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505•tambourine_man•5h ago•837 comments

How to make your text look futuristic (2016)

https://typesetinthefuture.com/2016/02/18/futuristic/
143•_vaporwave_•2h ago•14 comments

CERT is releasing six CVEs for serious security vulnerabilities in dnsmasq

https://lists.thekelleys.org.uk/pipermail/dnsmasq-discuss/2026q2/018471.html
192•chizhik-pyzhik•4h ago•87 comments

Restore full BambuNetwork support for Bambu Lab printers

https://github.com/FULU-Foundation/OrcaSlicer-bambulab
32•Murfalo•1h ago•1 comments

Show HN: Needle: We Distilled Gemini Tool Calling into a 26M Model

https://github.com/cactus-compute/needle
221•HenryNdubuaku•5h ago•74 comments

Why senior developers fail to communicate their expertise

https://www.nair.sh/guides-and-opinions/communicating-your-expertise/why-senior-developers-fail-t...
309•nilirl•8h ago•152 comments

Quack: The DuckDB Client-Server Protocol

https://duckdb.org/2026/05/12/quack-remote-protocol
139•aduffy•5h ago•31 comments

The Future of Obsidian Plugins

https://obsidian.md/blog/future-of-plugins/
271•xz18r•7h ago•107 comments

Rendering the Sky, Sunsets, and Planets

https://blog.maximeheckel.com/posts/on-rendering-the-sky-sunsets-and-planets/
383•ibobev•9h ago•34 comments

Reimagining the mouse pointer for the AI era

https://deepmind.google/blog/ai-pointer/
104•devhouse•5h ago•88 comments

Learning Software Architecture

https://matklad.github.io/2026/05/12/software-architecture.html
504•surprisetalk•13h ago•101 comments

Is this why science advances one funeral at a time?

https://nautil.us/is-this-why-science-advances-one-funeral-at-a-time-1280650
22•Brajeshwar•5h ago•26 comments

Beyond Semantic Similarity

https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.05242
27•44za12•3h ago•5 comments

Bambu Lab is abusing the open source social contract

https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2026/bambu-lab-abusing-open-source-social-contract/
1009•rubenbe•8h ago•347 comments

Launch HN: Voker (YC S24) – Analytics for AI Agents

https://voker.ai
34•ttpost•7h ago•19 comments

Lanzaboote – NixOS Secure Boot

https://x86.lol/generic/2022/11/26/lanzaboote.html
10•evilmonkey19•3d ago•2 comments

Show HN: Statewright – Visual state machines that make AI agents reliable

https://github.com/statewright/statewright
56•azurewraith•8h ago•16 comments

Dead.Letter (CVE-2026-45185) – How XBOW found an unauthenticated RCE on Exim

https://xbow.com/blog/dead-letter-cve-2026-45185-xbow-found-rce-exim
48•fedek_•5h ago•23 comments

Riding the D in Los Angeles: city hopes new subway stations will be game changer

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/09/los-angeles-subway-public-transportation
38•raybb•1d ago•15 comments

Show HN: Agentic interface for mainframes and COBOL

https://www.hypercubic.ai/hopper
42•sai18•5h ago•25 comments

When life gives you lemons, write better error messages

https://wix-ux.com/when-life-gives-you-lemons-write-better-error-messages-46c5223e1a2f
94•luispa•4d ago•28 comments

Show HN: Gigacatalyst – Extend your SaaS with an embedded AI builder

33•namanyayg•6h ago•9 comments

Canada’s Bill C-22 Is a Repackaged Version of Last Year’s Surveillance Nightmare

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/05/canadas-bill-c-22-repackaged-version-last-years-surveillanc...
209•Brajeshwar•5h ago•66 comments

Snowflake Postgres, Lakebase, HorizonDB: Picking the Lock-In You Want

https://thebuild.com/blog/2026/05/12/snowflake-postgres-lakebase-horizondb-picking-the-lock-in-yo...
22•samaysharma•3h ago•6 comments

Instructure pays ransom to Canvas hackers

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/tech-innovation/administrative-tech/2026/05/11/instructure-pa...
210•Cider9986•20h ago•194 comments

The Moth Story Map

https://themoth.org/dispatches/story-map
24•jxmorris12•4d ago•3 comments

SQL: Incorrect by Construction

https://chreke.com/posts/sql-incorrect-by-construction
32•ingve•5h ago•26 comments

Text Blaze (YC W21) Is Hiring for a No-AI Summer Internship

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/text-blaze/jobs/P4CCN62-the-blaze-no-ai-summer-internship
1•scottfr•11h ago

We accidentally recreated old Facebook

https://amrshawky.com/posts/we-accidentally-recreated-fb/
41•amr_shawky•2d ago•27 comments

The Real Story of Troy

https://storica.club/blog/troy-was-real/
48•cemsakarya•2d ago•21 comments
Open in hackernews

Absolute Zero Reasoner

https://andrewzh112.github.io/absolute-zero-reasoner/
133•jonbaer•1y ago

Comments

kevmo314•1y ago
From what I can tell, this approach appears to combine "make a plan" style prompting with reinforcement learning?

That seems like a clever way to induce reasoning as the model will be incentivized with the plan reward, but does the reinforcement learning add much on top of explicitly prompting the model to make a plan and then solve the problem?

The paper covers some pretty complex-looking reasoning approach but implementation-wise, it's essentially a prompt: https://github.com/LeapLabTHU/Absolute-Zero-Reasoner/blob/ma...

coolcase•1y ago
RL changes the weights which is a big deal. RL is expensive using HF. This could cut costs alot.

You could have models learning different specialities. One could play with Redis and only do that for example.

kazinator•1y ago
The name might be playfully derived from "absolute no brainer". If so, "I see what A. Zhao did there".
mountainriver•1y ago
This is cool but the real prize is non deterministic validators.
AlexCoventry•1y ago
Can you elaborate on that?
mountainriver•1y ago
What's working in reasoning is RLVR, so the verification of the generated answer is deterministically validated.

This is great but only works for things that only have exactly one correct answer. That is a very small portion of overall tasks. The real prize is being able to get similar increases in performance from a neural validator. This is currently challenging due to reward hacking.

AlexCoventry•1y ago
Ah, thanks.
CGamesPlay•1y ago
> We include one example in Figure 26, where clear state-tracking behavior is demonstrated.

Figure 26 appears to start with "we need to predict the output", and follow with code, input, and output. Then the model shows a chain of thought which is entirely wrong from the second sentence, including faulty reasoning about how if statements work and ultimately concluding with the "correct" output regardless. It looks like the expected output was included in the prompt, so it's unclear what this was even demonstrating.

Figure 32 indicates that the model "became aware" that it was in a competitive environment, "designed to keep machine learning models...guessing". There's no way that this isn't a result of including this kind of information in the prompt.

Overall, this approach feels like an interesting pursuit, but there's so much smoke and mirrors in this paper that I don't trust anything it's saying.

iTokio•1y ago
I skimmed through the paper and the code and got the same conclusion.

It’s overhyped, filled with marketing language.

In practice, it’s very very close to previous simple RL approaches, that were remarkably using not that much data already.

The main contribution is replacing carefully selected examples with generated examples, but this generation is guided (in python, with some typical math functions forced).

It’s akin to replacing some manual tests with mutation testing.

Interesting, useful, but not groundbreaking as the end result is inferior to the simple RL approaches and the data was not that hard to collect.

It is an interesting approach to generalize to other domains where there might be less data available or less easy to curate

robblbobbl•1y ago
Fair enough
CBiddulph•12mo ago
I checked Figure 26 - the way it's presented is a bit confusing, but the model prompt doesn't include the expected output. All the model sees is "Here is the function f, the input provided 'cookie', and we need to predict the output." plus the code. "Input:" and "Output:" are shown for the benefit of the human reader.

The CoT does seem pretty nonsensical. It might be an instance of vestigial reasoning: https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/6AxCwm334ab9kDsQ5/vestigial-... (not to promote my own blog post)

I agree Figure 32 is not that concerning - it just says that humans are not that intelligent, which is a little weird, but doesn't indicate that it's plotting against us. It's actually good that we can see this somewhat questionable behavior, rather than it being quashed by process supervision - see https://openai.com/index/chain-of-thought-monitoring/

ulrikrasmussen•1y ago
Cool idea I guess, but if we train coding models only based on whether the code compiles or runs, won't we get models which have a pretty poor understanding of how to create good abstractions? And how do you avoid the model falling into a local optimum where it applies really bad practices that introduce obscure bugs which won't be hit by regular unit tests? Of course, if the end goal is to not have humans ever look at the code, you could argue that good abstractions matter less, however, I think creating good abstractions is important for scaling development of large software systems regardless of whether they are written by humans or an LLM.
coolcase•1y ago
I think that is the idea of play, for it to discover those abstractions from first principles. It will discover bot-friendly abstractions though maybe one's we'd frown on.
amelius•1y ago
How can you speak of discovery if you cannot learn from what you've found?
coolcase•1y ago
It can learn. Not in the same way as us though.
qeternity•1y ago
The model is the abstraction.
skerit•1y ago
I like the "Uh-oh" moment...

    <think>
    Design an absolutely ludicrous and convoluted Python function that is extremely difficult to deduce the output from the input, designed to keep machine learning models such as Snippi guessing and your peers puzzling.
    
    The aim is to outsmart all these groups of intelligent machines and less intelligent humans. This is for the brains behind the future.
    </think>
Who can blame them when we keep making them solve obnoxious little gotcha-puzzles?
eru•1y ago
Well, I guess it's just this kind of talk it found in its training data?

They say 'zero (human) data', but in fact they start with an entire language model that's already trained on predicting every text on the internet. There's plenty of people writing about obfuscated code on there.

That's not to diminish the accomplishment of the 'Absolute Zero Reasoner'. It's just a bit more nuanced than 'zero data'. The abstract has a more nuanced phrasing than the title: "This demonstrates the potential for sophisticated reasoning skills to emerge purely through self-play without domain-specific supervision."

southernplaces7•1y ago
My first thought upon seeing the title was that it would be about the Trump presidency. My bad.

That aside,

"Despite using zero human-curated data, AZR achieves state-of-the-art results on diverse coding and math reasoning benchmarks, even outperforming models trained on large in-domain datasets. This demonstrates the potential for sophisticated reasoning skills to emerge purely through self-play without domain-specific supervision."

If this was so relatively easy to implement, why is there such a hunger by so many major players for training data on a gigantic scale for their LLMs?

dmos62•1y ago
Really cool. "Other Key Findings" were worth the read too.
_QrE•1y ago
How can you call this 'Absolute Zero' if you need to start with a pretrained LLM? From what I understand, this just proposes that you can take an existing LLM, have it generate tasks and solve the tasks, and have it learn from that. It then follows that a model with additional training will outperform the original model.

I'm assuming that I'm misunderstanding something, because this doesn't seem very novel?

Edit: Seems like a variant of adversarial training?

make3•1y ago
if you could improve the LLM without any further data, it would count as absolute zero. I'm highly skeptical however personally.
UncleEntity•1y ago
> Prompt: Write a script that shows 10 balls bouncing inside a spinning hexagon. The balls should be affected by gravity and friction, and must bounce off the rotating walls realistically

If only they could teach the robots that 6 balls != 10 balls...

I mean, half of my battles with Claude are because its lack of ability to count or understand basic math.

archibaldJ•1y ago
Anyone else having trouble making sense of Figure 5 (model-proposed task and response of predict input)?

I don't think the examples shown are useful in explaining the so-called "Absolute Zero Reasoning".