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An OpenAI model has disproved a central conjecture in discrete geometry

https://openai.com/index/model-disproves-discrete-geometry-conjecture/
739•tedsanders•6h ago•537 comments

GitHub confirms breach of 3,800 repos via malicious VSCode extension

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/github-confirms-breach-of-3-800-repos-via-maliciou...
538•Timofeibu•12h ago•192 comments

DOS Zone

https://dos.zone/
91•rglover•3h ago•21 comments

Colorado Amended SB051 (Age Verification Bill) to Exclude Open Source Projects

https://legiscan.com/CO/bill/SB051/2026
120•ki4jgt•5h ago•32 comments

I reverse engineered Apple's video wallpapers

https://github.com/kageroumado/phosphene
56•kageroumado•2h ago•9 comments

Flipper One Tech Specs

https://docs.flipper.net/one/general/tech-specs
252•gregsadetsky•7h ago•92 comments

Your Most Improbable Life

https://kevinkelly.substack.com/p/your-most-improbable-life
32•jger15•2d ago•4 comments

How fast is N tokens per second really?

https://mikeveerman.github.io/tokenspeed/
306•hexagr•2d ago•73 comments

Qwen3.7-Max: The Agent Frontier

https://qwen.ai/blog?id=qwen3.7
607•kevinsimper•15h ago•246 comments

Archaeologists find Egyptian mummy buried with the 'Iliad'

https://www.openculture.com/2026/05/archaeologists-discover-ancient-egyptian-mummy-buried-with-pa...
52•diodorus•5d ago•18 comments

Why is Inkwell stuck in review

https://www.manton.org/2026/05/19/why-is-inkwell-stuck-in.html
107•speckx•8h ago•33 comments

Saying goodbye to asm.js

https://spidermonkey.dev/blog/2026/05/20/saying-goodbye-to-asmjs.html
313•eqrion•13h ago•134 comments

Qian Xuesen: The missile genius America lost and China gained (2025)

https://www.usni.org/magazines/naval-history/2025/december/missile-genius-america-lost-and-china-...
114•thnaks•8h ago•64 comments

Reviving old scanners with an in-browser Linux VM bridged to WebUSB over USB/IP

https://yes-we-scan.app/details
10•gmac•2d ago•1 comments

Map of Metal

https://mapofmetal.com/
400•robin_reala•15h ago•145 comments

Anthropic is expanding to Colossus2. Will use GB200

https://xcancel.com/nottombrown/status/2057194829986300375
80•aurareturn•4h ago•69 comments

SpaceX S-1

https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1181412/000162828026036936/spaceexplorationtechnologi.htm
233•cachecow•5h ago•171 comments

Show HN: CPU-only transcription for YouTube, TikTok, X, Instagram videos

https://github.com/kouhxp/yapsnap
29•mrkn1•4h ago•12 comments

Google Declaring War on the Web

https://tante.cc/2026/05/20/on-google-declaring-war-on-the-web/
334•cdrnsf•4h ago•235 comments

Google's AI is being manipulated. The search giant is quietly fighting back

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260519-google-tackles-attempts-to-hack-its-ai-results
256•tigerlily•14h ago•173 comments

The Letter S, by Donald Knuth [pdf]

https://gwern.net/doc/design/typography/1980-knuth.pdf
8•bambax•1h ago•0 comments

Incident Report: May 19, 2026 – GCP Account Suspension

https://blog.railway.com/p/incident-report-may-19-2026-gcp-account-outage
388•0xedb•17h ago•232 comments

Sharla Boehm, the programmer whose code underpins the Internet

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-programmer-whose-code-underpins-the-internet/
97•dxs•2d ago•25 comments

Intuit to lay off over 3k employees to refocus on AI

https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/20/intuit-to-lay-off-over-3000-employees-to-refocus-on-ai/
27•wapasta•1h ago•6 comments

SBCL: the ultimate assembly code breadboard (2014)

https://pvk.ca/Blog/2014/03/15/sbcl-the-ultimate-assembly-code-breadboard/
125•yacin•10h ago•7 comments

PopuLoRA: Co-Evolving LLM Populations for Reasoning Self- Play

https://vmax.ai/team/populora-co-evolving-llm-populations-for-reasoning-self-play
33•AMavorParker•4h ago•6 comments

Starship's Twelfth Flight Test

https://www.spacex.com/launches/starship-flight-12
91•pantalaimon•4h ago•80 comments

Meta blocks human rights accounts from reaching audiences in Saudi Arabia, UAE

https://www.alqst.org/ar/posts/1190
925•giuliomagnifico•13h ago•398 comments

Not alive, but not dead: disembodied human brains used for drug testing

https://www.science.org/content/article/not-alive-not-dead-disembodied-human-brains-used-drug-tes...
152•Timofeibu•6h ago•125 comments

Formal Verification Gates for AI Coding Loops

https://reubenbrooks.dev/blog/structural-backpressure-beats-smarter-agents/
113•pyrex41•10h ago•25 comments
Open in hackernews

Understanding the Go Scheduler

https://nghiant3223.github.io/2025/04/15/go-scheduler.html
180•gnabgib•1y ago

Comments

90s_dev•12mo ago
I heard that the scheduler is a huge obstacle to many potential optimizations, is that true?
NAHWheatCracker•12mo ago
In some ways, yes. If you want to optimize at that level you ought to use another language.

I'm not a low level optimization guy, but I've had occasions where I wanted control over which threads my goroutines are running on or prioritizing important goroutines. It's a trade off for making things less complex, which is standard for Go.

I suppose there's always hope that the Go developers can change things.

silisili•12mo ago
You can kinda work around this though. runtime package has a LockOSThread that pins a goroutine to its current thread and prevents others from using it.

If you model it in a way where you have one goroutine per os thread that receives and does work, it gets you close. But in many cases that means rearching the entire code base, as it's not a style I typically reach for.

naikrovek•12mo ago
That sounds a lot like just using another language.
silisili•12mo ago
It's really not that bad. If you have a codebase in Go you can speed up, it's fine.

That said, if you're greenfielding and see this as a limitation to begin with, picking another language is probably the right way.

jerf•12mo ago
If you need it here or there, no. I've got a use case where I need a single locked thread for a particular syscall's functionality. It's not like it leaks out into the rest of the program and everything else has to change to accomodate it.

If you need it pervasively, Go may not be the correct choice. Then again, the list of languages that is not a correct choice in that case is quite long. That's a minority case. An important one, but a minority one.

jasonthorsness•12mo ago
It's always a sign of good design when something as complex as the scheduler described "just works" with the simple abstraction of the goroutine. What a great article.

"1/61 of the time, check the global run queue." Stuff like this is a little odd; I would have thought this would be a variable dependent on the number of physical cores.

01HNNWZ0MV43FF•12mo ago
That's so funny. I just saw `61` in the Tokio code with a comment "copied this from Go"
__turbobrew__•12mo ago
Make sure you set GOMAXPROCS when the runtime is cgroup limited.

I once profiled a slow go program running on a node with 168 cores, but cpu.max was 2 cores for the cgroup. The runtime defaults to set GOMAXPROCS to the number of visible cores which was 168 in this case. Over half the runtime was the scheduler bouncing goroutines between 168 processes despite cpu.max being 2 CPU.

The JRE is smart enough to figure out if it is running in a resource limited cgroup and make sane decisions based upon that, but golang has no such thing.

xyzzy_plugh•12mo ago
Relevant proposal to make GOMAXPROCS cgroup-aware: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/73193
robinhoodexe•12mo ago
Looks like it was just merged btw.
yencabulator•12mo ago
This should be automatic these days (for the basic scenarios).

https://github.com/golang/go/blob/a1a151496503cafa5e4c672e0e...

jasonthorsness•12mo ago
uh isn't that change 3 hours old?
yencabulator•12mo ago
Oh heh yes it is. I just remembered the original discussion from 2019 (https://github.com/golang/go/issues/33803) and grepped the source tree for cgroup to see if that got done or not, but didn't check when it got done.

As said in 2019, import https://github.com/uber-go/automaxprocs to get the functionality ASAP.

jasonthorsness•12mo ago
super-weird coincidence but welcome, I have been waiting for this for a long time!
williamdclt•12mo ago
I honestly can’t count on my fingers and toes how many times something very precisely relevant to me was brought up or sorted out hours-to-days before I looked it up. And more often than once, by people I personally knew!

Always a weird feeling, it’s a small world

formerly_proven•12mo ago
This is probably going to save quadrillions of CPU cycles by making an untold number of deployed Go applications a bit more CPU efficient. Since Go is the "lingua franca" of containers, many ops people assume the Go runtime is container-aware - it's not (well not in any released version, yet).

If they'd now also make the GC respect memory cgroup limits (i.e. automatic GOMEMLIMIT), we'd probably be freeing up a couple petabytes of memory across the globe.

Java has been doing these things for a while, even OpenJDK 8 has had those patches since probably before covid.

mappu•12mo ago
GOMEMLIMIT is not as easy, you may have other processes in the same container/cgroup also using memory.
kunley•12mo ago
As long as I admit respecting cgroup's setting is a good thing, I am not sure it's really quadrillions.

Or is it? Need calculations

formerly_proven•12mo ago
I would've expected it to be either way too much or way too little, but after doing the math it could be sorta in the right ballpark, at least cosmically speaking.

Let's go with three quadrillion (which is apparently 10^15), let's assume a server CPU does 3 GHz (10^9), that's 10^6, a day is about 100k seconds, so ~ten days. But of course we're only saving cycles. I've seen throughput increase by about 50% when setting GOMAXPROCS on bigger machines, but in most of those cases we're looking at containers with fractional cores. On the other hand, there are many containers. So...

kunley•12mo ago
Nice reasoning, thanks.

Hey, but what did you have in mind with regard to bigger machines? I think we're talking here about lowering GOMAXPROCS to have in effect less context switching of the OS threads. While it can bring some good result, a gut feeling is that it'd be hardly 50% faster overall, is your scenario the same then?

01HNNWZ0MV43FF•12mo ago
Trying to see if Rust and Tokio have the same problem. I don't know enough about cgroups to be sure. Tokio at this line [1] ends up delegating to `std::thread::available_parallelism` [2] which says

> It may overcount the amount of parallelism available when limited by a process-wide affinity mask or cgroup quotas and sched_getaffinity() or cgroup fs can’t be queried, e.g. due to sandboxing.

[1] https://docs.rs/tokio/1.45.0/src/tokio/loom/std/mod.rs.html#...

[2] https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/thread/fn.available_par...

nvarsj•12mo ago
Probably not?

The fundamental issue comes down to background GC and CPU quotas in cgroups.

If your number of worker threads is too high, GC will eat up all the quota.

kortex•12mo ago
Fantastic writeup! Visualizations are great, the writeup is thorough but readable.
weiwenhao•12mo ago
Your write-up is so detailed that I even feel like I could implement a complete golang scheduler myself
davidw•12mo ago
I'd be interested in seeing a comparison of this and the BEAM/Erlang/Elixir scheduler by someone paying attention to the details.