Latest Tutorials

Learn about the latest technologies from fellow newline community members!

  • React
  • Angular
  • Vue
  • Svelte
  • NextJS
  • Redux
  • Apollo
  • Storybook
  • D3
  • Testing Library
  • JavaScript
  • TypeScript
  • Node.js
  • Deno
  • Rust
  • Python
  • GraphQL
  • React
  • Angular
  • Vue
  • Svelte
  • NextJS
  • Redux
  • Apollo
  • Storybook
  • D3
  • Testing Library
  • JavaScript
  • TypeScript
  • Node.js
  • Deno
  • Rust
  • Python
  • GraphQL
NEW

Speeding Up LLM Function Calls with Parallel Decoding

Watch: Faster LLMs: Accelerate Inference with Speculative Decoding by IBM Technology Modern applications relying on large language models (LLMs) face a critical bottleneck: the sequential nature of traditional decoding methods. Most LLMs generate text one token at a time, creating a dependency chain that limits speed. For example, if a model takes 10 milliseconds to process each token and a response requires 100 tokens, the total time becomes 1 second-even if hardware could theoretically handle faster computations. This delay compounds in real-world scenarios where users expect near-instant responses. As LLMs grow larger and handle more complex tasks, the demand for efficient inference solutions like parallel decoding becomes urgent. Slow LLM function calls directly impact user experience and system scalability. Consider a customer support chatbot handling 1,000 concurrent requests. If each response takes 2 seconds due to sequential processing, the total time to resolve all queries balloons to over 30 minutes -a scenario no business can afford. Beyond user frustration, this latency increases infrastructure costs. Companies often deploy multiple servers to compensate, driving up expenses without addressing the root issue. Parallel decoding breaks this cycle by enabling models to generate multiple tokens simultaneously, reducing both latency (time per request) and throughput bottlenecks (requests per second), as detailed in the Achieving Speedup with Parallel Decoding section.
Thumbnail Image of Tutorial Speeding Up LLM Function Calls with Parallel Decoding
NEW

TATRA: Prompt Engineering Without Training Data

Prompt engineering shapes how AI systems interpret and respond to inputs, making it a cornerstone of effective AI deployment. As industries increasingly adopt AI-from customer service to healthcare-the ability to fine-tune model behavior without extensive retraining becomes critical. Traditional methods often require labeled datasets or time-consuming manual adjustments, creating bottlenecks. Prompt engineering offers a solution, enabling teams to achieve precise results faster and with fewer resources. Consider a scenario where a customer support team uses AI to resolve user queries. Without optimized prompts, the model might misinterpret requests, leading to generic or incorrect responses. However, with strategic prompt design, the same system can deliver accurate, context-aware answers. For example, a dataset-free approach like TATRA, as introduced in the Introduction to TATRA section, allows teams to adapt models to specific tasks without requiring task-specific training data. This eliminates the need for expensive data annotation and accelerates deployment. A key advantage of prompt engineering is its ability to bridge the gap between model capabilities and practical use cases. Manual prompting often involves trial and error, while automated techniques streamline this process. Studies show that businesses using advanced prompt engineering reduce development time by up to 40% compared to traditional training methods. One company improved response accuracy by 35% after refining prompts to include task-specific instructions, demonstrating how small adjustments yield measurable results.
Thumbnail Image of Tutorial TATRA: Prompt Engineering Without Training Data

I got a job offer, thanks in a big part to your teaching. They sent a test as part of the interview process, and this was a huge help to implement my own Node server.

This has been a really good investment!

Advance your career with newline Pro.

Only $40 per month for unlimited access to over 60+ books, guides and courses!

Learn More
NEW

Testing How Stable LLMs Are When Evaluating Moral Dilemmas

Evaluating the stability of large language models (LLMs) in moral dilemmas isn’t just a technical exercise-it’s a critical step in ensuring these systems align with human values. As LLMs increasingly power tools in healthcare, law enforcement, and policy-making, their ability to deliver consistent , fair , and transparent decisions shapes real-world outcomes. For example, a model that shifts its stance on ethical questions under slight input variations could lead to biased legal sentencing recommendations or unequal healthcare resource allocation. Stability evaluations act as a safeguard, identifying weaknesses before these systems are deployed at scale. As mentioned in the Designing a Comprehensive Testing Framework section, these evaluations require structured approaches to ensure robustness. LLMs are now embedded in applications where moral reasoning directly impacts people’s lives. In healthcare, models assist in triage decisions during emergencies, while in law enforcement, they analyze body-camera footage for misconduct. A 2025 study found that over 60% of organizations using LLMs in high-stakes roles reported encountering ethical dilemmas they couldn’t resolve with existing tools. Building on concepts from the Evaluating LLM Performance with Chain-of-Thought Prompting section, unstable models often fail to maintain coherent reasoning when faced with complex scenarios. Without rigorous stability testing, these models risk amplifying human biases or creating new ones. For instance, a model trained on culturally skewed data might prioritize certain lives over others in a disaster response scenario, leading to systemic inequity. Unstable LLMs produce inconsistent outputs when faced with similar dilemmas, undermining trust in their decisions. Research from 2025 highlights how models with low stability scores often flip between utilitarian and deontological reasoning depending on phrasing. Consider a healthcare AI recommending treatment A for a patient one day and treatment B the next, based on minor rewording of symptoms. This inconsistency not only confuses end-users but also exposes organizations to legal and reputational risks. In law enforcement, such instability could result in unfair risk assessments for suspects, eroding public trust in AI-driven justice systems.
Thumbnail Image of Tutorial Testing How Stable LLMs Are When Evaluating Moral Dilemmas
NEW

The Role of Decentralized Networks in AI Inference

Decentralized networks are reshaping how AI inference operates, offering solutions to critical challenges in cost, privacy, and scalability. As AI models grow larger and more complex, the demand for efficient inference-where models generate predictions-has surged. Centralized systems struggle to keep up, with costs rising sharply: inference now accounts for over 70% of total AI operational expenses in many industries. Decentralized networks address this by distributing computational workloads across global networks of nodes, reducing reliance on single providers and slashing costs, a concept first introduced in the Introduction to Decentralized Networks section. The financial burden of AI inference is a major barrier for startups and mid-sized companies. Traditional cloud providers charge per API call or GPU-hour, creating unpredictable expenses. Decentralized networks bypass this by using underutilized hardware from a global node network. For example, a decentralized compute marketplace enables users to bid for spare computing capacity, reducing inference costs by up to 40% compared to centralized alternatives. This model also scales dynamically-during peak demand, more nodes join the network automatically, ensuring consistent performance without manual intervention. Privacy-preserving decentralized networks further cut costs by eliminating intermediaries. Instead of sending sensitive data to a central server, users process data locally on distributed nodes. This not only reduces transmission costs but also avoids compliance risks associated with data concentration. A privacy-focused network demonstrated this by letting researchers train models on encrypted datasets without exposing raw data, lowering both financial and legal overhead, as detailed in the Decentralized Machine Learning Protocols section.
Thumbnail Image of Tutorial The Role of Decentralized Networks in AI Inference
NEW

The Future of Decentralized AI Infrastructure

Decentralized AI infrastructure is reshaping how individuals and organizations interact with artificial intelligence. By distributing computational workloads across a network rather than relying on centralized cloud providers, this approach addresses critical pain points like data privacy, scalability, and infrastructure costs. For example, AI researchers and developers currently spend 70–80% of their time managing infrastructure instead of focusing on innovation. As discussed in the Benefits of Decentralized AI Infrastructure section, decentralized systems reduce this burden by automating resource allocation and enabling on-demand access to distributed computing power. A key advantage of decentralized AI infrastructure is data sovereignty . Unlike traditional cloud models, where data is stored and processed by third-party providers, decentralized systems let users maintain control over their information. This is critical for industries handling sensitive data, such as healthcare or finance, where regulatory compliance is non-negotiable. As mentioned in the Introduction to Decentralized AI Infrastructure section, confidential computing techniques in decentralized frameworks ensure that AI models operate on encrypted data without exposing raw inputs, a feature already improving privacy in projects like Atoma’s infrastructure. The infrastructure burden is equally transformative. Centralized systems require costly, rigid setups that scale poorly during demand spikes. Decentralized networks dynamically allocate resources from geographically dispersed nodes, slashing costs by up to 40% in some use cases. As highlighted in the Real-World Applications of Decentralized AI Infrastructure section, this flexibility allows businesses to avoid overprovisioning while maintaining performance during peak workloads.
Thumbnail Image of Tutorial The Future of Decentralized AI Infrastructure