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Why Traditional QA Fails for Generative AI in Tech Support

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 20:11:17

The rapid advancement of generative AI (GenAI) has created unprecedented opportunities to transform technical support operations. However, it has also introduced unique challenges in quality assurance that traditional monitoring approaches simply cannot address. As enterprise AI systems become increasingly complex, particularly in technical support environments, we need more sophisticated evaluation frameworks to ensure their reliability and effectiveness. Why Traditional Monitoring Fails for GenAI Support Agents Most enterprises rely on what's commonly called "canary testing" — predefined test cases with known inputs and expected outputs that run at regular intervals to validate system behavior. While these approaches work well for deterministic systems, they break down when applied to GenAI support agents for several fundamental reasons: Infinite input variety: Support agents must handle unpredictable natural language queries that cannot be pre-scripted. A customer might describe the same technical issue in countless different ways, each requiring proper interpretation. Resource configuration diversity: Each customer environment contains a unique constellation of resources and settings. An EC2 instance in one account might be configured entirely differently from one in another account, yet agents must reason correctly about both. Complex reasoning paths: Unlike API-based systems that follow predictable execution flows, GenAI agents make dynamic decisions based on customer context, resource state, and troubleshooting logic. Dynamic agent behavior: These models continuously learn and adapt, making static test suites quickly obsolete as agent behavior evolves. Feedback lag problem: Traditional monitoring relies heavily on customer-reported issues, creating unacceptable delays in identifying and addressing quality problems. A Concrete Example Consider an agent troubleshooting a cloud database access issue. The complexity becomes immediately apparent: The agent must correctly interpret the customer's description, which might be technically imprecise It needs to identify and validate relevant resources in the customer's specific environment It must select appropriate APIs to investigate permissions and network configurations It needs to apply technical knowledge to reason through potential causes based on those unique conditions Finally, it must generate a solution tailored to that specific environment This complex chain of reasoning simply cannot be validated through predetermined test cases with expected outputs. We need a more flexible, comprehensive approach. The Dual-Layer Solution Our solution is a dual-layer framework combining real-time evaluation with offline comparison: Real-time component: Uses LLM-based "jury evaluation" to continuously assess the quality of agent reasoning as it happens Offline component: Compares agent-suggested solutions against human expert resolutions after cases are completed Together, they provide both immediate quality signals and deeper insights from human expertise. This approach gives comprehensive visibility into agent performance without requiring direct customer feedback, enabling continuous quality assurance across diverse support scenarios. How Real-Time Evaluation Works The real-time component collects complete agent execution traces, including: Customer utterances Classification decisions Resource inspection results Reasoning steps These traces are then evaluated by an ensemble of specialized "judge" large language models (LLMs) that analyze the agent's reasoning. For example, when an agent classifies a customer issue as an EC2 networking problem, three different LLM judges independently assess whether this classification is correct given the customer's description. Using majority voting creates a more robust evaluation than relying on any single model. We apply strategic downsampling to control costs while maintaining representative coverage across different agent types and scenarios. The results are published to monitoring dashboards in real-time, triggering alerts when performance drops below configurable thresholds. Offline Comparison: The Human Expert Benchmark While real-time evaluation provides immediate feedback, our offline component delivers deeper insights through comparative analysis. It: Links agent-suggested solutions to final case resolutions in support management systems Performs semantic comparison between AI solutions and human expert resolutions Reveals nuanced differences in solution quality that binary metrics would miss For example, we discovered our EC2 troubleshooting agent was technically correct but provided less detailed security group explanations than human experts. The multi-dimensional scoring assesses correctness, completeness, and relevance, providing actionable insights for improvement. Most importantly, this creates a continuous learning loop where agent performance improves based on human expertise without requiring explicit feedback collection. Technical Implementation Details Our implementation balances evaluation quality with operational efficiency: A lightweight client library embedded in agent runtimes captures execution traces without impacting performance These traces flow into a FIFO queue that enables controlled processing rates and message grouping by agent type A compute unit processes these traces, applying downsampling logic and orchestrating the LLM jury evaluation Results are stored with streaming capabilities that trigger additional processing for metrics publication and trend analysis This architecture separates evaluation logic from reporting concerns, creating a more maintainable system. We've implemented graceful degradation so the system continues providing insights even when some LLM judges fail or are throttled, ensuring continuous monitoring without disruption. Specialized Evaluators for Different Reasoning Components Different agent components require specialized evaluation approaches. Our framework includes a taxonomy of evaluators tailored to specific reasoning tasks: Domain classification: LLM judges assess whether the agent correctly identified the technical domain of the customer's issue Resource validation: We measure the precision and recall of the agent's identification of relevant resources Tool selection: Evaluators assess whether the agent chose appropriate diagnostic APIs given the context Final solutions: Our GroundTruth Comparator measures semantic similarity to human expert resolutions This specialized approach lets us pinpoint exactly where improvements are needed in the agent's reasoning chain, rather than simply knowing that something went wrong somewhere. Measurable Results and Business Impact Implementing this framework has driven significant improvements across our AI support operations: Increased successful case deflection by 20% while maintaining high customer satisfaction scores Detected previously invisible quality issues that traditional metrics missed, such as discovering that some agents were performing unnecessary credential validations that added latency without improving solution quality Accelerated improvement cycles thanks to detailed, component-level feedback on reasoning quality Built greater confidence in agent deployments, knowing that quality issues will be quickly detected and addressed before they impact customer experience Conclusion and Future Directions As AI reasoning agents become increasingly central to technical support operations, sophisticated evaluation frameworks become essential. Traditional monitoring approaches simply cannot address the complexity of these systems.  Our dual-layer framework demonstrates that continuous, multi-dimensional assessment is possible at scale, enabling responsible deployment of increasingly powerful AI support systems. Looking ahead, we're working on:

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AI-Powered Data Integrity for ECC to S/4HANA Migrations

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 19:11:17

Abstract Migrating millions of data after the extraction, transformation, and loading (ETL) process from SAP ECC to S/4HANA is one of the most complex challenges developers and QA engineers face today. The most common risk in these projects isn’t the code; it is data integrity and trust. Validating millions of records across changing schemas, transformation rules, and supply chain processes is vulnerable to error, especially when handled manually. This article introduces a comprehensive AI-powered end-to-end data integrity framework to reconcile the transactional data and validate millions of master data records and transactional record integrity after migration from ECC to S/4HANA.

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Introducing the Ampere® Performance Toolkit to Optimize Software

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 18:11:17

Overview The use of practical tools to evaluate performance in consistent, predictable ways across various platform configurations is necessary to optimize software. Ampere’s open-source availability of the Ampere Performance Toolkit (APT) enables customers and developers to take a systematic approach to performance analysis. The Ampere Performance Toolkit provides an automated way to run and benchmark important application data. The toolkit makes it faster and easier to set up, run, and repeat performance tests across bare metal and various clouds leveraging a mature, automated framework for utilizing best known configurations, a simple YAML file input for configuring resources for cloud-based tests, and numerous examples running common benchmarks including Cassandra, MySQL, and Redis on a variety of cloud vendors or internally provisioned platforms.

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Architectural Understanding of CPUs, GPUs, and TPUs

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 17:11:17

With the announcement of antigravity, Google's new agent-first AI development platform, the focus of AI infrastructure shifted back to TPUs. Antigravity runs on the custom-designed Tensor Processing Units. What are these TPUs, and how are they different from GPUs?  In this article, you will learn about CPUs, GPUs, and TPUs. When to use what. CPUs, GPUs, and TPUs are three types of “brains” for computers, each optimized for different kinds of work: CPUs are flexible all‑rounders, GPUs are experts at doing many small calculations in parallel, and TPUs are specialized engines for modern AI and deep learning. Understanding how they evolved and where each shines helps you pick the right tool for the job, from everyday apps to large‑scale enterprise AI systems.

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Unleashing Powerful Analytics: Technical Deep Dive into Cassandra-Spark Integration

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 16:11:17

Apache Cassandra has long been favored by organizations dealing with large volumes of data that require distributed storage and processing capabilities. Its decentralized architecture and tunable consistency levels make it ideal for handling massive datasets across multiple nodes with minimal latency. Meanwhile, Apache Spark excels in processing and analyzing data in-memory; this makes it an excellent complement to Cassandra for performing real-time analytics and batch processing tasks. Why Cassandra?  

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Building Scalable Disaster Recovery Platforms for Microservices

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 15:11:17

Introduction Disaster recovery is the process of restoring a business's IT infrastructure — including critical data, applications, and systems — after a catastrophic event to minimize downtime and resume normal operations. There is a common misconception that disaster recovery is just about database snapshot. In reality, it includes restoring application state, database, cache, traffic management, and infrastructure orchestration. Today’s cloud-native environment, which consists of thousands of microservices, makes disaster recovery complex because it requires coordination across services, infrastructure, and dependencies. In large organizations, there are thousands of services to manage with varied technologies. Using a non-standard disaster recovery static script leads to inconsistent and error-prone disaster recovery execution.

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How to Use AI for Anomaly Detection

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 14:26:17

You usually need AI when your data is just too much, too fast, or too complex for static rules to handle. Think about it: rules work fine when patterns are stable and predictable. But in today’s environment, data isn’t static. Anomalies evolve, labels are often scarce, and what’s considered “normal” shifts depending on the service, the cloud, or even the time of day. If you’re already drowning in alerts or missing critical events, you’ve felt the pain of relying on rigid thresholds. Analysts get overwhelmed, false positives eat up hours, and the real threats slip through. That’s exactly where AI shines: it adapts to change, learns new behaviors, and balances precision with recall in a way that static rules simply can’t.

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Encapsulation Without "private": A Case for Interface-Based Design

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 13:26:17

Introduction: Rethinking access control Encapsulation is one of the core pillars of object-oriented programming. It is commonly introduced using access modifiers — private, protected, public, and so on — which restrict visibility of internal implementation details. Most popular object-oriented languages provide access modifiers as the default tool for enforcing encapsulation. While this approach is effective, it tends to obscure a deeper and arguably more powerful mechanism: the use of explicit interfaces or protocols. Instead of relying on visibility constraints embedded in the language syntax, we can define behavioral contracts directly and intentionally — and often with greater precision and flexibility.

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Building Self-Healing Data Pipelines: From Reactive Alerts to Proactive Recovery

Aggregated on: 2025-12-04 12:26:17

It's 3 a.m. Your Outlook pops: “Production pipeline down. ETL job failed.” Before you even unlock your phone, another ping follows: “Issue auto-resolved by AI agent. Root cause: Memory pressure from 3× data spike. Fix applied: Scaled cluster, adjusted Spark config. Recovery time: 47 seconds. Cost: $2.30.”

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Stop Writing Excel Specs: A Markdown-First Approach to Enterprise Java

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 20:11:16

Design documents in Enterprise Java often end up trapped in binary silos like Excel or Word, causing them to drift away from the actual code. This pattern shows how to treat Design Docs as source code by using structured Markdown and generative AI. We've all been there: the architecture team delivers a Detailed Design Document (DDD) to the development team. It’s a 50-page Word file, even worse, a massive Excel spreadsheet with multiple tabs defining Java classes, fields, and validation rules.

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Reproducible SadTalker Pipeline in Google Colab for Single-Image, Single-Audio Talking-Head Generation

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 19:11:16

If you’ve ever wanted to bring a still photo to life using nothing more than an audio clip, SadTalker makes it surprisingly easy once it's set up correctly. Running it locally can be tricky because of GPU drivers, missing dependencies, and environment mismatches, so this guide walks you through a clean, reliable setup in Google Colab instead.  The goal is simple: a fully reproducible, copy-and-paste workflow that lets you upload a single image and a single audio file, then generate a talking-head video without spending hours troubleshooting your system. 

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Engineering Evidence‑Grounded Review Pipelines With Hybrid RAG and LLMs

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 18:11:16

Unchecked language generation is not a harmless bug — it is a costly liability in regulated domains. A single invented citation in a visa evaluation can derail an application and triggering months of appeal. A hallucinated clause in a compliance report can result in penalties. A fabricated reference in a clinical review can jeopardize patient safety. Large language models (LLMs) are not “broken”; they are simply unaccountable. Retrieval‑augmented generation (RAG) helps, but standard RAG remains brittle:

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MCP Elicitation: Human-in-the-Loop for MCP Servers

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 17:11:16

What Is MCP The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is an open standard developed by Anthropic that enables large language models (LLMs) to receive data from any backend or application in a single, standardized format. Prior to the introduction of MCP, developers working on agent-based AI systems had to rely on custom tools and logic to connect with the APIs of various third-party applications. This process was often tedious and didn't scale effectively, as every integration had to be manually built and maintained by the developers. With MCP, this responsibility has shifted: application developers can now expose their APIs in a unified format that most models and agent frameworks can easily understand right from the outset.

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Building Privacy-Preserving ML for CRM Systems With Federated Learning

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 16:11:16

The Problem: Training Models on Distributed Data When creating ML models for lead scoring, customer data is often stored in CRM systems across the EU, the US, and APAC. Because the GDPR prohibits moving EU data to central servers and violations are costly, traditional approaches are ineffective. Centralized training: Violates data residency laws Separate regional models: Poor performance, no cross-regional learning Data replication: Compliance nightmare Federated learning addresses this by training models in each region and sharing only updates to the model, not the raw data.

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Implementing Zero Trust on Google Cloud

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 15:11:16

Cybersecurity now requires more than just perimeter defences. As you adopt microservices, hybrid workloads, and AI pipelines on Google Cloud, identity becomes your new perimeter. Zero Trust means never trust and always verify. It is no longer optional but essential. This article guides you on implementing zero trust with Google Cloud Platform. You will learn how to use strong identity and access management strategies. The focus is on practical advice for modern DevSecOps teams using the latest GCP tools.

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U.S. Nonprofit Data APIs: A Developer’s Overview

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 14:11:16

Trust will be the most important factor in the future, whether online donation is successful. No one is satisfied to do no more than click "Donate" and hope for the best. They want guarantees, data validation, and proof that their money has not actually been dumped. In the background, this schema is mostly realized as APIs. You can produce a fundraising platform, a donor portal, or a gift assessment dashboard. If you're making anything, the backend we are provided by technology becomes a soon-to-be irreplaceable asset for confidence and efficiency management.

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Building Green AI: Lessons in GPU Efficiency From the Trenches

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 13:11:16

The Real Problem With Modern Deep Learning Let’s be honest — we all love scaling. Bigger models, more GPUs, larger clusters. But here’s what we found in production: most GPU time isn’t spent doing useful work. Even when the utilization graph says “busy,” your GPUs might be sitting idle waiting for data. The issue isn’t the hardware — it’s inefficiency across three fronts:

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WebAssembly Is Eating the Cloud: Why Devs Should Care

Aggregated on: 2025-12-03 12:11:16

Remember when WebAssembly (Wasm) was just that thing you'd use to squeeze extra performance out of web apps? Those days are over. WebAssembly's jumped the fence and is now quietly reshaping the entire cloud infrastructure landscape. Most developers I talk to are still treating it like a nice-to-have browser feature. Big mistake.

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Web App Load Testing Using Maven Plugins for Apache JMeter, and Analyzing the Results

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 21:11:16

In this article, we will walk you through how to conduct a load test and analyze the results using Java Maven technology. We'll covering everything from launching the test to generating informative graphs and tables. For this demonstration, we'll utilize various files, including Project Object Model (POM) files, JMeters scripts, and CSV data, from the jpetstore_loadtesting_dzone project available on GitHub. This will help illustrate the steps involved and the functionality of the necessary plugins and tools. You can find the project here: https://github.com/vdaburon/jpetstore_loadtesting_dzone.

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Apache Phoenix With Variable-Length Encoded Data

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 19:11:16

Apache Phoenix is an open-source, SQL skin over Apache HBase that enables lightning-fast OLTP (Online Transactional Processing) operations on petabytes of data using standard SQL queries. Phoenix helps combine the scalability of NoSQL with the familiarity and power of SQL. By supporting large-scale aggregate and non-aggregate functionality, Phoenix has evolved into an OLTP and OLAP (Online Analytical Processing) database. This makes it a compelling choice for organizations looking to combine real-time data processing with complex analytical querying in a single, unified system. Phoenix supports several variable-length data types:

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JDK 17 Memory Bloat in Containers: A Post-Mortem

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 18:11:16

When engineering teams modernize Java applications, the shift from JDK 8 to newer Long-Term Support (LTS) versions, such as JDK 11, 17, and soon 21, might seem straightforward at first. Since Java maintains backward compatibility, it's easy to assume that the runtime behavior will remain largely unchanged. However, that's far from reality. In 2025, our team completed a major modernization initiative to migrate all of our Java microservices from JDK 8 to JDK 17. The development and QA phases went smoothly, with no major issues arising. But within hours of deploying to production, we faced a complete system breakdown.

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Architecting Cloud Data Migration From Legacy Warehouses

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 17:11:16

The Legacy Challenge in Enterprise Data For decades, enterprise data platforms were built on Teradata, Oracle, and other legacy systems. They were once the backbone of analytics, providing reliability and scale, but over time, they became rigid, costly, and difficult to evolve. Today, many of these platforms hold petabytes of data, support thousands of reports, and sit at the center of hundreds of dependent processes. What was once an enabler has become a bottleneck. The challenge is not just technology. Over the years, enterprises accumulate thousands of stored procedures, ETL pipelines, and reporting scripts embedded into these systems. Business rules and definitions are often hard-coded into SQL, reporting layers, or application logic. Migration to the cloud cannot be treated as a simple copy-and-paste job. Without a deliberate strategy, companies risk recreating the inefficiencies and inconsistencies of the past on a modern platform.

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Beyond Buzzwords: Demystifying Agentic AI

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 16:11:16

AI discussions today are filled with buzzwords — autonomy, orchestration, reasoning, context-awareness, and more. These terms often get used loosely, yet they are central to understanding the shift toward agentic AI. In this article, I’ll unpack the most common buzzwords tied to AI agents, explain what they really mean, and show how they come together to shape agentic AI. What Are Agents Anyway? First, let us understand what an agent is. Why does everyone want to build an agent? 

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A Comparative Analysis of AI Tools for Developers in 2025

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 15:11:16

Overview Nowadays, AI-powered coding assistants transform how developers write, refactor, and comprehend code. This technology blog examines the features, usability, and efficacy of the most cutting-edge AI coding tools, such as GitHub Copilot, Cursor, Cody, Aider, and Windsurf. Most importantly, this article analyzes, evaluates, and suggests the best choice based on practical testing. AI Assistants Evaluated The following AI coding assistants were examined:

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From Mechanical Ceremonies to Agile Conversations

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 14:11:16

TL; DR: Mechanical Ceremonies to Meaningful Events Your Agile events aren’t failing because people lack training. They’re failing because your organization adopted the rituals while rejecting the transparency, trust, and adaptation that make them work. And often, the dysfunction of mechanical ceremonies isn’t a bug. It’s a feature. The Reality of Your “Ceremonies” Let’s stop pretending. Your Daily Scrum is a status report. Your Sprint Planning confirms decisions that a circle of people made last week without you. Your Retrospective surfaces the same three issues it surfaced six months ago, and nothing has changed. Your Sprint Review is a demo followed by polite applause, before everyone happily leaves to do something meaningful.

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Phishing 3.0: AI and Deepfake-Driven Social Engineering Attacks

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 13:11:16

Phishing is no longer an easy-to-detect cyberattack. With the rise of artificial intelligence, attackers now launch AI-driven phishing campaigns to mimic human behavior. They can now generate flawless emails and use deepfake phishing attacks. Email security threats are more prominent now due to AI impersonation attacks and real-time credential phishing. Plus, there is a likelihood of credential harvesting. It can lead to not only monetary fraud but also reputation damage. Plus, organizations can suffer non-compliance and operational interruptions.

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Building a Customer Intelligence AI Agent With OpenSearch and LLMs

Aggregated on: 2025-12-02 12:11:16

The Problem You have three types of customer data: You want to support questions like:

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Not Just Crashes: Your Observability Stack for the Mobile App

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 20:26:15

Go beyond Crashlytics by adopting latency tracing, ANR root-cause analysis, and in-app telemetry to understand the end-user journey. If you are a mobile engineer, you have probably felt the same gut punch I have: ship a feature, see the app store rating drop, see reviews say nothing more useful than "app is slow" or "app keeps freezing."

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Why Open-Source OpenSearch 3.0 Is More Than Just an Upgrade: An Interview

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 19:26:15

OpenSearch 3.0 is more of a signal flare than just another version bump. The open-source project, which began as a fork of Elasticsearch, has now grown into a fully differentiated, community-driven search and analytics platform. With performance leaps, modular architecture, and a deeper embrace of AI workloads, OpenSearch 3.0 marks a pivotal shift toward a more scalable, flexible, and future-ready open source engine. To unpack what’s new and what’s next, I spoke with Anil Inamdar, Global Head of Data Services at NetApp Instaclustr. Anil has decades of experience helping enterprises adopt and operate open source data technologies at scale. In this conversation, he explains why 3.0 matters not just for developers already on OpenSearch, but for any engineering team rethinking how they search, monitor, and analyze data in a distributed world.

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Building an OWASP 2025 Security Scanner in 48 Hours

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 18:26:15

OWASP dropped its 2025 Top 10 on November 6th with a brand-new category nobody saw coming: "Mishandling of Exceptional Conditions" (A10). I spent a weekend building a scanner to detect these issues and immediately found authentication bypasses in three different production codebases. The most common pattern? return True in exception handlers, effectively granting access whenever the auth service hiccups. This article walks through building the scanner, what I found, and why this matters way more than you think. Friday Night: OWASP Releases Something Interesting I was scrolling through Twitter when I saw the OWASP announcement. They'd just released the 2025 Top 10 list at the Global AppSec Conference. Most people were talking about Supply Chain Security moving up to #3, but something else caught my eye.

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Real-Time Computer Vision on macOS: Accelerating Vision Transformers

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 17:26:15

Hi mates! For years, "computer vision" meant convolutional neural networks (CNN). If you wanted to detect a cat, you would use a CNN. If you wanted to recognize a face, you used a CNN. But in 2020, the game changed. A paper entitled "An Image is Worth 16x16 Words" introduced the Vision Transformer. Instead of looking at pixels through small sliding windows — convolution — the ViT treats an image like a sequence of text patches. It sees the "whole picture" all at once, and often with better accuracy.

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Shield Your Nonprofit: How to Tackle Ransomware Attacks

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 16:26:15

Set against the backdrop of accelerated growth of technology over the past several decades, notwithstanding large organizations, nonprofits as well have become overly reliant on technology for their day-to-day operations. New data shows that this reliance often presents opportunities for cyber criminals to launch discreet or direct attacks, leading to one of the most threatening scenarios: a ransomware attack.  In recent years, there has been a significant uptick in ransomware attacks, in which malicious software or a hacker encrypts or locks down critical files. Post that, they demand huge payments to let users get back their files and access to their systems. These types of attacks can happen anywhere — and at any time of the day — often to the surprise and shock of users. Further, tracking the source of such attacks is often difficult, exacerbating a highly critical situation. The attackers have the potential to slam the brakes on the engine of any large business — and nonprofits aren’t much further away from becoming a victim in such cases — and this can often lead to their shutdown.

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AI Ethics in Action: How We Ensure Fairness, Bias Mitigation, and Explainability

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 15:26:15

Like many challenges, it began with a user who continued receiving the wrong videos on her feed. It appeared to be a mere glitch in our recommendation system, but as we got deeper into it, we found that there was some concealed bias in our code, and it was just causing unfairness in our setup. It was not only a question of bad user experience, but of equity and credibility. Since then, AI ethics has no longer been a blank whiteboard discussion but an actual issue we have had to resolve at the moment. It is not difficult to produce AI with a lot of power; however, to create it in a fair, transparent, and trustworthy way is quite a different matter.

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From Chaos to Clarity: Building a Data Quality Framework That Actually Works

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 14:26:15

The dream of a "data-driven" organization is common to all of them. However, the reality across a wide range of business sectors is that the situation is very opposite; the data is so overwhelming that it can't be managed properly. Even strong data initiatives are sometimes undermined by incomplete records, inconsistent formats, duplicate entries, and obsolete information. The misinterpretation of the situation caused by the use of poor-quality data is the main consequence leading to confusion instead of insight, which is interpreted as missed opportunities, flawed strategies, and wastage of resources. Data chaos doesn't happen all of a sudden; it silently grows from siloed systems, a lack of governance, and unclear ownership. With the increasing number of data sources and automation of processes, the need for a structured approach to data quality management becomes crucial.

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Building a Production-Ready MCP Server in Python

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 13:26:15

The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is rapidly emerging as a fundamental framework for secure AI integration. It effectively links large language models (LLMs) with essential corporate assets, such as APIs, databases, and services. However, moving from concept to production requires addressing several key real-world demands: Governance: Defining clear rules regarding who is authorized to access specific tools Security: Implementing robust practices for managing and protecting tokens and secrets Resilience: Ensuring system stability and performance during high-demand periods or in the face of malicious attacks Observability: Establishing the capability to effectively diagnose and troubleshoot failures across various tools and user environments In this article, we'll focus on these points and upgrade a simple MCP server into a production-grade, robust system. We'll build:

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Introducing the Testing Vial: a (better?) alternative to Testing Diamond and Testing Pyramid

Aggregated on: 2025-12-01 12:26:15

Testing is crucial for any application. It can also be important in applications that are meant to be thrown away: in fact, with a proper testing strategy, you can ensure that the application will do exactly what you expect it to do; instead of running it over and over again to fix the parts, by adding some specific tests, you will speed up the development of that throwaway project. The most common testing strategies are the Testing Pyramid and the Testing Diamond. Both useful, but I think that they are not perfect.

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How to Gracefully Deal With Contention

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 20:11:14

The Problem Statement When multiple clients, processes, or threads compete for a limited number of resources simultaneously, causing degraded turnaround time and performance, the system enters a state called contention. This is the most common problem in systems that handle high traffic volumes. Without graceful dealing, contention leads to race conditions and an inconsistent state. Example Scenario Consider buying flight tickets online. There is only one seat available on the flight. Alice and Bob both want this seat and click "Book Now" at exactly the same time.

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The Illusion of Deep Learning: Why "Stacking Layers" Is No Longer Enough

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 19:11:14

Have we reached the limit of what we can achieve with our current AI models? At the very heart of the race for parameters and power conducted by Big Tech players, a fundamental question emerges: Do our AIs truly understand the changing world, or are they simply reciting a frozen past? In the study shared by the Google Research team in their paper "Nested Learning: The Illusion of Deep Learning Architectures" (1), the finding is unequivocal. According to them, our large language models (LLMs) suffer from "anterograde amnesia syndrome." Like patient Henry Molaison, a famous clinical case (2), who was incapable of forming new memories after his operation, our models, once their training is complete, are frozen.

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RAG Applications with Vertex AI

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 18:11:14

Most organizations experimenting with generative AI face a common bottleneck: their LLMs can chat nicely, but they do not consistently know the company’s own data. A customer wants to know a policy clause, or an engineer asks a question about a system diagram, and the model makes something up or simply provides an ambiguous, incomplete response. This won’t work in industries such as healthcare, financial services, or insurance where accuracy is critical. What we want is the creative power of LLMs, but also the ability to reliably know our organization’s stuff.  Here, we will explore how Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) gives us those solutions.

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Is TOON the Next Lightweight Hero in Event Stream Processing With Apache Kafka?

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 17:11:14

The data serialization format is a key factor when dealing with stream processing, as it decides how efficiently the data is forwarded on the wire and optimized internally in order to be stored, understood, and processed by a distributed system. The data serialization format is core to stream processing in that it directly influences the speed, reliability, scalability, and maintainability of the entire pipeline. Choosing the right one can eliminate expensive lock-ins and ensure that our streaming infrastructure remains stable as data volume and intricacy evolve.  In a stream-processing platform where millions of events per second must be handled with low latency by ingestion systems such as Apache Kafka and processing engines like Flink or Spark, reducing CPU usage is important, as it depends on efficient data formats.

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Next-Gen AI-Based QA: Why Data Integrity Matters More Than Ever

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 16:11:14

Artificial intelligence has changed the way we work across different industries. From chatbots that quickly resolve customer issues to systems that detect equipment failures before they occur, automation is now a standard practice. As these smart systems become more independent, one question keeps emerging: how much can we trust the data behind them?  Data integrity may not make the news often, but it supports every AI-driven process. When data is inconsistent, incomplete, or biased, even the best algorithms can fail. In an automated setup, those failures don’t just stay small; they grow, causing flawed predictions, distorted insights, or even unethical results. Bias, safety, disinformation, copyright, and alignment are big problems with AI thus robust data quality matters ever than before. 

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From Repetition to Reusability: How Maven Archetypes Save Time

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 15:11:14

Within the discipline of software engineering, practitioners are frequently encumbered by the monotonous ritual of initializing identical project scaffolds — configuring dependencies, establishing directory hierarchies, and reproducing boilerplate code prior to engaging in substantive problem‑solving. Although indispensable, such preliminary tasks are inherently repetitive, susceptible to human error, and inimical to efficiency.  Maven, a cornerstone of the Java build ecosystem, furnishes an elegant mechanism to mitigate this redundancy through the construct of archetypes. An archetype functions as a canonical blueprint, enabling the instantaneous generation of standardized project structures aligned with organizational conventions. By engineering bespoke archetypes, development teams can institutionalize consistency, accelerate delivery, and reallocate intellectual effort toward innovation rather than procedural repetition.

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Level Up Your API Design: 8 Principles for World-Class REST APIs

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 14:11:14

You’ve probably built a “REST API” before. But what does “RESTful” truly mean? It’s not just about using JSON and HTTP. It’s a spectrum, best described by the Richardson Maturity Model (RMM). Level 0 (The Swamp): Using HTTP as a transport system for remote procedure calls (RPC). Think of a single /api endpoint where all operations are POST requests. Level 1 (Resources): Introducing the concept of resources. Instead of one endpoint, you have multiple URIs like /users and /orders. Level 2 (HTTP Verbs): Using HTTP methods (GET, POST, PUT, DELETE) and status codes (2xx, 4xx) to operate on those resources. This is where most “REST” APIs live. Level 3 (Hypermedia  —  HATEOAS): The “holy grail” of REST. The API’s responses include links (hypermedia) that tell the client what they can do next. The client navigates your API by discovering these links, not by hard-coding URLs. The eight principles I’m sharing today are a blend of my own production experience and the pragmatic wisdom from industry-leading guides like Zalando’s. These should help you move your APIs up this maturity ladder, creating designs that are more robust, scalable, and easier to use.

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Five Nonprofit & Charity APIs That Make Due Diligence Way Less Painful for Developers

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 13:11:13

I learned this lesson the hard way. A few years back, I built a donation platform I thought was bulletproof. The design? Slick. Payments? Smooth. I figured, “Alright, I’ve nailed it.”

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Running Istio in Production: Five Hard-Won Lessons From Cloud-Native Teams

Aggregated on: 2025-11-28 12:11:13

Istio has established itself as a popular, trusted, and powerful service mesh platform. It complements Kubernetes with powerful features such as security, observability, and traffic management with no code changes. Istio’s several key features strengthen cloud-native and distributed systems, ensuring consistency, security, and resilience across diverse environments.  Istio has also recently graduated under the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF), along with other projects like Kubernetes. In this article, we will cover Istio's best practices for building a production-grade service mesh layer that offers secure, resilient, and durable performance.

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Building a Simple MCP Server and Client: An In-Memory Database

Aggregated on: 2025-11-27 20:11:13

If you've been diving into the world of AI-assisted programming or tool-calling protocols, you might have come across Model Context Protocol (MCP). MCP is an open-source standard for connecting AI applications to external systems. It is a lightweight framework that lets you expose functions as "tools" to language models, enabling seamless interaction between AI agents and your code. Think of it as a bridge that turns your functions into callable endpoints for models. In this post, we’ll build a basic in-memory database server using MCP, with code samples to extend and learn from. We'll dissect the code step by step, and by the end, you'll have a working prototype. Plus, I'll ask you to extend it with update, delete, and drop functionalities. Let's turn your terminal into a mini SQL playground!

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How To Restore a Deleted Branch In Azure DevOps

Aggregated on: 2025-11-27 19:11:13

Human error is one of the most common causes of data loss or breaches. In the ITIC report, they state that 64 % of downtime incidents have their roots in human errors. If you think that in SaaS environments all your data is safe, you need to think once again. All SaaS providers, including Microsoft, follow the shared responsibility model, which states that the service provider is responsible for the accessibility of its infrastructure and services, while a user is responsible for their data availability, including backup and disaster recovery.

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Mastering Fluent Bit: Controlling Logs with Fluent Bit on Kubernetes (update to Part 4)

Aggregated on: 2025-11-27 18:11:13

NOTE: This is a special update to the original Controlling Logs with  Fluent Bit on Kubernetes (Part 4) article published previously. The issue requiring this update arose over the weekend when I discovered that Broadcom, who acquired VMWare, who were the custodians of the Bitnami catalog, did something not so nice to all of us.

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Solving Real-Time Event Correlation in Distributed Systems

Aggregated on: 2025-11-27 17:11:13

Modern digital platforms operate as distributed ecosystems — microservices emitting events, APIs exchanging data, and asynchronous communication becoming the norm. In such environments, correlating events across multiple sources in real time becomes a critical requirement. Think of payments, orders, customer metadata, IoT sensors, logistics tracking — all flowing continuously.

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Run LLMs Locally Using Ollama

Aggregated on: 2025-11-27 16:56:13

Over the past few months, I’ve increasingly shifted my LLM experimentation from cloud APIs to running models directly on my laptop. The reason is simple: local inference has matured to the point where it’s fast, private, offline-friendly, and surprisingly easy to set up. Tools like Ollama have lowered the barrier dramatically. Instead of wrestling with GPU drivers, manually downloading weights, or wiring up custom runtimes, you get a single lightweight tool that can run models such as Llama 3.1, Mistral, Phi-3, DeepSeek R1, Gemma, and many others, all with minimal configuration.

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