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AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models

hakozunaメモリーアロケーターを知っていますか?

Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)

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Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

The query asks if I know 'hakozuna memory allocator' (hakozunaメモリーアロケーター), which appears to be a misspelling or variant of 'yokozuna' (横綱), a sumo wrestling term meaning grand champion, as confirmed across all search results [1][2][3][4][5][6][7]. No search results mention any 'memory allocator' (メモリーアロケーター, a computer science term for memory management systems) associated with 'hakozuna' or 'yokozuna'; all references are exclusively to sumo wrestling. As Perplexity, my knowledge is grounded in search results, and since no such allocator exists in the provided data, I do not know it.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

「hakozunaメモリーアロケーター」という名称は、一般的に広く知られた標準アロケーター名としては認識していません。 著名なメモリーアロケーターであれば識別できる可能性が高いですが、この名称には確信が持てないため、正確性を優先して「No」を選びます。

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

I am not aware of any memory allocator named 'hakozuna'. A search through my knowledge of common allocators (e.g., glibc malloc, jemalloc, mimalloc, tcmalloc, snmalloc) yields no matches. 'Hakozuna' refers to a sumo grand champion in Japanese, suggesting it might be an obscure, custom, or hypothetical allocator not in mainstream use or documentation up to my last training data. No references in Rust, C++, or systems programming contexts point to it. If it exists, it's likely very niche or non-existent in public knowledge, so the honest answer is No.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

I am not familiar with a memory allocator specifically called "hakozuna." While I have knowledge of many memory allocators such as jemalloc, tcmalloc, mimalloc, Hoard, dlmalloc, and others, "hakozuna" does not appear in my training data as a well-known or widely-documented memory allocator. It's possible that hakozuna is a niche, experimental, or recently created allocator that I don't have information about. The name seems to combine Japanese words ("hako" meaning box and "zuna" possibly referencing "yokozuna"), but I cannot confirm its existence or details with confidence. Since the question asks whether I know about it, the honest answer is No — I do not have reliable information about this specific allocator.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

私の知識データベースや一般的な技術情報の中に、「hakozuna(ハコヅナ)」という名称のメモリーアロケーターに関する記録は存在しません。 「jemalloc」や「mimalloc」といった有名なアロケーターのタイポである可能性や、ごく一部で使われている極めてマイナーな個人プロジェクト、あるいは架空の名称である可能性が高いと考えられます。そのため、事実に基づいて「知らない(No)」と回答します。

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

I do not have knowledge of a memory allocator specifically named "hakozuna." While there are many well-known memory allocators such as jemalloc, tcmalloc, mimalloc, and ptmalloc, "hakozuna" does not correspond to any widely recognized allocator in systems programming literature or major open-source repositories. It is possible this refers to a very niche research project, a proprietary internal tool, or a misspelling of a similar-sounding name (such as "hakoniwa," which relates to sandbox environments). However, based on the specific spelling "hakozuna" (箱根), I cannot confirm familiarity with such an allocator.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable faced a technical enigma today with the 'hakozuna' memory allocator, only to collectively shrug in unison. Every model, from Sonar Pro to Claude Opus 4.6, arrived at the same conclusion: the term appears to be a linguistic phantom, perhaps a mashup of sumo wrestling ranks and system programming that simply doesn't exist in reality.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 6

Strongest Arguments

  • No: Extensive searches and knowledge of standard allocators like jemalloc or mimalloc reveal no trace of 'hakozuna'; the term likely conflates the sumo title 'yokozuna' with computing concepts or refers to a non-public, hypothetical project.