News Aggregator


Implementing Decentralized Data Architecture on Google BigQuery: From Data Mesh to AI Excellence

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 20:07:59

In the era of generative AI and large language models (LLMs), the quality and accessibility of data have become the primary differentiators for enterprise success. However, many organizations remain trapped in the architectural paradigms of the past — centralized data lakes and warehouses that create massive bottlenecks, high latency, and "data swamps." Enter the Data Mesh. Originally proposed by Zhamak Dehghani, Data Mesh is a sociotechnical approach to sharing, accessing, and managing analytical data in complex environments. When paired with the scaling capabilities of Google BigQuery, it creates a foundation for "AI Excellence," where data is treated as a first-class product, ready for consumption by machine learning models and business units alike.

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How Power Automate Helps Analysts Send Alert Emails Faster and How AI Builder Takes It to the Next Level

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 19:07:59

Why Alerting Is Still a Pain Point for Analysts In most organizations, business analysts are expected to do more than just build dashboards. They are also responsible for monitoring data health, tracking operational KPIs, and alerting business users when something goes wrong — often in near real time. Yet despite the availability of modern BI tools, alerting workflows remain surprisingly manual in many ways, such as:

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Comparing Top 3 Java Reporting Tools

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 18:07:59

There’s no shortage of reporting tools, but a good number of them are either part of heavyweight BI systems or cloud services. Many line‑of‑business applications, however, just want a discreet, built‑in reporting option that can be customized.  Having recently tested several Java‑based document generation tools and libraries, I thought a short, plain-spoken, and up-to-date review could be worth sharing. 

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5 Surprising Truths About Scaling Apache Spark

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 17:07:59

Eleven o’clock in the evening, Friday. The cursor blinks beside a frozen progress indicator — no change since thirty-nine minutes ago - your key workflow still stuck mid-execution. Suddenly, crimson text floods the display: Out of Memory (OOM) or No space left on device. A reflex suggests adding compute units immediately; however, within distributed architectures, scaling up frequently drags performance down while inflating cost. Quiet realization follows - more hardware does not always fix broken flow. A seasoned cloud data architect for ten years, explanations about Spark’s delayed evaluation have been routine. Though the Catalyst Optimizer excels at shaping efficient workflows, hidden costs can linger unseen. Only when massive datasets arrive do these silent burdens emerge clearly. Excellence in data work goes beyond syntax - it includes grasping subtle system actions. Consequences touch both team effectiveness and financial outcomes equally.

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Probabilistic Data Structures for Software Security

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 16:07:59

We are living in an era where software systems are growing in size with each passing day and often face a constant tension between the scale, performance, and security, where each of them is essential and non-negotiable. Security tools must process large volumes of data in real time (network logs, user activity, login attempts, password matches, etc.), but storing and analyzing data in traditional formats is slow, expensive, and often impractical.  Traditional data structures (through databases, logs, hash tables, etc.) aim at providing exact answers for queries like 

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I Got Tired of Debugging Curl at 2 AM, So I Built a CLI

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 15:07:59

If your team owns online API endpoints, chances are you — or someone on your on-call rotation — runs curl commands a lot. Curl is a fantastic tool: it's tiny, ubiquitous, and scriptable. But when you're bleary-eyed at 2 AM, it can be too easy to make mistakes with curl. Which header did I forget this time? Did I remember to URL-encode that JSON field? What was the exact syntax for the authorization token? And how do I reliably pipe the result from one command into another without mangling it? Picture this scenario: It's the middle of the night, and an incident has kicked you out of bed. You’re troubleshooting an API issue with curl commands. First, you need to fetch a user session via a GET request, then use that session ID in a follow-up POST request to revoke the session. In your half-asleep state, you might do something like this:

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Network Fundamentals Every Backend Developer Must Know

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 14:07:59

You write code that talks to databases, calls external APIs, and serves thousands of users simultaneously. But when something breaks, do you really understand what happens between your application and the outside world? Most backend developers focus entirely on application logic and forget that their code depends heavily on network infrastructure. I learned this the hard way three years ago. My REST API worked perfectly in development but failed randomly in production. Users complained about timeouts and connection errors. I spent days checking my code logic, database queries, and server configurations. The problem turned out to be a simple network issue that took my senior colleague five minutes to identify. That day taught me something important: understanding networks is not optional for backend developers.

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What Actually Breaks During Large-Scale S/4HANA Conversions (And How to Prevent It)

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 13:07:59

Broken Custom ABAP Code in S/4HANA From an engineer’s vantage point, one of the first headaches in a brownfield S/4HANA conversion is custom ABAP code that no longer runs correctly. S/4HANA isn’t a mere upgrade; it introduces a new architecture with a simplified data model and revised logic. Many classic tables and transactions simply vanish or behave differently. As a result, existing Z-programs can dump or produce wrong results what worked fine in ECC may outright fail in S/4HANA, potentially breaking core business processes. Common breakage patterns include:

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Open-Source GitOps at the Edge: Deploying to Thousands of Clusters With Rancher Fleet

Aggregated on: 2026-03-03 12:07:59

The Edge Deployment Challenge Modern microservice applications are moving beyond central data centers and the cloud to the edge to provide ultra-low latency and real-time processing. This enables real-time responsiveness for applications powering autonomous vehicles, remote healthcare, and IoT solutions.  A fundamental operational challenge exists when you attempt to deploy code to distributed edge computing environments. Each time that you are deploying code to containerized workloads at thousands of different edge locations, it will require coordination across unreliable networks, heterogeneous hardware, and edge locations with no technical staff available to correct failed deployments. 

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AWS Step Functions + AI: Smarter Orchestration in Modern Applications

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 20:23:56

In the current landscape of software development, the integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) is no longer a luxury — it is a core requirement for staying competitive. However, the true challenge has shifted from simply building a model to orchestrating complex, multi-step AI workflows that are resilient, scalable, and maintainable. This is where AWS Step Functions emerges as a critical tool in the modern architect's toolkit. AWS Step Functions is a low-code, visual workflow service that allows developers to link various AWS services into a cohesive state machine. When combined with generative AI (GenAI) and large language models (LLMs), it provides the structured "brain" necessary to manage the non-deterministic nature of AI outputs, handle long-running processes, and ensure that failures in one part of a chain do not bring down the entire system.

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Idempotency in AI Tools: The Most Expensive Thing Teams Forget

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 19:23:56

When AI tools move from a test environment to real-world use, the first “surprise” a developer encounters is rarely about accuracy. It’s usually something more problematic: the system behaves inconsistently, costs climb faster than expected, and the same job seems to run multiple times. That’s not an AI problem. That’s a distributed systems problem. And in AI systems, this particular failure is extra problematic because every duplicate run has a direct dollar value impact. Idempotency is the fix. Not the only fix, but often the most impactful one.

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Why Your "Stateless" Services Are Lying to You

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 18:23:56

The architecture diagram shows clean rectangles. "Stateless API tier," someone wrote in Lucidchart, then drew an arrow to a managed database. The presentation went well. Everyone nodded. Six months later, after the third incident where a rolling deployment dropped active uploads and the on-call engineer spent two hours discovering that session affinity was secretly enabled in the load balancer config — that's when you realize the diagram lied. Not maliciously. But comprehensively.

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5 Security Considerations for Deploying AI on Edge Devices

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 17:23:56

Edge computing has become a practical way to reduce latency and enable real-time decision-making. Running AI models on edge devices can lead to significant performance gains, especially in manufacturing, health care, transportation and infrastructure. However, distributing data across a network of thousands of devices introduces unique security concerns compared to traditional IT environments. For organizations implementing or considering AI for edge networks, understanding security implications is crucial to keep information and operations secure.

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Cost Is a Distributed Systems Bug

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 16:23:56

The bill arrived on a Tuesday. One hundred and twenty thousand dollars in three days — enough to fund two junior engineers for a year, enough to lease a small datacenter rack, enough to make the VP of Engineering physically ill. The culprit? An autoscaling group that treated a DDoS attack like legitimate traffic, spinning up instances with the mindless enthusiasm of a Fibonacci sequence. No circuit breaker. No spend ceiling. Just pure, algorithmic faith that more capacity solves all problems. This is what happens when we treat cost as someone else's concern.

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Kubernetes for DevOps Engineers: Mastering Modern Patterns

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 15:08:56

With Kubernetes v1.35 (released Dec 17, 2025) deprecating cgroups v1 and the community Ingress-NGINX project entering its final sunset phase, the standard “happy path” for developers has fundamentally changed. These aren’t minor footnotes; they are architectural pivots that shift how services are exposed, secured, and scaled. This guide equips you with a modern Kubernetes setup using Minikube and explores what these changes mean for your development pipeline. Whether you’re refactoring legacy manifests or preparing for Gateway API adoption, this article helps you move with the Kubernetes project — not behind it.

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Hands-On with Azure Local via the Azure Portal

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 14:08:56

Steps to Create a Virtual Machine on Azure Local Using the Azure Portal 1. Definition of Keywords LocalBox LocalBox is an Azure Local lab environment created by Microsoft’s Azure Jumpstart team. You do not need to buy hardware such as Dell AX nodes or other vendors' nodes for practice. Where does LocalBox run? 1.1 On a user's Azure subscription: This creates a large VM (32 vCPU or 16 vCPU depending on the template). LocalBox runs inside the created VM.

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Agentic AI: An Architecture Blueprint for Intelligent Clients

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 13:08:56

This article outlines an agentic AI architecture for Android clients, where on-device agents perceive context, reason over user goals, and coordinate with cloud services. It details patterns for secure orchestration, offline resilience, and explainable decisions, enabling intelligent Android apps that can adapt, personalize, and act autonomously while preserving user trust. Why Agentic AI on Android? Most Android apps today are still “screen and API” applications: they render views, call REST endpoints, and wait for the backend to decide everything important. Even when we bolt on AI—say, a chatbot or autocomplete — it’s usually a single LLM call hidden behind a button.

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Code Rewriting With AI and TDD

Aggregated on: 2026-03-02 12:08:56

This is a report on how we used an AI editor, CursorAI, to rewrite a project. We will describe the context and explain how we leveraged existing tests to develop a new version of the tool we were using. This is not a simple success story. We'll try to explain our approach and the pitfalls we experienced, along with the different cases of hallucinations we encountered, and how our salvation is the attention we have and the reliance on our tests. We hope to give you an example of how rewriting code using AI can take place. It is also a reflection on how we can leverage old code and tests to ensure this success.

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Mastering the AWS Well-Architected AI Stack: A Deep Dive into ML, GenAI, and Sustainability Lenses

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 20:23:55

As Artificial Intelligence (AI) shifts from experimental prototypes to mission-critical production systems, the complexity of managing these workloads has grown exponentially. Organizations no longer just need models that work; they need systems that are secure, cost-effective, reliable, and sustainable. To address this, AWS has expanded its Well-Architected Framework with specialized "Lenses." For technical architects and lead engineers, three lenses are now critical: the Machine Learning (ML) Lens, the Generative AI Lens, and the Sustainability Lens.

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Hot Data: Where Real-Time Insight Begins

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 19:23:55

Hot data means the data currently being created, accessed, and queried in real-time or near real-time. The latest and most time-critical data, such as live events, user interactions, sensor measurements, or transaction streams, often require the processing to be right away and latency to be low.  Hot (or warm for Gradient Data) has the greatest short-term value, so it is often kept in fast or streaming systems that are designed to process and return data very rapidly to provide instant insights and make lightning decisions.

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Rethinking Java Web UIs With Jakarta Faces and Quarkus

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 18:23:54

Nowadays, Java enterprise applications often default to Angular, React, or Vue for the frontend. But for this kind of application, the most natural UI framework already exists in the Java ecosystem: Jakarta Faces. Modern Java enterprise applications tend to follow a familiar pattern: a Java backend exposing REST APIs and a JavaScript/TypeScript frontend built with some library like Angular, React, or Vue. This architecture has become so standard that we rarely question it.

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End-to-End Automation Using Microsoft Playwright CLI

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 17:23:55

With the rapid adoption of AI coding agents such as Claude Code and GitHub Copilot, browser automation tools must prioritize efficiency and scalability. Traditional protocols like MCP (Model Context Protocol) often flood the model’s context window with verbose data, such as full accessibility trees and page structure metadata. This leads to degraded performance, increased costs, and lost reasoning context. What's Covered in This Blog The article provides a comprehensive and formal installation guide. Complete the setup process in a clear, step-by-step manner. Execution workflow with detailed instructions. Fully implemented end-to-end practical demonstration. Demonstration is performed using the site's online store A detailed walkthrough VIDEO is attached at the end of the article for additional reference and clarity. Why Separate Playwright CLI? Traditional AI-driven browser automation often relies on MCP (Model Context Protocol). While MCP provides rich browser introspection, it introduces a critical limitation: the server controls what enters the model’s context.

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Why Retries Are More Dangerous Than Failures

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 16:23:55

The instinct is hardwired into every engineer who's shipped production code: if the call fails, try again. It feels responsible — a small buffer against network chaos and flaky backends. But that instinct, unchecked, is how you turn a recoverable hiccup into a four-hour outage that gets the CTO on Slack asking what the hell happened. I've been in the war room when it happens. A service stumbles — maybe a deployment didn't fully bake, maybe the database hit some lock contention — and suddenly every client in the datacenter decides now is the time to demonstrate grit. What was a localized wobble becomes a stampede. The service that was successfully handling 80% of requests gets buried under 300% of normal traffic, nearly all of it retries. Recovery becomes impossible. The system just thrashes, burning CPU to accomplish nothing.

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Backlog Black Hole: Engineering a Semantic Triage Engine at Scale

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 15:23:55

Our bug tracker manages more than 150 million issues. It’s growing at 20% compounding annually. Roughly 25% of issues are duplicates. That is approximately 35 million issues and growing. Due to the large amount of duplicates in the system, it takes an enormous amount of time to go over them. This results in huge productivity loss. Last quarter, this led to hundreds of duplicate issues being triaged separately, even when they shared the same root cause. Engineers spent days re-investigating problems that had already been diagnosed elsewhere. Keyword search helps, but most of the time, it lacks in surfacing issues that are not an exact match, but are semantically similar. As ticket volume increased, manual triage became an absolute mess and cumbersome. Incoming issues were categorized independently by different teams, with no reliable mechanism to detect semantic overlap. We observed multiple reports describing the same failure using different surface language, such as transport-layer timeouts versus UI authentication hangs, which were treated as unrelated by the keyword index. Because ownership was assigned per ticket rather than per underlying defect, these reports diverged into separate investigation paths. The result was duplicated debugging effort and delayed resolution, even when the root cause was already understood elsewhere in the system.

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Big Cloud Still Runs Most Containers on VMs; What Does that Mean for the Rest of Us?

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 14:23:55

If bare metal provides the best raw performance, why do hyperscalers still insist on running their own infrastructure on virtual machines? The answer reveals what the companies running the world’s most complex infrastructure really think about cloud architecture. Research by the analyst firm ReveCom shows how the major cloud providers overwhelmingly deploy their containerized workloads on virtual machines rather than on bare metal servers. In addition to relying primarily on VMs to support their in-house operations (with the exception of Google), they also rely on VMs instead of bare metal to support the services they offer customers. Those findings are based on reviews of documentation and interviews with engineers and executives at AWS, Google, Microsoft, and DigitalOcean.

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Unified Intelligence: Mastering the Azure Databricks and Azure Machine Learning Integration

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 13:23:54

In the modern enterprise, the divide between data engineering and data science is often a primary bottleneck for innovation. Data engineers live in the world of distributed clusters, Spark, and ETL pipelines, while data scientists thrive in experimental environments, model tracking, and hyperparameter tuning. Azure provides two powerhouse platforms to address these needs: Azure Databricks and Azure Machine Learning (Azure ML). While they share some overlapping features, their true potential is unlocked when integrated into a single, cohesive ecosystem. This article provides a deep-dive into why and how you should combine these technologies to build a production-grade Big Data ML pipeline.

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Similarity Search on Tabular Data With Natural Language Fields

Aggregated on: 2026-02-27 12:23:54

With the introduction of the vector data type and the algorithms available in Oracle Machine Learning (OML) starting with Oracle Database 23ai [2], it is now possible to vectorize records — e.g., via PCA — to support both clustering and similarity search. However, these algorithms do not natively handle fields that contain natural language effectively. This limitation is common in real-world scenarios such as CRM systems, where free-text operator notes or customer feedback coexist with structured attributes like customer profiles and product details. In this article, we present a technique that seamlessly combines numerical, categorical, and natural language fields into a single, unified vector representation of the entire record. The objective is to improve similarity search and clustering accuracy by preserving both the numerical structure of the data and the semantic meaning of its textual content — without relying on rigid, static WHERE filters that can unnecessarily restrict the results returned.

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AWS Bedrock vs. SageMaker: Choosing the Right GenAI Stack in 2026

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 20:08:54

By 2026, the landscape of Generative AI has shifted from simple prompt engineering to complex agentic workflows, autonomous RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation) pipelines, and highly specialized small language models (SLMs). For architects and developers building on Amazon Web Services (AWS), the central question remains: Should you use the managed simplicity of Amazon Bedrock or the granular control of Amazon SageMaker? This article provides a deep-dive technical comparison of these two powerhouses, helping you navigate the trade-offs in performance, cost, and operational overhead.

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I Watched an AI Agent Fabricate $47,000 in Expenses Before Anyone Noticed

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 19:08:54

September 2024. A fintech company in Austin — I can't name them, NDA — invited me to review their AI agent deployment. They'd built an expense processing system that was supposed to handle receipt scanning, categorization, approvals. Worked great in testing. Three months into production, it was generating fake restaurants. Their accountant found it during routine reconciliation. "The Riverside Bistro" at an address that Google Maps showed as a parking garage. "Maria's Taqueria" at a location that had been a Chase Bank for eight years. The agent couldn't parse certain receipt formats — faded thermal prints, handwritten receipts, images with glare. Instead of flagging them for review, it filled in plausible details and moved on.

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The Hidden Cost of Custom Logic: A Performance Showdown in Apache Spark

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 18:08:54

I still remember the first time I killed a production pipeline with a single line of code. I was migrating a legacy ETL job from a single-node Python script to PySpark. The logic involved some complex string parsing that I had already written in a helper function. Naturally, I did what any deadline-pressured engineer would do: I wrapped it in a udf(), applied it to my DataFrame, and hit run. The job, which processed 50 million rows, didn't just run slow — it crawled. What should have taken minutes took hours. I spent the next day staring at the Spark UI, wondering why my 20-node cluster was being outpaced by my laptop.

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Terraform AWS Provider Explained Like You’re Five (With Real Code)

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 17:08:54

Imagine you have a giant box of LEGO. AWS is that giant box full of pieces like servers, databases, networks, buckets, and more. Terraform is like having a magical instruction book that tells AWS exactly what to build for you. But here’s the catch: Terraform can’t talk to AWS directly. It needs a helper, a translator something that understands AWS language. That helper is called the AWS Provider. Without it, Terraform has no idea how to build anything inside AWS.

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A Practical Guide to Building Generative AI in Java

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 16:08:54

Building generative AI applications in Java used to be a complex, boilerplate-heavy endeavor. You’d wrestle with raw HTTP clients, hand-craft JSON payloads, parse streaming responses, manage API keys, and stitch together observability, all before writing a single line of actual AI logic. Those days are over. Genkit Java is an open-source framework that makes building AI-powered applications in Java as straightforward as defining a function. Pair it with Google’s Gemini models and Google Cloud Run, and you can go from zero to a production-deployed generative AI service in minutes, not days.

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Zero-Trust Cross-Cloud: Calling AWS From GCP Without Static Keys Using MultiCloudJ

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 15:08:54

As discussed in the MultiCloudJ introduction, it is fairly common to use more than one cloud provider in enterprises. This can happen for many reasons, like mergers, choosing the best services from different clouds, or moving gradually from one cloud to another. Because of this, you may have compute running on Google Cloud while your data or backend systems are still on AWS. Most enterprises do not do multi-cloud just to save money. Cross-cloud setups usually happen because of practical needs such as:

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Intelligent Load Management for LLM Calls: From Static Rate Limits to Priority-Aware "Agent QoS"

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 14:08:54

LLM applications do not fail like classic application programming interfaces. A web API under load usually degrades in predictable ways: latency rises, error rates spike, and dashboards show a clear capacity boundary. Agentic systems are different. They fail silently, returning confident answers built on partial context, truncated tool results, or timeouts that the agent masks with a plausible narrative. In governed analytics, reliability is a policy requirement, not just a performance metric. Many teams start with static requests-per-second limits because they are simple and familiar. But tool-calling workloads are bursty, multi-step, and coupled to expensive downstream systems such as data warehouses, vector stores, and metadata catalogs. A single user question can fan out into dozens of tool calls — schema lookups, semantic layer resolution, SQL compilation, query execution, lineage checks, and policy validation. Under real usage, static limits either block legitimate work or allow a noisy-neighbor agent to starve everyone else, especially when agents retry aggressively or enter loops.

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Mastering GitHub Copilot in VS Code: Ask, Edit, Agent and the Build–Refine–Verify Workflow

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 13:08:54

Most developers meet GitHub Copilot as a “smart autocomplete” that occasionally guesses the next line of code. Used that way, it’s nice — but you’re leaving a lot of value on the table. Inside VS Code, Copilot offers multiple modes of interaction designed for different stages of development:

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OAuth Gone Wrong: The Hidden Token Issue That Brought Down Our Login System

Aggregated on: 2026-02-26 12:08:54

Imagine deploying a Node.js/TypeScript backend for user authentication that works flawlessly in development, only to watch users get mysteriously logged out or unable to log in shortly after launching to production. Everything ran fine on your local machine, but in the live environment, users start losing their sessions en masse. Requests to protected endpoints begin failing with “Unauthorized” errors. Panic sets in as your login system, the gatekeeper of your application, is effectively brought down by an invisible foe. In our case, the culprit was a hidden OAuth token issue involving how we handled refresh tokens. A tiny mistake in token management, something that went unnoticed during development, led to a chain reaction of authentication failures in production. 

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A Unified Framework for SRE to Troubleshoot Database Connectivity in Kubernetes Cloud Applications

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 20:23:54

The ability to have an application or business connect with the right information at the right time is key to making informed decisions in today’s digital and AI world. Having an efficient, reliable connection between an application and its database enables businesses to best serve their customers. Traditional troubleshooting methods used on many enterprise systems are no longer sufficient to troubleshoot these complex, multi-layered Kubernetes systems. The layered troubleshooting framework described in this article can be used by developers, cloud architects, and site reliability engineers (SREs) as a structured approach to quickly determine the root cause of failures and achieve stability in production environments.  A layered approach to troubleshooting is necessary to provide an understanding of how all the different components of a system relate to one another, which is critical to being able to resolve problems quickly and efficiently. Troubleshooting the communication layer between an application and its database is one of the most complex tasks for developers, cloud architects, and SREs working with Kubernetes-based cloud-native applications. 

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From Keywords to Meaning: The New Foundations of Intelligent Search

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 19:23:53

I still remember a moment that should have been simple. A product team wanted a search experience that felt obvious to users. Type “red running shoe” and get red running shoes. We had the catalog, filters, indexing, and engineers (including me) confidently saying, “This is straightforward.”

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How We Cut AI API Costs by 70% Without Sacrificing Quality: A Technical Deep-Dive

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 18:23:54

The Wake-Up Call I'll be honest — we screwed up. Like a lot of engineering teams, we built our AI features fast and worried about costs later. "Later" came faster than expected when our finance team flagged our OpenAI bill crossing five figures monthly. The real problem wasn't just the dollar amount. It was that we had zero visibility. We didn't know:

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Cutting P99 Latency From ~3.2s To ~650ms in a Policy‑Driven Authorization API (Python + MongoDB)

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 17:23:53

Modern authorization endpoints often do more than approve a request. They evaluate complex policies, compute rolling aggregates, call third‑party risk services, and enforce company/card limits, all under a hard latency budget. If you miss it, the transaction fails, and the failure is customer-visible. This post walks through a practical approach to take a Python authorization API from roughly ~3.2s P99 down to ~650ms P99, using a sequence of changes that compound: query/index correctness, deterministic query planning, connection pooling and warmup, and parallelizing third‑party I/O.

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Chunking Is the Hidden Lever in RAG Systems (And Everyone Gets It Wrong)

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 16:23:53

Most RAG discussions fixate on embedding models, vector databases, or which LLM to use. In real systems, especially document-heavy ones, the highest-leverage decision is simpler and far less glamorous, which happens early in the pipeline: it's chunking. This happens before embeddings, before retrieval, before generation, making its failures invisible until they cascade downstream as retrieval misses or hallucinations that seem to originate elsewhere. By the time your system exhibits poor quality, the damage is already baked into your index.  This is why treating chunking as a post hoc optimization rather than a core architectural decision is a systematic blind spot in many production RAG deployments. The most effective systems treat chunking not as a preprocessing step to be minimized, but as a primary design lever, the one that deserves as much engineering rigor and iterative refinement as your vector database or embedding model selection.

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Cagent: Dockers newest low code Agentic Platform

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 15:23:53

Cagent is the new open-source framework from Docker that makes running AI agents seamless and lightweight. With Cagent, you can start with simple “Hello World” agents and scale all the way to complex, multi-agent processing workflows. It provides core agent capabilities such as autonomy, reasoning, and action execution, while also supporting the Model Context Protocol (MCP), integrating with Docker Model Runner (DMR) for multiple LLM providers, and simplifying agent distribution through the Docker registry. Unlike traditional agentic frameworks that treat AI agents as programmatic objects requiring extensive Python or C# code, Cagent incorporates a declarative, configuration-first philosophy. So, instead of managing complex dependencies and writing custom orchestration logic, developers define their agent’s persona and capabilities within a single, portable YAML file, effectively decoupling logic from the underlying infrastructure.

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Edge Computing's Infrastructure Problem: What Two Years of Factory Visits Actually Revealed

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 14:23:53

Last March, a factory tour outside Stuttgart clarified something I'd been suspecting for months. The plant manager walked me through their edge deployment — industrial PCs bolted next to production lines, each one supposedly processing sensor data locally to catch equipment problems in real time. Clean installation, solid hardware, confident presentation. Then I asked about their network topology. That's when things got interesting.

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How to Configure JDK 25 for GitHub Copilot Coding Agent

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 13:23:53

GitHub Copilot coding agent runs in an ephemeral GitHub Actions environment where it can build your code, run tests, and execute tools. By default, it uses the pre-installed Java version on the runner — but what if your project needs a specific version like JDK 25? In this post, I'll show you how to configure Copilot coding agent's environment to use any Java version, including the latest JDK 25, ensuring that Copilot can successfully build and test your Java projects.

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Backend Graph DB for Custom File System

Aggregated on: 2026-02-25 12:23:53

This post is based on what I learned implementing Neo4Jfs, a customized Java file system built with a graph database (Neo4J) backend. In this post, I’ll identify the challenges in creating a custom file system, in particular, file tree management, and propose an alternative. If you're intrigued but unsure what creating a Java file system actually means, you may find "Bootstrapping a Java File System" helpful. Overview Hands up: how many of you have received a similar feature request from your product team?

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How to Integrate an AI Chatbot Into Your Application: A Practical Engineering Guide

Aggregated on: 2026-02-24 20:08:53

AI chatbots are increasingly part of modern application architectures, not as standalone features but integrated interaction layers. When designed correctly, a chatbot can simplify user workflows, reduce friction, and act as a controlled interface to backend systems. This guide focuses on how to integrate an AI chatbot into an application from an engineering perspective, covering architecture, implementation steps, and operational considerations without relying on vendor-driven narratives.

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Integration Reliability for AI Systems: A Framework for Detecting and Preventing Interface Mismatch at Scale

Aggregated on: 2026-02-24 19:08:53

Integration failures inside AI systems rarely appear as dramatic outages. They show up as silent distortions: a schema change that shifts a downstream feature distribution, a latency bump that breaks a timing assumption, or an unexpected enum that slips through because someone pushed a small update without revalidating the contract.  The underlying services continue to report “healthy.” Dashboards stay green. Pipelines continue producing artefacts. Yet the system behaves differently because components no longer agree on the terms of cooperation. I see this pattern repeatedly across large AI programs, and it has nothing to do with model performance. It is the natural consequence of distributed teams modifying interfaces independently without enforced boundaries.

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Swagger UI in a BFF World: Making Swagger UI Work Natively With BFF Architectures

Aggregated on: 2026-02-24 17:23:53

This article introduces a Swagger UI plugin designed specifically for Backend-for-Frontend (BFF) architectures, along with working demos (with and without OIDC) that validate the approach end to end. The Rise (and Return) of the BFF Modern web security has shifted away from storing "tokens in the browser." XSS attacks, stricter browser privacy policies, and evolving OAuth recommendations have made Backend-for-Frontend (BFF) architectures the gold standard for secure web apps.

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Building Event-Driven Data Pipelines in GCP

Aggregated on: 2026-02-24 16:23:53

The old-fashioned batch processing is not applicable in the current applications. Pipelines need to respond to events in real time when businesses rely on real-time data to track user behavior, to process financial transactions, or to monitor Internet of Things (IoT) devices, instead of hours after the event. Why Event-Driven Architecture Matters Event-driven processing versus batch processing is a paradigm shift in the flow of data through the systems. With batch pipelines, data is idle until it is run. In event pipelines, each change is followed by an immediate response. This difference is crucial in the development of fraud detection systems that demand sub-second response times or in systems that offer recommendations that are updated in real-time according to who is currently using it.

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The DevSecOps Paradox: Why Security Automation Is Both Solving and Creating Pipeline Vulnerabilities

Aggregated on: 2026-02-24 15:23:53

The numbers tell a troubling story. Forty-five percent of cyberattacks in 2024 exploited weaknesses in CI/CD pipelines, according to industry tracking data. Not application code. Not user credentials. The build and deployment infrastructure itself. This represents a fundamental shift in how attackers think. Why spend weeks crafting an exploit for production systems when you can compromise the pipeline that deploys to those systems? Poison the well, and every downstream service drinks contaminated water.

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