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Tuesday, October 31, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Firefox got faster for real users in 2023

Firefox got faster for real users in 2023
493 by kevincox | 212 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Phind Model beats GPT-4 at coding, with GPT-3.5 speed and 16k context

Phind Model beats GPT-4 at coding, with GPT-3.5 speed and 16k context
471 by rushingcreek | 211 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, We’re excited to announce that Phind now defaults to our own model that matches and exceeds GPT-4’s coding abilities while running 5x faster. You can now get high quality answers for technical questions in 10 seconds instead of 50. The current 7th-generation Phind Model is built on top of our open-source CodeLlama-34B fine-tunes that were the first models to beat GPT-4’s score on HumanEval and are still the best open source coding models overall by a wide margin: https://ift.tt/D2C79KT... . This new model has been fine-tuned on an additional 70B+ tokens of high quality code and reasoning problems and exhibits a HumanEval score of 74.7%. However, we’ve found that HumanEval is a poor indicator of real-world helpfulness. After deploying previous iterations of the Phind Model on our service, we’ve collected detailed feedback and noticed that our model matches or exceeds GPT-4’s helpfulness most of the time on real-world questions. Many in our Discord community have begun using Phind exclusively with the Phind Model despite also having unlimited access to GPT-4. One of the Phind Model’s key advantages is that it's very fast. We’ve been able to achieve a 5x speedup over GPT-4 by running our model on H100s using the new TensorRT-LLM library from NVIDIA. We can achieve up to 100 tokens per second single-stream while GPT-4 runs around 20 tokens per second at best. Another key advantage of the Phind Model is context – it supports up to 16k tokens. We currently allow inputs of up to 12k tokens on the website and reserve the remaining 4k for web results. There are still some rough edges with the Phind Model and we’ll continue improving it constantly. One area where it still suffers is consistency — on certain challenging questions where it is capable of getting the right answer, the Phind Model might take more generations to get to the right answer than GPT-4. We’d love to hear your feedback. Cheers, The Phind Team

New best story on Hacker News: The Grug Brained Developer (2022)

The Grug Brained Developer (2022)
463 by simonsarris | 179 comments on Hacker News.


Monday, October 30, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: The product manager role is a mistake

The product manager role is a mistake
407 by mooreds | 347 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Giving a Shit as a Service (2022)

Giving a Shit as a Service (2022)
473 by damir | 257 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Linear Algebra Done Right – 4th Edition

Linear Algebra Done Right – 4th Edition
493 by __rito__ | 202 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: YouTube's Anti-Adblock and uBlock Origin

Friday, October 27, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Interactive intro to shaders

Interactive intro to shaders
419 by superMayo | 59 comments on Hacker News.


Thursday, October 26, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Was Rust Worth It?

Was Rust Worth It?
418 by todsacerdoti | 660 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Jina AI launches open-source 8k text embedding

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Software disenchantment

Software disenchantment
546 by InsiderTesla | 400 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Cooler screens

Cooler screens
362 by kevincox | 242 comments on Hacker News.


Monday, October 23, 2023

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Thursday, October 19, 2023

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: What is the Demoscene? An interview

What is the Demoscene? An interview
459 by keiferski | 184 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Commercially available chairs in Star Trek

Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Sunday, October 15, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Mastercard Should Stop Selling Our Data

New best story on Hacker News: TimeGPT-1

TimeGPT-1
399 by PaulHoule | 122 comments on Hacker News.


Saturday, October 14, 2023

Thursday, October 12, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Scrollbars are becoming a problem

Scrollbars are becoming a problem
366 by dredmorbius | 331 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Desmos 3D graphing calculator

Desmos 3D graphing calculator
353 by benpm | 78 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: The midwit home

The midwit home
348 by stacktrust | 245 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Has anyone gotten complete, permanent relief from tinnitus?

Ask HN: Has anyone gotten complete, permanent relief from tinnitus?
335 by actinium226 | 359 comments on Hacker News.
As far as I can tell, there's no universally accepted "cure" for tinnitus, but there are a number of "therapies" out there, some of which seem to prey upon people looking for relief but some of which seem plausible. I'm wondering if any subscribers here have had tinnitus and experience permanent relief from the ringing? Not just reduction, but actual permanent relief that never comes back even when doing things that previously worsened the tinnitus. If you can't tell, I'm trying to establish an "existence proof" here, if no one has ever gotten permanent relief then it seems like it might not be worth bothering with the "symptom reduction" therapies since they would most likely lead to focusing on the symptoms more intensely.

New best story on Hacker News: A suicide crisis among veterinarians

A suicide crisis among veterinarians
328 by rntn | 428 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Introduction to Modern Statistics

Introduction to Modern Statistics
374 by noelwelsh | 72 comments on Hacker News.


Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Monday, October 9, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Ardour 8.0

Ardour 8.0
410 by 6581 | 136 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: John Riccitiello steps down as CEO of Unity

John Riccitiello steps down as CEO of Unity
496 by AndrewKemendo | 240 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Blackmagic Camera for iPhone

Blackmagic Camera for iPhone
432 by Lwrless | 236 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: My personal C coding style as of late 2023

Sunday, October 8, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: We’re opening up access to Gov.uk forms

We’re opening up access to Gov.uk forms
355 by open-source-ux | 189 comments on Hacker News.


Saturday, October 7, 2023

Friday, October 6, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: AMD may get across the CUDA moat

AMD may get across the CUDA moat
350 by danzheng | 188 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Making Hard Things Easy

Making Hard Things Easy
483 by hasheddan | 95 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: How fast are Linux pipes anyway? (2022)

How fast are Linux pipes anyway? (2022)
418 by SEJeff | 69 comments on Hacker News.


Thursday, October 5, 2023

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Show HN: Classic Video Poker

Show HN: Classic Video Poker
548 by appstorelottery | 209 comments on Hacker News.
I'm a Unity 3D refugee, certified expert, started in 2005 when it was a two man-band with Joachim and David. I've been lucky enough to make a good living out of Unity with my own consultancy over the years making data visualisation applications (Wind Energy) and innovation projects (Visualising accounting data for Wolters Kluwer etc.). Godot is pretty amazing in my opinion. Wrote this game over a few days and was productive in Godot basically instantly. I couldn't get up and running in Unreal despite trying a few times. It's my ambition to start a niche agency developing 80's style games of skill and chance for the corporate world. So... If anyone has any leads for making Space Invaders for Nike - please help! Happy to pay 5% on whatever work I get.

New best story on Hacker News: An interactive intro to CRDTs

An interactive intro to CRDTs
512 by jakelazaroff | 82 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Running Stable Diffusion XL 1.0 in 298MB of RAM

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (October 2023)

Ask HN: Who is hiring? (October 2023)
457 by whoishiring | 476 comments on Hacker News.
Please state the location and include REMOTE, INTERNS and/or VISA when that sort of candidate is welcome. When remote work is not an option, include ONSITE. Please only post if you personally are part of the hiring company—no recruiting firms or job boards. One post per company. If it isn't a household name, explain what your company does. Commenters: please don't reply to job posts to complain about something. It's off topic here. Readers: please only email if you are personally interested in the job. Searchers: try https://ift.tt/h1cSt4b , https://ift.tt/QNyIHba , https://ift.tt/YRhJEXr , https://hnhired.fly.dev , https://ift.tt/up2dsor , https://ift.tt/UbwBTmX . Don't miss these other fine threads: Who wants to be hired? https://ift.tt/yCDSnap Freelancer? Seeking freelancer? https://ift.tt/rTAvemu

New best story on Hacker News: Exploiting the iPhone 4

Exploiting the iPhone 4
437 by codyd51 | 46 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, author here! For the past three months, I've been obsessively working on gala, a jailbreak for iOS 4 that currently targets the iPhone 4. While other jailbreaks for this device, and this iOS version, already exist, the 'special sauce' of this jailbreak is that it comes with a 6-part series describing the building of a jailbreak and the many challenges that arose when jailbreaking iOS. The series includes interactive visualizations at every step of exploiting the device - from pulling memory dumps of the boot ROM to debugging a flashed filesystem image. That said, this isn't just a bare-bones jailbreak with some writing attached: gala is a fully-fledged suite that includes a significant Python application, a Cocoa GUI for end-users, a Rust payload, Cocoa Touch games to play within the boot environment while the jailbreak completes, and C utilities that run on-device. This was a lot of fun, and the journey included lots of milestones: when an iOS device boots, it does so in discrete stages (boot ROM, then boot loader, then kernel, etc.). This meant that my experience of developing this jailbreak also included these milestones, as over time I successfully compromised and ran each of these stages! Building this was personally exciting because I used to regularly make and sell tweaks for jailbroken phones on Cydia. The jailbreaks themselves always seemed like inscrutable black magic, until now! I'm really gratified to have finished up this project, and am excited to put it out into the world. Please feel welcome to have a look at the code, the writeup, or give it a spin on an old iPhone 4 that you have lying around. I hope you enjoy!

Monday, October 2, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Python 3.12

Python 3.12
431 by qsort | 197 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Nomnoml

Nomnoml
448 by mono-bob | 120 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Goodbye integers, hello UUIDv7

Goodbye integers, hello UUIDv7
421 by juanfatas | 220 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Bing ChatGPT image jailbreak

Bing ChatGPT image jailbreak
383 by tomduncalf | 191 comments on Hacker News.


Sunday, October 1, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Show HN: RISC-V assembly tabletop board game (hack your opponent)

Show HN: RISC-V assembly tabletop board game (hack your opponent)
377 by throwaway71271 | 46 comments on Hacker News.
I made this game to teach my daughter how buffer overflows work. I want her to look at programs as things she can change, and make them do whatever she wants. Building your exploit in memory and jumping to it feels so cool. I hope this game teaches kids and programmers (who seem to have forgotten what computers actually are) that its quite fun to mess with programs. We used to have that excitement few years ago, just break into softice and change a branch into a nop and ignore the serial number check, or go to a different game level because this one is too annoying. While working on the game I kept thinking what we have lost from 6502 to Apple Silicon, and the transition from 'personal computers' to 'you are completely not responsible for most the code running on your device', it made me a bit sad and happy in the same time, RISCV seems like a breath of fresh air, and many hackers will build many new things, new protocols, new networks, new programs. As PI4 cost increases, the esp32 cost is decreasing, we have transparent displays for 20$, good computers for 5$, cheap lora, and etc. Everything is more accessible than ever. I played with a friend who saw completely different exploits than me, and I learned a lot just from few games, and because of the complexity of the game its often you enter into a position that you get surprised by your own actions :) So if you manage to find at least one friend who is not completely stunned by the assembler, I think you will have some good time. A huge inspiration comes from phrack 49's 'Smashing The Stack For Fun And Profit' which has demystified the stack for me: https://ift.tt/hafUSnt TLDR: computers are fun, and you can make them do things. PS: In order to play with my friends I also built esp32 helper[1] that keeps track of the game state, and when I built it and wrote the code and everything I realized I could've just media queried the web version of the game.. but anyway, its way cooler to have a board game contraption. [1]: https://ift.tt/m9SK6nd