Moving Beyond Prompting: Building Reliable Autonomous Agents with the New Open-Action Protocol
Introduction The rapid evolution of large language models (LLMs) has turned prompt engineering into a mainstream practice. Early‑stage developers often treat an LLM as a sophisticated autocomplete engine: feed it a carefully crafted prompt, receive a text response, and then act on that output. While this “prompt‑then‑act” loop works for simple question‑answering or single‑turn tasks, it quickly breaks down when we ask an LLM to operate autonomously—to plan, execute, and adapt over many interaction cycles without human supervision. ...
Building Scalable AI Agents with n8n, LangChain, and Pinecone for Autonomous Workflows
Table of Contents Introduction Why Combine n8n, LangChain, and Pinecone? Core Concepts 3.1 n8n: Low‑Code Workflow Automation 3.2 LangChain: Building LLM‑Powered Agents 3.3 Pinecone: Managed Vector Database Architectural Blueprint for Autonomous AI Agents Step‑by‑Step Implementation 5.1 Setting Up the Infrastructure 5.2 Creating a Reusable n8n Workflow 5.3 Integrating LangChain in a Function Node 5.4 Persisting Context with Pinecone 5.5 Orchestrating the Full Loop Scaling Strategies 6.1 Horizontal Scaling of n8n Workers 6.2 Vector Index Sharding in Pinecone 6.3 Prompt Caching & Token Optimization Monitoring, Logging, and Alerting Real‑World Example: Automated Customer Support Agent Conclusion Resources Introduction Artificial intelligence has moved from the realm of research labs to everyday business processes. Companies now expect AI‑driven automation that can understand natural language, retrieve relevant information, and act autonomously—all while handling thousands of requests per minute. ...
Building Scalable Real-Time AI Agents Using the MERN Stack and Local LLMs
Introduction Artificial intelligence agents have moved from research prototypes to production‑grade services that power chatbots, recommendation engines, and autonomous decision‑making systems. While cloud‑based LLM APIs (e.g., OpenAI, Anthropic) make it easy to get started, many organizations require local large language models (LLMs) for data privacy, cost control, or latency reasons. Pairing these models with a robust, full‑stack web framework like the MERN stack (MongoDB, Express, React, Node.js) gives developers a familiar, JavaScript‑centric environment to build real‑time, scalable AI agents. ...
Optimizing LLM Inference with Quantization Techniques and vLLM Deployment Strategies
Table of Contents Introduction Why Inference Optimization Matters Fundamentals of Quantization 3.1 Floating‑Point vs Fixed‑Point Representations 3.2 Common Quantization Schemes 3.3 Quantization‑Aware Training vs Post‑Training Quantization Practical Quantization Workflows for LLMs 4.1 Using 🤗 Transformers + BitsAndBytes 4.2 GPTQ & AWQ: Fast Approximate Quantization 4.3 Exporting to ONNX & TensorRT Benchmarking Quantized Models 5.1 Latency, Throughput, and Memory Footprint 5.2 Accuracy Trade‑offs: Perplexity & Task‑Specific Metrics Introducing vLLM: High‑Performance LLM Serving 6.1 Core Architecture and Scheduler 6.2 GPU Memory Management & Paging Deploying Quantized Models with vLLM 7.1 Installation & Environment Setup 7.2 Running a Quantized Model (Example: LLaMA‑7B‑4bit) 7.3 Scaling Across Multiple GPUs & Nodes Advanced Strategies: Mixed‑Precision, KV‑Cache Compression, and Async I/O Real‑World Case Studies 9.1 Customer Support Chatbot at a FinTech Startup 9.2 Semantic Search over Billion‑Document Corpus Best Practices & Common Pitfalls 11 Conclusion 12 Resources Introduction Large Language Models (LLMs) have transitioned from research curiosities to production‑grade engines powering chat assistants, code generators, and semantic search systems. Yet, the sheer size of state‑of‑the‑art models—often exceeding dozens of billions of parameters—poses a practical challenge: inference cost. ...
Algorithmic Trading Zero to Hero with Python for High Frequency Cryptocurrency Markets
Table of Contents Introduction What Makes High‑Frequency Crypto Trading Different? Core Python Tools for HFT Data Acquisition: Real‑Time Market Feeds Designing a Simple HFT Strategy Backtesting at Millisecond Granularity Latency & Execution: From Theory to Practice Risk Management & Position Sizing in HFT Deploying a Production‑Ready Bot Monitoring, Logging, and Alerting Conclusion Resources Introduction High‑frequency trading (HFT) has long been the domain of well‑capitalized firms with access to microwave‑grade fiber, co‑located servers, and custom FPGA hardware. Yet the explosion of cryptocurrency markets—24/7 operation, fragmented order books, and generous API access—has lowered the barrier to entry. With the right combination of Python libraries, cloud infrastructure, and disciplined engineering, an individual developer can move from zero knowledge to a heroic trading system capable of executing sub‑second strategies on Bitcoin, Ethereum, and dozens of altcoins. ...