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Inline MCP results are the new prompt bloat
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Diffusion LLM may make most of the AI engineering stack obsolete
I've been deep-diving into diffusion language models this week and I think this is the most underrated direction in AI right now.
The core issue with autoregressive LLMs:
Every major model today (GPT, Claude, Gemini) generates one token at a time, left to right. Each token depends on the previous one. This single architectural constraint has shaped the entire AI industry:
- Models can't revise what they already wrote → we build chain-of-thought, reflection, and multi-pass reasoning to force them to "think before committing" - One forward pass per token → we invest heavily in speculative decoding, KV-caches, and quantization to make generation tolerable - Can't edit mid-output → we build agent frameworks with retry loops, tool calls, and planning layers to work around it - Can't generate in parallel → we build orchestration systems that chain multiple slow calls together
Most of what we call "AI engineering" today is patching around one thing: the model can't look back.
Diffusion LMs flip the paradigm. Start with a canvas of masked tokens, iteratively refine the entire output in parallel. Every position updated simultaneously, the model sees and edits all of its output at every step. Same principle as image diffusion (Stable Diffusion, DALL-E), applied to text.
Why I think the theory actually holds:
1. Parallelism is real, not theoretical. Inception Labs' Mercury 2 (closed-source, diffusion-based) already hits ~1000 tok/s with quality competitive with GPT-4o mini on MMLU, HumanEval, MATH. That's not a benchmark trick — it's a direct consequence of not being bottlenecked by sequential generation. 2. The complexity reduction is massive. If a model can see and edit its entire output at once, you don't need half the scaffolding we've built: reflection prompting becomes native (the model already iterates on its own output), retry loops become unnecessary (edit in place), planning agents get simpler (the model can restructure, not just append). The whole stack flattens. 3. The conversion path exists. You can take an existing pretrained AR model and convert it to diffusion via fine-tuning alone — no pretraining from scratch. This means the billions already invested in AR pretraining aren't wasted. It's an upgrade path, not a restart.
The main limitation today: fixed output length. You must pre-allocate the canvas size before generation starts. Block Diffusion (generating in sequential chunks, diffusing within each chunk) is one workaround. Hierarchical generation — outline first, expand sections in parallel — is another. Ironically, orchestrating that requires an agent, so diffusion doesn't kill agents — it changes what they do.
Honest take: Open diffusion LMs still trail top AR models on knowledge and reasoning at comparable scale. But Mercury 2 shows the ceiling is high, the conversion results are surprisingly good, and the architecture eliminates entire categories of engineering complexity. I think within a year we'll see diffusion models competitive with frontier AR models, and when that happens, a lot of the current tooling (agent frameworks, prompt engineering techniques, inference optimization stacks) gets dramatically simpler or unnecessary.
While researching all this I found dLLM, an open-source library that unifies training, inference, and evaluation for diffusion LMs. It has recipes for LLaDA, Dream, Block Diffusion, and converting any AR model to diffusion. Good starting point if you want to experiment.
Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.22661
Code: https://github.com/ZHZisZZ/dllm
Models: https://huggingface.co/dllm-hub
What is your opinion?
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How are you filling your days? A few months ago I was upskilling and prepping for interviews but i've lost all motivation now. I don't want any of this, AI has poisoned the whole ecosystem for good even if one did get back into the game, it all seems like the good old days are over and they were never that great in the first place. I miss having a paycheck more than anything else, even daily standups which I dreaded gave structure and purpose which I am unable to replace.
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Show HN: AI assistant that reads Intervals.icu data and adjusts workouts
Hi HN,
I’m a self-coached endurance athlete and long-time user of Intervals.icu. Over the years I’ve gotten comfortable interpreting my own training data (CTL/ATL trends, HRV, fatigue, etc.), but I kept running into a practical problem:
The training plan makes sense when you write it, but real life rarely cooperates.
Bad sleep, work travel, missed workouts, or suddenly having only 45 minutes instead of two hours. In those moments the question becomes: does the planned workout still make sense today?
I built a small tool called PacePartner to help with that:
https://pacepartner.app
The idea is not to replace coaching or generate perfect plans, but to act as a decision layer on top of Intervals.icu.
It connects to your account and reads things like:
training load (ATL / CTL)
HRV / recovery signals
sleep data
planned workouts
upcoming races
You can then ask questions like:
“Should I still do threshold today?”
“I only have 60 minutes — what should I train?”
“I missed yesterday’s workout — how should the week adapt?”
If the workout changes, it can also push the new session back into the Intervals calendar.
What surprised me while building this
Initially I assumed the main challenge would be building a very specialized “AI coach”. In practice the biggest improvement came from simply giving the model good context from the athlete’s actual training data.
Most athletes already have a training plan. The useful part isn’t generating one from scratch — it’s helping adjust it when circumstances change.
Rough architecture
Intervals.icu OAuth integration
Pull training metrics + calendar data via API
Contextual prompt layer grounded in common endurance training principles
Conversational interface (web + messaging)
Still early and very much a work in progress.
Would especially appreciate feedback from:
endurance athletes who use Intervals / TrainingPeaks
people building AI assistants around structured datasets
anyone thinking about AI systems that augment decision making rather than automate it
Happy to answer any questions.
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