// TODO: I’m martinuke0

Welcome to my corner of the internet. This website is a personal blog which I use as a platform to document my learning journey and showcase it for the world to see.

Beyond Code: Mastering Multi‑Agent Orchestration with the New OpenTelemetry Agentic Standards

Introduction The rise of multi‑agent systems (MAS) has transformed how modern software tackles complex, distributed problems. From autonomous micro‑services coordinating a supply‑chain workflow to fleets of LLM‑driven assistants handling customer support, agents now act as first‑class citizens in production environments. Yet, as the number of agents grows, so does the difficulty of observability, debugging, and performance tuning. Traditional logging and tracing tools were built around single‑process request flows; they struggle to capture the emergent behavior of dozens—or even thousands—of interacting agents. ...

March 27, 2026 · 11 min · 2151 words · martinuke0

Deploying Private Local LLMs for Workflow Automation with Ollama and Python

Introduction Large language models (LLMs) have transitioned from research curiosities to production‑grade engines that can read, write, and reason across a wide variety of business tasks. While cloud‑based APIs from providers such as OpenAI, Anthropic, or Azure are convenient, many organizations prefer private, on‑premise deployments for reasons that include data sovereignty, latency, cost predictability, and full control over model versions. Ollama is an open‑source runtime that makes it remarkably easy to pull, run, and manage LLMs on a local machine or on‑premise server. Coupled with Python—still the lingua franca of data science and automation—Ollama provides a lightweight, self‑contained stack for building workflow automation tools that can run offline and securely. ...

March 27, 2026 · 14 min · 2823 words · martinuke0

Edge Computing Zero to Hero: Building and Deploying Resilient Microservices at the Network Edge

Table of Contents Introduction Why Edge Computing Matters Today Microservices Meet the Edge: Architectural Shifts Core Principles of Resilience at the Edge Designing Edge‑Ready Microservices 5.1 Stateless vs. State‑ful Considerations 5.2 Lightweight Communication Protocols 5.3 Edge‑Specific Data Modeling Tooling and Platforms for Edge Deployment 6.1 K3s and KubeEdge 6.2 Serverless at the Edge (OpenFaaS, Cloudflare Workers) 6.3 Container Runtime & OCI Standards CI/CD Pipelines Tailored for the Edge 7.1 Cross‑Compilation and Multi‑Arch Images 7.2 GitOps with Flux & Argo CD Observability, Monitoring, and Debugging in Remote Locations 8.1 Metrics Collection with Prometheus‑Node‑Exporter 8.2 Distributed Tracing with Jaeger and OpenTelemetry Security Hardening for Edge Nodes Real‑World Case Study: Smart Manufacturing Line Best‑Practice Checklist Conclusion Resources Introduction Edge computing has moved from a niche buzzword to a mainstream architectural paradigm. As billions of devices generate data at the periphery of networks, the latency, bandwidth, and privacy constraints of sending everything to a central cloud become untenable. At the same time, the microservice revolution—breaking monolithic applications into small, independently deployable units—has reshaped how we build scalable software. ...

March 27, 2026 · 10 min · 2116 words · martinuke0

Scaling Probabilistic Data Structures for Real Time Anomaly Detection in High Throughput Distributed Streams

Introduction Anomaly detection in modern data pipelines is no longer a batch‑oriented after‑thought; it has become a real‑time requirement for fraud prevention, network security, IoT health monitoring, and many other mission‑critical applications. The sheer volume and velocity of data generated by distributed systems—think millions of events per second across a fleet of microservices—make traditional exact‑counting algorithms impractical. Probabilistic data structures (PDS) such as Bloom filters, Count‑Min Sketches, HyperLogLog, and their newer variants provide sub‑linear memory footprints while offering bounded error guarantees. When coupled with scalable stream‑processing frameworks (Apache Flink, Apache Spark Structured Streaming, Kafka Streams, etc.), they enable low‑latency, high‑throughput anomaly detection pipelines. ...

March 27, 2026 · 13 min · 2620 words · martinuke0

Starlink: The Rise of a Global Satellite Internet Constellation

Table of Contents Introduction Historical Context: From Early Satellites to SpaceX’s Vision Technical Architecture of Starlink 3.1 Satellite Design and Generation 3.2 Orbital Mechanics and Constellation Geometry 3.3 Ground Segment: User Terminals and Gateway Stations Performance Metrics and Real‑World Deployments 4.1 Latency, Throughput, and Reliability 4.2 Case Studies: Rural Broadband, Maritime, Aviation, and Disaster Relief Regulatory Landscape and Spectrum Management Economic Impact and Business Model Environmental Considerations and Space Debris Mitigation Competition and the Future of Satellite Internet Challenges Ahead and Potential Solutions Conclusion Resources Introduction When SpaceX launched its first Starlink prototype in 2018, the idea of a high‑speed, low‑latency internet service beamed from space sounded more like science‑fiction than a practical solution. Six years later, the constellation has grown to more than 4,500 operational satellites, delivering broadband to remote villages in Alaska, ships crossing the Pacific, and even aircraft cruising at 35,000 feet. ...

March 27, 2026 · 12 min · 2402 words · martinuke0
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