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5h ago · 4 min read · Welcome to the first installment of Tech Tuesday! When I first started building Genealogix, I had a strict, non-negotiable rule: zero cloud databases. To fulfill the mission of helping people stop ren
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4h ago · 3 min read · Intro: Learn to build bulletproof data layers by mapping UI requirements to Mongoose schemas—before writing a single controller. Concept: Map UI Requirements to Database Schemas First ✅ Data modelin
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32m ago · 7 min read · EU AI Act for Fraud Detection Software: The Compliance Questions Your Bank Customers Are About to Send A compliance officer at a mid-size European bank added your fraud detection SaaS to their vendor review queue three weeks ago. Yesterday, a questio...
Join discussion58m ago · 7 min read · TL;DR: What European CTOs budget for AI coding tools in 2026. Planning guide for Claude Code, Copilot, and Cursor for small and mid-sized tech teams. For a finance team evaluating AI tool costs, the numbers look deceptively simple: $19 per seat per ...
Join discussionI do fancy stuff with Oracle APEX #orclapex
1 post this monthalways learning something new
1 post this monthReal-world engineering insights on AI, systems, and scalable design
1 post this monthI do fancy stuff with Oracle APEX #orclapex
1 post this monthalways learning something new
1 post this monthReal-world engineering insights on AI, systems, and scalable design
1 post this monthMost are still shipping “AI add-ons.” The real shift happens when the whole workflow disappears into one action — that’s when users actually feel the value.
You’re definitely not alone that “Step 5 bottleneck” is where most AI-assisted teams hit reality. Right now, most teams aren’t fully automating reviews yet. The common pattern I’m seeing is a hybrid approach, not purely human or purely automated. What others are doing AI generates code → Automated checks (linting, tests, security, architecture rules) → Targeted human review (not full manual review) 👉 The key shift: humans review intent + architecture, not every line.
Nice first deployment walkthrough! One thing worth adding to this stack: set up an OAI (Origin Access Identity) or the newer OAC (Origin Access Control) so your S3 bucket stays fully private and only CloudFront can read from it. Without that, the bucket is publicly accessible even though CloudFront is in front. Also, consider adding a Cache-Control header strategy — setting immutable assets to max-age=31536000 with content hashing in filenames, and your index.html to no-cache so CloudFront always checks for the latest version. WAF is a solid move this early — most people skip it until they get hit with bot traffic.
AI coding works best when you treat it like a collaborator, not a shortcut—be specific with prompts, provide context (code, errors, goals), and always review the output for logic and security. The real productivity boost comes from combining AI speed with human judgment.
You're right—many AI agent problems stem from improper data, lack of domain knowledge, or inadequate integration rather than the model itself. Issues like poor training data, insufficient fine-tuning, or misaligned objectives often lead to suboptimal results. Addressing these foundational elements usually resolves most challenges with AI agents.
Quick breakdown of why Hawkes matters here: A standard Poisson process (used in classic Merton) has no memory. The probability of the next jump is the same whether a jump just happened or not. A Hawkes process is self-exciting — each arriving event temporarily raises the rate of future events. The excitation decays exponentially: λ(t) = λ₀ + α · Σ exp(−β · (t − tᵢ)) The key constraint: α/β < 1 keeps the process stationary. Push past that and intensity explodes. In practice, this means a single bad print can cascade — and the simulation captures exactly that.
Most developers go in expecting magic. They come out wondering why their app still breaks. I spent a full month using AI coding assistants as my main workflow tool. The speed on boilerplate code alone
Agreed! This is so true
Hmm, I think AI tools are actually pretty helpful, but you still have to double-check everything — they’re not perfect 🙂