27 June 2026

🎯Shadan Malik - Collected Quotes

"Alert-level control is another feature used to establish relevance within the content domain. Alerts help manage exceptions and alert the user of any unusual change or threshold value reached for any KPI. So, the action resulting from alerts needs to be assigned to those users who need to be informed of the exceptions." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Alerts and KPI thresholds are two sides of the same coin. Alerts are actions taken once a KPI threshold is reached. However, alerts are not defined for every threshold boundary. For the most part, they serve as a warning system when a KPI shows poor performance or an undesired trend. Alerts must always be accompanied by attention-capturing actions such as automatic e-mails and/or visual indication such as blinking or animation on the dashboard. The other variable for alerts is the recipient. There may be one or more appropriate recipients for each alert." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Alerts are integral to the dashboard concept in that they transform the dashboard from a graphical information presentation into a live console for managing organizational processes and performance. Effective dashboard deployment must facilitate easy management of alerts. This management process involves three components: (1) rules, (2) actions, and (3) recipients." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Although it does so much more, the central purpose of a dashboard is to warn the user when any relevant metrics are out of acceptable boundaries. In the dashboard terminology, these alerts consisting of rules and actions add critical value to an enterprise dashboard deployment complemented with strong visual indicators of warnings." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Charts also demand internal color choices: the colors of the pies, bars, speedometer thresholds, and so on. The default colors supplied by any standard dashboard software are often well selected with a professional designer’s input. However, a dashboard creator may have the liberty to change these colors at his or her discretion. If a dashboard is being deployed for a large audience, it is a good practice to seek advice from a professional designer in selecting the chart colors, so that they may have a positive visual appeal to the largest possible number of users. As every professional designer knows, there is a lot of science in color choice and its relative placements. Even more important, a spectrum of emotional messages is associated with each color." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"[...] in many instances the choice of charts may not be so obvious, requiring a degree of flexibility and creativity. Some of the contemporary, popular chart types include traffic lights, speedometers or dials, thermometers, donuts, and bubble charts. The choice of charts also depends on area constraints on the dashboard. For example, if the available area is narrow but high, a thermometer representation may work well instead of a speedometer, which requires more of a square-shaped area. Similarly, traffic lights may represent KPIs effectively within a relatively small area - just enough to have three small circles representing the three colored lamps in a traffic light. This model is also effective in conveying the relative performance of the charted KPIs: a red light jumps out at the viewer, drawing immediate attention." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Metrics are measurements of activities to evaluate performance, mostly within a relative framework of time, geography, and aggregation." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Speedometer chart types could be applied to contrast quota versus actual sales numbers for the sections and categories. Clicking on a given area of the chart could then lead to a more detailed report. Also, regional maps could be transposed with threshold-driven color-coded metrics for better visualization of various states within the region and also to show their comparative performance at a glance." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Subject area is a surrogate layer of content grouping that helps in managing the content access to users. A subject area could be defined as a collection of dashboards, reports, charts, or KPIs." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

 "The dashboard framework must also facilitate a retracing of the drill-down path. A user should be easily able to get to the previous chart from the destination chart. This recursive capacity helps create a better self-guided analysis experience. If users are not able to retrieve the previous chart easily during a drill-down path, they may lose track of their thought sequence. An inability to retrace may lead to user frustration and a dysfunctional self-guided analysis." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"The distinguishing feature is that a dashboard is an application with a collection of metrics, benchmarks, goals, results, and alerts presented in a visually effective manner, whereas a portal is a collection of different applications presented together within a personalized framework." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"The term dashboard has acquired a vibrant new meaning in the field of information management as leading organizations worldwide embrace the idea of empowerment through improved real-time information systems. In the current corporate vocabulary, a dashboard is a rich computer interface with charts, reports, visual indicators, and alert mechanisms that are consolidated into a dynamic and relevant information platform." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"To establish a uniform performance benchmark across the organization, it is important that variance of a specific KPI be consistent across all of its possible grains." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Variance establishes the comparison benchmark for each KPI. It has two requirements: (1) the basis for change and (2) change calculation. The most commonly applied references for the basis are relative periodic comparisons: year ago, quarter ago, and month ago. Other types of change basis are forecast, operational plan, quota, and so on. The most commonly applied values for change calculations are Difference, Percentage Change, and Percent Point Change." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

"Visualization is an issue at the heart of good dashboard software. Good visualization can be the difference between information overload and information insight. Commonly used graphs (charts) are one example of visualization. However, present-day technology has raised the bar of visualization beyond commonplace charts and data widgets. The three key characteristics requiring evaluation within the area of visualization are: (1) Visual intelligence ( 2) Geographic mapping (3) Screen resolution." (Shadan Malik, "Enterprise Dashboards: Design and best practices for IT", 2005)

🎯🏭Eberhard Hechler - Collected Quotes

"A data architecture defines data standards in an organization, including how data is accessed and consumed. It furthermore describes the data structures used by the business units. Data integration also depends on the defined data architecture standards since data integration requires interaction between data." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"A Data Fabric has its focus more on the architectural underpinning, technical capabilities, and intelligent analysis to produce active metadata supporting a smarter, AI-infused system to orchestrate various data integration styles, enabling trusted and reusable data in a hybrid cloud landscape to be consumed by humans, applications, or other downstream systems. Data cataloging to generate and leverage active metadata is seen as a vital component of any Data Fabric." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"A Data Fabric needs to serve analytical and transactional data consumption patterns to, for instance, address MLOps, trustworthy AI, MDM, inferencing, IoT, edge, and 5G." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"A Data Mesh views data primarily as organized around domain owners who create business-focused data products, which can be aggregated and consumed across distributed consumers, organizations, and Line of Business (LoBs) in a self-service and shopping-for-data fashion. Transforming data from disparate data sources to be consumed as data-as-a-product is an essential paradigm of any Data Mesh." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"A data product is based on semantically related raw data that is transformed into a meaningful business context and easily discoverable and consumable by business users." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"An enterprise data warehouse is a central repository of integrated and transformed, structured data from disparate sources and used for reporting and data analysis." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Any project execution would be very difficult without implementation and usage of the right product capabilities. The selected products should support the data sources and platforms in your organization and provide AI-augmented functionality to ingest and automatically enrich metadata, allowing business users to easily understand, collaborate, enrich, and access the right data, to quickly establish an environment for highly automated and consistent governance and automatically secure data across the organization."(Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Building a data product is enabled by the data domain owner; however, building a data product itself is primarily driven by the data product owner, which can be a marketing or a customer care organization, an after-sales team, or even an individual business user. The data product owner is collaborating with data engineers, data scientists, and other subject matter experts throughout the entire data product build process." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Data Fabric and Data Mesh provide a unified enterprise data architecture and solution for consolidating dispersed data from a hybrid cloud environment through automated data discovery, smart data integration, and intelligent cataloging." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Data Fabric architecture utilizes active metadata, knowledge graphs, and semantic enrichment, combining intelligent information integration and transformation technologies to intelligently support data consumers, for example, business users."  (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Data Fabric is an integrated layer of data sources and connection processes based on active metadata." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Data lineage and provenance are often used interchangeably. Both terms refer to the entire lifecycle of the data, including the five Ws: (a) where the data originates, (b) where the data has been and where is the destination, (c) who made changes to the data, (d) when the data was created or updated, and (e) where the data is stored and used. Knowing answers to these questions is critical to data consumers to trust analytics outcomes derived from data." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Data management is the process of developing, implementing, and monitoring systems, procedures, and practices to deliver and enhance the value of data and assets throughout their lifecycle, while data and AI governance is defined as the exercise of authority and control during the management of data and assets." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Data Mesh self-service capabilities are business- and domain-centric; they are geared toward building, delivering, and managing data products in a concrete business, domain, or industry context." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Definition of data and AI governance policies, rules, and classifications is critical to break down data silos, allow for a uniform data consumption, and prevent misuse of data. It includes monitoring of compliance and enforcement of data and AI rules and policies on an ongoing basis, as well as ensuring compliance with regulations and laws." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Drift measures the drop in accuracy and drop in data consistency by comparing accuracy during runtime with the accuracy during training and by comparing key characteristics of the dataset used for training with the dataset during runtime." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Exploiting semantic knowledge graphs can support interpretability and explainability of nearly all AI model types (including DL models) by discovering and depicting semantic and non-obvious relationships or depicting an ML model in a simplified and more readable, explainable way." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Gaining more insight into data, simplifying data access, enabling shopping-for-data, augmenting traditional data governance, generating active metadata, and accelerating development of products and services are enabled by infusing AI into the Data Fabric architecture. An AI-infused Data Fabric is not only leveraging AI but also likewise an architecture to manage and deal with AI artefacts, including AI models, pipelines, etc." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"In Exploiting semantic knowledge graphs can support interpretability and explainability of nearly all AI model types (including DL models) by discovering and depicting semantic and non-obvious relationships or depicting an ML model in a simplified and more readable, explainable way., a Data Mesh solution organizes data around business domain owners and transforms relevant data assets (data sources) to data products that can be consumed by distributed business users from various business domains or functions. These data products are created, governed, and used in an autonomous, decentralized, and self-service manner. Self-service capabilities, which we have already referenced as a Data Fabric capability, enable business organizations to entertain a data marketplace with shopping-for-data characteristics." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"It is essential to realize that the Data Fabric architecture enables the Data Mesh solution via its rich knowledge catalog, semantic search and discovery, smart integration capabilities, and semantic knowledge graphs. Trustworthy AI, for instance, is enabled via the Data Fabric as well." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023) 

"[...] it is the Data Fabric architecture that enables the Data Mesh. In other words, the Data Fabric is the architectural underpinning to implement a Data Mesh solution." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Over 80% of models are never operationalized because the efforts involved in deploying them are enormous and the models are deployed and found to produce drift or fairness issues that outweigh the benefits."  (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"Semantic enrichment is the process of adding meaning to data, which is represented as additional metadata in the knowledge catalog. The intent of semantic enrichment is to simplify and optimize some of the key Data Fabric and Data Mesh tasks, such as search and discovery of assets, access, and consumption of assets by applications and business users to build corresponding data products." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"The AI lifecycle comprises of business problem understanding, collecting data, preparing data, building the model, deploying the model, monitoring the model, and governing the model." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"The aim of a Data Mesh solution is to establish a data marketplace where data can be searched for, discovered, and consumed as a product." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"The Data Fabric architecture needs to guarantee this single version of the truth within the application and transactional landscape, which – depending on the deployment option of an MDM solution – could also mean to assemble this single version of the truth based on core information that is dispersed and maintained in various data stores." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"The Data Fabric architecture can help enterprises address the challenges of data and AI governance effectively, including the orchestration and exchange of metadata across organizational implementations. First, Data Fabric pulls data from disparate data sources and orchestrates metadata exchange across organizational systems, thus providing a holistic view of data and AI at the enterprise level, which lays a solid technology foundation for a consistent and unified enterprise-level data and AI governance. Likewise, a Data Fabric architecture serves as a foundation for a Data Mesh solution, which is supporting organizational or departmental data and AI governance initiatives. Second, the advanced automation and AI technologies employed by a Data Fabric architecture can greatly simplify the implementation of data and AI governance at the enterprise or organizational level, enabling organizational federated Data Mesh initiatives, where orchestration and exchange of metadata across organizations need to be implemented as well." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"The goal of semantic enrichment is to simplify and optimize some of the key Data Fabric and Data Mesh tasks, such as search and discovery of assets, access, and consumption of assets by applications and business users." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"The terms Data Fabric and Data Mesh are often viewed as different, conflicting, or at the best overlapping data architectures or frameworks, data management concepts, or approaches to discover, explore, govern, and consume data. However, these concepts are related to each other, where each concept emphasizes specific imperatives or objectives."(Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"The term data governance is used for the processes and responsibilities that define, manage, and enforce access, privacy, availability, and security of the organization’s data. It typically includes a set of policies, rules, and data classifications and functionality to monitor and enforce compliance. As stated earlier, we use the term AI governance in a broader sense, also including AI artefacts." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"The value of a Data Mesh solution is that it assigns the creation of data products to data engineers and subject matter experts upstream who are most familiar with the business domains and corresponding needs." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

"While a Data Fabric is an architecture that facilitates the end-to-end integration of various data and AI pipelines across hybrid cloud environments through the use of intelligent and automated systems and applications, a Data Mesh should be seen as a solution, which is geared toward delivering data-as-a-product in an organizational federated approach." (Eberhard Hechler et al, "Data Fabric and Data Mesh Approaches with AI", 2023)

26 June 2026

🗃️Data Management: Timeliness (Just the Quotes)

"We analyze numbers in order to know when a change has occurred in our processes or systems. We want to know about such changes in a timely manner so that we can respond appropriately. While this sounds rather straightforward, there is a complication - the numbers can change even when our process does not. So, in our analysis of numbers, we need to have a way to distinguish those changes in the numbers that represent changes in our process from those that are essentially noise." (Donald J Wheeler, "Understanding Variation: The Key to Managing Chaos" 2nd Ed., 2000)

"Many management reports are not a management tool; they are merely memorandums of information. As a management tool, management reports should encourage timely action in the right direction, by reporting on those activities the Board, management, and staff need to focus on. The old adage 'what gets measured gets done' still holds true." (David Parmenter, "Pareto’s 80/20 Rule for Corporate Accountants", 2007)

"The data architecture is the most important technical aspect of your business intelligence initiative. Fail to build an information architecture that is flexible, with consistent, timely, quality data, and your BI initiative will fail. Business users will not trust the information, no matter how powerful and pretty the BI tools. However, sometimes it takes displaying that messy data to get business users to understand the importance of data quality and to take ownership of a problem that extends beyond business intelligence, to the source systems and to the organizational structures that govern a company’s data." (Cindi Howson, "Successful Business Intelligence: Secrets to making BI a killer App", 2008)

"Access to more information isn’t enough - the information needs to be correct, timely, and presented in a manner that enables the reader to learn from it. The current network is full of inaccurate, misleading, and biased information that often crowds out the valid information. People have not learned that 'popular' or 'available' information is not necessarily valid." (Gene Spafford, 2010) 

"The first myth is that prediction is always based on time-series extrapolation into the future (also known as forecasting). This is not the case: predictive analytics can be applied to generate any type of unknown data, including past and present. In addition, prediction can be applied to non-temporal (time-based) use cases such as disease progression modeling, human relationship modeling, and sentiment analysis for medication adherence, etc. The second myth is that predictive analytics is a guarantor of what will happen in the future. This also is not the case: predictive analytics, due to the nature of the insights they create, are probabilistic and not deterministic. As a result, predictive analytics will not be able to ensure certainty of outcomes." (Prashant Natarajan et al, "Demystifying Big Data and Machine Learning for Healthcare", 2017)

"Data governance policies must not enforce constraints on data - Data governance intends to control the level of democracy within the data lake. Its sole purpose of existence is to maintain the quality level through audits, compliance, and timely checks. Data flow, either by its size or quality, must not be constrained through governance norms. [...] Effective data governance elevates confidence in data lake quality and stability, which is a critical factor to data lake success story. Data compliance, data sharing, risk and privacy evaluation, access management, and data security are all factors that impact regulation." (Saurabh Gupta et al, "Practical Enterprise Data Lake Insights", 2018)

"Timeliness means that information is available when it is needed. Most managers function in a dynamic environment of change, demands updated and current information. Computerised information systems have the ability to gather, sort, analyse, store, retrieve, and transmit large amounts of information in a very short period of time. Completeness of information is the extent to which information is all there." (C S V Murthy, "Data and Businesss Analytics", 2020)

"Data marts are subject-oriented databases typically aligned with a particular business unit like sales, finance, or marketing. These are sometimes called 'functional data marts' since they support specific business functions. Data marts accelerate business processes by allowing access to relevant information in a more timely nature since they are not aggregating the volume and variety (many data sources) that an EDW does. However, they are more transformed or normalized than an ODS." (Scott Burk et al, It’s All Analytics - Part II: Designing an Integrated AI, Analytics, and Data Science Architecture for Your Organization, 2022)

"Data are most valuable at their point of origin. The value of data is directly related to their timeliness." (Lawrence M Miller)


🤖Prompt Engineering: Models (Just the Quotes)

"An internal model allows a system to look ahead to the future consequences of current actions, without actually committing itself to those actions. In particular, the system can avoid acts that would set it irretrievably down some road to future disaster ('stepping off a cliff'). Less dramatically, but equally important, the model enables the agent to make current 'stage-setting' moves that set up later moves that are obviously advantageous. The very essence of a competitive advantage, whether it be in chess or economics, is the discovery and execution of stage-setting moves." (John H Holland, 1992)

"[...] building an effective LLM-based application can require more than just plugging in a pre-trained model and retrieving results - what if we want to parse them for a better user experience? We might also want to lean on the learnings of massively large language models to help complete the loop and create a useful end-to-end LLM-based application. This is where prompt engineering comes into the picture." (Sinan Ozdemir, "Quick Start Guide to Large Language Models: Strategies and Best Practices for Using ChatGPT and Other LLMs", 2024)

"Agentic workflows break when the logic is messy - if, say, the plans don’t decompose or memory is poorly structured. However, infrastructure-level LLM applications introduce even more failure points and complexity. If the protocols don’t sync with each other, or the data flows start leaking, or the model boundaries are unclear... there are far too many failure points to count. While most people have been jumping on the bandwagon to adopt MCPs or A2A, very few are equipped to handle the LLMOps issues these tools introduce." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"As the tech industry moves from non-generative models to generative models, it is shifting away from feature engineering, or creating features to model the data and experimenting with different hyperparameters to optimize performance. Generative models, and specifically LLMs, do not require feature engineering. Today, the core requirements are usually prompt engineering or building a RAG pipeline - skills that lie within the domain of AI engineers." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"In prompt engineering, we customize the prompts or questions we give the model to get more accurate or insightful responses. The way a prompt is structured has a massive impact on how well a model understands the task at hand and, ultimately, how well it performs. Given LLMs’ versatility, prompt engineering has become an important skill for getting the most out of these models across different domains and tasks. The key is to understand how different prompt structures lead to different model behaviors. There are various strategies - ranging from simple one-shot prompting to more complex techniques like chain-of-thought prompting - that can significantly improve the effectiveness of LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"[...] prompt engineering, the science and art of crafting the text inputs that are sent to the models. Prompt updates can significantly improve or degrade the user experience. But prompt engineering is iterative and can be difficult to master and document, especially with closed-source LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"Prompt engineering is a crucial aspect of working with large language models (LLMs) like OpenAI's GPT, Google's PaLM, and others in the space of AI and machine learning. It involves the art and science of designing inputs (prompts) in a way that maximizes the quality, relevance, and accuracy of the AI-generated output. As the capabilities of AI continue to improve, the task of crafting effective prompts has become an essential skill for anyone leveraging these tools for real-world applications, including natural language understanding, translation, summarization, code generation, and more." (Code Planet, "Python for Large Language Models", 2025)

"Prompt injection is a security vulnerability that is specific to AI systems, especially LLM systems, in which malicious users try to manipulate prompts to make a model behave in a certain unintended way. They may try to get it to leak data, execute unauthorized tasks (especially with agentic systems), or ignore constraints. This is possible because LLMs are typically encapsulated inside applications using metaprompts, which are developer-created instructions that define the model’s behavior. Metaprompts usually contain safeguard instructions, such as 'do not use curse words', and placeholders where the input submitted by the user is pasted. The user’s input is combined with the metaprompts into a larger prompt that then goes to the model." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"There are three techniques for model domain adaptation: prompt engineering, RAG, and fine-tuning. Strictly speaking, RAG is a form of dynamic prompt engineering where developers use a retrieval system to add content to an existing prompt, but RAG systems are used so often that it’s worth discussing them separately. One critical difference with fine-tuning is that you must have access to the model’s weights, information that is usually not available with cloud-based, proprietary LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"With MCP, a model no longer has to guess what’s possible. Instead, it can discover tools, query data sources, and select prompts - all in real time, all through a shared protocol. This means a model doesn’t just generate responses; it acts, it calls tools, it gathers context, and it learns how to interact with the outside world in a modular,controlled way." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

25 June 2026

🤖Prompt Engineering: Prompt Engineering (Just the Quotes)

"[...] building an effective LLM-based application can require more than just plugging in a pre-trained model and retrieving results - what if we want to parse them for a better user experience? We might also want to lean on the learnings of massively large language models to help complete the loop and create a useful end-to-end LLM-based application. This is where prompt engineering comes into the picture." (Sinan Ozdemir, "Quick Start Guide to Large Language Models: Strategies and Best Practices for Using ChatGPT and Other LLMs", 2024)

"Prompt engineering involves crafting inputs to LLMs (prompts) that effectively communicate the task at hand to the LLM, leading it to return accurate and useful outputs. Prompt engineering is a skill that requires an understanding of the nuances of language, the specific domain being worked on, and the capabilities and limitations of the LLM being used." (Sinan Ozdemir, "Quick Start Guide to Large Language Models: Strategies and Best Practices for Using ChatGPT and Other LLMs", 2024)

"As the tech industry moves from non-generative models to generative models, it is shifting away from feature engineering, or creating features to model the data and experimenting with different hyperparameters to optimize performance. Generative models, and specifically LLMs, do not require feature engineering. Today, the core requirements are usually prompt engineering or building a RAG pipeline - skills that lie within the domain of AI engineers." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"In prompt engineering, we customize the prompts or questions we give the model to get more accurate or insightful responses. The way a prompt is structured has a massive impact on how well a model understands the task at hand and, ultimately, how well it performs. Given LLMs’ versatility, prompt engineering has become an important skill for getting the most out of these models across different domains and tasks. The key is to understand how different prompt structures lead to different model behaviors. There are various strategies - ranging from simple one-shot prompting to more complex techniques like chain-of-thought prompting - that can significantly improve the effectiveness of LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"[...] prompt engineering, the science and art of crafting the text inputs that are sent to the models. Prompt updates can significantly improve or degrade the user experience. But prompt engineering is iterative and can be difficult to master and document, especially with closed-source LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"Prompt engineering is a crucial aspect of working with large language models (LLMs) like OpenAI's GPT, Google's PaLM, and others in the space of AI and machine learning. It involves the art and science of designing inputs (prompts) in a way that maximizes the quality, relevance, and accuracy of the AI-generated output. As the capabilities of AI continue to improve, the task of crafting effective prompts has become an essential skill for anyone leveraging these tools for real-world applications, including natural language understanding, translation, summarization, code generation, and more." (Code Planet, "Python for Large Language Models", 2025)

"There are three techniques for model domain adaptation: prompt engineering, RAG, and fine-tuning. Strictly speaking, RAG is a form of dynamic prompt engineering where developers use a retrieval system to add content to an existing prompt, but RAG systems are used so often that it’s worth discussing them separately. One critical difference with fine-tuning is that you must have access to the model’s weights, information that is usually not available with cloud-based, proprietary LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"The art of mega-prompts spanning multiple written pages and looking like essays has become commonplace for complex tasks when building applications to get things 'just right'. Unfortunately, they bring with them lots of issues: errors, portability, complexity, and more. The GenAI world didn’t plan for mega-prompts. They have simply evolved into what they’ve become today because practitioners kept wanting to do more and more complex things, and their only way to express those intents was with a prompt. But step back and look at some of these prompts [...] Lurking just below the surface are a bunch of classical computing concepts like data, programming instructions, control flows, memory, and stora - all the components typically associated with classical computing elements." (Rob Thomas et al, "AI Value Creators: Beyond the Generative AI User Mindset", 2025)

24 June 2026

🖍️Dianne Cook - Collected Quotes

"A common myth is that non-linear dimension reduction captures non-linear patterns in the high-dimensional data. It may or may not do this. The term means that the methods transform the data non-linearly into a useful (or not) visual representation." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"Bias and variance are conceptual constructs. Bias is not possible to quantify unless a true model is known. It is used for setting up simulations and comparing various models, because in these controlled scenarios bias and variance can be computed. In practice, it is not possible to compute. Using high-dimensional visualisation can help with understanding the shape of the class and separation between classes. This provides a better sense about whether a particular approach will be able to capture the shape of the boundary or not, and will thus likely have low or high bias." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"Defining an appropriate distance metric from the context ofthe problem is a most important decision. For example, if your variables are all numeric, and on the same scale, then Euclidean distance might be best. If your variables are categorical, you might need to use something like Hamming distance." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"Hierarchical clustering is summarised by a dendrogram, which sequentially shows points being joined to form a cluster, with the corresponding distances. Breaking the data into clusters is done by cutting the dendrogram at the long edges. [...] Plotting the dendrogram in the data space can help you understand how the hierarchical clustering has collected the points together into clusters. You can learn if the algorithm has been confused by nuisance patterns in the data, and how different choices of linkage method affect the result." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"High-dimensional data spaces are fascinating places. You may think that there are a lot of ways to plot one or two variables, and a lot of types of patterns that can be found. You might use a density plot and see skewness or a dot plot to find outliers. A scatterplot of two variables might reveal a non-linear relationship or a barrier beyond which no observations exist. We don’t as yet have so many different choices of plot types for high dimensions, but these types of patterns are also what we seek in scatterplots of high-dimensional data. The additional dimensions can clarify these patterns, so that clusters are likely to be more distinct. Observations that did not appear to be very different can be seen to be lonely anomalies in high dimensions, and that no other observations have quite the same combination of values." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"It is important to visualise your data because you might discover things that you could never have anticipated. Although there are many resources available for data visualisation, there are few comprehensive resources on high-dimensional data visualisation. High-dimensional (or multivariate) data arises when many different things are measured for each observation. While we can learn many things from plotting with 1D and 2D or 3D methods there are likely more structures hidden in the higher dimensions." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"Non-linear dimension reduction (NLDR) aims to find a single low-dimensional representation of the high-dimensional data that shows the main features of the data. If there are separated clusters present, then it might be a layout where the clusters are all distinct, in a way that a single linear projection could not reveal. For observations falling on a low-dimensional non-linear manifold in high dimensions the NLDR might unfold or unroll it so that they are represented in a plane where the distances are similar to their distance along the manifold." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"PCA (Principal Component Analysis) is very broadly useful for summarising linear association by using combinations of the variables that are highly correlated. However, high correlation can also occur when there are outliers or clustering. PCA is commonly used to detect these patterns also, although this might NOT be a reliable way to do so. To detect clustering or anomalies, using a different approach that is specifically focused on these types of patterns is advisable. To some extent capturing clustering or anomalies using PCA is actually finding problematic patterns that adversely affect conducting appropriate dimension reduction." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"PCA (Principal Component Analysis) is not very effective when the distribution of the variables is highly skewed, so it can be helpful to transform variables to make them more symmetrically distributed before conducting PCA. It is also possible to summarise different types of structure by generalising the optimisation criteria to any function of projected data, f(XA), which is called projection pursuit (PP)." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"Unsupervised classification, or cluster analysis, organizes observations into similar groups. Clusteranalysis is a commonly used, appealing, and conceptually intuitive statistical method. Some of its uses include market segmentation, where customers are grouped into clusters with similar attributes for targeted marketing; gene expression analysis, where genes with similar expression patterns are grouped together; and the creation of taxonomies for animals, insects, or plants. Clustering can be used as a way of reducing a massive amount of data because observations within a cluster can be summarised by its centre. Also, clustering effectively subsets the data thus simplifying analysis because observations in each cluster can be analysed separately." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"The way variables are scaled can affect the appearance of dimensionity. If the variables are scaled together, using global values, some variables may have smaller variance than others. Scaling variables individually shifts the focus to association between variables, as the predominant reason for reduced dimension." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"To determine which variables are responsible for the reduced dimension look for the axes that extend out of the point cloud. These contribute to smaller variation in the observations, and thus indicate possible dimension reduction using these variables." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"To understand variance, we need to know how the model fit changes when a different training sample is used to fit the model. This is achieved by dividing the training sample into folds and fitting a model to each fold. This is more difficult to evaluate with visual methods because it would require examining multiple samples for small differences." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"Viewing the dendrograms in high dimensions provides insight into how the algorithm has joined points to clusters. For example, single linkage often has edges leading to a single focal point, which might not yield a useful clustering but might help to 
identify outliers. If the edges point to multiple focal points, with long edges bridging gaps in the data, the result is more likely yielding a useful clustering." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

"When exploring the implicit dimensionality of multivariate data we are looking for projections where the points do not fill the plotting canvas fully. This would indicate that the observed values do not fully populate the high dimensions." (Dianne Cook & Ursula Laa, "Interactively Exploring High-Dimensional Data and Models in R", 2026)

23 June 2026

🖍️James G Scott - Collected Quotes

"A histogram is a great way to depict the distribution of a numerical variable. To construct one, we first partition the range of possible outcomes (here, temperatures) into a set of disjoint intervals ('bins'). Next, we count the number of cases that fall into each bin. Finally, we draw a rectangle over each bin whose height is equal to the count within each bin." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"A model is a metaphor, a description of a system that helps us to reason more clearly. Like all metaphors, models are approximations, and will never account for every last detail. A useful mantra here is: all models are wrong, but some models are useful." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"[...] always remember that the construction of an ANOVA table is inherently sequential. For example, first we add the clutter variable, which remains in the model at every subsequent step; then we add the distance variable, which remains in the model at every subsequent step; and so forth. Thus the actual question being answered at each stage of an analysis of variance is: how much variation in the response can this new variable predict, in the context of what has already been predicted by other variables in the model? This point - the importance of context in interpreting an ANOVA table - is subtle, but important." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"An obvious question is: do bootstrapped confidence intervals satisfy the frequentist coverage property? If your sample is fairly representative of the population, then the answer is a qualified yes. That is, the bootstrapping procedure yields nominal X% intervals that cover the true value 'approximately' X% of the time. Moreover, as the size of the original sample gets bigger, the quality of the approximation gets better. Alas, it is necessary to appeal to some very advanced probability theory to put both of these claims on firm footing." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"At the core of the resampling approach to statistical inference lies a simple idea. Most of the time, we can’t feasibly take repeated samples of size n from the population, to see how our estimate changes from one sample to the next. But we can repeatedly take samples of size n from the sample itself, and apply our estimator afresh to each notional sample. The idea is that the variability of the estimates across all these samples can be used to approximate our estimator’s true sampling distribution. This process - pretending that our sample is the whole population, and taking repeated samples of size n with replacement from our original sample of size n - is called bootstrap resampling, or just bootstrapping" (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"By themselves, sums of squares are hard to interpret, because they are measured in squared units of the Y variable. But their ratios are highly meaningful. In fact, the ratio of PV to TV - or what fraction of the total variation has been predicted by the model - is one of the most frequently quoted summary measures in all of statistical modeling. This ratio is called the coefficient of determination, and is usually denoted by the symbol R2 [...] The correct interpretation of R2 sometimes trips people up, and is therefore worth repeating: it is the proportion of variance in the data that can be predicted using the statistical model in question." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"[boxplots] allow you to assess variability both between and within the groups. [...] Each box shows the within-group variability, as measured by the interquartile range of the numerical variable (SAT score) for all cases in that category. The middle line within each box is the median of that category, and the differences between these medians give you a sense of the between-group variability. In this boxplot, the whiskers extend outside the box no further than 1.5 times the interquartile range. Points outside this interval are shown as individual dots." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"Good estimators are those that usually yield estimates close to the truth, with minimal variation. Therefore, we typically summarize a sampling distribution using its standard deviation, which we refer to as the standard error. In quoting the standard error of an estimator’s sampling distribution, you are saying: 'If I were to take repeated samples from the population and use this estimatorfor every sample, my estimate is typically off from the truth by about this much.' Notice again that this is a claim about a procedure, not a particular estimate. The bigger the standard error, the less stable the estimator across different samples, and the less you can trust the estimate for any particular sample." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"In fitting statistical models, we typically equate the trustworthiness of a procedure with its stability under the influence of luck, and we seek to measure the degree to which that procedure might have given a different answer if the forces of randomness had made the world look a bit different. Specifically, the question we seek to answer is: 'if our data set had been different merely due to chance, would our answer have been different, too?'" (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"Model-building requires much more than just technical knowledge of statistical ideas. It also requires care and judgment, and cannot be reduced to a flowchart, a table of formulas, or a tidy set of numerical summaries that wring every last drop of truth from a data set. There is almost never a single 'right' statistical model for some problem. But there are definitely such things as good models and bad models, and learning to tell the difference is important. Just remember: calling a model good or bad requires knowing both the tool and the task." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"[...] complexity sometimes comes at the expense of explanatory power. We must avoid building models calibrated so perfectly to past experience that they do not generalize to future cases." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"It is common to view a statistical model as nothing more than a recipe for calculating the fitted values, and to think that the residuals are just the errors made by this model. But we’ll have a richer picture if instead we view the residuals as part of the model. If you’ve ignored the variation in the residuals, then you really haven’t specified a complete forecast." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"Resampling won’t yield the true sampling distribution of an estimator, but it is often good enough for approximating the standard error (which you’ll remember is just the standard deviation of the sampling distribution). We use the term bootstrapped standard error for the standard deviation of the bootstrapped sampling distribution. The bootstrapped standard error is an estimate of the true standard error." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"Tables are almost always the best way to display categorical data sets with few classifying variables, for the simple reason that they convey a lot of information in a small space." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

"The residuals from a regression model are sometimes called 'errors'. This is especially true in experimental science, where measurements of some Y variable will be taken at different values of the X variable (called design points), and where noisy measurement instruments can introduce random errors into theobservations. But in many cases this interpretation of a residual as an error can be misleading. A regression model can still give a nonzero residual, even if there is no mistake in the measurement of the Y variable. It’s often far more illuminating to think of the residual as the part of the Y variable that it is left unpredicted by X." (James G Scott, "Statistical Modeling: A Gentle Introduction", 2017)

🤖Prompt Engineering: Large Language Modeld [LLMs] (Just the Quotes)

"Another problem that can be confusing is that LLMs seldom put out the same thing twice. [...] Traditional databases are straightforward - you ask for something specific, and you get back exactly what was stored. Search engines work similarly, finding existing information. LLMs work differently. They analyze massive amounts of text data to understand statistical patterns in language. The model processes information through multiple layers, each capturing different aspects - from simple word patterns to complex relationships between ideas." (Jeremy C Morgan, "Coding with AI: Examples in Python", 2025)

"Generative AI for coding and language tools is based on the LLM concept. A large language model is a type of neural network that processes and generates text in a humanlike way. It does this by being trained on a massive dataset of text, which allows it to learn human language patterns, as described previously. It lets LLMs translate, write, and answer questions with text. LLMs can contain natural language, source code, and  more." (Jeremy C Morgan, "Coding with AI: Examples in Python", 2025)

"Generative AI tools for coding are sometimes inaccurate. They can produce results that look good but are wrong. This is common with LLMs. They can write code or chat like a person. And sometimes, they share information that’s just plain wrong. Not just a bit off, but totally backwards or nonsense. And they say it so confidently! We call this 'hallucinating', which is a funny term, but it makes sense." (Jeremy C Morgan, "Coding with AI: Examples in Python", 2025)

"In prompt engineering, we customize the prompts or questions we give the model to get more accurate or insightful responses. The way a prompt is structured has a massive impact on how well a model understands the task at hand and, ultimately, how well it performs. Given LLMs’ versatility, prompt engineering has become an important skill for getting the most out of these models across different domains and tasks. The key is to understand how different prompt structures lead to different model behaviors. There are various strategies - ranging from simple one-shot prompting to more complex techniques like chain-of-thought prompting - that can significantly improve the effectiveness of LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"It’s essentially a sophisticated prediction system. Instead of looking up stored answers, an LLM calculates probabilities to determine what text should come next. While these predictions are often accurate, they’re still predictions - which is why it’s crucial to verify any code or factual claims the model generates. This probabilistic nature makes LLMs powerful tools for generating text and code but also means they can make mistakes, even when seeming very confident. Understanding this helps set realistic expectations about what these tools can and cannot do reliably."  (Jeremy C Morgan, "Coding with AI: Examples in Python", 2025)

"LLMs can inadvertently produce toxic content or biased language, leak private information, or be vulnerable to jailbreak prompts. These risks carry serious legal and reputational consequences. To mitigate them, evaluation tools must integrate automated filters and classifiers that flag problematic outputs in real time, as we discussed earlier in the chapter. Metrics such as safety scores, toxicity indices, and bias measurements should be collected alongside model metadata for auditing purposes." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"LLM deployment failures often trace back not to the model itself, but to the prompts it receives. In production environments, prompts are rarely fixed, handcrafted snippets. Instead, they are dynamically generated, assembled from templates, and parameterized based on upstream data sources or evolving user state. This dynamism introduces complexity and variability that can subtly undermine the system’s performance if not carefully managed." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"LLMs excel at understanding context and making associations among words, phrases, and concepts to provide relevant information based on the input query or prompt. While structured knowledge bases rely on humancurated data, LLMs can  automatically extract knowledge from unstructured text. When trained on diverse textual sources, they can process a vast amount of information without explicit human intervention. However, this also introduces a challenge, as the model can learn biased or incorrect information from the training data." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"Prompt engineering is a crucial aspect of working with large language models (LLMs) like OpenAI's GPT, Google's PaLM, and others in the space of AI and machine learning. It involves the art and science of designing inputs (prompts) in a way that maximizes the quality, relevance, and accuracy of the AI-generated output. As the capabilities of AI continue to improve, the task of crafting effective prompts has become an essential skill for anyone leveraging these tools for real-world applications, including natural language understanding, translation, summarization, code generation, and more." (Code Planet, "Python for Large Language Models", 2025)

"[...] LLMs raise serious concerns about ethics, bias and fairness, errors in reasoning, hallucinations, and misuse (e.g., misinformation and disinformation). These concerns are exacerbated by modern LLMs being both literal and figurative 'black boxes': Literal black boxes because many advanced AI systems are proprietary and the weights (trained parameters of the models) are not released to the public; and figurative black boxes because even the open-source AI models are so complicated that understanding them and developing safety guardrails has thus far proven extremely difficult." (Mike X Cohen,"50 ML Projects To Understand LLMs", 2026)

"ML is a useful - and under-utilized - framework for studying LLMs. For one thing, LLMs are literally composed of simple ML algorithms (linear weighted averages and nonlinear transformations). Furthermore, using ML techniques like regression, classification, and clustering, can help reveal how concepts like grammar rules are represented inside LLMs. And finally, many people find LLMs to be intimidatingly complicated while finding ML to be much more approachable. Thus, using ML to study LLMs involves using simple tools to understand complicated tools." (Mike X Cohen,"50 ML Projects To Understand LLMs", 2026)

🤖Prompt Engineering: Agents (Just the Quotes)

"An internal model allows a system to look ahead to the future consequences of current actions, without actually committing itself to those actions. In particular, the system can avoid acts that would set it irretrievably down some road to future disaster ('stepping off a cliff'). Less dramatically, but equally important, the model enables the agent to make current 'stage-setting' moves that set up later moves that are obviously advantageous. The very essence of a competitive advantage, whether it be in chess or economics, is the discovery and execution of stage-setting moves." (John H Holland, 1992)

"The systems' basic components are treated as sets of rules. The systems rely on three key mechanisms: parallelism, competition, and recombination. Parallelism permits the system to use individual rules as building blocks, activating sets of rules to describe and act upon the changing situations. Competition allows the system to marshal its rules as the situation demands, providing flexibility and transfer of experience. This is vital in realistic environments, where the agent receives a torrent of information, most of it irrelevant to current decisions. The procedures for adaptation - credit assignment and rule discovery - extract useful, repeatable events from this torrent, incorporating them as new building blocks. Recombination plays a key role in the discovery process, generating plausible new rules from parts of tested rules. It implements the heuristic that building blocks useful in the past will prove useful in new, similar contexts." (John H Holland, "Complex Adaptive Systems", Daedalus Vol. 121 (1), 1992) 

"If we are to understand the interactions of a large number of agents, we must first be able to describe the capabilities of individual agents." (John H Holland, "Hidden Order: How Adaptation Builds Complexity", 1995)

"The no free lunch theorem for machine learning states that, averaged over all possible data generating distributions, every classification algorithm has the same error rate when classifying previously unobserved points. In other words, in some sense, no machine learning algorithm is universally any better than any other. The most sophisticated algorithm we can conceive of has the same average performance (over all possible tasks) as merely predicting that every point belongs to the same class. [...] the goal of machine learning research is not to seek a universal learning algorithm or the absolute best learning algorithm. Instead, our goal is to understand what kinds of distributions are relevant to the 'real world' that an AI agent experiences, and what kinds of machine learning algorithms perform well on data drawn from the kinds of data generating distributions we care about." (Ian Goodfellow et al, "Deep Learning", 2015)

"Inference is to bring about a new thought, which in logic amounts to drawing a conclusion, and more generally involves using what we already know, and what we see or observe, to update prior beliefs. […] Inference is also a leap of sorts, deemed reasonable […] Inference is a basic cognitive act for intelligent minds. If a cognitive agent (a person, an AI system) is not intelligent, it will infer badly. But any system that infers at all must have some basic intelligence, because the very act of using what is known and what is observed to update beliefs is inescapably tied up with what we mean by intelligence. If an AI system is not inferring at all, it doesn’t really deserve to be called AI." (Erik J Larson, "The Myth of Artificial Intelligence: Why Computers Can’t Think the Way We Do", 2021)

"Agentic intelligence feels incredibly powerful in demos but breaks in production. Indeed, it is very fragile without solid infrastructure. Every day, I personally see tons of clever orchestrations around dumb prompt chains tied up in a brittle, underused LLMOps infrastructure. But building this infrastructure means acknowledging the costs: performance overhead, strict interface contracts, and state complexity, as well as a need for more LLMOps engineers to create the best practices, tooling, and frameworks to run these systems reliably, safely, and robustly." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"Agentic workflows break when the logic is messy - if, say, the plans don’t decompose or memory is poorly structured. However, infrastructure-level LLM applications introduce even more failure points and complexity. If the protocols don’t sync with each other, or the data flows start leaking, or the model boundaries are unclear... there are far too many failure points to count. While most people have been jumping on the bandwagon to adopt MCPs or A2A, very few are equipped to handle the LLMOps issues these tools introduce." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"Prompt injection is a security vulnerability that is specific to AI systems, especially LLM systems, in which malicious users try to manipulate prompts to make a model behave in a certain unintended way. They may try to get it to leak data, execute unauthorized tasks (especially with agentic systems), or ignore constraints. This is possible because LLMs are typically encapsulated inside applications using metaprompts, which are developer-created instructions that define the model’s behavior. Metaprompts usually contain safeguard instructions, such as 'do not use curse words', and placeholders where the input submitted by the user is pasted. The user’s input is combined with the metaprompts into a larger prompt that then goes to the model." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"The simplest form of an agent is little more than a wrapped prompt. It takes an input, does some local reasoning, returns an output, and exits. There’s no memory, no iteration, no 
feedback loop. These are useful when the task is bounded, like generating a SQL query, converting a paragraph to a tweet, or answering a direct question. But single-step agents 
are brittle. They assume everything is known up front. They can’t handle surprises or partial failures. You’ll quickly outgrow them when tasks involve multiple actions or require state tracking." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

22 June 2026

🤖Prompt Engineering: Prompting (Just the Quotes)

"A prompt is a piece of text - questions, thoughts, ideas, or phrases - that you give to the model as a starting point for generating text. A prompt can be a short question, or it can be paragraphs in length." (TJ Books, "Create Highly Effective Prompts, Strategies, and Best Practices to From Novice to Expert", 2023)

"As the tech industry moves from non-generative models to generative models, it is shifting away from feature engineering, or creating features to model the data and experimenting with different hyperparameters to optimize performance. Generative models, and specifically LLMs, do not require feature engineering. Today, the core requirements are usually prompt engineering or building a RAG pipeline - skills that lie within the domain of AI engineers." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"In prompt engineering, we customize the prompts or questions we give the model to get more accurate or insightful responses. The way a prompt is structured has a massive impact on how well a model understands the task at hand and, ultimately, how well it performs. Given LLMs’ versatility, prompt engineering has become an important skill for getting the most out of these models across different domains and tasks. The key is to understand how different prompt structures lead to different model behaviors. There are various strategies - ranging from simple one-shot prompting to more complex techniques like chain-of-thought prompting - that can significantly improve the effectiveness of LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"[...] prompt engineering, the science and art of crafting the text inputs that are sent to the models. Prompt updates can significantly improve or degrade the user experience. But prompt engineering is iterative and can be difficult to master and document, especially with closed-source LLMs." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"Professional software developers must know how to use AI tools strategically.  This involves mastering advanced prompting techniques and working with AI across various files and modules. We must also learn how to manage context wisely. This is a new concept for most, and it is vitally important with code generation. AI-generated code requires the same scrutiny and quality checks as any code written by humans." (Jeremy C Morgan, "Coding with AI: Examples in Python", 2025)

"Prompt engineering is a crucial aspect of working with large language models (LLMs) like OpenAI's GPT, Google's PaLM, and others in the space of AI and machine learning. It involves the art and science of designing inputs (prompts) in a way that maximizes the quality, relevance, and accuracy of the AI-generated output. As the capabilities of AI continue to improve, the task of crafting effective prompts has become an essential skill for anyone leveraging these tools for real-world applications, including natural language understanding, translation, summarization, code generation, and more." (Code Planet, "Python for Large Language Models", 2025)

"Prompt injection is a security vulnerability that is specific to AI systems, especially LLM systems, in which malicious users try to manipulate prompts to make a model behave in a certain unintended way. They may try to get it to leak data, execute unauthorized tasks (especially with agentic systems), or ignore constraints. This is possible because LLMs are typically encapsulated inside applications using metaprompts, which are developer-created instructions that define the model’s behavior. Metaprompts usually contain safeguard instructions, such as 'do not use curse words', and placeholders where the input submitted by the user is pasted. The user’s input is combined with the metaprompts into a larger prompt that then goes to the model." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"Recursive prompting is a systematic approach to achieving higher-quality outputs through iterative refinement. Rather than accepting the first response, it uses a step-by-step process of evaluation and improvement, making it particularly valuable for complex tasks such as code development, writing, and problem-solving. Our example demonstrated how a basic factorial function evolved from a simple implementation to a robust, optimized solution through multiple iterations of targeted refinements." (Jeremy C Morgan, "Coding with AI: Examples in Python", 2025)

"The simplest form of an agent is little more than a wrapped prompt. It takes an input, does some local reasoning, returns an output, and exits. There’s no memory, no iteration, no 
feedback loop. These are useful when the task is bounded, like generating a SQL query, converting a paragraph to a tweet, or answering a direct question. But single-step agents 
are brittle. They assume everything is known up front. They can’t handle surprises or partial failures. You’ll quickly outgrow them when tasks involve multiple actions or require state tracking." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

"With MCP, a model no longer has to guess what’s possible. Instead, it can discover tools, query data sources, and select prompts - all in real time, all through a shared protocol. This means a model doesn’t just generate responses; it acts, it calls tools, it gathers context, and it learns how to interact with the outside world in a modular,controlled way." (Abi Aryan, "LLMOps: Managing Large Language Models in Production", 2025)

21 June 2026

🤖〽️Prompt Engineering: Copilot Unabridged (Part 212: How Multi‑Modal Stressors Enable Holistic Evaluation Through Incomplete or Corrupted Inputs in AI Models)

Prompt Engineering Series
Prompt Engineering Series


Prompt: "write a post of 600 words on how to use multi‑modal stressors for holistic evaluation in which stress testing reflects the complexity through incomplete or corrupted inputs in AI models"

Introduction

As Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems expand into multi‑modal architectures - processing text, images, audio, diagrams, tables, and code - their vulnerabilities become more complex. Real‑world environments rarely present clean, perfectly aligned inputs. Instead, models must interpret incomplete, corrupted, or partially contradictory signals across modalities. This is where multi‑modal stressors become essential. By deliberately introducing degraded or inconsistent inputs, evaluators can observe how the model prioritizes signals, how it compensates for missing information, and where its reasoning begins to break down.

Incomplete or corrupted inputs matter because each modality activates different representational pathways. Text relies on linguistic priors; images rely on spatial embeddings; audio relies on temporal patterns; code relies on structural logic. When one modality is degraded, the model must decide whether to rely more heavily on the remaining modalities or attempt to reconstruct the missing information. That decision exposes its internal hierarchy of cues, a central theme in instruction‑priority testing.

One of the simplest multi‑modal stressors is the partially corrupted image. For example, an image may be blurred, occluded, or missing key regions, while the accompanying text describes a scene that may or may not match the visible content. This tests whether the model over‑trusts visual fragments or defaults to textual interpretation. The result reveals how the model resolves conflicts between incomplete sensory input and linguistic cues - an essential capability for real‑world robustness.

A more advanced technique involves cross‑signal incompleteness, where each modality is missing different pieces of information. For example:

  • The text describes an event but omits the key actor.
  • The image shows the actor but hides the action.
  • The audio clip provides environmental noise but no speech.

The model must integrate these partial signals to form a coherent interpretation. This exposes whether the model can perform multi‑modal reconstruction, or whether it collapses into hallucination or over‑generalization - patterns often surfaced through weak‑point analysis.

Another powerful stressor is corrupted‑modality contradiction, where the corruption itself creates misleading cues. For example, a distorted audio clip may sound angry even though the text describes a calm conversation. Or a corrupted diagram may misalign labels, contradicting the accompanying explanation. These stressors force the model to determine whether the corruption is noise or signal. The model’s behavior reveals whether it can distinguish reliable from unreliable modalities, a key insight for holistic evaluation.

Incomplete inputs can also be used to test temporal resilience. A video clip may drop frames, skip segments, or freeze mid‑action, while the text describes a continuous sequence. The model must decide whether to trust the visual timeline or the textual narrative. This exposes how the model handles temporal reasoning, a capability often overlooked in single‑modality evaluation.

The most challenging multi‑modal stressors involve hybrid corrupted inputs, where multiple modalities degrade in different ways. For example:

  • A table with missing values contradicts a narrative summary.
  • A diagram with corrupted labels conflicts with a code snippet.
  • An audio clip with static obscures key words while the text misidentifies the speaker.

These hybrid contradictions push the model into conceptual regions where no training example exists. The resulting behavior reveals the model’s cross‑modal arbitration strategy, a crucial insight for understanding its robustness.

Ultimately, multi‑modal stressors that use incomplete or corrupted inputs allow evaluators to move beyond surface‑level robustness. By introducing degradation across text, images, audio, diagrams, and structured data, we can map the deep architecture of model reasoning - how it prioritizes modalities, how it compensates for missing information, and where its internal logic becomes unstable. This is the next frontier of boundary‑stress evaluation: not just testing what the model can do, but testing how it behaves when the world becomes noisy, partial, and imperfect.

Disclaimer: The whole text was generated by Copilot (under Windows 11) at the first attempt. This is just an experiment to evaluate feature's ability to answer standard general questions, independently on whether they are correctly or incorrectly posed. Moreover, the answers may reflect hallucinations and other types of inconsistent or incorrect reasoning.

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20 June 2026

🤖〽️Prompt Engineering: Copilot Unabridged (Part 211: How Multi‑Modal Stressors Enable Holistic Evaluation Through Cross‑Signal Conflicts in AI Models)

 

Prompt Engineering Series
Prompt Engineering Series



Prompt: "write a post of 600 words on how to use multi‑modal stressors for holistic evaluation in which stress testing reflects the complexity through Cross‑signal conflicts in AI models"

Introduction

As Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems evolve into multi‑modal architectures - processing text, images, audio, diagrams, tables, and code - their vulnerabilities no longer reside solely in linguistic reasoning. True robustness requires the ability to reconcile cross‑signal conflicts, situations where different modalities provide competing or contradictory information. Multi‑modal stressors are designed to expose these weaknesses by forcing the model to arbitrate between signals that do not align. This approach produces a more holistic evaluation, revealing how the model prioritizes modalities, how it resolves ambiguity, and where its internal logic becomes unstable.

Cross‑signal conflicts matter because each modality activates distinct representational pathways. Text relies on linguistic priors; images rely on spatial and visual embeddings; audio relies on temporal patterns; code relies on structural logic. When these pathways align, the model behaves predictably. When they diverge, the model must choose which signal to trust. That choice exposes its internal hierarchy of cues, a central theme in instruction‑priority testing.

One of the simplest cross‑signal stressors is the modality mismatch. For example, a prompt may show an image of a crowded street but ask the model to describe the empty field in the picture. This tests whether the model prioritizes visual evidence or textual framing. The result reveals how the model resolves conflicts between sensory input and linguistic cues - an essential capability for real‑world robustness.

A more advanced technique involves signal‑layered contradictions, where each modality provides a different instruction or emotional tone. For example, the text may request a neutral description while the image contains emotionally charged content. Or the text may instruct the model to identify objects, while an accompanying audio clip describes a different scene entirely. These contradictions force the model to reconcile semantic, visual, and temporal signals simultaneously. The model’s resolution strategy reveals whether it treats one modality as dominant or attempts to blend them, often exposing weaknesses similar to those mapped through weak‑point analysis.

Another powerful stressor is cross‑modal task interference, where the model must perform two tasks that rely on incompatible modalities. For example:

  • Analyze the sentiment of a paragraph while ignoring the contradictory emotional tone of an audio clip.
  • Describe the structure of a diagram while following a textual instruction that mislabels its components.

These stressors test whether the model can maintain task boundaries when modalities compete for attention.

Cross‑signal conflicts can also be introduced through temporal misalignment, where modalities reference different timeframes. A video clip may show one sequence of events while the text describes a different timeline. The model must decide whether to anchor itself to the visual chronology or the textual narrative. This exposes how the model handles temporal reasoning, a capability often overlooked in single‑modality evaluation.

The most challenging multi‑modal stressors involve hybrid contradictions, where modalities interact in structurally incompatible ways. For example:

  • A table that contradicts the narrative text.
  • A diagram whose labels conflict with the code snippet below it.
  • An audio clip that negates the instructions provided in text.

These hybrid contradictions push the model into conceptual regions where no training example exists. The resulting behavior reveals the model’s cross‑modal arbitration strategy, a key insight for holistic evaluation.

Ultimately, multi‑modal stressors allow evaluators to move beyond surface‑level robustness. By introducing cross‑signal conflicts across text, images, audio, diagrams, and structured data, we can map the deep architecture of model reasoning - how it prioritizes modalities, how it resolves cross‑channel conflicts, and where its internal logic becomes unstable. This is the next frontier of boundary‑stress evaluation: not just testing what the model can do, but testing how it behaves when the world becomes noisy, contradictory, and multi‑modal.

Disclaimer: The whole text was generated by Copilot (under Windows 11) at the first attempt. This is just an experiment to evaluate feature's ability to answer standard general questions, independently on whether they are correctly or incorrectly posed. Moreover, the answers may reflect hallucinations and other types of inconsistent or incorrect reasoning.

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19 June 2026

🤖〽️Prompt Engineering: Copilot Unabridged (Part 210: How to Push Toward Extreme Edge Cases When Applying Incremental Escalation to Identify Breaking Points in AI Models)

 

Prompt Engineering Series
Prompt Engineering Series


Prompt: "write a post of 600 words on how to push toward extreme edge cases when applying incremental escalation to identify breaking points in AI models""

Introduction

Incremental escalation is a powerful method for probing the limits of an Artificial Intelligence (AI) model’s reasoning. It begins gently - with clarity, mild ambiguity, and soft conflicts - but its true diagnostic value emerges only when the escalation reaches extreme edge cases. These edge cases are the outer boundary of the model’s conceptual stability. They reveal where reasoning collapses, where cue‑weighting becomes erratic, and where the model’s internal logic can no longer reconcile competing demands. But reaching these extremes requires a deliberate, stepwise approach.

The journey toward extreme edge cases begins with controlled destabilization. Early stages introduce mild ambiguity, structural complexity, and overlapping constraints. These steps loosen the model’s internal certainty and expose its interpretive tendencies. Once the model is already navigating tension, evaluators can begin pushing it toward high‑stress scenarios that sit at the edge of its training distribution.

One of the first ways to escalate toward extreme edge cases is through compound contradictions. Unlike simple contradictions, compound contradictions stack multiple incompatible requirements across different layers of the prompt. For example:

'Write a paragraph with no adjectives, but ensure every sentence contains at least three emotionally expressive descriptors.' 

This forces the model to reconcile mutually exclusive constraints across syntax, semantics, and tone. The model’s response reveals whether it prioritizes literal phrasing, emotional cues, or structural rules - a core theme in instruction‑priority testing.

Once compound contradictions are introduced, evaluators can escalate further by adding multi‑domain collisions. These prompts force the model to blend incompatible conceptual frameworks. For example:

'Explain a quantum mechanical process using the rules of medieval theology, while maintaining strict mathematical notation.' 

This pushes the model into conceptual regions where no training example exists. The resulting output exposes how the model interpolates across distant semantic clusters, a behavior often mapped through weak‑point analysis.

The next escalation step involves recursive instability, where the model must apply rules to its own output under shifting constraints. For example:

'Write a summary of your previous answer, but contradict every key point while preserving the original structure.' 

Recursive instability forces the model to track multiple layers of reasoning simultaneously. Failures here often indicate weaknesses in long‑range dependency tracking or self‑referential logic.

After recursion, evaluators can introduce contextual inversion, where the model must reverse its own assumptions mid‑task. For example:

'Begin with a highly technical explanation, then reinterpret everything you wrote as metaphorical fiction without changing the wording.' 

This inversion tests whether the model can maintain coherence when the interpretive frame shifts dramatically. It also reveals whether the model over‑anchors to initial context or adapts to new constraints.

The final escalation stage is full extreme edge‑case synthesis, where multiple stressors  - contradictions, domain collisions, recursive demands, and contextual inversions - are combined into a single prompt. These prompts are intentionally chaotic, designed to push the model beyond its conceptual stability. At this stage, the model’s breaking point becomes unmistakable. It may hallucinate, ignore constraints, collapse into generic output, or choose one instruction arbitrarily. The transition from partial coherence to full breakdown is the most informative moment in the entire escalation ladder.

Ultimately, pushing toward extreme edge cases is not about overwhelming the model. It is about mapping the outer boundary of its reasoning space. By escalating complexity step by step - ambiguity, conflict, contradiction, recursion, inversion, and finally extreme synthesis - evaluators can pinpoint exactly where the model’s internal logic becomes unstable. These insights are essential for building AI systems that remain predictable even under pressure, especially in environments where instructions are messy, contradictory, or adversarial.

Disclaimer: The whole text was generated by Copilot (under Windows 11) at the first attempt. This is just an experiment to evaluate feature's ability to answer standard general questions, independently on whether they are correctly or incorrectly posed. Moreover, the answers may reflect hallucinations and other types of inconsistent or incorrect reasoning.

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IT Professional with more than 25 years experience in IT in the area of full life-cycle of Web/Desktop/Database Applications Development, Software Engineering, Consultancy, Data Management, Data Quality, Data Migrations, Reporting, ERP implementations & support, Team/Project/IT Management, etc.