February 28, 2026

Rate-limited enlightenment, anyone?

Show HN: Now I Get It – Translate scientific papers into interactive webpages

Science, decoded for humans — fans cheer, skeptics demand receipts, and limits spark rage

TLDR: A new tool turns research PDFs into interactive plain‑English pages. Commenters love the concept but roast daily limits, push for open‑source and social previews, and demand data‑checking features—signaling a bigger battle to make science readable without trusting AI summaries blindly.

“Now I Get It” promises to turn dense scientific PDFs into shareable, interactive pages in plain English. The gallery jumps from retinal vessels to cybersecurity and even Immanuel Kant’s 1795 essay, which sparked jokes like “Now I Kant It.” Early reactions: excitement and curiosity, with a healthy dose of side‑eye.

The first fight: access. One commenter asked if they can run it themselves and whether the code is public, hinting at an open‑source expectation. Another got hit with “Daily processing limit reached” on a tiny file, cue the meme of a rate‑limited enlightenment. A helpful voice requested slick social previews and shared a social preview, while others pitched a donate button and a nominate‑a‑paper queue to showcase more fields.

The deeper debate: trust. A biotech pro warned that AI tools—so‑called “large language models” that generate text—can be too credulous about authors’ claims. Their dream feature: pull real data from figures and tables and regraph it to check if the conclusions hold. The room split between “finally, plain language” and “show me the receipts.” Verdict: love the idea, demand transparency, fewer limits, and smarter fact‑checks.

Key Points

  • “Now I Get It” converts uploaded scientific PDFs into shareable, interactive webpages written in plain language.
  • The site features a gallery of recent explanations across multiple domains, from AI and cryptanalysis to clinical guidance and philosophy.
  • Examples include works on Transformer‑U‑Net models, CoWTracker, diffusion models for road networks, Git Re‑Basin, and LangSec.
  • Regulatory guidance from the U.S. FDA (CDER/CBER) and historical texts like Kant’s essay are included, showing broad applicability.
  • Each gallery item lists titles, authors, and dates, indicating the variety and time span of materials the tool can process.

Hottest takes

"can i spin this up myself? is the code anywhere?" — enos_feedler
"Daily processing limit reached" — lamename
"LLMs can be overly credulous with the authors' claims" — armedgorilla
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