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Valve releases Steam Controller CAD files under Creative Commons license

https://www.digitalfoundry.net/news/2026/05/valve-releases-steam-controller-cad-files-under-creat...
1267•haunter•14h ago•391 comments

Appearing productive in the workplace

https://nooneshappy.com/article/appearing-productive-in-the-workplace/
941•diebillionaires•14h ago•363 comments

Diskless Linux boot using ZFS, iSCSI and PXE

https://aniket.foo/posts/20260505-netboot/
51•stereo-highway•3h ago•15 comments

Permacomputing Principles

https://permacomputing.net/principles/
83•andsoitis•4h ago•20 comments

SQLite Is a Library of Congress Recommended Storage Format

https://sqlite.org/locrsf.html
137•whatisabcdefgh•8h ago•31 comments

Vibe coding and agentic engineering are getting closer than I'd like

https://simonwillison.net/2026/May/6/vibe-coding-and-agentic-engineering/
525•e12e•15h ago•573 comments

ProgramBench: Can Language Models Rebuild Programs from Scratch?

https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.03546
11•jonbaer•2h ago•8 comments

The Mathematical Dance Inside Plant Cells

https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-hidden-mathematical-dance-inside-plant-cells-20260504/
17•isaacfrond•1d ago•1 comments

The Vatican's Website in Latin

https://www.vatican.va/latin/latin_index.html
103•ks2048•4h ago•64 comments

Programming Still Sucks

https://www.stvn.sh/writing/programming-still-sucks-fqffhyp
267•jeromechoo•11h ago•104 comments

From Supabase to Clerk to Better Auth

https://blog.val.town/better-auth
238•stevekrouse•13h ago•164 comments

RSS Feeds Send Me More Traffic Than Google

https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/05/rss-feeds-send-me-more-traffic-than-google/
37•SpyCoder77•5h ago•4 comments

What I Learned Making an App for My Family

https://mendelgreenberg.com/posts/ourcar/
26•chabad360•16h ago•2 comments

Pen pal programs endure in a digital age

https://apnews.com/article/pen-pals-letters-comeback-bc87e1b9c229665bafd368e19751d6ca
32•petethomas•1d ago•2 comments

Google Cloud fraud defense, the next evolution of reCAPTCHA

https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/identity-security/introducing-google-cloud-fraud-defense-t...
263•unforgivenpasta•12h ago•257 comments

Show HN: Hallucinopedia

http://halupedia.com/
194•bstrama•13h ago•178 comments

Finding the differences in a series of power supplies

https://www.lttlabs.com/articles/2026/05/05/testing-psu-series
37•LabsLucas•1d ago•2 comments

Show HN: Tilde.run – Agent sandbox with a transactional, versioned filesystem

https://tilde.run/
148•ozkatz•14h ago•105 comments

Community firmware for the Xteink X4 e-paper reader

https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader
78•dmos62•1d ago•21 comments

Building the TD4 4-Bit CPU

https://jayakody2000lk.blogspot.com/2026/05/building-td4-4-bit-cpu.html
7•zdw•1h ago•5 comments

Learning the Integral of a Diffusion Model

https://sander.ai/2026/05/06/flow-maps.html
124•benanne•11h ago•20 comments

Building my own Vi text editor in BASIC

https://leetusman.com/nosebook/yvi
45•zeech•1d ago•21 comments

A Theory of Deep Learning

https://elonlit.com/scrivings/a-theory-of-deep-learning/
165•elonlit•1d ago•34 comments

Perturb-MARS: Reading mouse experiments through a human lens

https://www.noetik.blog/p/perturb-mars-reading-mouse-experiments
17•crescit_eundo•2d ago•2 comments

Wolfgang Koeppen's Structural Musicality

https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2026/05/04/wolfgang-koeppens-structural-musicality/
6•prismatic•2d ago•0 comments

SoundOff: Low-Cost Passive Ultrasound Tags

https://yibo-fu.com/SoundOff-Low-cost-Passive-Ultrasound-Tags-for-Non-invasive-and-Non
56•jonbaer•13h ago•1 comments

Ted Turner has died

https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/06/us/ted-turner-death
260•pseudolus•15h ago•205 comments

Show HN: PHP-fts – Full-text search engine in pure PHP, no extensions

https://github.com/olivier-ls/php-fts
58•asmodios•9h ago•13 comments

Inkscape 1.4.4

https://inkscape.org/doc/release_notes/1.4.4/Inkscape_1.4.4.html
270•s1291•10h ago•83 comments

Show HN: I built an open-source email builder, alternative to Beefree/Unlayer

https://play.templatical.com
127•oahmadov•14h ago•31 comments
Open in hackernews

Comparing Parallel Functional Array Languages: Programming and Performance

https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.08906
91•vok•11mo ago

Comments

yubblegum•11mo ago
Chapel got a mention in the 'Related Work' section. I looked at it a few years ago and found it compelling (but I don't do HPC so it was just window watching). What's the HN feedback on Chapel?

https://chapel-lang.org/

marai2•11mo ago
If you scroll down on the Chapel-lang website, there seems to be a lot of activity happening with this language. There is even going to be a ChapelCon 2025.

https://chapel-lang.org/blog/posts/chapelcon25-announcement/

throwaway17_17•11mo ago
Chapel and Lustre (a parallel, distributed file system) from Cray were funded by DARPA’s High Productivity Computing Systems program. This work, along with Fortress, from Sun, were developed explicitly to enable and ‘simplify’ the programming of distributed “supercomputers”. The work and artifacts, along with the published documentation and research is of particularly high quality.

Even if you aren’t involved in HPC I’d say the concepts transfer or provide a great basis for parallel and distributed idioms and methodologies that can be adapted to existing languages or used in development of new languages.

TL;DR - Chapel is cool and if you are interested in the general subject matter (despite a different focus) Fortress, which is discontinued, should also be checked out.

bradcray•11mo ago
@yubblegum: I'm unfairly biased towards Chapel (positively), so won't try to characterize HN's opinion on it. But I did want to note that while Chapel's original and main reason for being is HPC, now that everyone lives in a parallel-computing world, users also benefits from using Chapel in desktop environments where they want to do multicore and/or GPU programming. One such example is covered in this interview with an atmospheric science researcher for whom it has replaced Python as his go-to desktop language: https://chapel-lang.org/blog/posts/7qs-dias/
yubblegum•11mo ago
Thank you Brad! I was in fact wondering about GPU use myself. Does it work with Apple's M# GPUs?

Btw, I was looking at the docs for GPU [1] and unsolicited feedback from a potential user is that the setup process needs to become less painful. For example, yesterday installed it via brew but then hit the setup page for GPU and noted I now needed to build from source.

(Back in the day, one reason some of Sun's Java efforts to extend Java's fieddom faltered was because of the friction of setup for (iirc) things like Applets, etc. I think Chapel deserves a far wider audiance.)

[1]: https://chapel-lang.org/docs/technotes/gpu.html#setup (for others - you obviously know the link /g)

p.s. just saw your comment from last year - dropping it here for others: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39032481

bradcray•11mo ago
@yubblegum: I'm afraid we don't have an update on support for Apple GPUs since last year's comment. While it comes up from time-to-time, nobody has opened an issue for it yet (please feel encouraged to!), and it isn't something we've had the chance to prioritize, where a lot of our recent work has focused on improving tooling support and addressing user requests.

I'll take your feedback about simplifying GPU-based installs back to our team, and have noted it on this thematically related issue: https://github.com/chapel-lang/chapel/issues/25187#issuecomm...

munchler•11mo ago
Are these languages pure in the functional sense? E.g. Do they allow/encourage mutation? My understanding is that APL permits mutable state and side effects, but maybe they are rarely used in practice? If you're modifying the contents of an array in-place, I don't think it's reasonable to consider that functional.
zfnmxt•11mo ago
Futhark, SaC, and Accelerate have purely functional semantics. Futhark has something called "in-place updates" that operationally mutate the given array, but semantically they work as if a new array is created (and are statically guaranteed to work this way by the type system).
RodgerTheGreat•11mo ago
APL arrays are values in the same sense as value types in any functional language. You don't explicitly modify arrays in-place; if they happen to have a refcount of 1 operations may happen in-place as an optimization, but not in a manner which observably alters program behavior.
grg0•11mo ago
Accelerate is a Haskell library/eDSL.
axman6•11mo ago
I wasn’t expecting to personally know two of the authors, but having Accelerate included makes sense.
geocar•11mo ago
> My understanding is that APL permits mutable state and side effects ... If you're modifying the contents of an array in-place, I don't think it's reasonable to consider that functional.

      a←'hello'
      a[1]←'c'
This does _not_ modify the array in-place. It's actually the same as:

     a←'hello'
     a←'c'@1⊢a
which is more obviously functional. It is easy to convince yourself of this:

      a←'hello'
      b←a
      b[1]←'j'
      a,b
returns 'hellojello' and not 'jellojello'.
teleforce•11mo ago
Notice that all the all the languages mentioned depends on the external BLAS library for example OpenBLAS for performance.

D language have excellent support functional and array features with parallel support. On top that not known to others it has high performance native BLAS kind of library with ergonomic and intuitiveness similar to python [1].

[1] Numeric age for D: Mir GLAS is faster than OpenBLAS and Eigen (2016):

http://blog.mir.dlang.io/glas/benchmark/openblas/2016/09/23/...

zfnmxt•11mo ago
> Notice that all the all the languages mentioned depends on the external BLAS library for example OpenBLAS for performance.

That's incorrect. Futhark doesn't even have linear algebra primitives---everything has to be done in terms of map/reduce/etc: https://github.com/diku-dk/linalg/blob/master/lib/github.com...

tomsmeding•11mo ago
The same holds for Accelerate, and I'm fairly sure also SaC and APL. DaCe even gets a special mention in the paper in section 10.5 stating that they specifically _do_ use BLAS bindings.
joe_the_user•11mo ago
"Notice that all the all the languages mentioned depends on the external BLAS library". I didn't notice this 'cause I don't think it's true. For example, it highly implausible that APL[1] would depend on BLAS[2] considering APL predates BLAS by 5-10 years ("developed in the sixties" versus "between 1971 and 1973"). I don't think Futhark uses BLAS either but in modern stupidity, this currently two hour old parent has taken over Google results so it's hard to find references.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APL_(programming_language)

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_Linear_Algebra_Subprogra...

DrNosferatu•11mo ago
Matlab supposedly is “portable APL”.
DrNosferatu•11mo ago
the man who invented MATLAB, Cleve Moler said: [I’ve] always seen MATLAB as “portable APL”. [1]

…why the downvoting?

[1] - https://computinged.wordpress.com/2012/06/14/matlab-and-apl-...

beagle3•11mo ago
I didn't downvote, but ... as someone who used both, this statement seems nonsensical.

APL is mathematical notation that is also executable. It is all about putting a mathematical algorithm in a succinct, terse way.

MATLAB is a clunky Fortran-like language that does simple 2D matrix stuff reasonably terse (though not remotely as terse as APL), and does everything else horribly awkwardly and verbosely.

Modern MATLAB might be comparable to 1960s APL, but original MATLAB was most certainly not, and even modern MATLAB isn't comparable to modern APL (and its successors such as BQN and K)

devlovstad•11mo ago
I took a course on massively parallel programming taught by one of the authors of this paper that extensively used Futhark and CUDA. While I have not used any of these languages since, I have used JAX[1] quite a lot, where the learnings from this course have been quite helpful. Many people will end up writing code for GPUs through different levels of abstraction, but those who are able to reason about the semantics through functional primitives might have an easier time understanding what's happening under the hood.
vanderZwan•11mo ago
I think the intended footnote was accidentally left out. Were you talking about this Python library?

https://docs.jax.dev/en/latest/index.html

tough•11mo ago
There's a JAX for AI/LM too

https://github.com/jax-ml/jax

but yeah no idea which the OP meant

zfnmxt•11mo ago
> I took a course on massively parallel programming taught by one of the authors of this paper that extensively used Futhark and CUDA.

PMPH? :)