News Aggregator


Beyond Reactive HPA: Designing a Predictive Autoscaler with KEDA and Time-Series Forecasting

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 20:23:09

Kubernetes scaling relies predominantly on the Horizontal Pod Autoscaler (HPA), a robust feedback loop that adjusts capacity based on observed metric saturation. While reliable for steady-state traffic, HPA is inherently reactive, it mitigates resource exhaustion only after it has begun. For workloads with steep, predictable traffic ramps (such as morning log-in spikes or scheduled synchronization jobs), this reactive lag guarantees a period of transient performance degradation. To achieve strict Service Level Objectives (SLOs) during these ramps, infrastructure must shift from reacting to current load to anticipating future demand. This article details a feed-forward architecture using time-series forecasting (Prophet) and Kubernetes Event-Driven Autoscaling (KEDA) to provision capacity before the demand arrives.

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Why Supply Chain Planning Still Breaks Even with Advanced Forecasting Tools

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 19:23:09

A supply chain planning team reviews its dashboard on a Monday morning. Forecast accuracy looks strong. Demand models are updated. Inventory targets are aligned with the plan. Yet by midweek, urgent expediting requests appear, stockouts emerge in critical locations, and excess inventory quietly piles up elsewhere. This is not a failure of forecasting software. It is a failure of how planning actually works in the real world.

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From 13,000 to 20,000+ Endpoints: Architecting Forensics for the Remote Workforce

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 18:23:09

Traditional forensic processes fail when dealing with a large number of devices (over 20,000), such as in Fortune 500–level organizations. At that scale, the idea of taking a full disk image of a 512 GB laptop over a VPN is virtually impossible before the device shuts down, the user restarts it, or the legal window expires. To overcome the physics bottleneck (bandwidth), we need to reverse how we think about remote data collection. Instead of bringing all the data to the tool, we need to send the tool to the data.

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Why AI Agents Are the New Backbone of Software Quality

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 17:23:09

The story of software testing is one of constant reinvention. From the early days of manual testing to the widespread adoption of test automation, each stage has served to keep pace with the growing complexity of digital products. Now, QA is entering its most transformative chapter. Systems can explore apps using behavior-driven heuristics and probabilistic user flows, simulating multiple interaction patterns more quickly, identifying signals that indicate a higher likelihood of defects before they surface in production, accelerating QA cycles, and refining testing strategies. Statistics show a clear shift in the adoption curve. The World Quality Report 2025–26 reveals that 88% of interviewees already apply AI in QA workflows, while the latest McKinsey survey states that AI implementation can boost software quality outcomes by up to 31–45%.

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Shrink a Bloated Git Repository and Optimize Pack Files

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 16:23:09

Executive Summary Large Git repositories slow down developers, CI/CD, and release processes. The main culprits are big binary blobs, long-lived histories of rarely used files, and repeated commits of generated artifacts. This guide provides a comprehensive, step-by-step approach to:  Measure where the bloat is and surgically remove it by rewriting history with safe, modern tools,  Aggressively repack objects for performance, and put guardrails in place — such as Git LFS, CI size policies, and partial clone — to keep your repo lean over time. By the end, you will know how to identify the largest objects hidden in your commit DAG, remove historical binaries without breaking your trunk, safely coordinate a force-push for the team, reduce pack files by orders of magnitude, and adopt practices that prevent bloat from coming back.

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Securing the Software Supply Chain in the Age of AI Agent Swarms

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 15:23:09

If your team is using AI agents to write code, pick dependencies, or trigger builds, your delivery model is evolving fast, and your trust model needs to evolve with it. Agents are already improving quickly and can be a major force multiplier for engineering teams. But even with better models, trust decisions still need explicit controls: dependency validation, pipeline integrity checks, and artifact verification before runtime. At machine speed, those checks have to be automated, not optional. I started paying attention to this after watching a team roll out an LLM-based coding assistant. Within weeks, their build logs had packages that were not in any approved registry. Nobody noticed because the builds were green. That experience convinced me that supply chain security is no longer something you bolt on later. It is part of how you ship software now.

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Getting Started With Qwen Code for Coding Tasks

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 14:53:09

Nowadays, there are quite a lot of AI coding assistants. In this blog, you will take a closer look at Qwen Code, a terminal-based AI coding assistant. Qwen Code is optimized for Qwen3-Coder, so when you are using this AI model, it is definitely worth looking at. Enjoy! Introduction There are many AI models and also many AI coding assistants. Which one to choose is a hard question. It also depends on whether you run the models locally or in the cloud. When running locally, Qwen3-Coder is a very good AI model to be used for programming tasks. In previous posts, DevoxxGenie, a JetBrains IDE plugin, was often used as an AI coding assistant. DevoxxGenie is nicely integrated within the JetBrains IDEs. But it is also a good thing to take a look at other AI coding assistants. And when you are using Qwen3-Coder, Qwen Code is an obvious choice.

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Building an LLM-Based Agent: Step 0

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 14:23:09

Newcomers to the LLM world often start by "chatting for fun," but very quickly they run into a bigger question about how to make it not only answer, but actually do work. From that moment, they begin to touch on the idea of an agent, meaning a system that can accept a goal, break down tasks, use tools, and self-check results to get real work done. This first post serves as the foundation for the entire series. We will not go far yet and focus on one concrete thing: building a minimal yet correct chat framework that we can later upgrade into an agent without rewriting everything from scratch. Once this framework is stable, we will see that two factors determine quality from the very beginning, namely how we package context using messages and how we write prompts in a clear and disciplined way.

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Rate Limiting Strategies With Redis: Fixed Window, Sliding Window, and Token Bucket

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 13:08:09

The Rate Limiting Problem API rate limiting protects services from overload, prevents abuse, and ensures fair resource distribution across clients. Without rate limiting, a single high-volume client can degrade performance for all users, whether through malicious attacks or unintentional bugs causing request loops. Traditional approaches, like in-memory counters, fail in distributed systems. When multiple API servers handle requests, each maintains separate counts, making it impossible to enforce consistent limits. Redis solves this by providing a centralized, fast key-value store that all servers can query atomically.

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AI Can Help With Migration; It Cannot Own It

Aggregated on: 2026-03-23 12:08:09

There’s a growing assumption that as AI agents become more capable, system migrations will eventually become fully autonomous. If an agent can refactor code, translate SQL dialects, infer schemas, and generate tests, then perhaps it should be able to re-platform an organization’s data stack end to end. That assumption makes sense if migration is understood primarily as translation. And sometimes it is. But in many real organizations, migration is not just about moving workloads. It is about using that moment to rethink what the system should be. And that changes the nature of the problem in ways that are less visible from the outside.

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Vibe Coding Is Great for Demo; It’s Not a Strategy for GenAI Value in the SDLC

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 20:08:08

If your IDE can whip up a feature in minutes, why do releases still get delayed, incidents keep popping up, and PR queues stay backed up?  That's the big question driving vibe coding. The idea sounds great: just say what you want in plain language, have an LLM generate the code, copy it over, run it, and then you're ready to go. It feels like software has finally turned into something that puts English first. 

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10 Strategies for Scaling Synthetic Data in LLM Training

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 19:08:08

With businesses desperately searching for ways to reduce data bottlenecks associated with LLMs, synthetic data is now emerging as a leading solution. For those encountering difficulties in accessing, purchasing, and utilizing high-quality datasets due to scarcity, legalities, or costs, synthetic data provides a way out. You can also generate "long-tail" data that is difficult to find and use at scale. Large language model (LLM) training teams are experiencing challenges in sourcing sufficient quality data for training purposes. Although data may exist, the data often has contractual restrictions or other limitations on its usage. Even if there are no contractual restrictions, cleaning, validating, and standardizing such data so that it produces consistent results during training is an extremely costly process. Due to this, synthetic data has emerged as a critical element in the training strategies of numerous LLM training teams.

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Modern Best Practices for Web Security Using AI and Automation

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 18:08:08

Beyond being a cliché, "artificial intelligence" and its associated automation technologies have driven major developments in security, signifying that important changes have occurred in this field. In the field of cybersecurity, artificial intelligence refers to systems that acquire data, trace patterns, and forecast trends. Typically, this application is performed using machine learning, neural networks, or other high-performance data processing algorithms. There are limited domains in which an AI-driven system is more effective than humans or conventional security systems, such as detecting security threats, connecting unrelated incidents across various geographical or logistical contexts, and examining large datasets for subtle attack indicators that are often missed by humans or conventional security systems. While traditional automation is constrained to predefined instructions, intelligent automation leverages artificial intelligence through playbooks and reasoning processes. This enables systems to analyze the outcomes they receive, make suitable decisions, or perform a series of predetermined tasks beyond simple ‘if-then’ rules. A simple example is a system that detects a malicious device and, if appropriate, isolates the bad actors by isolating the device. Such devices can suggest removing the malicious endpoint from the network or implementing a specific set of controls without the manual approval of security personnel.

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Kubernetes Scheduler Plugins: Optimizing AI/ML Workloads

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 17:08:08

Picture this: Enterprises burn $400K monthly on GPU clusters humming at 35% capacity while workloads queue endlessly outside. Why? The stock scheduler thinks GPUs are interchangeable, counting tokens — oblivious to silicon geography, workload personality, or the thundering cost-per-second of idle accelerators. What follows dissects how purpose-built scheduler plugins flip that equation. We're talking technical guts: architectural decisions, deployment mechanics, working code that actually ships. No hand-waving. Just the machinery needed to make GPUs earn their keep.

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AI as a SQL Performance Tuning Assistant: A Structured Evaluation

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 16:08:08

SQL performance tuning has been one of the most technical tasks in present-day software engineering. A query can be logically sound, well-indexed, and well-tested, yet still degrade significantly under production load. Answers to performance issues are found in execution plans, which are usually thick, technical, and hard to understand quickly. The skills and time needed to learn the strategies of joins, the type of scan, cost estimates, cardinality forecasts, and all that cannot be met by the forces of the development team. As large language models (LLMs) have become integrated into the developer workflow, a number of engineers have started piloting the use of AI as a query analysis tool and an interpretation of performance plans. Rather than manually dissecting the complex EXPLAIN ANALYZE results, developers are requesting AI to clarify bottlenecks, recommend indexing plans, and point out the inefficiencies. This brings us to a critical and practical query: Is it possible that AI can really help in optimization of SQLs, or does it only give confident answers devoid of engineering worth?

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Why Agentic AI Demands Intent-Based Chaos Engineering

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 15:53:08

Chaos engineering transformed modern reliability practices. Instead of waiting for systems to fail in production, we began deliberately injecting failure into distributed architectures to observe how they behaved under stress. The philosophy was simple: resilience cannot be assumed; it must be tested. For stateless microservices and horizontally scaled cloud systems, this approach worked remarkably well. Random instance termination, injected latency, and packet loss exposed weaknesses in infrastructure that traditional testing often missed. However, the systems we are building today are fundamentally different from those chaos engineering was originally designed to protect.

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Secrets Management With Infisical and External Secrets Operator

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 15:08:08

GitOps has a fundamental tension: everything should be in Git, but secrets shouldn't be in Git. You need database passwords, API keys, and tokens to deploy applications, but committing them to a repository is a security incident waiting to happen. This post covers how to solve this with Infisical and External Secrets Operator (ESO) - a combination that keeps secrets out of Git while letting Kubernetes applications access them seamlessly. The same architectural pattern works with any ESO-supported backend (HashiCorp Vault, AWS Secrets Manager, Azure Key Vault, GCP Secret Manager), so the concepts apply regardless of which secrets manager you choose.

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Scalable Cloud-Native Java Architecture With Microservices and Serverless

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 14:08:08

Building enterprise Java systems used to mean choosing an app server, deploying a monolith, and scaling vertically until the budget or the database complained. In 2026, modern Java teams are expected to deliver faster releases, better resilience, and elastic cost-performance across unpredictable workloads. That’s exactly what cloud-native Java architecture is designed to achieve: systems built for change, not just for uptime.  But “cloud-native” is not a buzzword synonym for “running on Kubernetes.” A truly scalable approach combines Java microservices (for domain isolation and independent delivery) with Serverless Java (for bursty or event-driven workloads), backed by Kubernetes for Java as the operational substrate for consistent deployment, resilience, and observability. 

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Stop Trusting Your RAG Pipeline: 5 Guardrails I Learned the Hard Way

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 13:08:08

A few months back, one of our internal QA engineers asked the AI assistant a straightforward question about overtime pay calculations for a specific state. The system retrieved the right document, generated a confident answer, and the answer was wrong. Not slightly wrong. It cited a tax withholding table that had been updated two quarters earlier, but our vector store was still serving the old version. Nobody noticed for three days. That incident changed how I think about retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) systems. I’d been building retrieval-augmented generation pipelines for enterprise applications for a while at that point, and I thought retrieval grounding was enough. It’s not. RAG reduces hallucinations, sure. But “reduces” is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence when you’re processing payroll for millions of people.

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Toward Intelligent Data Quality in Modern Data Pipelines

Aggregated on: 2026-03-20 12:08:07

What Data Quality Means in Practice When I think about data quality in data engineering, I don’t immediately think about null checks or schema validation. Those are necessary, but they’re the obvious parts. In a typical data pipeline, data is extracted from operational systems, transformed through layers of logic, and then loaded into tables, dashboards, and feature stores. At each step, expectations exist. We expect upstream systems to behave consistently. We expect transformations to preserve meaning. We expect metrics to reflect reality. And often, we expect that if nothing fails loudly, everything is fine. Some issues are easy to catch. Missing columns. Type mismatches. Duplicate keys. Those problems are visible. The harder issues are quieter.

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Why Security Scanning Isn't Enough for MCP Servers

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 20:08:07

The Gap Nobody Is Talking About The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is quickly becoming the de facto standard between AI agents and the tools they use. The adoption is growing rapidly - from coding assistants to enterprise automation platforms, MCP servers are replacing custom API integrations everywhere. As a result of the MCP's rapid growth, the security community is now stepping up with solutions to address potential security threats. Solutions such as Cisco's open-source MCP scanner, Invariant Labs' MCP analyzer, and the OWASP MCP Cheat Sheet are helping organizations identify malicious MCP tool definitions, prompt injection attack vectors, and supply chain-related risk factors. These are significant efforts. But here's the problem: a secure MCP server can still take down your production environment.

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Nvidia’s Open Model Super Panel Made a Strong Case for Open Agents

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 19:08:07

The room for Nvidia’s Open Model Super Panel at San Jose Civic was packed well before Jensen Huang really got going. It felt less like a normal conference panel and more like one of those sessions where the industry starts saying the next platform shift out loud. Nvidia listed the session as “Open Models: Where We Are and Where We’re Headed,” moderated by Huang and held on March 18 during GTC 2026.

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Microsoft Fabric: The Developer's Guide on API Automation of Security and Data Governance

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 19:08:07

While working with Data Analytics Systems, it is crucial to understand what is happening with the data, who can see specific data, which data we already have in the system, and which should be ingested. This is a typical business challenge that most companies face after implementing a new data analytics solution. That article observes the automation of the two most critical parts of governance, which we may face in Microsoft Fabric:

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From DLT to Lakeflow Declarative Pipelines: A Practical Migration Playbook

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 18:08:07

Delta Live Tables (DLT) has been a game-changer for building ETL pipelines on Databricks, providing a declarative framework that automates orchestration, infrastructure management, monitoring, and data quality in data pipelines. By simply defining how data should flow and be transformed, DLT allowed data engineers to focus on business logic rather than scheduling and dependency management. Databricks expanded and rebranded this capability under the broader Lakeflow initiative. The product formerly known as DLT is now Lakeflow Spark Declarative Pipelines (SDP), essentially the next evolution of DLT with additional features and alignment to open-source Spark. The existing DLT pipelines are largely compatible with Lakeflow; your code will still run on the new platform without immediate changes. However, to fully leverage Lakeflow’s capabilities and future-proof your pipeline, it’s recommended that you update your code to the new API. This playbook provides a practical, engineer-focused guide to migrating from DLT to Lakeflow declarative pipelines with side-by-side code examples, tips, and coverage of edge cases. We’ll focus on the migration logic, the code changes, and pipeline definition adjustments, rather than tooling or deployment, assuming you’re using Databricks with Spark/Delta Lake as before.

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AI-Assisted Code Review With Claude Code (Terminal)

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 17:08:07

A security-first walkthrough with hands-on prompts and sample code. AI-assisted code review can dramatically speed up how you find bugs, edge cases, and security issues — especially during development, before a human review cycle even begins. In this article, we’ll walk through using Claude Code, an AI assistant that runs in your terminal. We’ll cover installation, the most important security step (restricting file access), and then we’ll run a few practical, realistic code review examples you can copy/paste into your own workflow.

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Push Filters Down, Not Up: The Data Layer Design Principle Most Developers Learn Too Late

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 16:08:07

Overview One of the most pervasive and costly performance anti-patterns in back-end development is unbounded data fetching — querying the database for an entire result set when only a fraction of that data is needed by the caller. This pattern is deceptively simple to introduce, difficult to detect in development environments with limited data, and expensive in production systems operating at scale. This article examines where unbounded fetching occurs, why it degrades performance across the full request lifecycle, and how to eliminate it at each layer of the stack — from SQL queries to ORM abstractions to API contract design.

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Latency Is Cheap, Bandwidth Is Not

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 15:08:07

The first time I really understood this, I was staring at a billing dashboard at 11 p.m., trying to explain to a VP why our AWS bill had doubled in a single month. We hadn't added significant compute. We hadn't provisioned new databases. What we'd done, quietly, as part of a feature nobody thought twice about, was start returning full user objects from a search endpoint instead of IDs. Forty fields per record. Hundreds of records per page. Millions of requests per day. The math, once you actually run it, is brutal. AWS charges roughly $0.09 per GB for the first 10 TB of outbound egress. That sounds trivial until you realize that 500 TB of monthly egress — a number that a moderately successful video platform reaches without trying — lands you somewhere around $37,500 every month. For moving bytes. Not for compute, not for storage, not for the engineering talent that built the thing. Just for the physical act of electrons crossing a boundary Bezos drew on a map.

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Building MCP Hub for DevOps and CI/CD Pipelines

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 14:08:07

Modern DevOps uses a wide range of tools, including Git repositories, CI/CD pipelines, monitoring platforms, cloud services, and security systems. These tools often work separately and are not fully connected. Because of this, engineers have to switch between multiple systems, repeat similar tasks, and rely on personal experience or undocumented knowledge to complete their work. This lack of integration creates inefficiencies, slows down deployments, and increases mental effort for engineering teams. The Model Context Protocol (MCP) solves the above challenges by providing a standardized communication layer between AI agents or assistants and development tools. This works as a universal embedding system that allows AI tools and systems to process the data from and execute actions across the ecosystem through a consistent interface.

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Agentic AI: A New Threat Surface

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 13:08:07

Artificial intelligence with agency refers to automated systems that possess the ability to create their own objectives, which they will follow without external assistance. The process requires two elements: using provided prompts with available tools and APIs to generate output and studying the produced text in sequential order. Agentic AI possesses the capability to store prompts while it detects environmental information and develops plans to achieve its objectives, which it will implement without requiring any human supervision.  For instance, they can independently initiate hotel reservations by accessing travel APIs with financial data stored on the blockchain, prompting hotel bookings to be automatically triggered by the initial AI agent. LangChain, for example, is attracting increasing attention not only for its complex framework but also for its practical applications. Additionally, current AI systems excel in conversation, although they may struggle with changing goals, ideas, or nuances.

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Building Fault-Tolerant Spring Boot Microservices With Kafka and AWS

Aggregated on: 2026-03-19 12:08:07

In distributed microservice architectures, failures are inevitable, but the impact can be minimized with the right design. Fault tolerance means the system can continue functioning even if some components fail, while resilience is the ability to recover quickly from failures. Using Spring Boot with Apache Kafka on AWS provides a powerful toolkit for building fault-tolerant microservices. Kafka acts as a high-throughput, replicated log that decouples services, and AWS offers scalability and complementary services like AWS Lambda for serverless processing.  In this article, we take an engineer’s perspective on implementing fault tolerance patterns such as retries, circuit breakers, and idempotency in Spring Boot microservices with a self-managed Kafka cluster on AWS. We also explore how AWS Lambda can be integrated into the Kafka-driven architecture to enhance resilience.

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Java Microservices(SCS) vs. Spring Modulith

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 20:23:07

This article discusses the differences between a Java microservice architecture (SCS style) using Clean Architecture and a Spring Modulith architecture. It explores their strengths, trade-offs, and when to use each approach. The architectures are demonstrated using two projects:

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Zero-Cost AI with Java

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 19:23:07

So you have a new AI-based idea and need to create an MVP app to test it? If your AI knowledge is limited to OpenAI, I have bad news for you… it’s not going to be free.

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How Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting Is Solving the Battery Waste Crisis in Industrial IoT

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 18:23:07

High-temperature energy harvesting exposes the hidden cost of batteries across Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) deployments, especially in environments where heat and access constraints shorten battery life and raise maintenance risk. Fit-and-forget architectures matter in hazardous and remote locations. Battery replacement introduces downtime and unpredictable operating costs that scale with fleet size, while thermal extremes further reduce cell reliability. Energy harvesting and self-powered sensors emerge as engineering-driven solutions that align with long-term system availability and life-cycle performance. Battery-less IIoT designs become a practical response to operational constraints rather than a sustainability narrative.

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How LLMs Reach 1 Million Token Context Windows — Context Parallelism and Ring Attention

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 17:23:07

Context Length and Hardware Scalability Context windows have exploded from 4k tokens to 10 million in just a few years. Meta's Llama 4 Scout supports 10M tokens — 78x more than Llama 3's 128k. Google's Gemini 3 Pro handles 1M tokens, while Claude 4 offers 1M in beta. This enables processing entire codebases, hundreds of research papers, or multi-day conversation histories in a single pass. But there's a problem: context length has outpaced hardware capacity.

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Is Your “Human-in-the-Loop” Actually Slowing You Down? Here’s What We Learned

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 16:23:07

In the rush to adopt AI and automation, many teams implement human-in-the-loop (HITL) frameworks. They believe that involving a person in the process solves the problems with reliability, quality, and trust. But as we’ve learned from real engineering workflows and integrations, the story isn’t that easy. In some contexts, humans-in-the-loop do improve outcomes, but in others, they can unintentionally become bottlenecks that limit speed, scalability, and innovation. In this post, we’ll analyze when human-in-the-loop is truly valuable, when it slows systems down, and how to strike the right balance between automation and human judgment. What Does “Human-in-the-Loop” Really Mean? Human-in-the-loop refers to the integration of human judgment into automated decision workflows, particularly in machine learning and AI systems. Instead of allowing algorithms to run fully autonomously, systems are designed so humans intervene at key points to approve, reject, correct, or guide outputs. This pattern includes:

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Fast Data Access Part 2: From Manual Hacks to Modern Stacks

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 15:23:07

It's been a while since I wrote Part 1 of this series. If you recall, back in 2019, we built a "Fast Data" pipeline using GemFire 9 and Spark 2.4. Precap of Part 1: Do you remember the pain we went through?

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Essential Monitoring Metrics for Cloud Native Systems: Part 1

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 14:38:07

Monitoring Is Not a Dashboard-Only Problem In the last couple of years, I have moved across a few product teams. Every time I walk into an engineering team and ask how monitoring works. I get a standard response. | There is a dashboard

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Orchestrating the Agentic Explosion: A Unified Governance Framework for the AI-First Enterprise

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 14:23:07

The Dawn of Agentic Chaos In 2026, the enterprise landscape has shifted from AI as a tool to AI as a Digital Teammate. Recent industry studies from IDC and Deloitte indicate that by the end of this year, nearly one-third of all AI-enabled applications will rely on autonomous agents. Technology companies in 2026 envision anchored democratized agent creation, allowing any role from a financial market analyst to a senior architect to deploy a functional digital assistant in minutes. However, this democratization has given rise to a new organizational crisis: agent sprawl. Without a centralized orchestration strategy, enterprises face redundant compute costs, double agent security risks, and a fragmented logic layer that threatens the integrity of the corporate data estate. For AI Architect and Strategy leaders, the challenge is no longer just delivery; it is creating a unified agent governance framework that balances the speed of "citizen development" with the rigors of production-grade stability.

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Beyond the Black Box: Implementing “Human-in-the-Loop” (HITL) Agentic Workflows for Regulated Industries

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 13:23:06

The Technical Hook Autonomous agents exhibit failure patterns analogous to those in distributed systems: not through isolated catastrophic errors, but via a cascade of locally justifiable actions that collectively result in globally unsafe states. Prompt injection in AI systems parallels a forged remote procedure call (RPC) syntactically valid input that traverses multiple processing layers before inducing an unauthorized state transition.  As illustrated in Figure 1, this architectural risk is mitigated by the "Commit Boundary," which prevents adversarial inputs from reaching sensitive executors by validating every intent against a deterministic schema. When extended with capabilities such as tool invocation and long-term planning, these agents manifest failure modes like confused deputy scenarios and privilege escalation, which are neutralized by the layered enforcement framework depicted in the diagram.

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The Invisible Bleed: A Field Guide to Cloud Costs That Hide in Plain Sight

Aggregated on: 2026-03-18 12:23:06

You deploy on Friday. The pipeline goes green. Monday morning, finance forwards you a bill that's double what it should be, and nobody can explain why. This scenario repeats across thousands of engineering teams — not because they're careless, but because cloud infrastructure has a peculiar talent for concealing its own inefficiencies. I've spent the better part of a decade debugging systems that worked perfectly yet hemorrhaged money. The patterns are weirdly consistent. What follows isn't theory — it's the accumulated scar tissue from watching well-architected systems quietly bankrupt themselves.

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Building Framework-Agnostic AI Swarms: Compare LangGraph, Strands, and OpenAI Swarm

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 20:23:06

If you've ever run the same app in multiple environments, you know the pain of duplicated configuration. Agent swarms have the same problem: the moment you try multiple orchestrators (LangGraph, Strands, OpenAI Swarm), your agent definitions start living in different formats. Prompts drift. Model settings drift. A "small behavior tweak" turns into archaeology across repos. AI behavior isn't code. Prompts aren't functions. They change too often and too experimentally to be hard-wired into orchestrator code. LaunchDarkly AI Configs lets you treat agent definitions like shared configuration instead. Define them once, store them centrally, and let any orchestrator fetch them. Update a prompt or model setting in the LaunchDarkly UI, and the new version rolls out without a redeploy.

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Automating IBM MQ Console (MQ Web Server) Startup Post-Server Reboot

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 19:23:06

In dynamic IT environments, server reboots due to patching, maintenance, or planned outages are a regular occurrence. For IBM MQ administrators, ensuring that critical management tools, such as the IBM MQ Console (which runs on the IBM MQ Web Server), are automatically available after such events is paramount. Manual intervention to restart the MQ Console after every server reboot can introduce unnecessary administrative overhead.  This article provides simple steps to configure the IBM MQ Web Server for automatic startup as a system service on both Windows and Linux.

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How Deterministic Rules Engines Improve Compliance and Auditability

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 18:23:06

Learn how deterministic rules, append-only decision records, and change data capture (CDC) in Snowflake help you explain every decision outcome with confidence. Marketplace rules-based decision systems fail quietly. Not because they cannot compute a number, but because they cannot reliably explain why the number is what it is. When rule evaluation is dynamic, small inconsistencies compound fast: the same inputs produce different outputs, rule intent gets lost in the code path, and a week later, you are reconstructing a decision from partial logs.

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Beyond Chatbots: Supercharging Feather Wand With Claude Code Integration

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 17:53:06

Performance testing has always been a bit of a “dark art.” It requires a unique blend of coding skills, architectural knowledge, and the patience to debug complex .jmx files. When I first introduced Feather Wand, the goal was simple: to make performance testing more accessible and efficient by leveraging the power of AI. Today, I’m excited to share a massive update that takes this mission to a whole new level. We’ve officially integrated Claude Code into the Feather Wand ecosystem.

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From SAST to “Shift Everywhere”: Rethinking Code Security in 2026

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 17:23:06

Several structural shifts have changed how source code security is approached. Software teams now deploy continuously, build on cloud-native architectures, and often depend on third-party and open-source components. As a result, security vulnerabilities propagate faster and across wider blast radii. Security expectations have shifted as well. Customers assess vendors not only on features but also on how reliably they manage source code risk throughout the whole software lifecycle. This pushes security considerations beyond isolated code scans into architecture, development practices, and operational processes.

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Refactoring the Monthly Review: Applying CI/CD Principles to Executive Reporting

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 16:38:06

We live in a dual-speed reality. On the ground, engineering teams run on Agile: two-week sprints, daily stand-ups, and continuous deployment. We value velocity, adaptability, and real-time observability.

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Swift Concurrency, Part 1: Tasks, Executors, and Priority Escalation

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 15:23:06

Swift 6 introduced a new approach to concurrency in apps. In this article, we will explore the problems it aims to solve, explain how it works under the hood, compare the new model with the previous one, and take a closer look at the Actor model. In the upcoming parts, we will also break down executors, schedulers, structured concurrency, different types of executors, implement our own executor, and more. Swift Concurrency Overview: Problems and Solutions Concurrency has long been one of the most challenging aspects of software development. Writing code that runs tasks simultaneously can improve performance and responsiveness, but it often introduces complexity and subtle bugs as race conditions, deadlocks, and thread-safety issues.

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Memory Is a Distributed Systems Problem: Designing Conversational AI That Stays Coherent at Scale

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 14:23:06

Conversational AI systems rarely fail in dramatic ways. They do not crash outright or return obvious errors. Instead, they decay. Conversations lose continuity. Personalization feels inconsistent. Latency creeps upward. Engineers respond by increasing context windows, adding vector stores, or layering more retrieval logic on top. For a while, things improve. Then the same failures return, just at a higher cost. The uncomfortable truth is that memory, in production conversational systems, is not a model feature. It is state. And state, at scale, behaves like a distributed systems problem, whether teams acknowledge it or not.

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Observability in AI Pipelines: Why “The System Is Up” Means Nothing

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 13:23:06

Monitoring vs Observability Observability is a term used widely in current systems, but it is often confused with monitoring. Monitoring tells developers whether something is not working or a flow is broken, whereas observability explains why a particular component within the pipeline is failing or malfunctioning. In most traditional applications, developers often monitor & track metrics around uptime, latency, error rates, CPU Usage, and memory. If the application API responds within the expected time and error rates stay within the limits, the application or system is considered healthy. If there is any deviation from the acceptable limits for any of these metrics, an email is triggered to the concerned team. Such a setup works for most of the systems.

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When Similarity Isn’t Accuracy in GenAI: Vector RAG vs GraphRAG

Aggregated on: 2026-03-17 12:23:06

Retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) based applications are being developed in high numbers with the advent of large language models (LLM) models. We are observing numerous use cases evolving around RAG and similar mechanisms, where we provide the enterprise context to LLMs to answer enterprise-specific questions. Today, most enterprises have developed, or are in the process of developing, a knowledge base based on the plethora of documents and content they have accumulated over the years. Billions of documents are going through parsing, chunking, and tokenization, and finally, vector embeddings are getting generated and stored in vector stores. 

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