Thursday, April 16, 2026

AI Ecosystem 2026

Category Subcategory Tool / Framework Type Description Typical Use Cases
Cloud AI Platforms Full-stack AI Platform Azure AI Foundry Managed Platform End-to-end AI development (models, agents, deployment) Enterprise AI apps, copilots
Cloud AI Platforms Foundation Model Platform Amazon Bedrock Managed API Platform Access to multiple foundation models via API GenAI apps, chatbots
Cloud AI Platforms Agent SDK Platform Google Agent Development Kit SDK / Platform Tools to build agentic apps in Google ecosystem Multi-agent applications
Cloud AI Platforms LLM Agent SDK OpenAI Agents SDK SDK Build agent workflows using OpenAI models Assistants, automation
Orchestration Frameworks LLM App Framework LangChain Framework Chains, tools, and memory for LLM apps Chatbots, RAG systems
Orchestration Frameworks Graph-based Orchestration LangGraph Framework Stateful graph-based workflows Complex agent systems
Orchestration Frameworks Multi-agent Framework CrewAI Framework Role-based agent collaboration Task automation
Orchestration Frameworks Multi-agent Framework AutoGen Framework Conversational multi-agent workflows Autonomous systems
Orchestration Frameworks Agent Framework Microsoft Agent Framework Framework Enterprise-grade agent tooling Copilots, enterprise AI
Agent + RAG Frameworks RAG Framework Haystack Framework Search + retrieval pipelines QA systems
Agent + RAG Frameworks Agent Framework Semantic Kernel SDK / Framework Planning, memory, tool integration AI copilots
Model Runtime Local LLM Runtime Ollama Runtime Run LLMs locally Offline AI, testing
Low-Code / No-Code Visual Builder Flowise Low-code Tool Drag-and-drop LangChain UI Prototyping
Low-Code / No-Code AI App Platform Dify Platform Build & deploy AI apps visually Internal tools
Low-Code / No-Code Workflow Automation n8n Automation Tool Connect APIs & workflows Business automation
Data Layer Data Modeling Pydantic Library Data validation using Python types Structured outputs

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Architectural Patterns of Agentic AI systems


The landscape of AI agents has shifted from simple "one-shot" prompting to complex agentic workflows. These architectures determine how an LLM thinks, uses tools, and corrects its own mistakes.

Here is a breakdown of the most prominent agentic architectures and the frameworks that power them.


1. ReAct (Reason + Act)

The Concept: ReAct is the "grandfather" of agentic design. It forces the LLM to generate a Thought (reasoning step) before performing an Action (calling a tool), and then process an Observation (result from the tool). This loop continues until the task is solved.

  • Architecture: Linear loop (Thought → Action → Observation).

  • Example Tool: LangChain (specifically the AgentExecutor).

  • Best For: Simple, multi-step tasks where the next step depends entirely on the outcome of the current one.


2. Graph-Based Architecture

The Concept: Instead of a linear loop, graph architectures represent the agent’s logic as a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) or a cyclic graph. Each node is a function or an LLM call, and the edges define the flow based on conditional logic.

  • Architecture: State Machines (Nodes and Edges).

  • Example Tool: LangGraph.

  • Best For: Complex, "human-in-the-loop" workflows where you need fine-grained control, cycles (looping back to fix errors), and state management.


3. ReWOO (Reasoning Without Observation)

The Concept: Traditional ReAct agents can be slow because they wait for tool outputs before planning the next step. ReWOO decouples the reasoning from the execution. It looks at a prompt and creates a full plan of execution (with placeholders) all at once, then runs the tools in parallel.

  • Architecture: Planner → Worker → Solver.

  • Example Tool: LangGraph (can be used to implement ReWOO patterns) or CrewAI.

  • Best For: Reducing latency and token costs when tool calls are independent of each other.


4. Multi-Agent Systems (Role-Playing)

The Concept: Instead of one "super agent," you break the task down into specialized agents (e.g., a "Researcher," a "Writer," and a "Manager"). These agents communicate with each other to complete a goal.

  • Architecture: Hierarchical or Sequential collaboration.

  • Example Tool: Autogen (Microsoft) or CrewAI.

  • Best For: Large-scale projects like software development or comprehensive market research where different "personas" add value.


5. Plan-and-Execute

The Concept: Similar to ReWOO but more iterative. The agent first creates a long-term plan, executes the first few steps, and then re-plans based on the results. It is less rigid than ReWOO but more structured than ReAct.

  • Architecture: Planner → Executor → Re-planner.

  • Example Tool: BabyAGI or AutoGPT.

  • Best For: Open-ended goals where the path to the solution is highly uncertain.


Summary Comparison Table

ArchitecturePrimary LogicSpeedComplexityBest Framework
ReActIterative loopSlowLowLangChain
GraphState MachineVariableHighLangGraph
ReWOOPre-planned stepsFastMediumLangGraph / CrewAI
Multi-AgentCollaborationSlowHighAutogen / CrewAI





We are currently in a "Great Migration" period for agentic frameworks. As of 2026, the industry has largely moved away from "black-box" executors toward explicit, graph-based control.

Here is the re-confirmed, updated breakdown of these architectures based on the latest 2026 standards.


1. The Migration: LangChain → LangGraph

You are correct: LangChain has officially deprecated AgentExecutor (the legacy ReAct implementation). The community has shifted to LangGraph because the old ReAct loop was too hard to debug and impossible to "steer" mid-process.

Key Note: While "ReAct" still exists as a reasoning strategy, it is no longer the architecture in LangChain. It is now just one specific way to configure a Graph.


2. Updated Architectures (2026 Standards)

A. Graph Architecture (State Machines)

Instead of a hidden loop, every step is a Node and every transition is an Edge.

  • Current Standard: LangGraph.

  • The Change: LangChain 0.x used AgentExecutor (a pre-built loop). LangGraph 1.0+ requires you to define a StateGraph. You explicitly draw where the agent goes if a tool fails or if a human needs to approve a step.

  • Example: A customer support bot that cycles between "Search Documentation" and "Ask User for Clarification" until a confidence score is met.

B. Event-Driven & Conversational (The New AutoGen)

While graphs are rigid, Microsoft's AutoGen (v0.4+) has moved toward an Event-Driven Architecture.

  • Current Standard: AutoGen.

  • Mechanism: Agents act like microservices. They publish "events" (e.g., TaskCompletedEvent), and other agents subscribe to them.

  • Best For: Massive systems (thousands of agents) where a static graph would become a "spaghetti" mess of lines.

C. Role-Based Hierarchical (The CrewAI Way)

CrewAI has doubled down on the Manager-Worker architecture.

  • Current Standard: CrewAI.

  • Mechanism: It uses a "Process" (Sequential or Hierarchical). You define a Manager agent that acts as the orchestrator, delegating tasks to specific Roles.

  • Best For: Business processes where you need a clear "boss" agent to review work before finishing.

D. ReWOO (Reasoning Without Observation)

This remains the gold standard for low-latency and cost-saving.

  • Current Standard: Implemented as a specific template within LangGraph.

  • Mechanism: It breaks the task into a Planner, Worker, and Solver. The Planner creates a "blueprint" with placeholders (e.g., "Find the price of $X$ and $Y$"). Tools run in parallel, and the Solver fills in the blanks.

  • Status: It is now considered a "Design Pattern" rather than a standalone tool.


Quick Reference: What to use in 2026?

If you want...Use this ArchitectureLatest Tooling
Total Control / DebuggingGraph-BasedLangGraph
Autonomous CollaborationEvent-DrivenAutoGen 0.4+
Business WorkflowsRole-Based / HierarchicalCrewAI
Speed & Low CostReWOO (Planning)LangGraph Templates

Sunday, April 12, 2026

List Of Models

Sr. No. Model Family (Learning Type) Model Type Model Name Popular Implementations / Models Use Cases
1Supervised LearningRegression / Linear ModelsLinear RegressionScikit-learn LinearRegressionHouse price prediction, forecasting
2Supervised LearningRegression / Linear ModelsLogistic RegressionScikit-learn LogisticRegressionSpam detection, credit scoring
3Supervised LearningTree-Based ModelsDecision TreeCART (Classification & Regression Trees)Loan approval, diagnosis
4Supervised LearningEnsemble (Bagging)Random ForestRandomForest (Scikit-learn)Fraud detection, risk modeling
5Supervised LearningEnsemble (Boosting)Gradient BoostingXGBoost, LightGBM, CatBoostRanking, fraud detection
6Supervised LearningDistance-Basedk-NNScikit-learn KNNRecommendation, similarity search
7Supervised LearningProbabilisticNaive BayesGaussianNB, MultinomialNBSpam filtering, NLP
8Supervised LearningMargin-BasedSVMLIBSVM, Scikit-learn SVMText classification, bioinformatics
9Supervised LearningNeural NetworksANNTensorFlow / PyTorch basic NNPrediction, pattern recognition
10Supervised LearningDeep LearningCNNResNet, VGG, EfficientNetImage recognition, medical imaging
11Supervised LearningDeep LearningRNN / LSTMSeq2Seq, LSTM (Keras/PyTorch)Speech, time-series
12Supervised LearningDeep LearningTransformersGPT, BERT, T5, LLaMAChatbots, search, translation
13Unsupervised LearningClusteringK-MeansScikit-learn KMeansCustomer segmentation
14Unsupervised LearningClusteringDBSCANScikit-learn DBSCANAnomaly detection
15Unsupervised LearningClusteringHierarchicalSciPy Hierarchical ClusteringTaxonomy, grouping
16Unsupervised LearningProbabilisticGMMScikit-learn GaussianMixtureSoft clustering
17Unsupervised LearningDimensionality ReductionPCAScikit-learn PCAVisualization, compression
18Unsupervised LearningDimensionality Reductiont-SNEsklearn / openTSNEEmbedding visualization
19Unsupervised LearningNeural NetworksAutoencodersTensorFlow / PyTorch AEAnomaly detection
20Unsupervised LearningAssociation RulesApriorimlxtend AprioriMarket basket analysis
21Semi-SupervisedHybridSelf-TrainingPseudo-labeling pipelinesMedical imaging
22Semi-SupervisedGraph-BasedLabel Propagationsklearn LabelPropagationSocial networks
23Semi-SupervisedNeural NetworksSemi-Supervised NNFixMatch, MixMatchNLP, speech
24Reinforcement LearningValue-BasedQ-LearningOpenAI Gym implementationsRobotics, games
25Reinforcement LearningDeep RLDQNDeepMind DQNGaming, control systems
26Reinforcement LearningPolicy-BasedPolicy GradientREINFORCERobotics
27Reinforcement LearningActor-CriticPPO / A2CStable-Baselines3Trading, optimization
28Optimization / EvolutionaryEvolutionaryGenetic AlgorithmsDEAP libraryScheduling, optimization
29Optimization / EvolutionarySwarmParticle Swarm OptimizationPySwarmsHyperparameter tuning
30Optimization / EvolutionarySwarmAnt Colony OptimizationACO algorithmsRouting, logistics
31Rule-Based / SymbolicExpert SystemsRule-Based SystemsDroolsBusiness rules
32Rule-Based / SymbolicKnowledge-BasedKnowledge GraphsNeo4j, RDF GraphsSearch, recommendations
33Ensemble LearningBaggingBaggingScikit-learn BaggingVariance reduction
34Ensemble LearningBoostingAdaBoostAdaBoost (sklearn)Classification improvement
35Ensemble LearningStackingStackingStackingClassifierHigh accuracy systems
36AI Systems (Hybrid)RAGRetrieval-Augmented GenerationLangChain, LlamaIndex + GPTEnterprise chatbots, QA
37AI Systems (Hybrid)Agentic PipelinesAI AgentsAutoGPT, CrewAI, LangGraphTask automation, research agents

Monday, February 9, 2026

rls

To enable row-level security (RLS) in MS SQL Server (2016 and later), you need to define a security policy that uses a user-defined, inline table-valued function as a filter predicate.

Step-by-Step Guide

1. Ensure compatibility

Verify that your SQL Server instance is at least SQL Server 2016 or newer.

2. Create a schema for RLS objects (Recommended)

This practice separates your security logic from the application data.

CREATE SCHEMA Security;
GO

3. Create a predicate function

This inline table-valued function contains the logic for determining which rows a user can access. The function must be created with SCHEMABINDING.

Example: This function allows a user to see rows where the UserID column matches their username, or if they are a Manager.

CREATE FUNCTION Security.fn_securitypredicate(@UserID AS sysname)
    RETURNS TABLE
    WITH SCHEMABINDING
AS
    RETURN SELECT 1 AS result
    WHERE @UserID = USER_NAME() OR USER_NAME() = 'Manager';
GO

4. Create and enable a security policy

The security policy links the predicate function to your target table and enables the RLS enforcement.

Example: This policy applies the function to the dbo.YourTable table, using the UserID column for the filter.

CREATE SECURITY POLICY SecurityPolicy
ADD FILTER PREDICATE Security.fn_securitypredicate(UserID) ON dbo.YourTable
WITH (STATE = ON);
GO

5. Grant necessary permissions

Ensure users have SELECT permission on both the target table and the security function.

GRANT SELECT ON dbo.YourTable TO SalesRep1;
GRANT SELECT ON Security.fn_securitypredicate TO SalesRep1;
-- Repeat for other users/roles as needed


Testing the Implementation
You can test RLS by impersonating different users to verify they only see authorized data.
sql
EXECUTE AS USER = 'SalesRep1';
SELECT * FROM dbo.YourTable; -- This will only show rows matching SalesRep1's UserID

REVERT; -- Stop impersonating
EXECUTE AS USER = 'Manager';
SELECT * FROM dbo.YourTable; -- This will show all rows
REVERT

AI Ecosystem 2026

Category Subcategory Tool / Framework Type Description Typical Use Cases ...