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The adder at the heart of Intel's 8087 floating-point chip

https://www.righto.com/2026/06/intel-8087-adder-reverse-engineered.html
1•pwg•28s ago•0 comments

Vercel Drop

https://vercel.com/changelog/vercel-drop
1•taubek•4m ago•0 comments

AI Coding at Home Without Going Broke

https://stephen.bochinski.dev/blog/2026/06/13/ai-coding-at-home-without-going-broke/
2•sbochins•5m ago•0 comments

More Tailscale tricks for your jailbroken Kindle

https://tailscale.com/blog/jailbroken-kindle-proxy-tun-modes
1•Brajeshwar•9m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Lightweight C++23 S3 client with no extra deps (just curl and OpenSSL)

https://github.com/ggcr/s3cpp
1•ggcr•9m ago•0 comments

You Have No Idea What a Trillion Dollars Is–and We Have Proof

https://www.wsj.com/business/trillions-game-spacex-first-trillionaire-elon-musk-75cfbf1b
2•karakoram•12m ago•1 comments

Solar Overtakes Coal in US Electricity for the First Month on Record`

https://ember-energy.org/latest-updates/solar-overtakes-coal-in-us-electricity-for-the-first-mont...
3•karakoram•12m ago•0 comments

Vibe Coding is the new Internet Dating

https://joecmarshall.com/posts/vibecoding-is-the-new-internet-dating/
1•CoreSet•13m ago•0 comments

The Day the US Government Shut Down the Most Powerful AI

https://www.pentesty.co/blog/fable5-mythos5-us-government-ban-cybersecurity
2•johnzoro107•15m ago•0 comments

Show HN: TrueQR – QR codes that don't expire, because static codes never could

https://trueqr.co
2•ElmerWallace•16m ago•1 comments

Masterfile – Scratch pad, vault, budget, notes, and Kanban in one iOS app

https://apps.apple.com/ph/app/masterfile/id6770906172
1•louiscada•17m ago•1 comments

$40k / Month from a Stolen Game

https://sawthat.io/case-studies/11062026-mmv
2•sickosanchez•17m ago•0 comments

History Repeating at Nintendo

https://ravi64.com/zelda-ocarina-history-repeating/
2•outrunner•17m ago•0 comments

Convoro - Forum software for the AI Age

https://convoro.co
2•ernestdefoe•20m ago•0 comments

First person in the world treated with gene therapy to regenerate optic neurons

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/world-first-therapy-to-make-cells-young-again-given-to...
3•ck2•22m ago•0 comments

Pretty Source – Beautify

https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/pretty-source/agiaaocdhepjibmfcjjdkkohnlkgenia
2•ihorko•22m ago•0 comments

US ban on Mythos is related to a jailbreak research by Amazon researchers

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/technology/tech-news/us-ban-on-anthropics-fable-5-and-mythos-...
3•maxloh•23m ago•0 comments

Underwater RF Communication at 700M Using Magnetoelectric Antennas

https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.09241
2•norcalkc•23m ago•0 comments

I built a local, free Granola alternative

https://hobnob.info/
2•polemos•25m ago•1 comments

The Mutualism Accord: a draft protocol for local-first, user-loyal AI agents

https://mutualismaccord.org
2•ravenpaige•26m ago•0 comments

LoongForge End-to-End Optimization for GR00T N1.6 Delivers 2.3× Throughput

https://baidu-baige.github.io/LoongForge/blog/2026-06-loongforge-groot-n16-acceleration.html
2•mindzzz•30m ago•0 comments

SpaceX Just Made the AI Infrastructure War Public

https://www.forbes.com/sites/robertszczerba/2026/06/13/spacex-just-made-the-ai-infrastructure-war...
4•cyrc•30m ago•0 comments

Sentencing the Innocent

https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2026/06/sentencing-the-innocent/
2•jjgreen•30m ago•0 comments

GLM 5.2 Is Out

https://digg.com/tech/ii9xibgn
6•aloknnikhil•31m ago•3 comments

When We Cease to Understand the World

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_We_Cease_to_Understand_the_World
3•petethomas•33m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Brightdeck – an OOXML-compatible AI presentation maker

https://brightdeck.ai/
4•mfn-throw•35m ago•1 comments

Cross-System Constraint Collisions: The Governance Gap in Enterprise Agentic AI [pdf]

https://himalaian.com/publications/CrAIg_WhitePaper_Public_v1.0.pdf
2•michaelmallon•35m ago•0 comments

Hacker Scripts

https://github.com/NARKOZ/hacker-scripts
2•skogstokig•35m ago•0 comments

The Wayland Protocol

https://wayland-book.com/protocol-design/design-patterns.html
3•tosh•36m ago•0 comments

Arch Linux AUR affected-package list after malicious commits were deleted

https://md.archlinux.org/s/SxbqukK6IA
2•tjek•38m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Decomposing Transactional Systems

https://transactional.blog/blog/2025-decomposing-transactional-systems
132•pongogogo•1y ago

Comments

karmakaze•1y ago
> commit version is chosen — the time at which the database claims all reads and writes occurred atomically.

This post doesn't mention transaction isolation specifically though it does say "How does this end up being equal to SERIALIZABLE MySQL?" So maybe I'm supposed to consider this post only for 'Every transactional system' running with SERIALIZABLE transaction isolation. I don't particularly care about that. I do care that the database I use clearly states what its isolation names mean in detail and that it does exactly what it says. e.g. I don't expect MySQL SERIALIZABLE to exactly mean the same as any other database that uses the same term.

mjb•1y ago
MySQL Serializable is pretty similar to serializable in other databases, in terms of the observable anomalies. There's a good set of tests here: https://github.com/ept/hermitage

> So maybe I'm supposed to consider this post only for 'Every transactional system' running with SERIALIZABLE transaction isolation.

No, it's a general point about the nature of transactions in DBMSs, and the different implementation choices. As the article says, there are some variations (e.g. MVCC at levels lower than serializable inherently has two 'order' steps).

karmakaze•1y ago
I'm not seeing the mention of two 'order' steps. Are you referring to the larger part of what I quoted?

> MVCC databases may assign two versions: an initial read version, and a final commit version. In this case, we’re mainly focused on the specific point at which the commit version is chosen — the time at which the database claims all reads and writes occurred atomically.

For non-SERIALIZABLE isolation there may be no such "time at which the database claims all reads and writes occurred atomically", which is how I took the rest of the post to mean when running with SERIALIZABLE isolation.

transactional•1y ago
(Hi! Post author here.)

It is written with a lean towards serializable, partly because there's a wide variety of easy examples to pull which all implement serializable, but the ideas mostly extend to non-serializable as well. Non-serializable but still MVCC will also place all of their writes as having happened at a single commit timestamp, they just don't try to serialize the reads there, and that's fine. When looking at non-serializable not MVCC databases, it's still useful to just try to answer how the system does each of the four parts in isolation. Maybe I should have been more direct that you're welcome to bend/break the mental model in whatever ways are helpful to understand some database.

The line specifically about MySQL running at serializable was because it was in the Spanner section, and Spanner is a (strictly) serializable database.

karmakaze•1y ago
Thanks for the clarifications and diagrams. I can see how using something like Spanner from the outset makes sense to use and stick with serializable isolation. With other SQL dbs, I've mostly seen repeatable read, read committed, and even read uncommitted used in the name of performance. Read committed works fine but you have to design everything for it from the start with thoughtful write and read sequences.

Moving to serializable should be easy but isn't in the case of Spanner and the like because you can't make 100+ of sub-millisecond queries to respond to an API request if that's how your app evolved.

The way I imagine the future is to bring the code closer to the data like stored procedures, but maybe in a new way like modern languages compiled to run (and if necessary retry) in a shard of the database.

mjb•1y ago
This is great, really worth reading if you're interested in transactions.

I liked it so much I wrote up how the model applies to Amazon Aurora DSQL at https://brooker.co.za/blog/2025/04/17/decomposing.html It's interesting because of DSQL's distributed nature, and the decoupling between durability and application to storage in our architecture.

maniacalhack0r•1y ago
DSQL is so cool - have been following since the release and once it supports more of the postgres feature set + extensions it’ll be a killer. Fantastic architecture deep dive at ReInvent as well.
pongogogo•1y ago
Hey Mark, I actually found this post via yours so thanks!