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Show HN: Mvvmm – Firecracker-like mini virtual machine monitor in ~2000 LoC

https://github.com/mistivia/mvvmm
1•mistivia•1m ago•0 comments

Search anything said on a podcast, speaker-labeled and speaker-tracked

https://poddley.com
1•onesandofgrain•2m ago•1 comments

Canada, better the 28th EU member than the 51st US state

https://www.lemonde.fr/en/opinion/article/2026/02/05/canada-better-the-28th-eu-member-than-the-51...
1•u1hcw9nx•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Team of agent researchers read things I don't have time to and brief me

https://read-fast.replit.app/
1•thomoliverz•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Chaos Agents – Run chaos experiments with Agents

https://github.com/system32-ai/chaos-agents
3•linuxarm64•5m ago•0 comments

Almostnode – Node.js in the Browser

https://github.com/macaly/almostnode
1•ushakov•5m ago•0 comments

Mount Fuji cherry blossom festival canceled due to overtourism

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2026/02/05/japan/japan-mount-fuji-cherry-festival-overtourism/
2•akyuu•7m ago•0 comments

Containers, cloud, blockchain, AI – it's all the same old BS, says RH veteran

https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/08/waves_of_tech_bs/
1•lproven•8m ago•0 comments

Gorge (2022)

https://qntm.org/gorg
1•Rygian•9m ago•0 comments

Like Game-of-Life, but on Growing Graphs, with WASM and WebGL

https://znah.net/graphs/
1•znah•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: agent-ledger – prevent double side effects when AI agents retry

https://github.com/rune0-dev/agent-ledger
1•itsimri•10m ago•0 comments

Gemini responds to request to turn on lights with hallucinated jailbreak prompt

https://www.reddit.com/r/googlehome/s/Lh3dYqccgB
4•visviva•12m ago•1 comments

RustCast -open-source Raycast-style launcher written in Rust

https://github.com/unsecretised/rustcast
1•todsacerdoti•12m ago•0 comments

Why Do Olympic Athletes Bite Their Medals?

https://www.thv11.com/article/sports/olympics/winter-games-iq/why-athletes-bite-medals-olympics/5...
1•RickJWagner•13m ago•0 comments

Mdash – Markdown in URL

https://kamilmac.github.io/mdash/
1•kmacinski•15m ago•0 comments

Brings your family memories now

https://familymemories.video
1•tareq_•15m ago•0 comments

Travel to Cheap Destinations

https://nomagicpill.substack.com/p/travel-to-cheap-destinations
1•surprisetalk•16m ago•0 comments

Rebuilding my home network with VLANs and 10Gbps

https://clintonboys.com/projects/homelab/03-network/
1•mtsolitary•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: RepoSherlock – repo onboarding in minutes (map, run, risks)

1•kemal-arslan•18m ago•0 comments

Going Through Snowden Documents, Part 2

https://libroot.org/posts/going-through-snowden-documents-part-2/
1•stareatgoats•20m ago•0 comments

Can Europe get kids off social media?

https://www.ft.com/content/cf465c21-4789-490b-b328-41f6383567d7
2•thm•23m ago•0 comments

I Built a NAS (Buildlog)

https://arne.me/blog/buildlog-nas
2•abahlo•23m ago•0 comments

Making Software: How do computers store data?

https://www.makingsoftware.com/chapters/how-is-data-stored
3•Garbage•25m ago•0 comments

A timeline of claims about AI/LLMs

https://blog.nethuml.xyz/posts/2026/02/timeline-of-claims-about-ai-llms/
2•nethuml•27m ago•0 comments

Freeciv 3D with hex map tiles and WebGPU renderer

https://freecivworld.net/
2•roschdal•29m ago•0 comments

SpaceX-xAI Merger: Nobody's Talking About the von Neumann Elephant in the Room

1•juanpabloaj•32m ago•2 comments

Smart Homes Are Terrible

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/02/smart-homes-technology/685867/
6•aarghh•36m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Would you use an ESLint-like tool for SEO that fails your CI/CD build?

1•YannBuilds•37m ago•0 comments

Praise for Price Gouging

https://www.grumpy-economist.com/p/praise-for-price-gouging
1•mhb•40m ago•0 comments

Open source infra orchestrator agent clanker CLI

https://github.com/bgdnvk/clanker
1•tekbog•42m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Show HN: Fine-tuned Qwen2.5-7B on 100 films for probabilistic story graphs

https://cinegraphs.ai/
11•graphpilled•1h ago
Hi HN, I'm a computer systems engineering student in Mexico who switched from film school. I built CineGraphs because my filmmaker friends and I kept hitting the same wall—we'd have a vague idea for a film but no structured way to explore where it could go. Every AI writing tool we tried output generic, formulaic slop. I didn't want to build another ChatGPT wrapper, so I went a different route.

The idea is simple: you input a rough concept, and the tool generates branching narrative paths visualized as a graph. You can sculpt those branches into a structured screenplay format and export to Fountain for use in professional screenwriting software.

Most AI writing tools are trained on generic internet text, which is why they output generic results. I wanted something that understood actual cinematic storytelling—not plot summaries or Wikipedia synopses, but the actual structural DNA of films. So I spent a month curating 100 films I consider high-quality cinema. Not just popular films, but works with distinctive narrative structures: Godard's jump cuts and essay-film digressions, Kurosawa's parallel character arcs, Brakhage's non-linear visual poetry, Tarkovsky's slow-burn temporal structures. The selection was deliberately eclectic because I wanted the model to learn that "story" can mean many things.

Getting useful training data from films is harder than it sounds. I built a 1000+ line Python pipeline using Qwen3-VL to analyze each film with subtitles enabled. The pipeline extracts scene-level narrative beats, character relationships and how they evolve, thematic threads, and dialogue patterns. The tricky part was getting Qwen3-VL to understand cinematic structure rather than just summarizing plot. I had to iterate on the prompts extensively to get it to identify things like "this scene functions as a mirror to the opening" or "this character's arc inverts the protagonist's." That took weeks and I'm still not fully satisfied with it, but it's good enough to produce useful training data.

From those extractions I generated a 10K example dataset of prompt-to-branching-narrative pairs, then fine-tuned Qwen2.5-7B-Instruct with a LoRA optimized for probabilistic story branching. The LoRA handles the graph generation—exploring possible narrative directions—while the full 7B model generates the actual technical screenplay format when you export. I chose the 7B model because I wanted something that could run affordably at scale while still being capable enough for nuanced generation. The whole thing is served on a single 4090 GPU using vLLM. The frontend uses React Flow for the graph visualization. The key insight was that screenwriting is fundamentally about making choices—what if the character goes left instead of right?—but most writing tools force you into a linear document too early. The graph structure lets you explore multiple paths before committing, which matches how writers actually think in early development.

The biggest surprise was how much the film selection mattered. Early versions trained on more mainstream films produced much more formulaic outputs. Adding experimental and international cinema dramatically improved the variety and interestingness of the generations. The model seemed to learn that narrative structure is a design space, not a formula.

We've been using it ourselves to break through second-act problems—when you know where you want to end up but can't figure out how to get there. The branching format forces you to think in possibilities rather than committing too early.

You can try it at https://cinegraphs.ai/ — no signup required to test it out. You get a full project with up to 50 branches without registering, though you'll need to create an account to save it. Registered users get 3 free projects. I'd love feedback on whether the generation quality feels meaningfully different from generic AI tools, and whether the graph interface adds value or just friction.

Comments

mmarvin•15m ago
Awesome work. Would be cool if you could publish the list of movies that you chose for finetuning. Just out of curiosity.
graphpilled•3m ago
Thanks! Here's the full list: 2001: A Space Odyssey, 8½, Aguirre the Wrath of God, Ali: Fear Eats the Soul, All That Heaven Allows, Apocalypse Now, Ashes and Diamonds, A Woman Under the Influence, Barry Lyndon, Bicycle Thieves, Breathless, Casablanca, Céline and Julie Go Boating, Chinatown, Chinese Roulette, Citizen Kane, City Lights, City of Pirates, Contempt, Daisies, Damnation, Dishonored, Earth, Electra My Love, El Topo, Eraserhead, Eyes Wide Shut, Film Socialisme, Fitzcarraldo, Fuego en Castilla, Hiroshima Mon Amour, Holy Motors, Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome, In a Year with 13 Moons, India Song, Inland Empire, Irma Vep, Koyaanisqatsi, La Dolce Vita, La Jetée, Late Spring, L'Eau de la Seine, Le Voyage dans la Lune, Lolita, Los Olvidados, Lost Highway, Lucifer Rising, Man with a Movie Camera, Metropolis, Mirror, Mulholland Drive, Night Music, Ordet, Orpheus, Persona, Pickpocket, Playtime, Psycho, Rebecca, Rosemary's Baby, Rumble Fish, Scarface, Seven Samurai, Sherlock Jr., Singin' in the Rain, Stalker, Sunset Boulevard, Taste of Cherry, Taxi Driver, Testament of Orpheus, The 400 Blows, The Blood of a Poet, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, The Color of Pomegranates, The Green Ray, The Holy Mountain, The Isle, The Lady from Shanghai, The Night of the Hunter, The Passion of Joan of Arc, The Seventh Seal, The Spirit of the Beehive, The Tales of Hoffmann, The Tree of Life, The Turin Horse, Time of the Gypsies, Tokyo Story, Touch of Evil, Trans-Europ-Express, Ugetsu, Un Chien Andalou, Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, Vampyr, Videodrome, Wavelength, Werckmeister Harmonies, Wild Strawberries Biased toward European art cinema, experimental work, and directors who broke conventional narrative rules.