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Amdahl's Law and the Limits to Growth

https://steinacker.name/articles/amdahls-law-en/
1•gsteinacker•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Stop parallel AI coding sessions clobbering each other's handoffs

https://github.com/joshduffy/claude-handoff-guard
1•nahsuhn•4m ago•0 comments

Deep Dive into Kubernetes Gateway API

https://www.romaglushko.com/blog/k8s-gateway-api/
1•roma_glushko•5m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Prezlo – We built an API that tells AI agent whether to trust an expert

https://prezlo.io/
1•loptymobile•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: NvEnvy – A Notational Velocity (NvAlt) Reboot in Swift. OSS

https://github.com/kenm47/nvEnvy
2•hank2000•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Vibewarz – bot vs bot arena for vibecoders

https://vibewarz.com
1•gaomri•10m ago•1 comments

Rsync maintainer starts uses Claude, regressions mount

https://mastodon.gamedev.place/@JeremiahFieldhaven/116654345332213390
7•timmytokyo•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Inkfeed – RSS Reader for Kindle

https://inkfeed.xyz
1•adhamsalama•14m ago•1 comments

Artificial Intelligence for Software Engineering: From Probable to Provable

https://cacm.acm.org/opinion/artificial-intelligence-for-software-engineering-from-probable-to-pr...
1•yarapavan•15m ago•0 comments

AI Now Writes as Many Online Articles as Humans

https://graphite.io/five-percent/ai-now-writes-as-many-online-articles-as-humans-do
1•ChrisArchitect•16m ago•0 comments

Reviving Teletext for Ham Radio

https://spectrum.ieee.org/reviving-teletext-for-ham-radio
2•yarapavan•16m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Is the AI "Boom" Merely Another Excuse for Layoffs?

3•giardini•19m ago•1 comments

Show HN: TV Explorer. Adding advanced UI to free online TV

https://tvexplorer.live
2•dtagames•19m ago•1 comments

Mystery company accidentally blew $500M on Claude AI in a single month

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intelligence/mystery-company-accidentally-b...
1•yogthos•19m ago•1 comments

Startup offers free home cleaning–if it can record it all for robot training

https://arstechnica.com/ai/2026/05/robot-training-startup-will-send-humans-wearing-cameras-to-cle...
5•tartoran•21m ago•0 comments

Nesbitt: Protestware for Coding Agents

https://lwn.net/Articles/1075315/
3•Brajeshwar•22m ago•1 comments

Nature is expanding Registered Reports to all the fields in which we publish

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01629-y
1•bookofjoe•26m ago•0 comments

iFood "Mega Leak" Alert: What This Case Teaches All Business About Data Security

https://www.pentesty.co/blog/ifood-data-leak-extortion-2026
1•josanjohnata•28m ago•0 comments

Unix-CTF: Procedural Environments for Unix-Competence Reinforcement Learning

https://twitter.com/MavorParker/status/2060386383496433862
1•AMavorParker•29m ago•0 comments

Apollo and Blackstone are wrangling $36B to buy Google chips for Anthropic

https://qz.com/apollo-blackstone-36-billion-debt-deal-anthropic-google-chips-052926
2•cwwc•31m ago•1 comments

Let's Standardize the 1970 Epoch

https://github.com/billpg/1970EpochalTime/
1•billpg•32m ago•1 comments

CS 153: Frontier Systems (Amin Vahdat)

https://share.descript.com/view/rYJYVV36fKa
1•aloukissas•32m ago•0 comments

Woodworkers at Melbourne Design Week are building on sustainability

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-24/melbourne-design-week-women-woodworkers/106695946
1•Tomte•34m ago•0 comments

Magnets Are Bad for Hardware Again

https://hackaday.com/2026/05/21/magnets-are-bad-for-hardware-again/
3•speckx•36m ago•0 comments

Notes from the Mistral AI Now Summit in Paris

https://koenvangilst.nl/lab/mistral-ai-now-summit
7•vnglst•36m ago•0 comments

Liquid AI reveals 8B-A1B MoE trained on 38T

https://www.liquid.ai/blog/lfm2-5-8b-a1b
2•simjnd•38m ago•0 comments

Strace-UI, Bonsai_term, and the TUI Renaissance

https://blog.janestreet.com/strace-ui-bonsai-term-and-the-tui-renaissance/
1•hardwaregeek•38m ago•0 comments

Same Driver, new vehicle: Welcoming our first riders trips in the Ojai

https://waymo.com/blog/2026/05/welcoming-riders-in-the-ojai/
1•xnx•39m ago•0 comments

Which LLM is the best at finding real vulnerabilities?

https://medium.com/@lp1/which-llm-is-the-best-at-finding-real-vulnerabilities-part-1-2c51802cd55b
3•leakr•39m ago•0 comments

Lipstick on a Pig

https://blog.fredrb.com/2026/05/29/lipstick-on-a-pig/
1•fredrb•40m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

The Lisp in the Cellar: Dependent types that live upstairs [pdf]

https://zenodo.org/records/15424968
88•todsacerdoti•1y ago
Downloadable: https://zenodo.org/records/15424968/files/deputy-els.pdf

Comments

droideqa•1y ago
Sadly "deputy clojure" on Google brings no results...

The only hint is this repo[0] referenced in the paper.

[0]: https://gitlab.com/fredokun/deputy

agumonkey•1y ago
Pretty readable code
reuben364•1y ago
Thinking out aloud here.

One pattern that I have frequently used in EMACS elisp is that redefining a top-level value overwrites that value rather than shadowing it. Basically hot reloading. This doesn't work in a dependently typed context as the type of subsequent definitions can depend on values of earlier definitions.

    def t := string
    def x: t := "asdf"
    redef t := int
redefining t here would cause x to fail to type check. So the only options are to either shadow the variable t, or have redefinitions type-check all terms whose types depend on the value being redefined.

Excluding the type-level debugging they mention, I think a lean style language-server is a better approach. Otherwise you are basically using an append-only ed to edit your environment rather than a vi.

extrabajs•1y ago
I don’t see the connection to dependent types. But anyway, is ‘redef’ part of your language? What type would you give it?
reuben364•1y ago
I just wrote redef to emphasize that I'm not shadowing the original definition.

    def a := 1
    def f x := a * x
    -- at this point f 1 evaluates to 1
    redef a := 2
    -- at this point f 1 evaluates to 2
But with dependent types, types can depend on prior values (in the previous example the type of x depends on the value t in the most direct way possible, as the type of x is t). If you redefine values, the subsequent definitions may not type-check anymore.
extrabajs•1y ago
I see what you mean. But would you not experience the same sort of issue simply from redefining types in the same way? It seems this kind of destructive operation (whether on types or terms) is the issue. As someone who's used to ML, it seems strange to allow this kind of thing (instead of simply shadowing), but maybe it's a Lisp thing?
resize2996•1y ago
> EMACS elisp

I used this to write the front end for an ATM machine.

wk_end•1y ago
I've fantasized about some kind of a dependently-typed Smalltalk-like thing before, and in those fantasies the solution would be that changes would be submitted in the form of transactions - they wouldn't be live until you bundled them all together into one big change that would be fully type-checked, as you describe.
dang•1y ago
Any URL for this that we can open in a browser (as opposed to the dreaded "Content-Disposition: attachment")?
Jtsummers•1y ago
https://zenodo.org/records/15424968 - This at least takes you to a webpage where you can view the paper. If you select to download it, it still downloads of course instead of just opening in the browser.
dang•1y ago
Thanks! I've switched to that above, and put the downloadable link in the top text.
reikonomusha•1y ago
Related context: The 2025 European Lisp Symposium [1] was just wrapped a few hours ago in Zurich. There was content on:

- Static typing a la Haskell with Coalton in Common Lisp

- Dependent typing with Deputy in Clojure (this post)

- The Common Lisp compiler SBCL ported to the Nintendo Switch

- Common Lisp and AI/deep learning

- A special retrospective on Modula and Oberon

- Many lightning talks.

[1] https://european-lisp-symposium.org/2025/index.html

no_wizard•1y ago
I feel like Lisp would be an ideal language for AI development. Its exceedingly good for DSL development and pattern matching. Its already structurally like math notation as well, which I would think would lend itself to thinking how models would consume information and learn
rscho•1y ago
Well... believe it or not, some have thought of using lisp for AI for quite some time. ;-)
froh•1y ago
indeed.

Peter Norvig, 1992

Paradigms of AI Programming: Case Studies in Common Lisp

https://g.co/kgs/hck8wsE

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Norvig

it's no coincidence Google is actively maintaining sbcl, either.

Zambyte
fithisux•1y ago
Impressive.
kscarlet•1y ago
The only option that you described is called "hyperstatic global environment".

And it is called that for a reason, it is not very dynamic :) and probably too static to the taste of many Lisp and all Smalltalk fans.

•
1y ago
Why not go all the way to the source? John McCarthy coined the term "artificial intelligence", and then invented / discovered LISP in pursuit of it in the 1950s :D
ayrtondesozzla•1y ago
https://quantumzeitgeist.com/lisp-and-the-dawn-of-artificial...

Lisp was the de facto language of artificial intelligence in the U.S. for many years. Apparently Prolog was popular in Europe (according to Norvig's PAIP)