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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/
73•Anon84•4h ago•27 comments

What xAI's Grok Build CLI Actually Sends to xAI

https://gist.github.com/cereblab/dc9a40bc26120f4540e4e09b75ffb547
214•jhoho•5h ago•105 comments

Mesh LLM: distributed AI computing on iroh

https://www.iroh.computer/blog/mesh-llm
178•tionis•7h ago•41 comments

Show HN: Ant – A JavaScript runtime and ecosystem

https://antjs.org
226•theMackabu•10h ago•101 comments

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

https://github.com/Wren6991/RISCBoy
101•mariuz•8h ago•17 comments

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

https://triapul.cz/automa/i_did_not_kill_stanley_lieber
43•c-c-c-c-c•2d ago•9 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
217•adletbalzhanov•12h ago•71 comments

Text Art Tools

https://hlnet.notion.site/text-art-tools
9•surprisetalk•3d ago•0 comments

An agent in 100 lines of Lisp

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

Why Write Code in 2026

https://softwaredoug.com/blog/2026/07/09/write-code.html
23•zdw•2h ago•5 comments

A pure scheme web programming tool

https://goeteia.dev
75•guenchi•5h ago•20 comments

EF Core 11 makes your split queries faster

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

The Energetic Costs of Cellular Computation (2012)

https://arxiv.org/abs/1203.5426
17•lioeters•4h ago•1 comments

Billions of Sketches Reveal Hidden Cultural Variation in Human Concepts

https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.07267
79•Anon84•2d ago•10 comments

A Erlang style pure Scheme Webserver and further

https://igropyr.com
53•guenchi•5h ago•4 comments

We scaled PgBouncer to 4x throughput

https://clickhouse.com/blog/pgbouncer-clickhouse-managed-postgres
197•saisrirampur•14h ago•39 comments

UPI: Anatomy of a Payment Transaction

https://timeseriesofindia.com/economy/reads/upi-architecture/
144•prtk25•13h ago•55 comments

Jellyfish Undersea Roundabout

https://visitfaroeislands.com/en/plan-your-stay/getting-around/world-first-under-sea-roundabout
20•hydrogen7800•3d ago•2 comments

Long Covid May Physically Damage the Nerves That Control the Stomach

https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(26)00608-9/fulltext
95•thenerdhead•5h ago•42 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/
28•marzukia•7h ago•13 comments

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

https://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~saito/courses/229A/stewart-svd.pdf
108•wolfi1•14h ago•62 comments

A dock that wakes up reliably

https://fabiensanglard.net/tb4/index.html
61•ingve•5h ago•38 comments

Prefer strict tables in SQLite

https://evanhahn.com/prefer-strict-tables-in-sqlite/
253•ingve•12h ago•125 comments

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

https://github.com/jacobobryant/biff/tree/v2.x/libs/graph
125•jacobobryant•4d ago•10 comments

Optimization Solver as a Service

https://www.quicopt.com/developer/getting-started/
30•paddi91•3d ago•18 comments

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

https://archive.cancerworld.net/featured/how-doctors-die/
123•downbad_•7h ago•69 comments

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

https://shipthatcode.com
149•acley•16h ago•41 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
66•daniel_iversen•5h ago•18 comments

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

https://github.com/sqlsure/sqlsure
29•tejusarora•10h ago•5 comments

Autopsy Study Finds Replicating SARS-CoV-2 in the Hearts of Long Covid

https://my.uscap.org/uscap/program/S0tc675/index.cfm?pgid=5167&sid=14770&abid=51228
23•thenerdhead•5h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Linear Programming for Fun and Profit

https://modal.com/blog/resource-solver
62•hmac1282•1y ago

Comments

ayhanfuat•1y ago
> X = [x1, ..., Xn]: instances of each type to launch

Is this a continuous variable? Seems discrete to me. I am surprised it is solved by simplex.

Frummy•1y ago
It's the answer, a vector of integers
ayhanfuat•1y ago
Simplex cannot give a vector of integers though, unless the constraint matrix is unimodular. Maybe the integrality constraint was relaxed.
cweld510•1y ago
You're right -- we do relax the integrality constraint, gaining performance at the expense of some precision, and we're generally able to paper over the difference at scheduling time. We've investigated integer linear programming for some use cases, but for solves to run quickly, we have to constrain the inputs significantly.
ayhanfuat•1y ago
Thanks for the clarification. I guess it wouldn’t matter much if the numbers are large. Initially I thought they were mostly ones and zeros.
stncls•1y ago
If this is business critical for you, you may want to switch to a faster solver. Glop is very nice, but it would be reasonable to expect a commercial solver (Gurobi, XPress, COpt) to be 60x faster [1]. By the same measure, the best open source solvers (CLP, HiGHS) are 2-3x faster than Glop.

Actually, the commercial solvers are so fast that I would not be surprised if they solved the IP problem as fast as Glop solves the LP. (Yes, the theory says it is impossible, but in practice it happens.) The cost of a commercial solver is 10k to 50k per license.

[1] ... this 60x number has very high variance depending on the type of problem, but it is not taken out of nowhere, it comes from the Mittelmann LP benchmarks https://plato.asu.edu/ftp/lpopt.html There are also benchmarks for other types of problems, including IP, see the whole list here: https://plato.asu.edu/bench.html

petters•1y ago
If you are able to paper over the fractional numbers and get a usable solution, an integer solver should also be able to find a feasible solution easily. Perhaps not optimal, but better than just solving the LP and rounding
hustwindmaple1•1y ago
You are basically doing a heurstic. Your solutions are not guaranteed to be optimal. Integer programming is the way to do.
cweld510•1y ago
Great to see this post here -- really enjoyed writing it! I think it's really cool how an algorithm from an operational research context can play a critical role in a high-availability large-scale cloud service.
sumtechguy•1y ago
LP is a shockingly good way to optimize a system. If you can put inputs/outputs into the correct form. Had an econ prof that loved these things for doing supply/demand maxima and minimum finding. He didnt outright say it but I think it was his current line of study when I was taking classes from him the 90s. I thought that, as he managed to bring it up in every class he taught.
Onavo•1y ago
Well, kantorovich did win the Nobel for inventing that.
underanalyzer•1y ago
Neat article. I do wish it mentioned that there are polynomial time algorithms to solve linear programming problems. According to the Google ortools docs it has the option to use those as well (but not with the GLOP solver). Might be good for when simplex is struggling (https://developers.google.com/optimization/lp/lp_advanced)
stncls•1y ago
You're right, but it's very subtle and complicated.

In theory, the simplex method is not known to be polynomial-time, and it is likely that indeed it is not. Some variants of the simplex method have been proven to take exponential time in some worst cases (Klee-Minty cubes). What solvers implement could be said to be one such variant ("steepest-edge pricing"), but because solvers have tons of heuristics and engineering, and also because they work in floating-point arithmetic... it's difficult to tell for sure.

In practice, the main alternative is interior-point (aka. barrier) methods which, contrary to the simplex method, are polynomial-time in theory. They are usually (but not always) faster, and their advantage tends to increase for larger instances. The problem is that they are converging numerical algorithms, and with floating-point arithmetic they never quite 100% converge. By contrast, the simplex method is a combinatorial algorithm, and the numerical errors it faces should not accumulate. As a result, good solvers perform "crossover" after interior-point methods, to get a numerically clean optimal solution. Crossover is a combinatorial algorithm, like the simplex method. Unlike the simplex method though, crossover is polynomial-time in theory (strongly so, even). However, here, theory and practice diverge a bit, and crossover implementations are essentially simplified simplex methods. As a result, in my opinion, calling iterior-point + crossover polynomial-time would be a stretch.

Still, for large problems, we can expect iterior-point + crossover to be faster than the simplex method, by a factor 2x to 10x.

There is also first-order methods, which are getting much attention lately. However, in my experience, you should only use that if you are willing to tolerate huge constraint violations in the solution, and wildly suboptimal solutions. Their main use case is when other solvers need too much RAM to solve your instance.

Onavo•1y ago
The most interesting question is how you scrape the prices. The cloudprovider really need to provide an API.
underanalyzer•1y ago
Very interesting! Thanks for the reply. I wonder if they tried these other solvers and decided they were either too slow b/c their problems were too small or the answers were too inaccurate