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Windows 9x Subsystem for Linux

https://social.hails.org/@hailey/116446826733136456
614•sohkamyung•6h ago•150 comments

Qwen3.6-27B: Flagship-Level Coding in a 27B Dense Model

https://qwen.ai/blog?id=qwen3.6-27b
177•mfiguiere•3h ago•84 comments

Our eighth generation TPUs: two chips for the agentic era

https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/infrastructure-and-cloud/google-cloud/eighth-generation-tpu...
227•xnx•4h ago•118 comments

3.4M Solar Panels

https://tech.marksblogg.com/american-solar-farms-v2.html
198•marklit•4h ago•118 comments

Treetops glowing during storms captured on film for first time

https://www.psu.edu/news/earth-and-mineral-sciences/story/treetops-glowing-during-storms-captured...
100•t-3•3h ago•21 comments

GitHub CLI now collects pseudoanonymous telemetry

https://cli.github.com/telemetry
251•ingve•4h ago•187 comments

Show HN submissions tripled and now mostly share the same vibe-coded look

https://www.adriankrebs.ch/blog/design-slop/
165•hubraumhugo•1h ago•134 comments

Columnar Storage Is Normalization

https://buttondown.com/jaffray/archive/columnar-storage-is-normalization/
54•ibobev•4h ago•22 comments

How does GPS work?

https://perthirtysix.com/how-the-heck-does-gps-work
149•alfanick•7h ago•33 comments

Making RAM at Home [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6GWikWlAQA
519•kaipereira•1d ago•146 comments

ChatGPT Images 2.0

https://openai.com/index/introducing-chatgpt-images-2-0/
964•wahnfrieden•21h ago•846 comments

Another Day Has Come

https://daringfireball.net/2026/04/another_day_has_come
111•ndr42•19h ago•98 comments

XOR'ing a register with itself is the idiom for zeroing it out. Why not sub?

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20260421-00/?p=112247
142•ingve•9h ago•152 comments

Bodega Cats of New York

https://bodegacatsofnewyork.com
16•zdw•4d ago•2 comments

DuckDB 1.5.2 – SQL database that runs on laptop, server, in the browser

https://duckdb.org/2026/04/13/announcing-duckdb-152
52•janandonly•1h ago•11 comments

Kernel code removals driven by LLM-created security reports

https://lwn.net/Articles/1068928/
81•edward•4h ago•66 comments

Prefill-as-a-Service:KVCache of Next-Generation Models Could Go Cross-Datacenter

https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.15039
34•matt_d•3d ago•1 comments

MuJoCo – Advanced Physics Simulation

https://github.com/google-deepmind/mujoco
82•modinfo•3d ago•16 comments

Expansion Artifacts

https://mattstromawn.com/writing/expansion-artifacts/
21•tobr•1d ago•1 comments

Sam Altman's Creepy Eyeball-Scanning Company Gets in Bed with Zoom and Tinder

https://gizmodo.com/sam-altmans-creepy-eyeball-scanning-company-gets-in-bed-with-zoom-and-tinder-...
15•speckx•31m ago•1 comments

Nobody Got Fired for Uber's $8M Ledger Mistake?

https://news.alvaroduran.com/p/nobody-got-fired-for-ubers-8-million
99•ohduran•5h ago•69 comments

Drunk post: Things I've learned as a senior engineer (2021)

https://luminousmen.substack.com/p/drunk-post-things-ive-learned-as
252•zdw•16h ago•184 comments

Contact Lens Uses Microfluidics to Monitor and Treat Glaucoma

https://spectrum.ieee.org/smart-contact-lens-glaucoma-microfluidics
82•pseudolus•3d ago•2 comments

Garbage Collection Without Unsafe Code

https://fitzgen.com/2024/02/06/safe-gc.html
93•foota•3d ago•37 comments

All your agents are going async

https://zknill.io/posts/all-your-agents-are-going-async/
105•zknill•2d ago•66 comments

The Vercel breach: OAuth attack exposes risk in platform environment variables

https://www.trendmicro.com/en_us/research/26/d/vercel-breach-oauth-supply-chain.html
355•queenelvis•23h ago•115 comments

Windows Server 2025 Runs Better on ARM

https://jasoneckert.github.io/myblog/server-2025-arm64/
169•jasoneckert•3d ago•129 comments

Acetaminophen vs. ibuprofen

https://asteriskmag.com/issues/14/the-mystery-in-the-medicine-cabinet
605•nkurz•2d ago•393 comments

SpaceX says it has agreement to acquire Cursor for $60B

https://twitter.com/spacex/status/2046713419978453374
764•dmarcos•18h ago•905 comments

CATL's new LFP battery can charge from 10 to 98% in less than 7 minutes

https://arstechnica.com/cars/2026/04/catls-new-lfp-battery-can-charge-from-10-to-98-in-less-than-...
111•PotatoNinja•5h ago•55 comments
Open in hackernews

JEP 515: Ahead-of-Time Method Profiling

https://openjdk.org/jeps/515
101•cempaka•11mo ago

Comments

nmstoker•11mo ago
Would be interesting if the Faster Python team considered this approach for Python (although maybe they already did?)
motoboi•11mo ago
The most impact will be achieved on java standard library, like Streams (cited in the article). Right now, although their behavior is well stablished and they are mostly used in the "factory" mode (no user subclassing or implementation of the stream api), they cannot be shipped with the JVM already compiled.

If you can find a way (which this JEP is one way) to make the bulk of the java standard api AOT compiled, then java programs will be faster (much faster).

Also, the JVM is already an engine marvel (java JIT code is fast as hell), but this will make java programs much nimbler.

rzwitserloot•11mo ago
I assume you meant with the AOT argument: "The initial few minutes of a JVM's existence, which would be the entire lifetime if you're using java the way you use e.g. your average executable in your `/usr/bin` dir".

Saying "java programs will be faster" is perhaps a bit misleading to those who don't know how java works. This will speed up only the first moments of a JVM execution, nothing more. Or, I misread the JEP, in which case I'd owe you one if you can explain what I missed.

As a java developer this will be lightly convenient when developing. We go through JVM warmup a lot more than your average user ever does. Personally I think I'm on the low end (I like debuggers, and I don't use TDD-style "what I work on is dictated by a unit test run and thus I rerun the tests a lot during development". But still it excites me somewhat, so that should mean your average java dev should be excited quite a bit by this.

I am not all that experienced in it, but I gather that lambda-style java deployments (self contained simple apps that run on demand and could in theory be operating on a 'lets boot up a JVM to run this tiny job which won't last more than half a second') have looong ago moved on from actually booting JVMs for every job, such as by using Graal, an existing AOT tool. But if you weren't using those, hoo boy. This gives every java app 'graal level bootup' for as far as I can tell effectively free (a smidge of disk space to store the profile).

For the kinds of java deployments I'm more familiar with (a server that boots as the box boots and stays running until a reboot is needed to update deps or the app itself), this probably won't cause a noticable performance boost.

indolering•11mo ago
I thought Graal was going to slowly replace HotSpot?
vips7L•11mo ago
There was talk of the graal jit replacing C2, but native image will never replace HotSpot.
mshockwave•11mo ago
in addition to storing profiles, what about caching some native code? so that we can eliminate the JIT overhead for hot functions

EDIT: they describe this in their "Alternative" section as future work

tikkabhuna•11mo ago
Is this similar/the same as Azul Zing’s ReadyNow feature?
rst•11mo ago
Faint echoes of the very first optimizing compiler, Fortran I, which did a monte carlo simulation of the flow graph to attempt to detect hot spots in the flow graph so it could allocate registers to inner loops first.
indolering•11mo ago
OpenJ9 has had some of this type of functionality for a while now. Glad to see the difference between interpreted and compiled languages continue to get fuzzier.
pjmlp•11mo ago
Even longer than that, OpenJ9 AOT capabilities, and JIT cache, go back to the Websphere Real-Time JVM, whose branding had nothing to do with J2EE application server.

Most documentation is gone from the Internet, I was able to dig one of the old manuals,

https://ftpmirror.your.org/pub/misc/ftp.software.ibm.com/sof...

These kind of features have been available in commercial JVMs like those for a while now, what the community is finally getting are free beer versions of such capabilities.