Pyjanitor Chains Away Data Cleaning Nightmares
Messy data? Pyjanitor's chaining fixes it in one elegant line. Skip the variable hell—welcome readable pipelines.
Practical guides, reviews, and updates on the latest AI products shaping coding, writing, design, and productivity workflows.
Messy data? Pyjanitor's chaining fixes it in one elegant line. Skip the variable hell—welcome readable pipelines.
Google and Kaggle dropped a free five-day GenAI crash course that drew 280,000 signups and a world record. But is it legit training or just a slick ad for Vertex AI?
What if your AI could truly 'see' your text queries? Sentence Transformers' new multimodal embedding models promise that — mapping words and pictures into one vector space. But after 20 years watching Valley vaporware, I'm asking: who really cashes in?
Your notes just got a roommate: an AI that lurks inside Obsidian, synced via iCloud. Sounds genius. Or does it?
Picture this: an AI handles your online banking while you watch every keystroke live in your app. Amazon Bedrock AgentCore makes it real, embedding browser streams into React with just three lines of code.
Everyone thought AI agents would own CI/CD pipelines. Nope—they hit the 100th tool call wall, looping into oblivion and wasting dev cycles.
Picture your AI agent grinding through a task, then halting to ping you for clarification. Amazon Bedrock's stateful MCP client capabilities on AgentCore Runtime make that real, bridging the gap from one-shot tools to ongoing dialogues.
Ninety-seven percent of IT leaders are knee-deep in agentic AI strategies for software development. Problem is, governance hasn't caught up, and real wins are scarce.
One AI-generated LEGO clip of Trump sobbing over a ceasefire deal exploded to millions of views overnight. These aren't clumsy state hacks; they're sharp, culture-savvy trolls from Iran's digital underground.
Imagine an AI agent hallucinating its way into your database—gone in seconds. Microsoft's new open-source toolkit slams the brakes on that chaos, right at runtime.
Two engineers scrap over RAG and MCP like it's religion, but their agent can't spot a pipeline crash. Time to cut through the buzz: one's memory, the other's muscle.
What if your slick AI agent turned into a goldfish after one server hiccup? LangGraph's default memory setup does exactly that—until you swap RAM for Postgres and tame those exploding context windows.