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Peter Salus has died

https://www.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2026-May/033750.html
62•speckx•1h ago•6 comments

Click (2016)

https://clickclickclick.click/
232•andrewzeno•5h ago•56 comments

The last six months in LLMs in five minutes

https://simonwillison.net/2026/May/19/5-minute-llms/
76•yakkomajuri•2h ago•19 comments

Regex Chess: A 2-ply minimax chess engine in 84,688 regular expressions

https://nicholas.carlini.com/writing/2025/regex-chess.html
45•surprisetalk•4d ago•5 comments

Anthropic acquires Stainless

https://www.anthropic.com/news/anthropic-acquires-stainless
389•tomeraberbach•11h ago•264 comments

Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical Magnifica humanitas to be published May 25

https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2026-05/pope-leo-xiv-first-encyclical-magnifica-humanitas...
145•cucho•4h ago•86 comments

Anyone on the Internet Can Ring Your Doorbell

https://www.abgeo.dev/blog/anyone-can-ring-your-doorbell
19•jrdres•2d ago•5 comments

We stopped AI bot spam in our GitHub repo using Git's –author flag

https://archestra.ai/blog/only-responsible-ai
437•ildari•12h ago•197 comments

War game exposed U.S. vulnerability to low-tech warfare

https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/news/2024-11-01/rigged-war-game-exposed-us-vulnerability-low-tech-warfare
11•KnuthIsGod•1h ago•4 comments

Hyperpolyglot Lisp: Common Lisp, Racket, Clojure, Emacs Lisp

https://hyperpolyglot.org/lisp
142•veqq•8h ago•29 comments

The Quiet Renovation at Bitwarden

https://blog.ppb1701.com/the-quiet-renovation-at-bitwarden
573•DaSHacka•2d ago•262 comments

We let AIs run radio stations

https://andonlabs.com/blog/andon-fm
204•lukaspetersson•10h ago•176 comments

Show HN: Files.md – Open-source alternative to Obsidian

https://github.com/zakirullin/files.md
574•zakirullin•14h ago•290 comments

Show HN: Number Gacha, a gacha game distilled to its essence

https://isabisabel.com/gacha/
88•babel16•5d ago•33 comments

When can the C++ compiler devirtualize a call?

https://quuxplusone.github.io/blog/2021/02/15/devirtualization/
30•lionkor•1d ago•5 comments

Project Glasswing: what Mythos showed us

https://blog.cloudflare.com/cyber-frontier-models/
298•Fysi•14h ago•113 comments

Earth's Radio Bubble: Every signal we've ever sent into space

https://www.thescientificdrop.com/2026/05/earths-radio-bubble-every-signal-weve.html
48•jonbaer•19h ago•28 comments

Elon Musk has lost his lawsuit against Sam Altman and OpenAI

https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/18/elon-musk-has-lost-his-lawsuit-against-sam-altman-and-openai/
846•nycdatasci•10h ago•430 comments

Agora-1: The Multi-Agent World Model

https://odyssey.ml/introducing-agora-1
90•olivercameron•9h ago•17 comments

The American Rebellion Against AI Is Gaining Steam

https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/the-american-rebellion-against-ai-is-gaining-steam-94b72529
68•JaakkoP•2h ago•61 comments

The FBI Wants to Buy Nationwide Access to License Plate Readers

https://www.404media.co/the-fbi-wants-to-buy-nationwide-access-to-license-plate-readers/
248•cdrnsf•8h ago•98 comments

Two computers, one monitor, zero fiddling (2025)

https://alexplescan.com/posts/2025/08/16/kvm/
183•ankitg12•3d ago•105 comments

Coding on Paper

https://wickstrom.tech/2026-05-16-coding-on-paper.html
54•owickstrom•1d ago•19 comments

Loopmaster – Livecoding Music IDE

https://loopmaster.xyz/
82•stagas•9h ago•24 comments

The Fil-C Optimized Calling Convention

https://fil-c.org/calling_convention
116•pizlonator•2d ago•23 comments

Show HN: InsForge – Open-source Heroku for coding agents

https://github.com/InsForge/InsForge
38•mrcoldbrew•12h ago•6 comments

Alignment pretraining: AI discourse creates self-fulfilling (mis)alignment

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.10160
30•anigbrowl•6h ago•12 comments

Cutting inference cold starts by 40x with LP, FUSE, C/R, and CUDA-checkpoint

https://modal.com/blog/truly-serverless-gpus
78•charles_irl•10h ago•18 comments

Iran starts Bitcoin-backed ship insurance for Hormuz strait

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-05-18/iran-starts-bitcoin-backed-shipping-insurance-...
286•srameshc•10h ago•471 comments

What Is Date:Italy?

http://aesthetikx.info/blog/date_italy.html
140•jollyjerry•2d ago•57 comments
Open in hackernews

How ZGC allocates memory for the Java heap

https://joelsiks.com/posts/zgc-heap-memory-allocation/
86•lichtenberger•1y ago

Comments

gopalv•1y ago
The 32x virtual memory to physical memory ratio plays into relocation and colored pointers (i.e pointers where some bits serve as flag bits).

Putting the actual data layouts in 44 bits out of 64 is a neat trick which relies on the allocator being aware of the mappings between physical and virtual addresses.

twoodfin•1y ago
When your comment and the article refer to “physical” addresses, those are physical in the context of the JVM, right? To the OS they’re virtual addresses in the JVM process space?
acchow•1y ago
Correct. ZGC has no way to escape from the virtualization by the kernel (assuming your hardware and kernel uses an MMU)
MBCook•1y ago
Thank you for the answer, I was wondering that as well.
hinkley•1y ago
In the beginning of the 32 bit revolution, when the future was here but unevenly distributed, there was a lot of talk about how 32 bit pointers would fundamentally change how people wrote code. Among other things it got rid of a bunch of odd bookkeeping, and if you don’t have to do the bookkeeping you don’t have to write the code in a way that supports it, so you can do other things.

Not too long after someone asked what sort of interesting changes 64 bit will bring. And I’ve been keeping that question in the back of my mind ever since.

Aliasing memory multiple times in order to do read or write barriers and make GC much cheaper is a pretty good one. But another one I know of is that one of the secrets of the L4 microkernel is that its IPC speed comes substantially from reducing the amount of TLB work that needs to be done to switch to another process running in a different address space. They use the same address space and only swap out the access rights which cuts the call overhead in half. It’s pretty easy to put a bunch of processes into a 64 bit address space and just throw each one a randomly located 4GB slice of RAM.

twoodfin•1y ago
Yeah, would love to see the CPU vendors invent some primitives to let user code pull those kinds of privilege isolation tricks within a single process and address space.

Something like: “From now on, code on these pages can only access data on these pages, and only return to/call into other code through these gates…”

hinkley•1y ago
Thread based seems like it at least should be possible.
ahartmetz•1y ago
I've had some ideas about avoiding format validation in IPC receivers if the data is encoded by trusted code, which is also the only code that has rights to send the IPC data / to connect to the receiver. I can't really think of an important problem that it would solve, though. DBus always validates received data, but it's not really meant or very suitable for large amounts of data anyway.
twoodfin•1y ago
What I’m looking for is a way for a process to de/re-escalate its privileges to access memory, without an expensive context switch being required at the transition. The CPU would simply enforce different rules based on (say) the high-order bits of the instruction pointer.

Imagine a server process that wants to run some elaborate third-party content parser. It’d be great to be sure that no matter how buggy or malicious that code, it can’t leak the TLS keys.

Today, high-security architectures must use process isolation to achieve this kind of architectural guarantee, but even finely tuned IPC like L4’s is an order of magnitude slower than a predictable jump.

gpderetta•1y ago
For a brief moment Intel supported MPX which did something similar.

You can also play tricks with the virtualization hardware, bit it need kernel support.

Eventually we will get segments back again.

MarkSweep•1y ago
That would be pretty cool. Something like the Win32 function GetWriteWatch, but implemented in hardware instead of the page fault handler (I assume).

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/memoryap...

Or some sort of special write barrier store op-code, idk.

mike_hearn•1y ago
It exists, that's called MPKs.
twoodfin•1y ago
I don’t think MPK’s will fit the need I have. Simply: Run some arbitrary, untrusted, non-sandboxed code in the same thread with assurance it can’t read page X. When that code completes and I’m back in code I trust, X is readable again.

Is that something MPK makes possible? The doc I’ve read suggests either your process can flip permission bits or it can’t. Great for avoiding out-of-sandbox reads. But if there’s arbitrary execution happening, why can’t that code flip the access to secrets back on?

mike_hearn•1y ago
Oracle Labs has tech that does that:

https://youtu.be/T05FI93MBI8?si=EieFgujaGiW2gbO8&t=958

The trick is to do a cascading disassembly of all untrusted code you'll execute to prove it can't change the MPK register.

twoodfin•1y ago
Wow. Neat trick and exactly the kind of thing I was looking for.

Thanks!

EDIT: Looks like this is the relevant paper from the Graal team: https://www.graalvm.org/resources/articles/binsweep.pdf

jdougan•1y ago
Is that something like the memory protection scheme on the Newton OS?
nyanpasu64•1y ago
Isn't not swapping page tables during a call precisely what the KPTI mitigations had to turn off for Meltdown mitigations?
pron•1y ago
For relevant upcoming changes see Automatic Heap Sizing for ZGC: https://openjdk.org/jeps/8329758