2 Days Target 🎯 For Software Architecture
shorts #short #rgpv #rgpvexam.
shorts #short #rgpv #rgpvexam.
I've been in a single product and designing and evolving the architecture for 10 years. What are some of the good and bad ...
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I've been in a single product and designing and evolving the architecture for 10 years. What are some of the good and bad ...
We’re sharing details of the role backend aggregation (BAG) plays in building Meta’s gigawatt-scale AI clusters like Prometheus.BAG allows us to seamlessly connect thousands of GPUs across multiple data centers and regions.Our BAG implementation is connecting two different network fabrics – Disaggregated Schedule Fabric (DSF) andNon-Scheduled Fabric (NSF).Once it’s complete our AI cluster,Prometheus, will deliver 1-gigawatt of capacity to enhance and enable new and existing AI experiences across
Hey everyoneI’m a solo founder and developer, and I’ve been building software since 2011. Over the years, I watched customer feedback tools go from simple and focused to bloated, enterprise-heavy platforms. Tons of features, endless configuration… and yet I kept using maybe 10% of what was there. The rest mostly got in the way.So I decided to build the feedback tool I actually wanted to use.That became Zigpoll — a fast, focused survey and feedback platform designed for real-world businesses. It
I’ve built several apps over the years that were technically solid.They worked. They were stable. They solved real problems. Some were even used by paying customers.And yet — they went nowhere.For a long time, I framed this as a distribution problem, or a timing problem, or “I just didn’t push it hard enough.” What I eventually realized is simpler, and harder to accept:Building software and growing a product are fundamentally different disciplines.I enjoy building systems. I enjoy architecture,
We spend a lot of time discussing AI Alignment—how to ensure the machine’s values match ours. But I’d like to open a thread on a parallel issue that seems to be causing a "Kernel Panic" in the current generation (specifically Gen Z and Alpha): The Human Alignment Problem.I approach this not as a psychologist, but from a systems engineering perspective. If we look at the rising rates of anxiety, burnout, and suicide not as "illnesses" but as System Errors, a terrifying archite
I'm a solo inventor in rural Pennsylvania. Over four days last week, I filed 10 provisional patents (70 claims, $650 total) describing a complete hardware specification for a standardized AI compute module for robots -- what I've been calling a "robot brain."The spec defines three standardized sizes (drone to surgical robot), a universal connector system (the Manufacturer Interface Module, or MIM) so any brain works with any robot body, and a hardware safety architecture wher
We just shipped Simulation Studio in ArchtSoft.It lets you simulate and compare software architectures before writing code — focusing on performance, scalability, resilience, and cloud cost trade-offs.What it does: Simulates architecture behavior under different load scenarios Compares alternative designs side-by-side Evaluates AWS / Azure / GCP implications early Surfaces bottlenecks and failure risks before production Helps reduce redesign cycles and cloud overspendThe goal is simple
I'm a software engineer who keeps getting pulled into DevOps no matter how hard I try to escape it. I recently moved into a Lead DevOps Engineer role writing tooling to automate a lot of the pain away. On my own time outside of work, I built Artifact Keeper — a self-hosted artifact registry that supports 45+ package formats. Security scanning, SSO, replication, WASM plugins — it's all in the MIT-licensed release. No enterprise tier. No feature gates. No surprise invoices.Your package m
Hi HN,I’m a 75-year-old former fishmonger from Japan, currently working on compensation claims for victims of the Fukushima nuclear disaster. Witnessing social divisions and bureaucratic limitations firsthand, I realized we need a new way for people to express their will without being “disposable.”To address this, I designed the Virtual Protest Protocol (VPP) ? an open-source framework for large-scale, 2D avatar-based digital demonstrations.Key Features:Beyond Yes/No: Adds an "Observe&
GenAI doesn’t change the fundamentals of software architecture.In fact, GenAI-based software development is an amplifier of organizational capabilities, not a replacement for sound architectural principles.It can make high-performing organizations even better and make low-performing organizations worse.For organizations adopting GenAI-based software delivery, fast flow is therefore not optional, but essential.This article explores what GenAI-based software delivery means for architecture and org
I wanted to learn distributed systems by building something real instead of just reading about them. So I built an image hosting service that automatically tags uploads using GPT-4o-mini vision.What it does: Upload an image → Celery worker picks it up → sends to OpenAI Vision API → tags get saved to PostgreSQL. Takes about 10 seconds, costs ~$0.004/image.Why I built it this way:I kept running into the same architecture decisions at work (swapping providers, handling async tasks, testing bac
I built a macOS screensaver that displays a spinning vinyl record synced to whatever you're listening to. The record spins while music plays and stops when you pause.Works with Spotify, Apple Music, or any app that reports to Now Playing (podcasts, YouTube, etc.).A few technical details HN might find interesting:- Zero permissions required. I use distributed notifications and the MediaRemote framework to read now-playing state without requesting any system access.- Album art comes from Spot
Hi HN! I built LayerClaw (https://github.com/layerclaw/layerclaw), a local-first observability tool for PyTorch training. The problem: When training neural networks, things go wrong silently. Your loss explodes at step 47,392. Your gradients vanish in layer 12. Your GPU memory spikes randomly. By the time you notice, you've wasted hours or days of compute.I got tired of adding print statements, manually checking TensorBoard files, and tracking down training issues after
Hi HN — I just open-sourced Hibana and hibana-agent.Hibana is an Affine MultiParty Session Types (MPST) runtime for Rust.It targets protocol drift in distributed systems. Instead of maintaining separate hand-written state machines in each component, you define interaction once as a global choreography and project role-local behavior at compile time. At runtime, only valid protocol transitions are executable, so invalid moves such as skipping, reusing, or taking the wrong branch are rejected by t
I think agents should work like real teams, with independent, distinct roles, async communication, and the ability to onboard new teammates or tools without restructuring the whole org. I built backend systems at Yahoo and TikTok so event-driven agents felt obvious. But no agent SDKs were using this pattern, so I made Calfkit.Calfkit breaks down agents into independent services (LLM inference, tools, and routing) that communicate asynchronously through Kafka. Agents, tool services, and downstrea
I vibe-coded this tool entirely from my phone with OpenClaw, to solve a problem I encountered in this workflow. It's called vibefs.The use case: when you're remotely controlling an AI agent and want to preview a file it generated — a development plan, a piece of code, or some log it found — you can have the agent run vibefs allow /path/to/file and send you back an accessible URL. Open it in your browser and you're looking at the file with syntax highlighting.For lar