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

Why Enterprise AI Projects Get Stuck After Prototyping

Watch: Enterprise AI agents: the gap between prototype and production by UiPath Enterprises investing in AI projects face a stark reality: according to recent research, companies with less than $100 million in revenue are prototyping fewer than five AI initiatives, yet many of these early efforts fail to progress beyond the experimental phase. As mentioned in the Understanding the AI Project Lifecycle section, this gap between prototyping and production-ready systems is a common hurdle for enterprises. Successful AI adoption isn’t just about keeping up with trends-it’s a transformative force that can redefine revenue streams, streamline operations, and solve problems once deemed unsolvable. AI adoption rates are accelerating across sectors, with enterprises recognizing its role in maintaining competitive advantage. Forrester reports that 73% of businesses now prioritize AI as a core component of their digital strategy. The financial impact is equally compelling: one company in the logistics sector reduced delivery costs by 30% using predictive routing algorithms, while another in healthcare cut diagnostic errors by 40% through machine learning models. These wins aren’t isolated. Sectors like finance, retail, and manufacturing are seeing double-digit revenue growth from AI-driven personalization, demand forecasting, and quality control systems.
Thumbnail Image of Tutorial Why Enterprise AI Projects Get Stuck After Prototyping
NEW

Using ZeRO and FSDP to Scale LLM Training on Multiple GPUs

Watch: Multi GPU Fine tuning with DDP and FSDP by Trelis Research Scaling large language model (LLM) training is no longer optional-it’s a necessity. As models grow from hundreds of millions to hundreds of billions of parameters, the computational demands outpace the capabilities of single GPUs. For example, training a 70B-parameter model on a single GPU is impossible due to memory and compute limits. ZeRO (Zero Redundancy Optimizer) and FSDP (Fully Sharded Data Parallel) address this by distributing training across multiple GPUs, enabling teams to handle models that would otherwise be infeasible. As mentioned in the Introduction to ZeRO and FSDP section, these frameworks reduce memory overhead by sharding model components across devices, making large-scale training practical even with limited hardware. LLMs are expanding rapidly. Open-source models like LLaMA and Miqu have pushed parameter counts beyond 70B, while research suggests that model performance continues to improve with scale. However, larger models require exponentially more resources. A 70B model can consume over 1TB of memory during training-a single H100 GPU offers only 80GB. Without memory optimization , teams face two choices: shrink models to fit hardware or invest in expensive multi-GPU clusters. ZeRO and FSDP eliminate this trade-off by sharding model parameters, gradients, and optimizer states across GPUs. This reduces memory usage per device, allowing you to train massive models on standard hardware setups.
Thumbnail Image of Tutorial Using ZeRO and FSDP to Scale LLM Training on Multiple GPUs

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

Why Human Work Still Matters in an AI‑Driven Future

Watch: Demis Hassabis On The Future of Work in the Age of AI by WIRED Human work remains indispensable in an AI-driven future, not in spite of automation but because of it. Industry data reveals a nuanced reality: while AI adoption is accelerating, it’s not replacing humans wholesale. A 2023 Korn Ferry survey found that AI adoption is reshaping job roles rather than eliminating them entirely, with 60% of organizations prioritizing upskilling over layoffs. Simultaneously, AI-driven automation is projected to create 97 million new job roles by 2025, according to 2025 research, many of which will require collaboration between humans and AI systems. This shift isn’t just theoretical-businesses using human-AI partnerships report 15–30% productivity gains in sectors like healthcare and finance, where AI handles data analysis while humans focus on creative problem-solving and ethical judgment. AI excels at repetitive, data-heavy tasks, but it struggles with ambiguity. Consider a scenario where an AI system flags a customer complaint as low-priority. A human agent might recognize subtle cues-like sarcasm or urgency-that the AI misses, preventing reputational damage. This isn’t just oversight; it’s judgment-based collaboration . As mentioned in the Identifying Decision Points for Human Judgment section, workflows must embed human input where intuition and ethical reasoning matter most. For example, one company saved 50% on decision-making time by pairing AI-generated insights with human validation for high-stakes projects.
Thumbnail Image of Tutorial Why Human Work Still Matters in an AI‑Driven Future
    NEW

    Large Human Preference Dataset Improves Long-Form QA Metrics

    The LFQA-HP-1M dataset introduces a significant advancement in evaluating long-form question-answering (LFQA) systems by leveraging human preferences to refine automated metrics. Below is a structured breakdown of its impact, implementation considerations, and performance benchmarks. The LFQA-HP-1M dataset contains 1.1 million human-annotated responses across diverse domains like science, history, and technology. Each entry includes pairwise comparisons of generated answers, annotated for coherence, factual accuracy, and relevance. This contrasts sharply with older benchmarks like BLEU or ROUGE, which rely solely on n-gram overlaps and struggle with nuanced, multi-sentence evaluations, as discussed in the Evaluating and Comparing Long-Form QA Metrics section. For example, human-annotated metrics in LFQA-HP-1M capture 15–20% higher accuracy in identifying logically consistent explanations compared to automated baselines. Integrating LFQA-HP-1M into an existing QA pipeline typically requires 2–4 weeks for data preprocessing and model adaptation, depending on infrastructure. Training a model to align with human preferences-using reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) as described in the Integrating Preference Signals into LLM Training section, can take 4–8 weeks with distributed GPUs. Teams with prior experience in preference modeling may reduce this by 30% but must address challenges like reward hacking and overfitting to annotation biases.
    Thumbnail Image of Tutorial Large Human Preference Dataset Improves Long-Form QA Metrics
      NEW

      How to Apply RLHF to AI Models

      Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) trains AI models to align with human preferences by integrating feedback into the learning process. This section breaks down core techniques, implementation challenges, and real-world applications to help you apply RLHF effectively. RLHF involves multiple methods, each with distinct use cases and complexity levels. For example: Each technique balances trade-offs between accuracy, cost, and implementation complexity. For deeper insights into reward modeling, see the Training a Reward Model and Fine-Tuning with Reinforcement Learning section.
      Thumbnail Image of Tutorial How to Apply RLHF to AI Models