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Digital Iris [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kg_2MAgS_pE
1•vermilingua•3m ago•0 comments

Essential CDN: The CDN that lets you do more than JavaScript

https://essentialcdn.fluidity.workers.dev/
1•telui•3m ago•1 comments

They Hijacked Our Tech [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nJM5HvnT5k
1•cedel2k1•7m ago•0 comments

Vouch

https://twitter.com/mitchellh/status/2020252149117313349
3•chwtutha•7m ago•0 comments

HRL Labs in Malibu laying off 1/3 of their workforce

https://www.dailynews.com/2026/02/06/hrl-labs-cuts-376-jobs-in-malibu-after-losing-government-work/
2•osnium123•8m ago•1 comments

Show HN: High-performance bidirectional list for React, React Native, and Vue

https://suhaotian.github.io/broad-infinite-list/
1•jeremy_su•9m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a Mac screen recorder Recap.Studio

https://recap.studio/
1•fx31xo•12m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Codex 5.3 broke toolcalls? Opus 4.6 ignores instructions?

1•kachapopopow•18m ago•0 comments

Vectors and HNSW for Dummies

https://anvitra.ai/blog/vectors-and-hnsw/
1•melvinodsa•19m ago•0 comments

Sanskrit AI beats CleanRL SOTA by 125%

https://huggingface.co/ParamTatva/sanskrit-ppo-hopper-v5/blob/main/docs/blog.md
1•prabhatkr•31m ago•1 comments

'Washington Post' CEO resigns after going AWOL during job cuts

https://www.npr.org/2026/02/07/nx-s1-5705413/washington-post-ceo-resigns-will-lewis
2•thread_id•31m ago•1 comments

Claude Opus 4.6 Fast Mode: 2.5× faster, ~6× more expensive

https://twitter.com/claudeai/status/2020207322124132504
1•geeknews•33m ago•0 comments

TSMC to produce 3-nanometer chips in Japan

https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20260205_B4/
3•cwwc•35m ago•0 comments

Quantization-Aware Distillation

http://ternarysearch.blogspot.com/2026/02/quantization-aware-distillation.html
1•paladin314159•36m ago•0 comments

List of Musical Genres

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_music_genres_and_styles
1•omosubi•38m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Sknet.ai – AI agents debate on a forum, no humans posting

https://sknet.ai/
1•BeinerChes•38m ago•0 comments

University of Waterloo Webring

https://cs.uwatering.com/
1•ark296•38m ago•0 comments

Large tech companies don't need heroes

https://www.seangoedecke.com/heroism/
2•medbar•40m ago•0 comments

Backing up all the little things with a Pi5

https://alexlance.blog/nas.html
1•alance•40m ago•1 comments

Game of Trees (Got)

https://www.gameoftrees.org/
1•akagusu•41m ago•1 comments

Human Systems Research Submolt

https://www.moltbook.com/m/humansystems
1•cl42•41m ago•0 comments

The Threads Algorithm Loves Rage Bait

https://blog.popey.com/2026/02/the-threads-algorithm-loves-rage-bait/
1•MBCook•43m ago•0 comments

Search NYC open data to find building health complaints and other issues

https://www.nycbuildingcheck.com/
1•aej11•47m ago•0 comments

Michael Pollan Says Humanity Is About to Undergo a Revolutionary Change

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/07/magazine/michael-pollan-interview.html
2•lxm•48m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Grovia – Long-Range Greenhouse Monitoring System

https://github.com/benb0jangles/Remote-greenhouse-monitor
1•benbojangles•53m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: The Coming Class War

2•fud101•53m ago•4 comments

Mind the GAAP Again

https://blog.dshr.org/2026/02/mind-gaap-again.html
1•gmays•54m ago•0 comments

The Yardbirds, Dazed and Confused (1968)

https://archive.org/details/the-yardbirds_dazed-and-confused_9-march-1968
2•petethomas•55m ago•0 comments

Agent News Chat – AI agents talk to each other about the news

https://www.agentnewschat.com/
2•kiddz•56m ago•0 comments

Do you have a mathematically attractive face?

https://www.doimog.com
3•a_n•1h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Alice's Adventures in a Differentiable Wonderland

https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.17625
157•henning•7mo ago

Comments

fossa1•7mo ago
Glad to see JAX featured alongside PyTorch. JAX still feels like the best-kept secret in deep learning
ProofHouse•7mo ago
Damn beeeeefffffyyyyy. Need the month to eat ten pages a day, Tnx looks awesome. Could append diffusion too ultimately
superjose•7mo ago
Wow, kudos to the Author. Very easy to digest, beautifully crafted, and took the time to explain the concepts when most places take them for granted.
canyp•7mo ago
Well, kudos to your one-line comment too because now I am encouraged to actually read this.
magnio•7mo ago
This looks like a good practical companion for a more theoretical text, such as Deep Learning by Bishop.
kittikitti•7mo ago
Although I love this, it's not peer reviewed and I don't trust arxiv.
SiempreViernes•7mo ago
Actually, it is peer reviewed following the standard practice for books: some other people read it and provided feedback as evidenced by the Acknowledgments section.
esafak•7mo ago
People are submitting corrections: https://www.sscardapane.it/assets/alice/errata_list.pdf
odyssey7•7mo ago
It’s more a book than academic research.

The funny thing about books is that authors in free societies are allowed to self-publish whatever they want. The norms are different and, frankly, more democratic and with less gatekeeping.

ethan_smith•7mo ago
arXiv is a preprint server trusted by the scientific community for decades - papers there often undergo peer review later, and many top ML researchers publish their work there first for faster dissemination.
_giorgio_•7mo ago
Website of the author with more material and lab sessions

https://www.sscardapane.it/alice-book/

https://sscardapane.notion.site/Guided-lab-sessions-18c25bd1...

odyssey7•7mo ago
It would be nice if arXiv included a small-layout pdf or native epub option for e-readers. Now that they serve the Tex files and are experimenting with HTML, it feels like a natural step.
solarwindy•7mo ago
I think the version hosted on the book's website would work fine on smaller screens (and also seems to have been updated more recently):

https://www.sscardapane.it/assets/alice/Alice_book_volume_1....

0cf8612b2e1e•7mo ago

  The corresponding row vector is denoted by x^T when we need to distinguish them. We can also ignore the transpose for readability, if the shape is clear from context.
I am tilting at windmills, but I am continually annoyed at the sloppiness of mathematicians in writing. Fine, you don’t like verbosity, but for didactic purposes, please do not assume the reader is equipped to know that variable x actually implies variable y.

All that being said, the writing style from the first chapter is very encouraging at how approachable this will be.

JadeNB•7mo ago
> I am tilting at windmills, but I am continually annoyed at the sloppiness of mathematicians in writing. Fine, you don’t like verbosity, but for didactic purposes, please do not assume the reader is equipped to know that variable x actually implies variable y.

I am a practicing mathematician who felt the same way you did when I started, and who still writes their papers in a way that many of my colleagues feel is gallingly pedantic. With that as my credentials, I hope I may say that it can be much worse as a reader to read something where every detail is spelled out, because a bit of syntactic sugar begins to seem as important as the heart of an argument. Where the dividing line is between precision and obfuscation depends on the reader, and so inevitably will leave some readers on the wrong side, but a trade-off does have to be made somewhere.

prisenco•7mo ago
Could there be a compromise where the verbosity is kept but the key points are highlighted, grouped or presented in a different color.

I would certainly appreciate if math papers were more explicit and "hand-holding" but understand why trained mathematicians would find that tedious.

JadeNB•7mo ago
> Could there be a compromise where the verbosity is kept but the key points are highlighted, grouped or presented in a different color.

There's no reason except inertia why there couldn't be. Lamport actually proposed a system for this: https://lamport.azurewebsites.net/pubs/lamport-how-to-write.....

zmgsabst•7mo ago
I wish the formality would be included in an appendix — as someone who has had to implement a lot of things (and more than once, found errors).

But I agree with your general point: understanding the recipe and general thrust of the approach is often more important, because even if the exact proof misses some technical detail, that can often be patched.

JadeNB•7mo ago
> I wish the formality would be included in an appendix — as someone who has had to implement a lot of things (and more than once, found errors).

Indeed. Lamport says that this was part of what inspired his interest in formal proofs: https://mathoverflow.net/questions/35727/community-experienc....

runeblaze•7mo ago
It is weird to be honest. I first learned Coq and then started taking upper level maths classes. My group theory proofs were panned by my TAs as overly verbose, very precise, and I was specializing on H_1 and H_2s everywhere and having IHns flying around like crazy because I could not fathom how one proves things without formally connecting things up.

Then my profs told me I was not “wrong”, but proofs or expositions are to most mathematicians not programs (ha! How did I not know. You teach me natural deduction and expect me not to program?), more like convincing arguments/prose. At some point one abstracts.

esperent•7mo ago
Humans, even talented mathematicians, have limited context. A big part of any mathematics text is abstraction for the sake of understanding. It can be confusing at first, but once you learn how to read mathematics with these abstractions in place, reading everything spelled out with great verbocity and pedantic accuracy is frustrating and tiring. You're forcing your eyes to parse and interpret a whole bunch of symbols that your brain doesn't need.

Of course, some mathematicians take it too far and use these abstractions to obfuscate and prove how smart they are. Like everything, it's a balance.

I personally wasn't a fan of this particular shorthand when I read this book but I got used to it quickly.

bwfan123•7mo ago
this 3 page classic [1] captures most of the core ideas and explains it in a manner anyone with basic calculus background can understand - "Learning representations by back-propagating errors"

[1] https://gwern.net/doc/ai/nn/1986-rumelhart-2.pdf

pstuart•7mo ago
I took calculus over 30 years ago and have never really used it -- I'll put your conjecture to test (sample size: 1). Will let you know if your conjecture is true ;-).
dunefox•7mo ago
And I just bought the physical book...
canyp•7mo ago
I do that all the time to support authors, plus the physicality of a tangible book is irreplaceable. In fact, I did that just today with a different book.
canyp•7mo ago
Beautifully formatted and has the right combination of code and theory for noobs like me. Strong vibes for Simone right now, hero of the people.