Kubernetes and AI have become unlikely bedfellows—and the numbers prove it. New data from CNCF and SlashData reveals that two-thirds of organizations running generative AI models have standardized on Kubernetes for orchestration. But here's the thing: it's not because Kubernetes magically solves AI problems. It's because the engineering fundamentals that make Kubernetes valuable—standardization, r
llms.txt is a small text file on a documentation site—usually lists what the product is and links to the important Markdown pages. For coding agents, treat it as the canonical URL to open first when upstream behavior is unclear. This post is mostly setup and workflow, not theory. Location Put this there Official doc server https://example.com/llms.txt (maintained by the library/vendor) Y
You just finished a statistics assignment. The code works. The results are correct. Then you read the submission requirements and see it: "all functions must be properly documented." You have twenty functions. No docstrings. Twenty minutes left. That's the problem this tutorial solves. A Python script that takes any function, sends it to Claude, and gets back a complete docstring — parameters, ret
This post was created with AI assistance and reviewed for accuracy before publishing. Cursor can use project rules and documentation to steer behavior. Exact file names and mechanisms evolve; check Cursor documentation for the current layout (for example rules in .cursor or legacy .cursorrules patterns). Short, enforceable bullets beat long essays: stack versions, test commands, “no new dependenci
How Cloudflare Built Resilience: Lessons from Their Infrastructure Overhaul When a single misconfiguration can cascade across a global CDN and take down customer traffic, every deployment becomes a high-stakes decision. Cloudflare recently completed a massive push to make their infrastructure fundamentally more resilient—and their approach offers critical lessons for anyone operating at scale. M
Introduction In Part 1, we successfully moved the resume from a local editor to a live URL. But an empty repository is like a house without a front door, functional, yet inaccessible to those looking in. In this second installment, we’re going back into the terminal to master the art of the README. I’ll show you how to turn a folder of code into a polished, technical portfolio that speaks for it