GB Parquet file somewhere and build a client-side JavaScript application that can run queries against that without having to fetch the whole thing.
DuckDB is an open-source column-oriented Relational Database Management System (RDBMS). It's designed to provide high performance on complex queries against large databases in embedded configuration.
"DICT FSST (Dictionary FSST) represents a hybrid compression technique that combines the benefits of Dictionary Encoding with the string-level compression capabilities of FSST.
This approach was implemented and integrated into DuckDB as part of ongoing efforts to optimize string storage and processing performance."
https://homepages.cwi.nl/~boncz/msc/2025-YanLannaAlexandre.p...
It is very similar to SQLite in that it can run in-process and store its data as a file.
It's different in that it is tailored to analytics, among other things storage is columnar, and it can run off some common data analytics file formats.
Not the author here. I’m not sure about DuckDB, but SQLite allows you to simply use a file as a database and for archiving, it’s really helpful. One file, that’s it.
At a glance, that is missing (at least) a `parent` or `parent_id` attribute which items in HN can have (and you kind of need if you want to render comments), see http://hn.algolia.com/api/v1/items/46436741
What a reminder on how text is so much more efficient than video, its crazy! Could you imagine the same amount of knowledge (or dribble) but in video form? I wonder how large that would be.
Average high quality 1080p60 video has bitrate of 5Mbps, which is equivalent to 120k English words per second. With average English speech being 150wpm, we end up with text being 50 thousand times more space efficient.
Converting 22GB of uncompressed text into video essay lands us at ~1PB or 1000TB.
one could use a video llm to generate the video, diagrams or the stills automatically based on the text. except when it's boardgames playthroughs or programming i just transcribe to text, summarise and read youtube video's.
How do you read youtube videos? Very curious as I have been wanting to watch PDF's scroll by slowly on a large TV. I am interested in the workflow of getting a pdf/document into a scrolling video format. These days NotebookLM may be an option but I am curious if there is something custom. If I can get it into video form (mp4) then I can even deliver it via plex.
Wonder if you could turn this into a .zim file for offline browsing with an offline browser like Kiwix, etc. [0]
I've been taking frequent "offline-only-day" breaks to consolidate whatever I've been learning, and Kiwix has been a great tool for reference (offline Wikipedia, StackOverflow and whatnot).
I did something similar. I build a tool[1] to import the Project Arctic Shift dumps[2] of reddit into sqlite. It was mostly an exercise to experiment with Rust and SQLite (HN's two favorite topics). If you don't build a FTS5 index and import without WAL (--unsafe-mode), import of every reddit comment and submission takes a bit over 24 hours and produces a ~10TB DB.
SQLite offers a lot of cool json features that would let you store the raw json and operate on that, but I eschewed them in favor of parsing only once at load time. THat also lets me normalize the data a bit.
I find that building the DB is pretty "fast", but queries run much faster if I immediately vacuum the DB after building it. The vacuum operation is actually slower than the original import, taking a few days to finish.
I doubt it. "hacker news" spelled lowercase? comma after "beauty"? missing "in" after "it's"? i doubt an LLM would make such syntax mistakes. it's just good writing, that's also possible these days.
There's a thing in soccer at the moment where a tackle looks fine in realtime but when the video referee shows it to the onpitch referee, they show the impact in slo-mo over and over again and it always looks way worse.
I wonder if there's something like this going on here. I never thought it was LLM on first read, and I still don't, but when you take snippets and point at them it makes me think maybe they are
I add em dashes to everything I write now, solely to throw people who look for them off. Lots of editors add them automatically when you have two sequential dashes between words — a common occurrence, like that one. And this is is Chrome on iOS doing it automatically.
Ooh, I used “sequential”, ooh, I used an em dash. ZOMG AI IS COMING FOR US ALL
> I'm really sorry to have to ask this, but this really feels like you had an LLM write it?
Ending a sentence with a question mark doesn’t automatically make your sentence a question. You didn’t ask anything. You stated an opinion and followed it with a question mark.
If you intended to ask if the text was written by AI, no, you don’t have to ask that.
I am so damn tired of the “that didn’t happen” and the “AI did that” people when there is zero evidence of either being true.
These people are the most exhausting people I have ever encountered in my entire life.
Don't miss how this works. It's not a server-side application - this code runs entirely in your browser using SQLite compiled to WASM, but rather than fetching a full 22GB database it instead uses a clever hack that retrieves just "shards" of the SQLite database needed for the page you are viewing.
I watched it in the browser network panel and saw it fetch:
As I paginated to previous days.It's reminiscent of that brilliant SQLite.js VFS trick from a few years ago: https://github.com/phiresky/sql.js-httpvfs - only that one used HTTP range headers, this one uses sharded files instead.
The interactive SQL query interface at https://hackerbook.dosaygo.com/?view=query asks you to select which shards to run the query against, there are 1636 total.
Is there anything more production grade built around the same idea of HTTP range requests like that sqlite thing? This has so much potential
There was a UK government GitHub repo that did something interesting with this kind of trick against S3 but I checked just now and the repo is a 404. Here are my notes about what it did: https://simonwillison.net/2025/Feb/7/sqlite-s3vfs/
Looks like it's still on PyPI though: https://pypi.org/project/sqlite-s3vfs/
You can see inside it with my PyPI package explorer: https://tools.simonwillison.net/zip-wheel-explorer?package=s...
This is somewhat related to a large dataset browsing service a friend and I worked on a while back - we made index files, and the browser ran a lightweight query planner to fetch static chunks which could be served from S3/torrents/whatever. It worked pretty well, and I think there’s a lot of potential for this style of data serving infra.
Vfs support is amazing.
I wonder how much smaller it could get with some compression. You could probably encode "This website hijacks the scrollbar and I don't like it" comments into just a few bits.
This is pretty neat! The calendar didn't work well for me. I could only seem to navigate by month. And when I selected the earliest day (after much tapping), nothing seemed to be updated.
Nonetheless, random access history is cool.
Similar to Single-page applications (SPA), single-table application (STA) might become a thing. Just a shard a table on multiple keys and serve the shards as static files, provided that the data is Ok to share, similar to sharing static html content.
[The Baked Data architectural pattern](https://simonwillison.net/2021/Jul/28/baked-data/)
do you mean single database? it'd be quite hard if not impossible to make applications using a single table (no relations). reddit did it though, they have a huge table of "things" iirc.
That is a common misconception.
> Next, we've got more than just two tables. The quote/paraphrase doesn't make it clear, but we've got two tables per thing. That means Accounts have an "account_thing" and an "account_data" table, Subreddits have a "subreddit_thing" and "subreddit_data" table, etc.
https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/z9sm8/comment/...
That repo is throwing up a 404 for me.
Question - did you consider tradeoffs between duckdb (or other columnar stores) and SQLite?
No, I just went straight to sqlite. What is duckdb?
One interesting feature of DuckDB is that it can run queries against HTTP ranges of a static file hosted via HTTPS, and there's an official WebAssembly build of it that can do that same trick.
So you can dump e.g. all of Hacker News in a single multi-GB Parquet file somewhere and build a client-side JavaScript application that can run queries against that without having to fetch the whole thing.
You can run searches on https://lil.law.harvard.edu/data-gov-archive/ and watch the network panel to see DuckDB in action.
DuckDB is an open-source column-oriented Relational Database Management System (RDBMS). It's designed to provide high performance on complex queries against large databases in embedded configuration.
It has transparent compression built-in and has support for natural language queries. https://buckenhofer.com/2025/11/agentic-ai-with-duckdb-and-s...
"DICT FSST (Dictionary FSST) represents a hybrid compression technique that combines the benefits of Dictionary Encoding with the string-level compression capabilities of FSST. This approach was implemented and integrated into DuckDB as part of ongoing efforts to optimize string storage and processing performance." https://homepages.cwi.nl/~boncz/msc/2025-YanLannaAlexandre.p...
It is very similar to SQLite in that it can run in-process and store its data as a file.
It's different in that it is tailored to analytics, among other things storage is columnar, and it can run off some common data analytics file formats.
While I suspect DuckDB would compress better, given the ubiquity of SQLite, it seems a fine standard choice.
Not the author here. I’m not sure about DuckDB, but SQLite allows you to simply use a file as a database and for archiving, it’s really helpful. One file, that’s it.
DuckDB does as well. A super simplified explanation of duckdb is that it’s sqlite but columnar, and so is better for analytics of large datasets.
The schema is this: items(id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, type TEXT, time INTEGER, by TEXT, title TEXT, text TEXT, url TEXT
Doesn't scream columnar database to me.
At a glance, that is missing (at least) a `parent` or `parent_id` attribute which items in HN can have (and you kind of need if you want to render comments), see http://hn.algolia.com/api/v1/items/46436741
Edges are a separate table
What a reminder on how text is so much more efficient than video, its crazy! Could you imagine the same amount of knowledge (or dribble) but in video form? I wonder how large that would be.
Average high quality 1080p60 video has bitrate of 5Mbps, which is equivalent to 120k English words per second. With average English speech being 150wpm, we end up with text being 50 thousand times more space efficient.
Converting 22GB of uncompressed text into video essay lands us at ~1PB or 1000TB.
one could use a video llm to generate the video, diagrams or the stills automatically based on the text. except when it's boardgames playthroughs or programming i just transcribe to text, summarise and read youtube video's.
How do you read youtube videos? Very curious as I have been wanting to watch PDF's scroll by slowly on a large TV. I am interested in the workflow of getting a pdf/document into a scrolling video format. These days NotebookLM may be an option but I am curious if there is something custom. If I can get it into video form (mp4) then I can even deliver it via plex.
Can be nice to pull a raw transcript and have it formatted as HTML (formatting/punctuation fixes applied).
Best locally of course to avoid “I burned a lake for this?” guilt.
Wonder if you could turn this into a .zim file for offline browsing with an offline browser like Kiwix, etc. [0]
I've been taking frequent "offline-only-day" breaks to consolidate whatever I've been learning, and Kiwix has been a great tool for reference (offline Wikipedia, StackOverflow and whatnot).
[0] https://kiwix.org/en/the-new-kiwix-library-is-available/
Oh this should TOTALLY be available to those who are scrolling through sources on the Kiwix app!
That's pretty neat!
I did something similar. I build a tool[1] to import the Project Arctic Shift dumps[2] of reddit into sqlite. It was mostly an exercise to experiment with Rust and SQLite (HN's two favorite topics). If you don't build a FTS5 index and import without WAL (--unsafe-mode), import of every reddit comment and submission takes a bit over 24 hours and produces a ~10TB DB.
SQLite offers a lot of cool json features that would let you store the raw json and operate on that, but I eschewed them in favor of parsing only once at load time. THat also lets me normalize the data a bit.
I find that building the DB is pretty "fast", but queries run much faster if I immediately vacuum the DB after building it. The vacuum operation is actually slower than the original import, taking a few days to finish.
[1] https://github.com/Paul-E/Pushshift-Importer
[2] https://github.com/ArthurHeitmann/arctic_shift/blob/master/d...
You could check out SQLite's auto_vacuum which reclaims space without rebuilding the entire db https://sqlite.org/pragma.html#pragma_auto_vacuum
22gb for mostly text? tried loading the site, it's pretty slow. curious how the query performance is with this much data in sqlite
The query tab looks quite complex with all these content shards: https://hackerbook.dosaygo.com/?view=query
I have a much simpler database: https://play.clickhouse.com/play?user=play#U0VMRUNUIHRpbWUsI...
Does your database also runs offline/locally in the browser? Seems to be the reason for the large number of shards.
The link seems to be down, was it taken down?
Probably just forgot to make it public.
This would be awesome as a cross platform app.
1 hour passed and it's already nuked?
Thank you btw
How much space is needed? ...for the data .... Im wondering if it would work on a tablet? ....
~9GB gzipped.
Is this updated regularly? 404 on GitHub as the other comment.
With all due respect it would be great if there is an official HN public dump available (and not requiring stuff such as BigQuery which is expensive).
> Community, All the HN belong to you. This is an archive of hacker news that fits in your browser.
> 20 years of HN arguments and beauty, can be yours forever. So they'll never die. Ever. It's the unkillable static archive of HN and it's your hands
I'm really sorry to have to ask this, but this really feels like you had an LLM write it?
Even if so, would it have mattered? The point is showing off the SQLite DB.
But it didn’t read LLM generated IMO.
I doubt it. "hacker news" spelled lowercase? comma after "beauty"? missing "in" after "it's"? i doubt an LLM would make such syntax mistakes. it's just good writing, that's also possible these days.
There's a thing in soccer at the moment where a tackle looks fine in realtime but when the video referee shows it to the onpitch referee, they show the impact in slo-mo over and over again and it always looks way worse.
I wonder if there's something like this going on here. I never thought it was LLM on first read, and I still don't, but when you take snippets and point at them it makes me think maybe they are
Why do you say that?
Because anything that even slightly differs from the standard American phrasing of something must be "LLM generated" these days.
With the em dashes I see you. But at this point idrc so long as it reads well. Everyone uses spell check…
I add em dashes to everything I write now, solely to throw people who look for them off. Lots of editors add them automatically when you have two sequential dashes between words — a common occurrence, like that one. And this is is Chrome on iOS doing it automatically.
Ooh, I used “sequential”, ooh, I used an em dash. ZOMG AI IS COMING FOR US ALL
Ya—in fact, globally replaced on iOS (sent from Safari)
Also for reference: “this shortcut can be toggled using the switch labeled 'Smart Punctuation' in General > Keyboard settings.”
Sometimes I want to write more creatively, but then worry I’ll be accused of being an LLM. So I dumb it down. Remove the colorful language. Conform.
> I'm really sorry to have to ask this, but this really feels like you had an LLM write it?
Ending a sentence with a question mark doesn’t automatically make your sentence a question. You didn’t ask anything. You stated an opinion and followed it with a question mark.
If you intended to ask if the text was written by AI, no, you don’t have to ask that.
I am so damn tired of the “that didn’t happen” and the “AI did that” people when there is zero evidence of either being true.
These people are the most exhausting people I have ever encountered in my entire life.