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Frontier AI agents violate ethical constraints 30–50% of time, pressured by KPIs

https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.20798
243•tiny-automates•5h ago•156 comments

Rust implementation of Mistral's Voxtral Mini 4B Realtime runs in your browser

https://github.com/TrevorS/voxtral-mini-realtime-rs
199•Curiositry•7h ago•21 comments

Discord will require a face scan or ID for full access next month

https://www.theverge.com/tech/875309/discord-age-verification-global-roll-out
1621•x01•18h ago•1544 comments

Brutalist Southbank Centre Listed

https://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/news/brutalist-southbank-centre-finally-listed-after-35-years...
14•daverol•1h ago•13 comments

Pure C, CPU-only inference with Mistral Voxtral Realtime 4B speech to text model

https://github.com/antirez/voxtral.c
123•Curiositry•7h ago•8 comments

Why is the sky blue?

https://explainers.blog/posts/why-is-the-sky-blue/
566•udit99•17h ago•186 comments

Converting a $3.88 analog clock from Walmart into a ESP8266-based Wi-Fi clock

https://github.com/jim11662418/ESP8266_WiFi_Analog_Clock
489•tokyobreakfast•16h ago•161 comments

Discord Alternatives, Ranked

https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives/
195•pseudalopex•13h ago•86 comments

Hard-braking events as indicators of road segment crash risk

https://research.google/blog/hard-braking-events-as-indicators-of-road-segment-crash-risk/
277•aleyan•15h ago•405 comments

Is particle physics dead, dying, or just hard?

https://www.quantamagazine.org/is-particle-physics-dead-dying-or-just-hard-20260126/
112•mellosouls•9h ago•170 comments

Luce: First Electric Ferrari

https://www.ferrari.com/en-US/auto/ferrari-luce
173•kaizenb•13h ago•173 comments

LiftKit – UI where "everything derives from the golden ratio"

https://www.chainlift.io/liftkit
161•peter_d_sherman•11h ago•95 comments

Sandboxels

https://neal.fun/sandboxels/
279•2sf5•17h ago•35 comments

The original vi is a product of its time (and its time has passed)

https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/unix/ViIsAProductOfItsTime
11•ingve•2d ago•14 comments

Eight more months of agents

https://crawshaw.io/blog/eight-more-months-of-agents
125•arrowsmith•1d ago•132 comments

America has a tungsten problem

https://www.noleary.com/blog/posts/1
167•noleary•12h ago•159 comments

Upcoming changes to Let's Encrypt and how they affect XMPP server operators

https://blog.prosody.im/2026-letsencrypt-changes/
113•zaik•12h ago•109 comments

Game Theory Patterns at Work (2016)

https://daeus.blog/2026/01/18/game-theory-patterns-at-work/
79•kurinikku•12h ago•6 comments

UEFI Bindings for JavaScript

https://codeberg.org/smnx/promethee
219•ananas-dev•19h ago•108 comments

LLMs as Language Compilers: Lessons from Fortran for the Future of Coding

https://cyber-omelette.com/posts/the-abstraction-rises.html
49•birdculture•2d ago•13 comments

Zulip.com Values

https://zulip.com/values/
37•nothrowaways•8h ago•5 comments

Stop using icons in data tables

https://medium.com/@codythistleward/stop-using-icons-in-data-tables-7537af18ea0d
108•ctward•4d ago•47 comments

Thoughts on Generating C

https://wingolog.org/archives/2026/02/09/six-thoughts-on-generating-c
221•ingve•19h ago•75 comments

Generative Pen-Trained Transformer

https://theodore.net/projects/Polargraph/
38•Twarner•4d ago•0 comments

MIT Technology Review has confirmed that posts on Moltbook were fake

https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/02/06/1132448/moltbook-was-peak-ai-theater/
71•helloplanets•1d ago•24 comments

Another GitHub outage in the same day

https://www.githubstatus.com/incidents/lcw3tg2f6zsd
329•Nezteb•14h ago•244 comments

Ask HN: What are you working on? (February 2026)

277•david927•1d ago•940 comments

Game Boy Advance Audio Interpolation

https://jsgroth.dev/blog/posts/gba-audio-interpolation/
91•ibobev•15h ago•38 comments

Everyone’s building “async agents,” but almost no one can define them

https://www.omnara.com/blog/what-is-an-async-agent-really
49•kmansm27•15h ago•39 comments

History of UHF Television: TV Above Channel 13 (2024)

https://uhfhistory.com/
16•surprisetalk•4d ago•3 comments
Open in hackernews

Falsify: Hypothesis-Inspired Shrinking for Haskell (2023)

https://www.well-typed.com/blog/2023/04/falsify/
90•birdculture•9mo ago

Comments

sshine•9mo ago
How does Hedgehog and Hypothesis differ in their shrinking strategies?

The article uses the words "integrated" vs. "internal" shrinking.

> the raison d’être of internal shrinking: it doesn’t matter that we cannot shrink the two generators independently, because we are not shrinking generators! Instead, we just shrink the samples that feed into those generators.

Besides that it seems like falsify has many of the same features like choice of ranges and distributions.

_jackdk_•9mo ago
This is the key sentence:

> The key insight of the Hypothesis library is that instead of shrinking generated values, we instead shrink the samples produced by the PRNG.

Hedgehog loses shrink information when you do a monadic bind (Gen a -> (a -> Gen b) -> Gen b). Hypothesis parses values out of the stream of data generated by the PRNG, so when it "binds", you are still just consuming off that stream of random numbers, and you can shrink the stream to shrink the generated values.

Here is a talk that applies the Hypothesis idea to test C++: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C6joICx1XMY . Discussion of PBT implementation approaches begins at 6:30.

thesz•9mo ago
This is fascinating!

If I understand correctly, they approximate language of inputs of a function to discover minimal (in some sense, like "shortest description length") inputs that violate relations between inputs and outputs of a function under scrutiny.

evertedsphere•9mo ago

    newtype Parser a = Parser ([Word] -> (a, [Word])
missing a paren here
moomin•9mo ago
I’m honestly completely failing to understand the basic idea here. What does this look like for generating and shrinking random strings,
chriswarbo•9mo ago
One straightforward approach would be:

- Generate a random number N for the size (maybe restricted to some Range)

- Generate N `Char` values, by using a random number for each code point.

- Combine those Chars into a string

falsify runs a generator by applying it to an infinite binary tree, with random numbers in the nodes. A generator can either consume a single number (taken from the root node of a tree), or it can run two other generators (one gets run on the left child, the other gets run on the right). Hence the above generator would use the value in the left child as N, then run the "generate N Chars" generator on the right child. The latter generator would run a Char generator on its left child, and an 'N-1 Chars' generator on its right child; and so on.

To shrink, we just run the generator on a tree with smaller numbers. In this case, a smaller number in the left child will cause fewer Chars to be generated; and smaller numbers in the right tree will cause lower code-points to be generated. falsify's tree representation also has a special case for the smallest tree (which returns 0 for its root, and itself for each child).

mjw1007•9mo ago
I've found in practice that shrinking to get the "smallest amount of detail" is often unhelpful.

Suppose I have a function which takes four string parameters, and I have a bug which means it crashes if the third is empty.

I'd rather see this in the failure report:

("ldiuhuh!skdfh", "nd#lkgjdflkgdfg", "", "dc9ofugdl ifugidlugfoidufog")

than this:

("", "", "", "")

gwern•9mo ago
Really? Your examples seem the opposite. I am left immediately thinking, "hm, is it failing on a '!', some sort of shell issue? Or is it truncating the string on '#', maybe? Or wait, there's a space in the third one, that looks pretty dangerous, as well as noticeably longer so there could be a length issue..." As opposed to the shrunk version where I immediately think, "uh oh: one of them is not handling an empty input correctly." Also, way easier to read, copy-paste, and type.
dullcrisp•9mo ago
Their point is that in the unshrunk example the “special” value stands out.

I guess if we were even more clever we could get to something more like (…, …, "", …).

gwern•9mo ago
The special value doesn't stand out, though. All three examples I gave were what I thought skimming his comment before my brain caught up to his caveat about an empty third argument. The empty string looked like it was by far the most harmless part... Whereas if they are all empty strings, then by definition the empty string stands out as the most suspicious possible part.
tybug•9mo ago
The Hypothesis explain phase [1][2] does this!

  fails_on_empty_third_arg(
      a = "",  # or any other generated value
      b = "",  # or any other generated value
      c = "",  
      d = "",  # or any other generated value
  )
[1] https://hypothesis.readthedocs.io/en/latest/reference/api.ht...

[2] https://github.com/HypothesisWorks/hypothesis/pull/3555

chriswarbo•9mo ago
> As opposed to the shrunk version where I immediately think, "uh oh: one of them is not handling an empty input correctly."

I agree that non-empty strings are worse, but unfortunately `("", "", "", "")` wouldn't only make me think of empty strings; e.g. I'd wonder whether duplicate/equal values are the problem.

chriswarbo•9mo ago
> I'd rather see this in the failure report:

> ("ldiuhuh!skdfh", "nd#lkgjdflkgdfg", "", "dc9ofugdl ifugidlugfoidufog")

I would prefer LazySmallcheck's result, which would be the following:

    (_, _, "", _)
Where `_` indicates that part of the input wasn't evaluated.
yorwba•9mo ago
A minimal reproducing example cannot guarantee that you'll correctly diagnose a bug just by looking at the example (because multiple potential bugs could cause the same example to fail) but it can guarantee that when you step through the code to understand what's happening, you won't have to deal with huge amounts of irrelevant data.

Maybe an alternative shrinking procedure could directly minimize the number of instructions that need to be executed to hit a failure...

edsko•9mo ago
(Author of falsify here.) You are absolutely correct that the empty string isn't always the best counter-example. The goal of shrinking is to shrink to the _simplest_ possible value (this is true for all approaches to shrinking). What constitutes "simple" is very much domain specific. It would certainly be possible to write a generator that would shrink to, say, "foo", as the canonical "simplest" example of a simple string. Indeed, since we are working in a lazy language, you could (with a bit of effort) shrink to `undefined` if the other arguments are not used at all.
mjw1007•9mo ago
I agree it can be domain-specific, but I think it's more common than not that empty containers, and the number zero, are corner cases rather than typical values.

So I think it would be a decent quality-of-life improvement to make generators of the sort you suggest easily available, and have the tutorial docs use them from the start.

shae•9mo ago
I care about the edge between "this value fails, one value over succeeds". I wish shrinking were fast enough to tell me if there are multiple edges between those values.