Jaeger UI is the official, React-based web interface for Jaeger, a popular open-source distributed tracing platform. It serves as a visual dashboard for developers and engineers to monitor, analyze, and troubleshoot microservices and complex software architectures.Key Features of Jaeger UITrace Visualization: It allows you to see the entire lifecycle of a single user request as it travels across various microservices, databases, and internal function calls.Timeline and Flame Graph Views: Traces are displayed in easy-to-read timelines or flame graphs, breaking down exactly how much time each service spends processing a request.Root Cause Analysis: It helps pinpoint the exact service where a delay occurs or an error is thrown.Service Dependency Graph: It automatically generates a visual map illustrating how different microservices communicate and depend on each other.Trace Filtering: You can search for traces using exact criteria such as operation name, time elapsed (latency), tags, or log errors.How it Works Under the HoodYour application microservices are instrumented with tracing libraries (like OpenTelemetry).As a request travels through your system, the execution path is collected and stored.The Jaeger Query service reads this stored trace data and powers the UI, turning the backend JSON data into interactive charts.For a visual walkthrough of how to use Jaeger UI to trace errors and debug latency in a real-world application:
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Saturday, June 6, 2026
What is MCP
MCP (Model Context Protocol) is an open-source standard for connecting AI applications to external systems.
Using MCP, AI applications like Claude or ChatGPT can connect to data sources (e.g. local files, databases), tools (e.g. search engines, calculators) and workflows (e.g. specialized prompts)—enabling them to access key information and perform tasks.
Think of MCP like a USB-C port for AI applications. Just as USB-C provides a standardized way to connect electronic devices, MCP provides a standardized way to connect AI applications to external systems.
What can MCP enable?
Agents can access your Google Calendar and Notion, acting as a more personalized AI assistant.
Claude Code can generate an entire web app using a Figma design.
Enterprise chatbots can connect to multiple databases across an organization, empowering users to analyze data using chat.
AI models can create 3D designs on Blender and print them out using a 3D printer.
Why does MCP matter?
Depending on where you sit in the ecosystem, MCP can have a range of benefits.
Developers: MCP reduces development time and complexity when building, or integrating with, an AI application or agent.
AI applications or agents: MCP provides access to an ecosystem of data sources, tools and apps which will enhance capabilities and improve the end-user experience.
End-users: MCP results in more capable AI applications or agents which can access your data and take actions on your behalf when necessary.
The Model Context Protocol includes the following projects:
MCP Specification: A specification of MCP that outlines the implementation requirements for clients and servers.
MCP SDKs: SDKs for different programming languages that implement MCP.
MCP Development Tools: Tools for developing MCP servers and clients, including the MCP Inspector
MCP Reference Server Implementations: Reference implementations of MCP servers.
MCP follows a client-server architecture where an MCP host — an AI application like Claude Code or Claude Desktop — establishes connections to one or more MCP servers. The MCP host accomplishes this by creating one MCP client for each MCP server. Each MCP client maintains a dedicated connection with its corresponding MCP server.
Local MCP servers that use the STDIO transport typically serve a single MCP client, whereas remote MCP servers that use the Streamable HTTP transport will typically serve many MCP clients.
The key participants in the MCP architecture are:
MCP Host: The AI application that coordinates and manages one or multiple MCP clients
MCP Client: A component that maintains a connection to an MCP server and obtains context from an MCP server for the MCP host to use
MCP Server: A program that provides context to MCP clients
For example: Visual Studio Code acts as an MCP host. When Visual Studio Code establishes a connection to an MCP server, such as the Sentry MCP server, the Visual Studio Code runtime instantiates an MCP client object that maintains the connection to the Sentry MCP server. When Visual Studio Code subsequently connects to another MCP server, such as the local filesystem server, the Visual Studio Code runtime instantiates an additional MCP client object to maintain this connectio
Note that MCP server refers to the program that serves context data, regardless of where it runs. MCP servers can execute locally or remotely. For example, when Claude Desktop launches the filesystem server, the server runs locally on the same machine because it uses the STDIO transport. This is commonly referred to as a “local” MCP server. The official Sentry MCP server runs on the Sentry platform, and uses the Streamable HTTP transport. This is commonly referred to as a “remote” MCP server.
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
What is LiteLLM?
LiteLLM is an open-source AI gateway and Python SDK that allows you to call over 100 Large Language Model (LLM) APIs using a single, unified interface. It translates your requests into the specific formats required by various providers like OpenAI, Anthropic, Google Gemini, Azure, and AWS Bedrock.Key FeaturesDrop-in OpenAI Compatibility: You can swap LLM providers without rewriting your code; any model can be treated as if it were a standard OpenAI object.Spend Tracking: Accurately track API costs by key, user, team, or organization.Model Fallbacks: Set up rules so that if a primary model fails or is rate-limited, your application automatically routes requests to a backup model.Enterprise Security: Provides features like virtual API keys, rate-limiting, edge-level guardrails, and access control.Observability: Easily log your inputs and outputs to tools like Langfuse, Helicone, Lunary, and MLflow.How You Can Use ItPython SDK: Integrate it directly into your Python codebase for seamless, local script-based multi-model support.Proxy Server (AI Gateway): Deploy it as a standalone server to create a centralized API gateway for your entire organization, making it easy to manage users and budgets.For a quick beginner introduction to how LiteLLM standardizes the code for various models and providers:
Monday, June 1, 2026
OpenTelemetry Tracing
OpenTelemetry (OTel) tracing is an open-source, vendor-neutral standard for monitoring requests as they flow through complex software systems. It tracks the exact path of a transaction, breaking down what happened, how long each step took, and whether the operation succeeded or failed.Core ConceptsTraces: A Trace represents the entire lifecycle of a single request or transaction from start to finish.Spans: The building blocks of a trace. Every individual operation, function call, or service request within a trace is captured as a Span. Spans contain metadata like start/end times, attributes (key-value pairs), and error statuses.Trace Context Propagation: This is the magic of distributed tracing. It passes a unique identifier (Trace ID) between different services and processes, ensuring that spans generated in separate microservices, databases, or servers are linked into one cohesive story.Why is it important?Modern applications, such as microservices, involve multiple networked components. When a problem or slowdown occurs, pinpointing the root cause is difficult. OTel tracing visualizes the end-to-end request path as a "waterfall diagram," making it easy to identify bottlenecks, diagnose latency, and track down errors.The OpenTelemetry AdvantageNo Vendor Lock-in: You instrument your code once using the OTel API and SDK. You can then send this data to any backend you prefer (e.g., Jaeger, Prometheus, Datadog) without having to rewrite your application code.Automatic Instrumentation: OTel offers libraries and agents that can automatically trace standard web requests, database queries, and framework calls without requiring you to manually write tracing code
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Cross encoder approaches
Velocity
If your blog is focused on **Cross Encoders for re-ranking semantic search results in RAG and retrieval systems**, it helps to distinguish between:
1. **Bi-Encoder Retrieval** (fast candidate generation)
2. **Cross-Encoder Re-ranking** (accurate final ranking)
A common pipeline is:
```
Query
↓
Embedding Model (Bi-Encoder)
↓
Top 100 candidates
↓
Cross Encoder Re-ranker
↓
Top 5-10 highly relevant documents
```
The "top methods" today are mostly different families of cross-encoder re-ranking architectures and training approaches.
---
# 1. BERT Cross Encoder (The Foundation)
The original approach introduced by researchers from Google Research.
Instead of encoding query and document separately:
```
[CLS] Query [SEP] Document [SEP]
```
The entire query-document pair is fed together into BERT.
The model outputs a relevance score:
```
Score(Query, Document) = 0.92
```
### Advantages
* Very accurate
* Captures deep token interactions
* Strong baseline
### Limitations
* Slow
* Must run once for every query-document pair
### Popular Models
* cross-encoder/ms-marco-MiniLM-L-6-v2
* cross-encoder/ms-marco-MiniLM-L-12-v2
Use this section in the blog to explain *why cross encoders outperform embedding similarity*.
---
# 2. MonoT5 (Generative Re-ranking)
Researchers discovered that ranking can be formulated as a generation task.
Input:
```
Query: What is RAG?
Document: ...
Relevant?
```
Output:
```
true
```
or
```
false
```
A T5 model predicts relevance.
### Why it became popular
Instead of classification:
```
Relevant = 0.84
```
the model uses language understanding learned during pretraining.
### Strengths
* Strong ranking quality
* Better reasoning
* Better semantic understanding
### Weaknesses
* Slower than BERT cross encoders
* Higher inference cost
### Notable Papers
* MonoT5
* DuoT5
---
# 3. ColBERT / Late Interaction Re-ranking
One of the most influential advances in retrieval.
Developed by researchers at Stanford University and collaborators.
Instead of:
```
Single embedding per document
```
it stores token-level embeddings.
Matching happens through:
```
MaxSim
```
between query tokens and document tokens.
### Why it matters
Traditional embedding:
```
1 vector vs 1 vector
```
ColBERT:
```
many token vectors vs many token vectors
```
Captures much finer-grained relevance.
### Benefits
* Near cross-encoder quality
* Much faster than full cross-encoder
* Excellent for large RAG systems
### Variants
* ColBERT
* ColBERTv2
Today many production retrieval systems use ColBERT-style reranking.
---
# 4. LLM-based Re-ranking (RankGPT)
A newer family of methods.
Instead of a dedicated reranker:
```
GPT-4
Claude
Llama
Gemini
```
directly rank candidate passages.
Example prompt:
```
Rank the following documents by relevance
to the query.
```
The LLM outputs:
```
Doc3
Doc1
Doc5
...
```
### Strengths
* Understands complex intent
* Handles ambiguity
* Excellent reasoning
### Weaknesses
* Expensive
* High latency
* Not ideal for high-throughput systems
### Popular Techniques
* RankGPT
* Listwise LLM ranking
* Pairwise LLM ranking
This is increasingly used in agentic RAG pipelines.
---
# 5. Modern Learned Re-rankers (BGE, Jina, Cohere Rerank)
These are the current state-of-the-art practical solutions.
Instead of training your own reranker, you use a pre-trained reranking model.
### Popular Models
#### BAAI BGE Reranker
* bge-reranker-large
* bge-reranker-v2-m3
#### Jina AI Rerankers
* Jina AI rerank models
#### Cohere Rerank
* Cohere rerank API
### Why these dominate production
They provide:
* Cross-encoder accuracy
* Optimized latency
* Multilingual support
* Ready-to-use APIs
For most enterprise RAG systems today, BGE Reranker or Cohere Rerank is usually the starting point.
---
# Comparison Table
| Method | Accuracy | Speed | Cost | Best Use Case |
| ---------------------- | ---------------- | --------- | ---------- | --------------------- |
| BERT Cross Encoder | High | Slow | Low-Medium | Classic re-ranking |
| MonoT5 | Very High | Slow | Medium | Research and QA |
| ColBERTv2 | Very High | Fast | Medium | Large-scale retrieval |
| LLM Re-ranking | Excellent | Very Slow | High | Agentic workflows |
| BGE/Cohere/Jina Rerank | State-of-the-Art | Fast | Low-Medium | Production RAG |
# Suggested Blog Structure
1. Why vector similarity alone is not enough
2. Bi-Encoder vs Cross-Encoder
3. How cross encoders compute relevance
4. Top 5 re-ranking approaches
* BERT Cross Encoder
* MonoT5
* ColBERTv2
* RankGPT
* BGE/Cohere/Jina Rerank
5. Benchmark comparison (MS MARCO, BEIR)
6. Practical implementation in LangChain/LlamaIndex
7. Cost vs Accuracy trade-offs
8. Future: LLM-as-a-Reranker and Agentic Retrieval
This structure will take the reader from the classical cross-encoder approach all the way to the modern reranking techniques being used in 2025–2026 production RAG systems.
Saturday, May 30, 2026
a write up on Taxonomy, Ontology, Knowledge Graph, Semantic Layer, Contextual layer
Your write-up is largely correct and captures the modern enterprise semantic architecture very well. However, there are a few nuances around the relationships between **taxonomy, ontology, knowledge graph, semantic layer, and context layer** that are worth refining.
## Overall Assessment
**Accuracy: 8.5/10**
The biggest improvement is clarifying that:
1. A taxonomy is **not necessarily "inside" an ontology**, although it is often represented within one.
2. A knowledge graph is **not always persistent enterprise context**; it is a graph representation of knowledge that may or may not be enterprise-wide.
3. The semantic layer is more about **business abstraction and governance** than simply being "above" the knowledge graph.
---
# Refined Version
## Layer 1: Data Layer (Facts)
At the foundation sits the physical data landscape:
* Data warehouses
* Data lakes and lakehouses
* Operational databases
* SaaS applications
* Document repositories
* Event streams and message queues
* Log and telemetry systems
These systems contain raw facts but generally lack shared business meaning.
Metadata accompanies this layer, describing:
* schemas
* ownership
* lineage
* quality
* classifications
* governance attributes
Think of this layer as:
> "What data exists?"
---
## Layer 2: Taxonomy (Classification Structure)
A taxonomy provides a controlled hierarchical classification of concepts.
Examples:
```text
Product
├── Electronics
│ ├── Laptop
│ ├── Tablet
│ └── Phone
└── Furniture
├── Desk
└── Chair
```
A taxonomy primarily answers:
> "How do we classify things?"
Taxonomies are usually:
* hierarchical
* tree-based
* simpler than ontologies
* focused on categorization
A taxonomy may become part of an ontology, but the two are not identical.
---
## Layer 3: Ontology (Meaning Layer)
An ontology formally defines:
* concepts
* attributes
* relationships
* constraints
* rules
For example:
```text
Customer
Product
Order
Supplier
```
Relationships:
```text
Customer PURCHASES Product
Supplier PROVIDES Product
Order CONTAINS Product
```
Constraints:
```text
Every Order must have at least one Product
Every Customer must have an identifier
```
An ontology answers:
> "What do things mean, and how are they allowed to relate?"
Unlike taxonomies, ontologies are not limited to hierarchies.
They support:
* inheritance
* multiple relationship types
* logical reasoning
* semantic validation
---
## Layer 4: Knowledge Graph (Instantiated Knowledge)
The knowledge graph populates the ontology with actual entities.
Ontology says:
```text
Customer PURCHASES Product
```
Knowledge graph says:
```text
Alice PURCHASED MacBook Pro
Bob PURCHASED iPhone
Cisco SUPPLIES Router-X
```
Example:
```text
(Customer: Alice)
|
purchased
|
(Product: MacBook Pro)
```
The ontology defines the model.
The knowledge graph contains the actual instances.
Think:
```text
Ontology = Schema of meaning
Knowledge Graph = Data conforming to that schema
```
A knowledge graph answers:
> "What is actually true right now?"
---
## Layer 5: Semantic Layer (Business Abstraction Layer)
The semantic layer translates technical data structures into business concepts.
Examples:
Instead of:
```sql
SUM(order_amount)
```
Users see:
```text
Revenue
```
Instead of:
```sql
COUNT(DISTINCT customer_id)
```
Users see:
```text
Active Customers
```
It defines:
* KPIs
* Metrics
* Business rules
* Aggregations
* Governance logic
Examples:
```text
Annual Recurring Revenue
Customer Lifetime Value
Active Customer
Net Profit
```
The semantic layer answers:
> "What does the business officially mean by this metric?"
This is the layer consumed by:
* BI tools
* dashboards
* analytics platforms
* AI agents
---
## Layer 6: Context Layer (Runtime Intelligence)
This is the layer most AI systems operate in.
It dynamically assembles:
* user identity
* permissions
* session state
* current task
* retrieved documents
* knowledge graph facts
* semantic metrics
* policies
* recent interactions
Example:
A sales agent asks:
> "Which customers are at risk this quarter?"
The context layer may combine:
```text
Knowledge Graph:
Customer relationships
Semantic Layer:
Risk Score KPI
User Context:
Regional Sales Manager
Policies:
Can only view APAC customers
Recent Activity:
Last 30 days interactions
```
The AI receives:
```text
The right information
for the right user
at the right moment
```
This layer answers:
> "What information is relevant for this decision right now?"
---
# Mental Model
A useful way to remember the hierarchy:
```text
Context Layer
↑
Semantic Layer
↑
Knowledge Graph
↑
Ontology
↑
Taxonomy
↑
Metadata
↑
Data
```
Or in terms of increasing meaning:
```text
Data
↓
Classification (Taxonomy)
↓
Meaning (Ontology)
↓
Facts & Relationships (Knowledge Graph)
↓
Business Interpretation (Semantic Layer)
↓
Decision Context (Context Layer)
```
# One-Sentence Definitions
* **Taxonomy** → Hierarchical classification of concepts.
* **Ontology** → Formal definition of concepts, relationships, and rules.
* **Knowledge Graph** → Real entities and relationships instantiated from an ontology.
* **Semantic Layer** → Business-friendly abstraction of data and metrics.
* **Context Layer** → Runtime assembly of relevant information for humans or AI agents.
For GenAI, RAG, and Agentic AI architectures, the most important distinction to internalize is:
> **Taxonomy classifies, Ontology defines meaning, Knowledge Graph stores connected facts, Semantic Layer defines business truth, and Context Layer determines what knowledge is relevant right now.**
That mental model will serve you well when studying enterprise AI, graph databases, agent systems, and knowledge engineering.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
What is OpenWebUI?
Open WebUI is an open-source, ChatGPT-style graphical user interface designed to interact with Large Language Models (LLMs). It acts as an extensible, "self-hosted AI operating system", giving you full control over your AI environment and privacy.
Open WebUI
+4
Key Features
Model Agnostic: Connects to any AI model, including locally hosted models via Ollama (allowing for 100% offline usage) or cloud-based APIs like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Groq.
Built-in RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation): You can upload documents, PDFs, or website URLs directly to a knowledge base. The AI will then read, index, and reference these files during your chat sessions.
Custom AI Agents: Build specialized chatbots (e.g., a "Meeting Summarizer" or "Code Reviewer") by assigning custom system prompts, knowledge bases, and tools to specific models.
Pipelines & Functions: Extensible via Python, allowing you to add custom logic, function calling, live translation, or usage monitoring.
Team Collaboration: Features Role-Based Access Controls (RBAC), allowing administrators to set up shared workspaces, monitor usage, and control who has access to which models.
Rich Media Support: Native rendering for math equations, Mermaid diagrams, and code snippets.
Open WebUI
+6
Why People Use It
It is frequently used by individuals, teams, and enterprises to centralize their AI workflows. It is particularly popular among users who want the powerful, intuitive interface of premium AI assistants (like ChatGPT Plus) but want to run models locally on their own hardware to avoid subscription fees and protect sensitive data.
Open WebUI
+4
You can deploy and host it yourself using Docker. To learn more or get started, visit the Open WebUI Documentation.