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We Know Simple Fluids Can Flow. Turns Out, Some Can Fracture

https://www.quantamagazine.org/we-know-simple-fluids-can-flow-turns-out-some-can-fracture-20260710/
48•Anon84•2h ago•8 comments

Mesh LLM: distributed AI computing on iroh

https://www.iroh.computer/blog/mesh-llm
169•tionis•6h ago•37 comments

A pure scheme web programming tool

https://goeteia.dev
55•guenchi•4h ago•16 comments

Show HN: Ant – A JavaScript runtime and ecosystem

https://antjs.org
215•theMackabu•8h ago•91 comments

RISCBoy is an open-source portable games console, designed from scratch

https://github.com/Wren6991/RISCBoy
91•mariuz•6h ago•17 comments

I Did Not Kill Stanley Lieber: How to Draw (With 9front)

https://triapul.cz/automa/i_did_not_kill_stanley_lieber
34•c-c-c-c-c•2d ago•5 comments

What xAI's Grok Build CLI Actually Sends to xAI

https://gist.github.com/cereblab/dc9a40bc26120f4540e4e09b75ffb547
145•jhoho•3h ago•79 comments

A dock that wakes up reliably

https://fabiensanglard.net/tb4/index.html
51•ingve•4h ago•37 comments

The Energetic Costs of Cellular Computation (2012)

https://arxiv.org/abs/1203.5426
14•lioeters•2h ago•1 comments

Nvidia, CoreWeave, and Nebius: Inside the Circular Financing of the GPU Boom

https://io-fund.com/ai-stocks/nvidia-coreweave-nebius-circular-financing-gpu-boom
203•adletbalzhanov•11h ago•68 comments

An agent in 100 lines of Lisp

https://thebeach.dev/posts/lisp-agent/
69•jamiebeach•4d ago•5 comments

Why are US consumers so angry? It's not just high prices

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2026/jun/04/us-consumer-rage-prices-economy
49•dilawar•1h ago•39 comments

Under federal rule, colleges must leave grads better off or lose financial aid

https://www.npr.org/2026/06/30/nx-s1-5835631/turner-camhi-do-no-harm-college-loans
22•nradov•57m ago•9 comments

A Erlang style pure Scheme Webserver and further

https://igropyr.com
33•guenchi•3h ago•1 comments

EF Core 11 makes your split queries faster

https://steven-giesel.com/blogPost/d4401fd0-805a-4703-9d9e-5fe3b57c25ea
5•rellem•1w ago•0 comments

Long Covid May Physically Damage the Nerves That Control the Stomach

https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(26)00608-9/fulltext
83•thenerdhead•4h ago•35 comments

Billions of Sketches Reveal Hidden Cultural Variation in Human Concepts

https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.07267
73•Anon84•2d ago•9 comments

UPI: Anatomy of a Payment Transaction

https://timeseriesofindia.com/economy/reads/upi-architecture/
134•prtk25•12h ago•50 comments

We scaled PgBouncer to 4x throughput

https://clickhouse.com/blog/pgbouncer-clickhouse-managed-postgres
190•saisrirampur•13h ago•38 comments

Jellyfish Undersea Roundabout

https://visitfaroeislands.com/en/plan-your-stay/getting-around/world-first-under-sea-roundabout
16•hydrogen7800•3d ago•1 comments

The early History of the Singular Value Decomposition (1993) [pdf]

https://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~saito/courses/229A/stewart-svd.pdf
103•wolfi1•13h ago•61 comments

Prefer strict tables in SQLite

https://evanhahn.com/prefer-strict-tables-in-sqlite/
243•ingve•11h ago•119 comments

Fixed three bugs that made Qwen3.5-122B a daily driver on Mac Studio

https://mrzk.io/posts/qmlx-maximising-ai-psychosis-minmaxing-mac-studio/
19•marzukia•6h ago•9 comments

Doctors die. It's not like the rest of us, but it should be (2016)

https://archive.cancerworld.net/featured/how-doctors-die/
113•downbad_•5h ago•65 comments

Biff.graph: structure your Clojure codebase as a queryable graph

https://github.com/jacobobryant/biff/tree/v2.x/libs/graph
106•jacobobryant•4d ago•9 comments

Optimization Solver as a Service

https://www.quicopt.com/developer/getting-started/
24•paddi91•3d ago•12 comments

Show HN: Learn by rebuilding Redis, Git, a database from scratch

https://shipthatcode.com
138•acley•15h ago•40 comments

Martha Lillard, last US polio patient using iron lung, dies at 78 in Oklahoma

https://abcnews.com/US/wireStory/martha-lillard-us-polio-patient-iron-lung-dies-134668491
52•daniel_iversen•4h ago•11 comments

Sixtyfour (YC P25) Is Hiring

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/sixtyfour/jobs/bIbgQkL-operations-associate-data-samples-cu...
1•HPMOR•11h ago

Show HN: Sqlsure – deterministic semantic checks for AI-generated SQL

https://github.com/sqlsure/sqlsure
25•tejusarora•8h ago•4 comments
Open in hackernews

QueryLeaf: SQL for Mongo

https://github.com/beekeeper-studio/queryleaf
23•tilt•1y ago

Comments

ttfkam•1y ago
Would much rather have "Mongo" for SQL like this:

https://github.com/microsoft/documentdb

I am skeptical that SQL with Mongo backing it would be at all performant except in the most trivial cases. On the flip side, Postgres's jsonb indexing makes the inverse very doable.

Zambyte•1y ago
https://www.ferretdb.com/
VWWHFSfQ•1y ago
We're seeing a convergence of document DBs adding relational features, and relational DBs adding document features. At this point I find the best of both worlds to simply be PG with JSONB.

    create table document (
      id uuid primary key default gen_random_uuid(),
      doc jsonb
    );

This alone will give you a huge number of the features that Mongo provides, but also the full power of Postgres for everything else.
victor106•1y ago
this makes so much sense.

I also wonder if there are some specific capabilities of MongoDB that this pattern does not support?

etse•1y ago
Maybe not capabilities, but I'm wondering if Postgres has gotten any easier to scale horizontally. The administrative overhead of scaling and maintenance with MongoDB seemed lower to Postgres to me.

Would love to hear from others with more Postgres than I.

ttfkam•1y ago
Excluding conversations about MongoDB compatibility, PG16 added bidirectional replication for multiple writers and there are Postgres-compatible options out there for a distributed database including Citus, EDB Postgres Distributed, Yugabyte, CockroachDB, Aurora Limitless, etc.

The choices require some nuance to figure out a best fit, but then again so does any MongoDB installation (despite the marketing hype to the contrary as there are no free lunches).

You might be surprised how far most folks can typically scale with just read replica(s) on a reasonably sized writer. Add in bidirectional replication for multiple writers, and you can go even further. Beyond that, even vanilla Postgres can do it, but you'll need to do some combinations of partitioning and foreign tables.

zareith•1y ago
Curious if there is something similar that works with sqlite.
maxbond•1y ago
As of 3.38 (or 3.45 if you meant a binary JSON structure specifically) https://sqlite.org/json1.html
zareith•1y ago
We can use json type, but the dx around directly using that is not comparable to mongodb. Which is why I was looking for a similar abstraction.
aleksi•1y ago
There is FerretDB v1, which provides MongoDB protocol for SQLite. See https://github.com/FerretDB/FerretDB/tree/main-v1
zareith•1y ago
They seemed to have moved away from that.

From https://docs.ferretdb.io/migration/migrating-from-v1

> Unlike v1.x that provides options for PostgreSQL and SQLite as backend, FerretDB v2.x requires a PostgreSQL with DocumentDB extension as the backend

aleksi•1y ago
FerretDB v2 is built on top of this extension. See https://github.com/FerretDB/FerretDB
gavinray•1y ago
It's somewhat of a secret, but AWS's JDBC driver for DocumentDB supports Mongo as well

Let's you interact with Mongo as if it were a regular SQL JDBC database

https://github.com/aws/amazon-documentdb-jdbc-driver

bdcravens•1y ago
That driver is read-only
gitroom•1y ago
Honestly, putting Mongo and SQL together always confuses me a bit. I'm way more comfy with Postgres and jsonb. Anyone else feel like scaling Postgres is still kinda a pain?
sparky_•1y ago
I can appreciate the technical aspect of a translation layer, but I struggle to understand the use case for a tool like this. If your data is inherently relational, then you should be using a relational store anyway. And if it isn't, trying to hammer it on-demand into something that looks relational is going to eat you with performance implications. Unless I'm missing something.