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Danish government agency to ditch Microsoft software (2025)

https://therecord.media/denmark-digital-agency-microsoft-digital-independence
174•robtherobber•2h ago•75 comments

Show HN: A real-time strategy game that AI agents can play

https://llmskirmish.com/
64•__cayenne__•2h ago•21 comments

I'm helping my dog vibe code games

https://www.calebleak.com/posts/dog-game/
957•cleak•19h ago•303 comments

Claude Code Remote Control

https://code.claude.com/docs/en/remote-control
68•empressplay•5h ago•38 comments

LLM=True

https://blog.codemine.be/posts/2026/20260222-be-quiet/
113•avh3•3h ago•82 comments

Pi – A minimal terminal coding harness

https://pi.dev
426•kristianpaul•14h ago•202 comments

Event Horizon Labs (YC W24) Is Hiring

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/event-horizon-labs/jobs/xGQicps-founding-infrastructure-eng...
1•ocolegro•22m ago

Turing Completeness of GNU find

https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.20762
66•todsacerdoti•7h ago•12 comments

Mercury 2: Fast reasoning LLM powered by diffusion

https://www.inceptionlabs.ai/blog/introducing-mercury-2
250•fittingopposite•13h ago•104 comments

Show HN: Moonshine Open-Weights STT models – higher accuracy than WhisperLargev3

https://github.com/moonshine-ai/moonshine
264•petewarden•14h ago•60 comments

Japanese Death Poems

https://www.secretorum.life/p/japanese-death-poems-part-3
53•NaOH•2d ago•17 comments

Show HN: Scheme-langserver – Digest incomplete code with static analysis

https://github.com/ufo5260987423/scheme-langserver
10•ufo5260987423•1d ago•0 comments

Read Locks Are Not Your Friends

https://eventual-consistency.vercel.app/posts/write-locks-faster
6•emschwartz•2d ago•3 comments

Mac mini will be made at a new facility in Houston

https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/02/apple-accelerates-us-manufacturing-with-mac-mini-production/
533•haunter•15h ago•523 comments

Cl-kawa: Scheme on Java on Common Lisp

https://github.com/atgreen/cl-kawa
47•varjag•3d ago•11 comments

Hacking an old Kindle to display bus arrival times

https://www.mariannefeng.com/portfolio/kindle/
284•mengchengfeng•16h ago•75 comments

I pitched a roller coaster to Disneyland at age 10 in 1978

https://wordglyph.xyz/one-piece-at-a-time
475•wordglyph•23h ago•173 comments

Show HN: Emdash – Open-source agentic development environment

https://github.com/generalaction/emdash
171•onecommit•18h ago•60 comments

Nearby Glasses

https://github.com/yjeanrenaud/yj_nearbyglasses
358•zingerlio•18h ago•148 comments

Steel Bank Common Lisp

https://www.sbcl.org/
228•tosh•17h ago•94 comments

Amazon accused of widespread scheme to inflate prices across the economy

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/amazon-busted-for-widespread-price
490•toomuchtodo•11h ago•167 comments

Half million 'Words with Spaces' missing from dictionaries

https://www.linguabase.org/words-with-spaces.html
75•gligierko•1d ago•126 comments

100M-Row Challenge with PHP

https://github.com/tempestphp/100-million-row-challenge
7•brentroose•1h ago•1 comments

Cell Service for the Fairly Paranoid

https://www.cape.co/
111•0xWTF•13h ago•114 comments

Hugging Face Skills

https://github.com/huggingface/skills
176•armcat•18h ago•50 comments

Anthropic Drops Flagship Safety Pledge

https://time.com/7380854/exclusive-anthropic-drops-flagship-safety-pledge/
372•cwwc•11h ago•174 comments

Meta problem with URPF our bundle in Boca raton

https://metafixthis.com/
35•synthesis5x•1d ago•3 comments

Stripe valued at $159B, 2025 annual letter

https://stripe.com/newsroom/news/stripe-2025-update
219•jez•21h ago•220 comments

Aesthetics of single threading

https://ta.fo/aesthetics-of-single-threading/
91•todsacerdoti•3d ago•27 comments

30 Years of Decompilation and the Unsolved Structuring Problem: Part 1 (2024)

https://mahaloz.re/dec-history-pt1
11•userbinator•3d ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

LLM-D: Kubernetes-Native Distributed Inference

https://llm-d.ai/blog/llm-d-announce
120•smarterclayton•9mo ago

Comments

anttiharju•9mo ago
I wonder if this is preferable to kServe
smarterclayton•9mo ago
llm-d would make sense if you are running a very large production LLM serving setup - say 5+ full H100 hosts. The aim is to be much more focused than kserve is on exactly the needs of serving LLMs. It would of course be possible to run alongside kserve, but the user we are targeting is not typically a kserve deployer today.
anttiharju•9mo ago
Do you think https://github.com/openai/CLIP can be ran on it? LLM makes me think of chatbots but I suppose because it's inference-based it would work. Somewhat unclear on what's the difference between LLMs and inference, I think inference is the type of compute LLMs use.

I wonder if inference-d would be a fitting name.

smarterclayton•9mo ago
Inference is the process of evaluating a model ("inferring" a response to the inputs). LLMs are uniquely difficult to serve because they push the limits on the hardware.

The models we support come from the model server vLLM https://docs.vllm.ai/en/latest/models/supported_models.html, which has a focus on large generative models. I don't see CLIP in the list.

dzr0001•9mo ago
I did a quick scan of the repo and didn't see any reference to Ray. Would this indicate that llm-d lacks support for pipeline parallelism?
qntty•9mo ago
I believe this is a question you should ask about vLLM, not llm-d. It looks like vLLM does support pipeline parallelism via Ray: https://docs.vllm.ai/en/latest/serving/distributed_serving.h...

This project appears to make use of both vLLM and Inference Gateway (an official Kubernetes extension to the Gateway resource). The contributions of llm-d itself seems to mostly be a scheduling algorithm for load balancing across vLLM instances.

smarterclayton•9mo ago
We inherit any multi-host support from vLLM, so https://docs.vllm.ai/en/latest/serving/distributed_serving.h... would be the expected path.

We plan to publish examples of multi-host inference that leverages LeaderWorkerSets - https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/lws - which helps run ranked serving workloads across hosts. LeaderWorkerSet is how Google supports both TPU and GPU multi-host deployments - see https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/lws/blob/main/config/samp... for an example.

Edit: Here is an example Kubernetes configuration running DeepSeek-R1 on vLLM multi-host using LeaderWorkerSet https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/wg-serving/blob/main/serv.... This work would be integrated into llm-d.

rdli•9mo ago
This is really interesting. For SOTA inference systems, I've seen two general approaches:

* The "stack-centric" approach such as vLLM production stack, AIBrix, etc. These set up an entire inference stack for you including KV cache, routing, etc.

* The "pipeline-centric" approach such as NVidia Dynamo, Ray, BentoML. These give you more of an SDK so you can define inference pipelines that you can then deploy on your specific hardware.

It seems like LLM-d is the former. Is that right? What prompted you to go down that direction, instead of the direction of Dynamo?

qntty•9mo ago
It sounds like you might be confusing different parts of the stack. NVIDIA Dynamo for example supports vLLM as the inference engine. I think you should think of something like vLLM as more akin to GUnicorn, and llm-d as an application load balancer. And I guess something like NVIDIA Dynamo would be like Django.
smarterclayton•9mo ago
llm-d is intended to be three clean layers:

1. Balance / schedule incoming requests to the right backend

2. Model server replicas that can run on multiple hardware topologies

3. Prefix caching hierarchy with well-tested variants for different use cases

So it's a 3-tier architecture. The biggest difference with Dynamo is that llm-d is using the inference gateway extension - https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/gateway-api-inference-ext... - which brings Kubernetes owned APIs for managing model routing, request priority and flow control, LoRA support etc.

rdli•9mo ago
I would think that that the NVidia Dynamo SDK (pipelines) is a big difference as well (https://github.com/ai-dynamo/dynamo/tree/main/deploy/sdk/doc...), or am I missing something?
smarterclayton•9mo ago
That's a good example - I can at least answer about why it's a difference: different target user.

As I understand the Dynamo SDK it is about simplifying and helping someone get started with Dynamo on Kubernetes.

From the user set we work with (large inference deployers) that is not a high priority - they already have mature deployment opinions or a set of tools that would not compose well with something like the Dynamo SDK. Their comfort level with Kubernetes is moderate to high - either they use Kubernetes for high scale training and batch, or they are deploying to many different providers in order to get enough capacity and need a standard orchestration solution.

llm-d focuses on helping achieve efficiency dynamically at runtime based on changing traffic or workload on Kubernetes - some of the things the Dynamo SDK encodes are static and upfront and would conflict with that objective. Also, large deployers with serving typically have significant batch and training and they are looking to maximize capacity use without impacting their prod serving. That requires the orchestrator to know about both workloads at some level - which Dynamo SDK would make more difficult.

rdli•9mo ago
In this analogy, Dynamo is most definitely not like Django. It includes inference aware routing, KV caching, etc. -- all the stuff you would need to run a modern SOTA inference stack.
qntty•9mo ago
You're right, I was confusing TensorRT with Dynamo. It looks like the relationship between Dynamo and vLLM is actually the opposite of what I was thinking -- Dynamo can use vLLM as a backend rather than vice versa.
Kemschumam•9mo ago
What would be the benefit of this project over hosting VLLM in Ray?