Medical errors in large language models revealed using 1,000 synthetic clinical transcripts - medRxiv
<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMidkFVX3lxTE5zZUpzMXQ4LV9sNTkxYUFMSXRNeW9GNllKNnNJLVNoWTJUN1BsMGdvR01wUE1PUjJjSHF4M0xJOHVqS0Vva2c4UGF2Ynp0ZGJPZklZb0g1SzRXN19YMV9nbl80emR2a3paLVR1SERnaTNvcHhOaFE?oc=5" target="_blank">Medical errors in large language models revealed using 1,000 synthetic clinical transcripts</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">medRxiv</font>
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In the world of software development, we obsess over latency, vertical scaling, and the elimination of technical debt. We build CI/CD pipelines to ensure that code moves from a developer’s IDE to a production server with zero friction. But what happens when the "production environment" isn't a cloud server, but a physical manufacturing floor? The global textile industry is currently undergoing its most significant "version update" in a century. For decades, the industry operated on a fragmented, "monolithic" architecture—slow, prone to bugs (defects), and incredibly difficult to scale ethically. Today, a new breed of FashionTech is emerging, treating the supply chain as a programmable stack. This article explores the technical transition from fragmented outsourcing to Vertical Integration
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Agentic Engineering Journey — Brain Dump
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Beware Even Small Amounts of Woo
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