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Running Gemma 4 26B at 5 tokens/sec on a 13-year-old Xeon with no GPU

https://www.neomindlabs.com/2026/06/08/running-gemma-4-26b-at-5-tokens-sec-on-a-13-year-old-xeon-...
120•neomindryan•3h ago•66 comments

Codex Micro

https://openai.com/supply/co-lab/work-louder/
106•davidbarker•2h ago•91 comments

Mysteries of Telegram Data Centers

https://dev.moe/en/3025
179•theanonymousone•5h ago•61 comments

Show HN: misa77 - a codec that decodes 2x faster than LZ4 (at better ratios)

https://github.com/welcome-to-the-sunny-side/misa77
66•nonadhocproblem•2h ago•19 comments

Collection of Digital Clock Designs

https://clocks.dev
45•levmiseri•2h ago•13 comments

Murati's Thinking Machines Releases Open-Weights 975B Parameter LLM

https://thinkingmachines.ai/inkling/
14•htrp•23m ago•2 comments

Stripe, Advent offer to buy PayPal for more than $53B

https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/stripe-advent-offer-buy-paypal-more-than-53-billion-sour...
72•rvz•15h ago•29 comments

Launch HN: Coasty (YC S26) – An API for computer-use agents

https://coasty.ai/docs
22•nkov47•2h ago•0 comments

Artie (YC S23) Is Hiring Software Engineers

https://jobs.ashbyhq.com/artie
1•tang8330•1h ago

Open-source memory for coding agents, synced over SSH

https://github.com/vshulcz/deja-vu/
54•vshulcz•2h ago•15 comments

My midlife crisis Corolla is fast, furious, and modded

https://www.zocalopublicsquare.org/my-midlife-crisis-corolla-fast-furious-fully-modded/
80•gmays•4h ago•160 comments

Sleep regularity is a stronger predictor of mortality risk than sleep duration (2023)

https://academic.oup.com/sleep/article/47/1/zsad253/7280269
567•bilsbie•6h ago•279 comments

Towards a Harness That Can Do Anything

https://eardatasci.github.io/c/ambiance/index.html
100•evakhoury•4h ago•59 comments

When A.I. Is a Member of the Family

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2026/07/20/when-ai-is-a-member-of-the-family
39•fortran77•3h ago•36 comments

Prioritize mental health, and why communication is so important

https://ramones.dev/posts/mental-health/
207•ramon156•7h ago•132 comments

A General Goal-Conditioned Minecraft Model

https://pantograph.com/journal/pan-1
21•agajews•2h ago•9 comments

The Memory Heist

https://www.ayush.digital/blog/the-memory-heist
48•eieio•22h ago•3 comments

Unsolved Problems in MLOps

https://spawn-queue.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3762989
19•gnyeki•2h ago•3 comments

What designing 54 computer science cards taught me about graphic design

https://fhoehl.com/designing-algodeck
18•marukodo•2h ago•6 comments

Editing React components that never rendered

https://blog.crossui.com/2026/07/editing-react-components-that-never-rendered
5•linb•2d ago•0 comments

The Three-Second Theft: Why AI Voice Fraud Outruns Every Defence

https://smarterarticles.co.uk/the-three-second-theft-why-ai-voice-fraud-outruns-every-defence
131•dxs•5h ago•167 comments

OpenAI loses trademark dispute at EU court

https://dpa-international.com/economics/urn:newsml:dpa.com:20090101:260715-930-389143/
140•hermanzegerman•4h ago•103 comments

Today I Rescued 7,234 Old GIFs

https://danq.me/2026/07/10/rescuing-7234-gifs/
34•birdculture•2d ago•2 comments

Inkling: Our Open-Weights Model

https://thinkingmachines.ai/news/introducing-inkling/
14•vimarsh6739•25m ago•2 comments

The well-calibrated Bayesian [pdf] (1982)

https://fitelson.org/seminar/dawid.pdf
39•Murfalo•4h ago•12 comments

The Conservationist Who Turned 40 Terabytes of Public Data into a Video Game

https://blog.exe.dev/meet-the-conservationist-who-turned-40-terabytes-of-government-data-into-a-v...
68•bryanmikaelian•1d ago•12 comments

Weathergotchi – an open-source climate Tamagotchi

https://github.com/Michael-Manning/E-Paper-Climate-Logger
96•luanmuniz•7h ago•22 comments

FreeBSD 16 Retires the Last of Its GPL Code from Its Base System

https://www.phoronix.com/news/FreeBSD-16-Goes-GPL-Free
48•lr0•2h ago•2 comments

What Every Python Developer Should Know About the CPython ABI

https://labs.quansight.org/blog/python-abi-abi3t
36•matt_d•3d ago•4 comments

DEA to Temporarily Schedule 7-Oh and Related Substances to Protect Public Safety

https://www.dea.gov/press-releases/2026/07/01/dea-temporarily-schedule-7-oh-and-related-substance...
66•gnabgib•3h ago•129 comments
Open in hackernews

EM-LLM: Human-Inspired Episodic Memory for Infinite Context LLMs

https://github.com/em-llm/EM-LLM-model
113•jbotz•1y ago

Comments

MacsHeadroom•1y ago
So, infinite context length by making it compute bound instead of memory bound. Curious how much longer this takes to run and when it makes sense to use vs RAG.
zfountas•1y ago
Hi MacsHeadroom, first author here. Thanks for the great questions about compute/memory trade-offs.

The quick take: To give you an example of processing speed, with a 7B model on an NVIDIA V100, EM-LLM processes (or generates) about 326 tokens/sec with a 51.2K context window (which is quite competitive for these old GPUs).

More broadly, EM-LLM is designed to make ultra-long contexts (memory-prohibitive for standard O(n^2) attention) computationally tractable. The Appendix C of our paper https://openreview.net/pdf?id=BI2int5SAC details how: significantly better attention scaling, efficient O(nm) memory formation, and large KV cache management via CPU/disk offloading. While there's a slight per-chunk overhead compared to the simplest retrieval methods initially, the crucial part is our ability to handle sequences at scales infeasible for full-context models. For instance, we're successfully using 8B models with 10M token contexts on a single GPU without prohibitive delays.

Regarding RAG in particular, EM-LLM often shows significant gains on tasks needing deep understanding of a single, long, coherent context. A key reason is that EM-LLM allows each layer to retrieve and integrate relevant information from different "episodes" of the context independently, offering more nuance than a typical single RAG step, for similar overall resource use.

mountainriver•1y ago
TTT, cannon layers, and titans seem like a stronger approach IMO.

Information needs to be compressed into latent space or it becomes computationally intractable

searchguy•1y ago
do you have references to

> TTT, cannon layers, and titans

najarvg•1y ago
This was the nearest reference I could find. Links to an unofficial pytorch implementation on Github are also linked in the threads somewhere - https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/1i0q8nw/titans_...
vessenes•1y ago
is titans replicated? I feel like lucidrains couldn't replicate.
logicchains•1y ago
I think something like Titans explains Gemini's excellent long context performance. That would explain why the Titan team hasn't released the training code or hyperpameters used even though they said in the paper that they would, and why soon after that it came out that DeepMind would be holding off publishing new results for 6 months to avoid giving away competitive advantages.
p_v_doom•1y ago
Interesting. Before there even was attention I was thinking that the episodic memory model offers something that could be very useful for neural nets, so its cool to see people testing that
killerstorm•1y ago
Note that this works within a single sequence of tokens. It might be consistent with "episodic memory" metaphor if we consider a particular transformer run as its experience.

But this might be very different from what people expect from "memory" - i.e. ability to learn vast amounts of information and retrieve it as necessary.

This is more like a refinement of transformer attention: instead of running attention over all tokens (which is very expensive as it's quadratic), it selects a subset of token spans and runs fine-grained attention only on those. So it essentially breaks transformer attention into two parts - coarse-grained (k-NN over token spans) and fine-grained (normal).

It might be a great thing for long-context situations. But it doesn't make sense when you want millions of different facts to be considered - making them into long context is rather inefficient.

yorwba•1y ago
It would be inefficient if you had to do it from scratch for every query, but if you can do it once as a preprocessing step and reuse the prepared context for many queries, it might start to become more efficient than a shorter context that includes only some documents but has to be reprocessed because it's different every time.
killerstorm•1y ago
Yes, I think it might be a good solution where you have a context up to 10M of tokens and you do a lot of requests with that context. It might be relevant for agentic stuff which tends to produce long chat logs - especially with some gadgets on top, e.g. some 'episodes' might be completely removed as obsolete.

But I don't think it's a good solution for bigger amounts of data - as in that case it's more beneficial if that can be formed into independent memories.