frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Open Source @Github

fp.

I Stored a Website in a Favicon

https://www.timwehrle.de/blog/i-stored-a-website-in-a-favicon/
126•theanonymousone•4h ago•40 comments

Where to Find the Colors Your Screen Can't Show You

https://moultano.wordpress.com/2026/06/19/where-to-find-the-colors-your-screen-cant-show-you/
105•moultano•6h ago•26 comments

Data Compression Explained (2012)

https://mattmahoney.net/dc/dce.html
120•mtdewcmu•3d ago•16 comments

There are no instances in ATProto

https://overreacted.io/there-are-no-instances-in-atproto/
441•danabramov•18h ago•226 comments

Can you see three trees?

https://www.not-ship.com/can-you-see-three-trees/
111•Pamar•2d ago•53 comments

The discovery that changed how scientists think about memory

https://www.ibm.com/think/news/discovery-changed-how-scientists-think-about-memory-kavli-prize
54•rbanffy•2d ago•11 comments

Surprising economics of load-balanced systems

https://brooker.co.za/blog/2020/08/06/erlang.html
110•KraftyOne•13h ago•27 comments

GPT-5.5 hallucinates 3x more than MIT-licensed GLM-5.2

https://arrowtsx.dev/bigger-models/
149•oshrimpton•17h ago•38 comments

Hyundai buys Boston Dynamics

https://startupfortune.com/hyundai-takes-full-control-of-boston-dynamics-as-softbank-exits-for-32...
829•ck2•17h ago•362 comments

How many of the 170k English words do you know?

https://vocabowl-870366514258.us-west1.run.app/
368•abnry•19h ago•450 comments

Norway imposes near ban on AI in elementary school

https://www.reuters.com/technology/norway-imposes-near-ban-ai-elementary-school-2026-06-19/
665•ilreb•17h ago•458 comments

Project Valhalla, Explained: How a Decade of Work Arrives in JDK 28

https://www.jvm-weekly.com/p/project-valhalla-explained-how-a
594•philonoist•1d ago•368 comments

Soccer Arcade Games Through the Years

https://arcadeheroes.com/2026/06/13/world-cup-2026-soccer-arcade/
17•speckx•3d ago•2 comments

Satellite reveals immense scale of GPS signal tampering

https://www.space.com/space-exploration/satellites/its-quite-a-bit-more-than-we-expected-satellit...
78•y1n0•5h ago•30 comments

A 1969 camera operators' strike created Upstairs Downstairs multiverse

https://ironicsans.ghost.io/the-color-strike/
22•ohjeez•3d ago•4 comments

Bobby Prince, composer for Doom, Wolfenstein 3D, and Duke Nukem 3D, has died

https://www.legacy.com/legacy/robert-bobby-prince-lll
373•pgrote•14h ago•40 comments

Egyptian Fractions (2006)

https://blog.plover.com/math/egyptian-fractions.html
94•luu•4d ago•8 comments

A Perceptron in Age of Empires II

https://adewynter.github.io/notes/aoe2-circuits
74•EvgeniyZh•2d ago•31 comments

AURpocalypse now: a look at the recent AUR attacks

https://lwn.net/SubscriberLink/1077619/f7b07c5489fdd43a/
82•jwilk•16h ago•52 comments

John Jumper to join Anthropic

https://twitter.com/JohnJumperSci/status/2068001285173834106
132•artninja1988•15h ago•98 comments

Ask HN: Will programmers write more efficient code during the memory shortage?

111•amichail•10h ago•183 comments

Zen and the Art of Machine Learning Research

https://blog.jxmo.io/p/zen-and-the-art-of-machine-learning
258•jxmorris12•4d ago•92 comments

Digital Printing of Arabic: explaining the problem

https://digitalorientalist.com/2017/08/21/digital-printing-of-arabic-explaining-the-problem/
56•a_t48•3d ago•23 comments

Court Records Should Be Free

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/06/court-records-should-be-free
364•hn_acker•16h ago•80 comments

Building a robotics research setup that lives next to my desk

https://dfdxlabs.com/research/2026/robotics-setup/
148•mplappert•1d ago•51 comments

Telescope Ranchers

https://kottke.org/26/06/telescope-ranchers
124•bookofjoe•3d ago•47 comments

Show HN: Metiq: a real time 3D globe for 100 public datasets

https://metiq.space
123•rakeda•3d ago•33 comments

Big Banana Car

https://bigbananacar.com/
151•Bender•15h ago•76 comments

Ten years of ClickHouse in open source

https://clickhouse.com/blog/open-source-10
303•saisrirampur•4d ago•84 comments

Designing a backyard deck for my house

https://blog.cosmin.cloud/posts/diy-deck.html
16•spycraft•4h ago•4 comments
Open in hackernews

Llasa: Llama-Based Speech Synthesis

https://llasatts.github.io/llasatts/
168•CalmStorm•1y ago

Comments

CalmStorm•1y ago
LLaSA is a simple framework for speech synthesis that employs a single-layer vector quantizer (VQ) codec and a single Transformer architecture to fully align with standard LLMs such as LLaMA.
WastedCucumber•1y ago
Probably the title should have the correct capitalization then. Cause I was fully expecting a speech synthesis tool that sounded like llamas talking human language and now I'm bummed out!
StevenNunez•1y ago
I can't wait see this integrated into Open WebUI! These sound amazing.
gapeleon•1y ago
You can run an openai-compatible endpoint and point open-webui at it if you want this. I had to add a function to filter out markdown lists, code, etc as the model was choking on them.
mring33621•1y ago
the long 'uuuuhhhhhhh' from some of the lesser models is killing me.
jszymborski•1y ago
based on the samples, it really seams like anything smaller than 3B is pretty useless.
hadlock•1y ago
If you're doing a home lab voice assistant 1B is nice, because on a 12gb gpu you can run a moderately competent 7b LLM and two 1b models; 1 for speech to text and also text to speech, plus some for the wake word monitor. Maybe in a couple of years we can combine all this into a single ~8b model that runs efficiently on 12gb gpu. Nvidia doesn't seem very incentivized right now to sell consumer GPUs that can run all this on a single consumer grade chip when they're making so much money selling commercial grade 48gb cards.
Dlemo•1y ago
Hui for the activation word?

Shouldn't there be some hardware module be available similar to how Alexa, Siri and Google do it?

Whith a ring buffer detection the word without recording everything?

gapeleon•1y ago
This finetune seems pretty stable (1b llasa) https://huggingface.co/spaces/HKUST-Audio/Llasa-1B-multi-spe...

1B is actually huge for a TTS model. Here's an 82m model with probably the most stable/coherent output of all the open weights tts models I've tested: https://huggingface.co/spaces/hexgrad/Kokoro-TTS

But if you mean zero-shot cloning, yeah they all seem to have those slurred speech artefacts from time to time.

dheera•1y ago
> employs a single-layer vector quantizer (VQ) codec and a single Transformer architecture to fully align

I really wish when new models were released that they would draw a diagram of all the layers and the tensor input and output sizes at each layer, with zoom in/out capabilities if needed using D3.js or whatever visualization framework if needed. Every single layer should be on there with its input and output sizes.

These one-sentence descriptions, and approximate block diagrams with arrows pointing at each other are never enough to understand how something is actually implemented.

exe34•1y ago
Sounds like a solid SaaS business plan!
dr_kiszonka•1y ago
That might be intentional.
imtringued•1y ago
This already exists in Transformer Lab and ONNX (not recommended for transformers).

You can also build a custom version of llama.cpp that writes out the ggml compute graph. What's irritating is that hugging face didn't add it to their GGUF file viewer.

dheera•1y ago
Oh, sure, for the well-known models that are already on there.

I just wish that new research would always spell it out in full instead of these silly block diagrams labelled with just e.g. "Cross Attention" and not the exact parameters, number of heads, layer sizes, etc.

Also some of these diagrams use a + for concatenation and some use it for addition, that's another headache to figure out, having layer sizes would make it clear.

ks2048•1y ago
Odd that the page doesn't seem to link to either,

paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.04128

github: https://github.com/zhenye234/LLaSA_training

thot_experiment•1y ago
Interesting that there isn't a mention of Orpheus as prior art either since it's the exact same thing.

(https://github.com/canopyai/Orpheus-TTS)

gapeleon•1y ago
> Interesting that there isn't a mention of Orpheus as prior art either

Llasa-3b (https://huggingface.co/HKUSTAudio/Llasa-3B) came out before Orpheus (https://huggingface.co/canopylabs/orpheus-3b-0.1-ft).

> it's the exact same thing.

They're very similar, but they're not the exact same thing.

Llasa uses xcodec2, a much simpler, lossless 16khz wav codec. This makes it superior for one-shot voice cloning.

Orpheus' 24khz snac codec is lossy which makes it difficult to use for zero-shot cloning as the reference audio gets degraded during tokenization. You can test this here: https://huggingface.co/spaces/Gapeleon/snac_test

But when finetuned on 50+ audio samples, it produces much cleaner 24khz audio than Llasa, and the snac model is much easier to run on consumer hardware than xcodec2 (87t/s for realtime speech, which can be achieved on an RTX3080 for example)

nialv7•1y ago
the mispronunciation of 行 and 行 in the Chinese sample is killing me too XD
oezi•1y ago
Do you happen to know why Orpheus and Llasa use Finetuning for voice cloning?

Zonos uses 128-float embeddings for voices and it seems so much nicer. Because you can just mix and match voices without changing the model.

thot_experiment•1y ago
No, you just condition it with text-voice token pairs and then when conditioning further inference w/ text the voice tokens tend to match the pairs further up in the context.
oezi•1y ago
Isn't xcodec2 also lossy? I thought it is also just another neural codec (50 tok/s, single codebook).

What are people using to upsampling back to 44,1 or 48 khz? Anything fancy?

woodson•1y ago
They’re both lossy. They use a VAE-VQ type architecture trained with a combination of losses/discriminators. The differences are mainly the encoder/decoder architecture, the type of bottleneck quantization (RVQ, FSQ, etc.) and of course the training data.