2026-03-15 18:00:22
:::info Astounding Stories of Super-Science July, 2008, by Astounding Stories is part of HackerNoon’s Book Blog Post series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here. The Call of the Wild - The Law of Club and Fang
\ By Jack London
:::
\ Buck’s first day on the Dyea beach was like a nightmare. Every hour was filled with shock and surprise. He had been suddenly jerked from the heart of civilization and flung into the heart of things primordial. No lazy, sun-kissed life was this, with nothing to do but loaf and be bored. Here was neither peace, nor rest, nor a moment’s safety. All was confusion and action, and every moment life and limb were in peril. There was imperative need to be constantly alert; for these dogs and men were not town dogs and men. They were savages, all of them, who knew no law but the law of club and fang.
He had never seen dogs fight as these wolfish creatures fought, and his first experience taught him an unforgetable lesson. It is true, it was a vicarious experience, else he would not have lived to profit by it. Curly was the victim. They were camped near the log store, where she, in her friendly way, made advances to a husky dog the size of a full-grown wolf, though not half so large as she. There was no warning, only a leap in like a flash, a metallic clip of teeth, a leap out equally swift, and Curly’s face was ripped open from eye to jaw.
It was the wolf manner of fighting, to strike and leap away; but there was more to it than this. Thirty or forty huskies ran to the spot and surrounded the combatants in an intent and silent circle. Buck did not comprehend that silent intentness, nor the eager way with which they were licking their chops. Curly rushed her antagonist, who struck again and leaped aside. He met her next rush with his chest, in a peculiar fashion that tumbled her off her feet. She never regained them. This was what the onlooking huskies had waited for. They closed in upon her, snarling and yelping, and she was buried, screaming with agony, beneath the bristling mass of bodies.
So sudden was it, and so unexpected, that Buck was taken aback. He saw Spitz run out his scarlet tongue in a way he had of laughing; and he saw François, swinging an axe, spring into the mess of dogs. Three men with clubs were helping him to scatter them. It did not take long. Two minutes from the time Curly went down, the last of her assailants were clubbed off. But she lay there limp and lifeless in the bloody, trampled snow, almost literally torn to pieces, the swart half-breed standing over her and cursing horribly. The scene often came back to Buck to trouble him in his sleep. So that was the way. No fair play. Once down, that was the end of you. Well, he would see to it that he never went down. Spitz ran out his tongue and laughed again, and from that moment Buck hated him with a bitter and deathless hatred.
Before he had recovered from the shock caused by the tragic passing of Curly, he received another shock. François fastened upon him an arrangement of straps and buckles. It was a harness, such as he had seen the grooms put on the horses at home. And as he had seen horses work, so he was set to work, hauling François on a sled to the forest that fringed the valley, and returning with a load of firewood. Though his dignity was sorely hurt by thus being made a draught animal, he was too wise to rebel. He buckled down with a will and did his best, though it was all new and strange. François was stern, demanding instant obedience, and by virtue of his whip receiving instant obedience; while Dave, who was an experienced wheeler, nipped Buck’s hind quarters whenever he was in error. Spitz was the leader, likewise experienced, and while he could not always get at Buck, he growled sharp reproof now and again, or cunningly threw his weight in the traces to jerk Buck into the way he should go. Buck learned easily, and under the combined tuition of his two mates and François made remarkable progress. Ere they returned to camp he knew enough to stop at “ho,” to go ahead at “mush,” to swing wide on the bends, and to keep clear of the wheeler when the loaded sled shot downhill at their heels.
“T’ree vair’ good dogs,” François told Perrault. “Dat Buck, heem pool lak hell. I tich heem queek as anyt’ing.”
By afternoon, Perrault, who was in a hurry to be on the trail with his despatches, returned with two more dogs. “Billee” and “Joe” he called them, two brothers, and true huskies both. Sons of the one mother though they were, they were as different as day and night. Billee’s one fault was his excessive good nature, while Joe was the very opposite, sour and introspective, with a perpetual snarl and a malignant eye. Buck received them in comradely fashion, Dave ignored them, while Spitz proceeded to thrash first one and then the other. Billee wagged his tail appeasingly, turned to run when he saw that appeasement was of no avail, and cried (still appeasingly) when Spitz’s sharp teeth scored his flank. But no matter how Spitz circled, Joe whirled around on his heels to face him, mane bristling, ears laid back, lips writhing and snarling, jaws clipping together as fast as he could snap, and eyes diabolically gleaming—the incarnation of belligerent fear. So terrible was his appearance that Spitz was forced to forego disciplining him; but to cover his own discomfiture he turned upon the inoffensive and wailing Billee and drove him to the confines of the camp.
By evening Perrault secured another dog, an old husky, long and lean and gaunt, with a battle-scarred face and a single eye which flashed a warning of prowess that commanded respect. He was called Sol-leks, which means the Angry One. Like Dave, he asked nothing, gave nothing, expected nothing; and when he marched slowly and deliberately into their midst, even Spitz left him alone. He had one peculiarity which Buck was unlucky enough to discover. He did not like to be approached on his blind side. Of this offence Buck was unwittingly guilty, and the first knowledge he had of his indiscretion was when Sol-leks whirled upon him and slashed his shoulder to the bone for three inches up and down. Forever after Buck avoided his blind side, and to the last of their comradeship had no more trouble. His only apparent ambition, like Dave’s, was to be left alone; though, as Buck was afterward to learn, each of them possessed one other and even more vital ambition.
That night Buck faced the great problem of sleeping. The tent, illumined by a candle, glowed warmly in the midst of the white plain; and when he, as a matter of course, entered it, both Perrault and François bombarded him with curses and cooking utensils, till he recovered from his consternation and fled ignominiously into the outer cold. A chill wind was blowing that nipped him sharply and bit with especial venom into his wounded shoulder. He lay down on the snow and attempted to sleep, but the frost soon drove him shivering to his feet. Miserable and disconsolate, he wandered about among the many tents, only to find that one place was as cold as another. Here and there savage dogs rushed upon him, but he bristled his neck-hair and snarled (for he was learning fast), and they let him go his way unmolested.
Finally an idea came to him. He would return and see how his own team-mates were making out. To his astonishment, they had disappeared. Again he wandered about through the great camp, looking for them, and again he returned. Were they in the tent? No, that could not be, else he would not have been driven out. Then where could they possibly be? With drooping tail and shivering body, very forlorn indeed, he aimlessly circled the tent. Suddenly the snow gave way beneath his fore legs and he sank down. Something wriggled under his feet. He sprang back, bristling and snarling, fearful of the unseen and unknown. But a friendly little yelp reassured him, and he went back to investigate. A whiff of warm air ascended to his nostrils, and there, curled up under the snow in a snug ball, lay Billee. He whined placatingly, squirmed and wriggled to show his good will and intentions, and even ventured, as a bribe for peace, to lick Buck’s face with his warm wet tongue.
Another lesson. So that was the way they did it, eh? Buck confidently selected a spot, and with much fuss and waste effort proceeded to dig a hole for himself. In a trice the heat from his body filled the confined space and he was asleep. The day had been long and arduous, and he slept soundly and comfortably, though he growled and barked and wrestled with bad dreams.
Nor did he open his eyes till roused by the noises of the waking camp. At first he did not know where he was. It had snowed during the night and he was completely buried. The snow walls pressed him on every side, and a great surge of fear swept through him—the fear of the wild thing for the trap. It was a token that he was harking back through his own life to the lives of his forebears; for he was a civilized dog, an unduly civilized dog, and of his own experience knew no trap and so could not of himself fear it. The muscles of his whole body contracted spasmodically and instinctively, the hair on his neck and shoulders stood on end, and with a ferocious snarl he bounded straight up into the blinding day, the snow flying about him in a flashing cloud. Ere he landed on his feet, he saw the white camp spread out before him and knew where he was and remembered all that had passed from the time he went for a stroll with Manuel to the hole he had dug for himself the night before.
A shout from François hailed his appearance. “Wot I say?” the dog-driver cried to Perrault. “Dat Buck for sure learn queek as anyt’ing.”
Perrault nodded gravely. As courier for the Canadian Government, bearing important despatches, he was anxious to secure the best dogs, and he was particularly gladdened by the possession of Buck.
Three more huskies were added to the team inside an hour, making a total of nine, and before another quarter of an hour had passed they were in harness and swinging up the trail toward the Dyea Cañon. Buck was glad to be gone, and though the work was hard he found he did not particularly despise it. He was surprised at the eagerness which animated the whole team and which was communicated to him; but still more surprising was the change wrought in Dave and Sol-leks. They were new dogs, utterly transformed by the harness. All passiveness and unconcern had dropped from them. They were alert and active, anxious that the work should go well, and fiercely irritable with whatever, by delay or confusion, retarded that work. The toil of the traces seemed the supreme expression of their being, and all that they lived for and the only thing in which they took delight.
Dave was wheeler or sled dog, pulling in front of him was Buck, then came Sol-leks; the rest of the team was strung out ahead, single file, to the leader, which position was filled by Spitz.
Buck had been purposely placed between Dave and Sol-leks so that he might receive instruction. Apt scholar that he was, they were equally apt teachers, never allowing him to linger long in error, and enforcing their teaching with their sharp teeth. Dave was fair and very wise. He never nipped Buck without cause, and he never failed to nip him when he stood in need of it. As François’s whip backed him up, Buck found it to be cheaper to mend his ways than to retaliate. Once, during a brief halt, when he got tangled in the traces and delayed the start, both Dave and Sol-leks flew at him and administered a sound trouncing. The resulting tangle was even worse, but Buck took good care to keep the traces clear thereafter; and ere the day was done, so well had he mastered his work, his mates about ceased nagging him. François’s whip snapped less frequently, and Perrault even honored Buck by lifting up his feet and carefully examining them.
It was a hard day’s run, up the Cañon, through Sheep Camp, past the Scales and the timber line, across glaciers and snowdrifts hundreds of feet deep, and over the great Chilcoot Divide, which stands between the salt water and the fresh and guards forbiddingly the sad and lonely North. They made good time down the chain of lakes which fills the craters of extinct volcanoes, and late that night pulled into the huge camp at the head of Lake Bennett, where thousands of goldseekers were building boats against the break-up of the ice in the spring. Buck made his hole in the snow and slept the sleep of the exhausted just, but all too early was routed out in the cold darkness and harnessed with his mates to the sled.
That day they made forty miles, the trail being packed; but the next day, and for many days to follow, they broke their own trail, worked harder, and made poorer time. As a rule, Perrault travelled ahead of the team, packing the snow with webbed shoes to make it easier for them. François, guiding the sled at the gee-pole, sometimes exchanged places with him, but not often. Perrault was in a hurry, and he prided himself on his knowledge of ice, which knowledge was indispensable, for the fall ice was very thin, and where there was swift water, there was no ice at all.
Day after day, for days unending, Buck toiled in the traces. Always, they broke camp in the dark, and the first gray of dawn found them hitting the trail with fresh miles reeled off behind them. And always they pitched camp after dark, eating their bit of fish, and crawling to sleep into the snow. Buck was ravenous. The pound and a half of sun-dried salmon, which was his ration for each day, seemed to go nowhere. He never had enough, and suffered from perpetual hunger pangs. Yet the other dogs, because they weighed less and were born to the life, received a pound only of the fish and managed to keep in good condition.
He swiftly lost the fastidiousness which had characterized his old life. A dainty eater, he found that his mates, finishing first, robbed him of his unfinished ration. There was no defending it. While he was fighting off two or three, it was disappearing down the throats of the others. To remedy this, he ate as fast as they; and, so greatly did hunger compel him, he was not above taking what did not belong to him. He watched and learned. When he saw Pike, one of the new dogs, a clever malingerer and thief, slyly steal a slice of bacon when Perrault’s back was turned, he duplicated the performance the following day, getting away with the whole chunk. A great uproar was raised, but he was unsuspected; while Dub, an awkward blunderer who was always getting caught, was punished for Buck’s misdeed.
This first theft marked Buck as fit to survive in the hostile Northland environment. It marked his adaptability, his capacity to adjust himself to changing conditions, the lack of which would have meant swift and terrible death. It marked, further, the decay or going to pieces of his moral nature, a vain thing and a handicap in the ruthless struggle for existence. It was all well enough in the Southland, under the law of love and fellowship, to respect private property and personal feelings; but in the Northland, under the law of club and fang, whoso took such things into account was a fool, and in so far as he observed them he would fail to prosper.
Not that Buck reasoned it out. He was fit, that was all, and unconsciously he accommodated himself to the new mode of life. All his days, no matter what the odds, he had never run from a fight. But the club of the man in the red sweater had beaten into him a more fundamental and primitive code. Civilized, he could have died for a moral consideration, say the defence of Judge Miller’s riding-whip; but the completeness of his decivilization was now evidenced by his ability to flee from the defence of a moral consideration and so save his hide. He did not steal for joy of it, but because of the clamor of his stomach. He did not rob openly, but stole secretly and cunningly, out of respect for club and fang. In short, the things he did were done because it was easier to do them than not to do them.
His development (or retrogression) was rapid. His muscles became hard as iron, and he grew callous to all ordinary pain. He achieved an internal as well as external economy. He could eat anything, no matter how loathsome or indigestible; and, once eaten, the juices of his stomach extracted the last least particle of nutriment; and his blood carried it to the farthest reaches of his body, building it into the toughest and stoutest of tissues. Sight and scent became remarkably keen, while his hearing developed such acuteness that in his sleep he heard the faintest sound and knew whether it heralded peace or peril. He learned to bite the ice out with his teeth when it collected between his toes; and when he was thirsty and there was a thick scum of ice over the water hole, he would break it by rearing and striking it with stiff fore legs. His most conspicuous trait was an ability to scent the wind and forecast it a night in advance. No matter how breathless the air when he dug his nest by tree or bank, the wind that later blew inevitably found him to leeward, sheltered and snug.
And not only did he learn by experience, but instincts long dead became alive again. The domesticated generations fell from him. In vague ways he remembered back to the youth of the breed, to the time the wild dogs ranged in packs through the primeval forest and killed their meat as they ran it down. It was no task for him to learn to fight with cut and slash and the quick wolf snap. In this manner had fought forgotten ancestors. They quickened the old life within him, and the old tricks which they had stamped into the heredity of the breed were his tricks. They came to him without effort or discovery, as though they had been his always. And when, on the still cold nights, he pointed his nose at a star and howled long and wolflike, it was his ancestors, dead and dust, pointing nose at star and howling down through the centuries and through him. And his cadences were their cadences, the cadences which voiced their woe and what to them was the meaning of the stiffness, and the cold, and dark.
Thus, as token of what a puppet thing life is, the ancient song surged through him and he came into his own again; and he came because men had found a yellow metal in the North, and because Manuel was a gardener’s helper whose wages did not lap over the needs of his wife and divers small copies of himself.
\
:::info About HackerNoon Book Series: We bring you the most important technical, scientific, and insightful public domain books.
This book is part of the public domain. Astounding Stories. (2008). ASTOUNDING STORIES OF SUPER-SCIENCE, JULY 2008. USA. Project Gutenberg. Release date: JULY 2, 2008, from https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/215/pg215-images.html
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org, located at https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html.
:::
\
2026-03-15 14:12:55
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A deal gets created, a contact gets created, an account gets created… and then the audit trail tells three different stories depending on whether you’re looking at webhooks, API logs, or what the CRM UI eventually shows.
When I first tried to audit our CRM workflow, I assumed the raw event feed would behave like a clean ledger: one event per state change, perfectly ordered, perfectly delivered. That assumption didn’t survive first contact with reality.
So I started treating the audit trail like a noisy sensor: it’s reporting on a real underlying process, but it drops readings, repeats readings, and sometimes reports them late.
The system I ended up building does four things:
deal_id, including a first-step “creation burst” when Contact+Deal+Account are created together.The hard part isn’t drawing the graph. It’s deciding what the graph even means when you only partially observe the underlying process.
deal_id is the spineThe most stabilizing decision in this audit pipeline is also the simplest: I treat deal_id as the primary key for process reconstruction.
Not because deals are the only entity that matters, but because they’re the one entity that reliably ties the story together across:
Everything else—contact IDs, account IDs, UI timestamps—can be missing, duplicated, reordered, or delayed. But if I can anchor events to a deal, I can reconstruct a timeline that’s good enough to reason about.
The pipeline has three representations of the same underlying thing:
Exactly one diagram, because one is all you need if it’s the right one.
The rest of this post walks through each step with the concrete shapes I use, the wrong turn I took early, and the two ways I handle missing states without lying to myself.
Webhooks and API logs don’t share a schema. So the first job is to normalize them into a single event record.
The normalized shape I need is driven by what I do later (sessionization and transition extraction). At minimum:
deal_id (primary key)timestampsource (webhook vs API log vs snapshot)entity_type (deal/contact/account)event_type (created/updated/etc.)canonical_state (derived label)In my system, the raw payload formats and the canonical label mapping rules are environment-specific, and I’m not going to paste them here. What I can do is make the contract explicit, and make it impossible to accidentally treat a stub as a working normalizer.
from __future__ import annotations
from dataclasses import dataclass
from datetime import datetime
from typing import Any, Dict, Optional
@dataclass(frozen=True)
class NormalizedEvent:
deal_id: str
timestamp: datetime
source: str # e.g., "webhook", "api_log", "snapshot"
entity_type: str # e.g., "deal", "contact", "account"
event_type: str # e.g., "created", "updated"
canonical_state: str
raw: Dict[str, Any]
def normalize_event(raw: Dict[str, Any], *, source: str) -> Optional[NormalizedEvent]:
"""Normalize a raw webhook/log/snapshot record into a common event shape.
This function is intentionally an interface example.
Why: the exact field extraction rules depend on your CRM payload schemas
and your canonical state vocabulary.
Safety: raising here prevents a silent 'return None' footgun that can
corrupt downstream counts.
"""
raise NotImplementedError(
"Implement payload parsing + canonical state mapping for your sources."
)
Canonical state labels aren’t just a prettier name for a stage. They’re a projection of heterogeneous events into a state-machine vocabulary you control.
If you don’t control the vocabulary, you can’t compare runs.
A single deal_id can have multiple “runs” worth of activity depending on how your business operates (re-opened deals, retries, manual edits). That’s why sessionization exists.
Sessionization does two jobs:
Unlike normalization, sessionization can be demonstrated generically because it only depends on timestamps and a couple of tunable time windows.
from __future__ import annotations
from dataclasses import dataclass
from datetime import datetime, timedelta
from typing import Dict, Iterable, List, Sequence
# NormalizedEvent is defined in the normalization step above.
@dataclass(frozen=True)
class Session:
deal_id: str
events: List[NormalizedEvent]
def sessionize(
events: Iterable[NormalizedEvent],
*,
gap: timedelta,
creation_burst_window: timedelta,
) -> List[Session]:
"""Group normalized events into sessions per deal_id.
Rules:
- Events are sorted by timestamp.
- A new session starts when the gap between consecutive events exceeds `gap`.
- A 'creation burst' is a short window at the start of a session; if multiple
creation events across entity types land in that window, they are kept
together as the single start of the session (not split into separate sessions).
Note: creation-burst handling here is deliberately conservative: it does not
rewrite states; it only prevents the session boundary logic from fragmenting
the initial bundle.
"""
by_deal: Dict[str, List[NormalizedEvent]] = {}
for e in events:
by_deal.setdefault(e.deal_id, []).append(e)
out: List[Session] = []
for deal_id, evs in by_deal.items():
evs_sorted = sorted(evs, key=lambda x: x.timestamp)
if not evs_sorted:
continue
current: List[NormalizedEvent] = [evs_sorted[0]]
session_start = evs_sorted[0].timestamp
for e in evs_sorted[1:]:
prev = current[-1]
dt = e.timestamp - prev.timestamp
# If we're still inside the initial creation-burst window, never split.
in_creation_burst = (prev.timestamp - session_start) <= creation_burst_window
if (dt > gap) and (not in_creation_burst):
out.append(Session(deal_id=deal_id, events=current))
current = [e]
session_start = e.timestamp
else:
current.append(e)
out.append(Session(deal_id=deal_id, events=current))
return out
Why this matters: transition extraction assumes you have a coherent sequence. If you let a creation bundle appear as three independent starts, your graph will over-count early-stage transitions and under-count the “true” first state.
Once I have a session, I compress it into a state path:
Then I extract transitions: (state_i -> state_{i+1}).
“Time‑weighted edges” means each edge carries both:
I store durations rather than pre-aggregating them, because averages can hide multi-modal behavior.
from __future__ import annotations
from dataclasses import dataclass
from datetime import datetime, timedelta
from typing import Dict, List, Tuple
State = str
Edge = Tuple[State, State]
@dataclass
class EdgeStats:
count: int
durations: List[timedelta]
def build_adjacency_matrix(
state_path: List[Tuple[State, datetime]],
) -> Dict[Edge, EdgeStats]:
"""Build an adjacency map from a timestamped state path.
Input: [(state, entered_at), ...] in chronological order.
Output: {(from_state, to_state): EdgeStats(count, durations)}
The 'time-weight' stored here is the raw observed duration per transition.
"""
adjacency: Dict[Edge, EdgeStats] = {}
for (s1, t1), (s2, t2) in zip(state_path, state_path[1:]):
edge = (s1, s2)
dt = t2 - t1
if edge not in adjacency:
adjacency[edge] = EdgeStats(count=0, durations=[])
adjacency[edge].count += 1
adjacency[edge].durations.append(dt)
return adjacency
Webhooks don’t always arrive. API logs don’t always include everything. That means you can observe:
A -> C in your timeline…even though the real process was:
A -> B -> CIf you naively count A -> C, you will:
B disappears)One mitigation I use is to augment event streams with periodic database snapshots of current entity state. When a snapshot implies a state that never appeared in the event stream, I insert an imputed event tagged with its source so it can’t be confused with an observed transition.
That doesn’t magically give you truth. It reduces a systematic bias: “missing delivery looks like a shortcut.”
Below is conceptual pseudocode—not runnable code. A real EM implementation needs your concrete state space, constraints, and safety checks (convergence criteria, caps on path explosion, and validation that probabilities stay well-formed).
PSEUDO-CODE — for conceptual illustration only (DO NOT RUN)
Goal:
Estimate transition probabilities while accounting for possibly-missing intermediate states.
initialize T from observed adjacent transitions (or uniformly)
repeat until convergence:
expected_counts = 0
for each observed path:
for each adjacent observed pair (A, C):
if missing intermediates are possible between A and C:
infer a distribution over candidate hidden sequences A -> ... -> C using current T
add fractional expected counts along each candidate sequence
else:
expected_counts[A,C] += 1
normalize each row of expected_counts into T
return T
The point of EM here isn’t magic—it’s honesty. Instead of declaring “it was A→C,” you spread probability mass across plausible intermediates.
Sometimes I don’t want the complexity of EM, or I need a deterministic path for visualization.
In that case:
That second branch is the whole point: preserve ambiguity instead of forcing a single edge.
Once you have an adjacency matrix with per-edge durations, three outputs are straightforward.
Heatmaps are a visualization layer over the adjacency matrix.
Averages are brittle. CDFs tell you what fraction of transitions complete within a given time.
Given EdgeStats.durations, you can compute an empirical CDF per edge and compare edges to find “slow tails” that don’t show up in mean/median.
A “shortcut” is an edge that appears in the graph but violates the expected ordering implied by your canonical state model.
Method:
My first implementation treated the event stream as inherently ordered: whatever arrived first must have happened first.
That was the wrong architecture.
Once I mixed sources (webhooks + logs), arrival order became a meaningless artifact of network timing. The fix was to make timestamp ordering a first-class requirement:
The symptom that finally forced the change was simple: I kept chasing “phantom shortcuts” that disappeared the moment I stopped trusting arrival order.
Once I anchored process reconstruction on deal_id, normalized the vocabulary, sessionized creation bursts, and let edges carry both counts and observed durations, the audit trail stopped being a pile of contradictory stories and started behaving like a model I could interrogate—without pretending the missing pieces weren’t missing.
2026-03-15 07:59:59
Payment gateways across multiple African markets went dark at 2:47am on January 1. The shift from mid-level to senior engineering thinking happens when you stop asking “will this work?” and start asking ‘how will this fail?’ Every component will fail. Your job is ensuring the system survives anyway.
2026-03-15 07:15:12
I didn't build my company research pipeline to be clever. I built it because enrichment is where systems quietly start lying. A recruiter asks for "Cedrus" and the internet gives you three Cedruses, two dead domains, and a LinkedIn vanity URL that doesn't match the legal name. If your pipeline collapses all of that into a single confident paragraph, you've created the worst kind of bug: one that looks correct.
So here's the multi-agent Firecrawl research flow I wired into this recruitment platform—specifically the part that uses Firecrawl for enrichment and falls back to Bing when Firecrawl fails or has low confidence.
That's the architecture I actually meant to build: two evidence sources, one enrichment stage, and a tracer that makes the pipeline legible when it misbehaves.
The design shows up explicitly in the codebase:
app/firecrawl_enricher.py — Firecrawl enrichmentapp/firecrawl_research.py — Firecrawl research moduleapp/firecrawl_v2_adapter.py and app/firecrawl_v2_fire_agent.py — a V2 adapter and agent wrapperapp/azure_integrations/bing_search.py — Bing Search API client with Redis caching and a stated role: "Provides fallback enrichment when Firecrawl fails or has low confidence."app/services/company_name_resolver.py — handles the "vanity URL" problem where domains don't match legal company namesapp/services/extraction_workflow_tracer.py — step-by-step tracing for extraction workflowsThe naive approach is to treat enrichment as a single call:
That fails for two reasons:
My fix was to treat research like a courtroom:
I'm not claiming a magical confidence model here—I haven't open-sourced the scoring internals. But the codebase makes the fallback intent explicit: Bing is used when Firecrawl "fails or has low confidence," and the system has dedicated modules for Firecrawl research plus a resolver for name mismatches.
In this codebase, company identity is explicitly called out as a problem:
app/services/company_name_resolver.py is described as: "Smart Company Name Extraction" and "Handles the vanity URL problem where domain names don't match legal company names."That tells you something important about the system's philosophy: I don't want downstream steps to guess what entity we're talking about.
What surprised me when I first built flows like this is how often the identity step is the actual bottleneck. Not performance—correctness. If you start research with the wrong entity, every downstream step can be perfect and still produce garbage.
(If you want a deeper look at why entity resolution matters at scale, see engineering writeups from teams tackling large-scale identity problems — they make the same point: resolving entity identity early is essential to avoid merging evidence across distinct entities. For an example of that engineering perspective, see a field example on entity resolution at scale: https://eng.uber.com/entity-resolution/.)
The repository contains multiple Firecrawl modules:
app/firecrawl_research.pyapp/firecrawl_enricher.pyapp/firecrawl_v2_adapter.pyapp/firecrawl_v2_fire_agent.pyThat tells me I didn't just "call Firecrawl once." I built an adaptation layer and an agent wrapper, which is usually what happens when:
I'm not going to invent what "research" returns, but the existence of both "research" and "enricher" modules strongly suggests a separation between fetching/collecting and structuring/augmenting.
The naive approach would merge those into one function and then you can't tell whether:
Splitting them makes failures diagnosable.
This part is explicit in the codebase:
app/azure_integrations/bing_search.py— "Bing Search API client with Redis caching for company enrichment. Provides fallback enrichment when Firecrawl fails or has low confidence."
That sentence encodes three design choices I care about:
I like this pattern because it's honest about reality: web enrichment is probabilistic, so the pipeline should behave like a cautious human. If your first source is weak, you don't fabricate—you corroborate.
A practical note on the caching point: if you're using a search API as a fallback, caching responses (and respecting freshness/TTL) is a common operational pattern to both reduce cost and stabilize results. The Azure/Bing docs and best-practice guidance discuss using caching and throttling strategies when integrating with web search APIs — useful background when designing the Redis layer in front of a search client: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/cognitive-services/bing-web-search/overview.
Here's a sketch of how the chain fits together in practice. I'm showing the control-flow decisions as comments—the real implementations live in the modules listed above, but the orchestration logic is what matters here:
"""company_research_flow.py
Modules in this pipeline:
- app/services/company_name_resolver.py — Smart Company Name Extraction
- app/firecrawl_research.py — Firecrawl research module
- app/firecrawl_enricher.py — Firecrawl enrichment
- app/azure_integrations/bing_search.py — Bing fallback with Redis caching
- app/services/extraction_workflow_tracer.py — step-by-step workflow tracing
"""
from dataclasses import dataclass
from typing import Optional, Dict, Any
@dataclass
class ResearchOutput:
company_profile: Dict[str, Any]
evidence_source: str # "firecrawl" | "bing_fallback"
notes: Optional[str] = None
def run_company_research(raw_query: str) -> ResearchOutput:
"""Orchestrate a Firecrawl-first, Bing-fallback research flow."""
# 1) Resolve/normalize company identity
# company = CompanyNameResolver(...).resolve(raw_query)
# 2) Firecrawl research attempt
# firecrawl_result = FirecrawlResearch(...).research(company)
# 3) If Firecrawl fails or has low confidence, use Bing fallback
# if firecrawl_result.failed or firecrawl_result.low_confidence:
# bing_result = BingSearchClient(...).search(company)
# combined = FirecrawlEnricher(...).enrich(company, bing_result)
# source = "bing_fallback"
# else:
# combined = FirecrawlEnricher(...).enrich(company, firecrawl_result)
# source = "firecrawl"
# 4) Trace the workflow for auditability
# ExtractionWorkflowTracer(...).record(stage="research", inputs=..., outputs=...)
... # real implementation delegates to the modules listed above
The non-obvious detail here is that "fallback" isn't just a second API call—it's a different failure mode. Firecrawl can fail because it can't fetch or parse a specific site. Bing can succeed by giving you alternate entry points: press releases, directory listings, cached copies, or simply a better canonical URL to feed back into the Firecrawl path.
When enrichment fails, the worst outcome is "it didn't work." The second-worst outcome is "it worked" but you can't explain why.
This codebase contains app/services/extraction_workflow_tracer.py — I originally built it for email extraction workflows, but the pattern (log every stage boundary with inputs, outputs, and the chosen evidence source) turned out to be exactly what research enrichment needed too. Same discipline, different domain.
What I like about tracing is that it changes the engineering incentives. Instead of arguing about whether a model/source is "good," I can point to a specific run and say: Firecrawl fetched X, parsing returned Y, fallback triggered, Bing returned Z, enrichment merged it, and the resolver chose this canonical name.
I don't have a formal postmortem to point to, but the codebase tells the story: Bing is explicitly used when Firecrawl fails or has low confidence.
That's already an admission of a wrong assumption most teams make:
"One source is enough."
It isn't. Even if Firecrawl is excellent, the web isn't stable. Sites block bots. Content moves. Domains expire. And the "vanity URL" problem is so common it got its own resolver module.
So I designed the pipeline to make failure boring:
A few details from the repo that change how I think about this system:
The Bing module's description explicitly mentions "low confidence." That means the pipeline isn't binary (success/fail). It has a third state: "I got something, but I don't trust it."
That's the state most systems mishandle. They either:
A fallback chain lets you keep the weak signal while still searching for corroboration.
CompanyNameResolver exists because domain names and legal names diverge. If you postpone resolution until the end, you end up merging evidence across different entities.
Doing it early is like labeling test tubes before you start pipetting. You can be a genius chemist and still ruin the experiment if you mix up the tubes.
The presence of firecrawl_v2_adapter.py tells me I had to stabilize an interface. In production systems, adapters are how you keep the rest of the codebase sane when upstream APIs evolve.
I won't bore you with what changed in V2, but the architectural intent is clear: isolate churn.
Most enrichment systems fail the same way: they ask one source, get one answer, and call it truth. The architecture I've described here—Firecrawl as investigator, Bing as corroboration, a resolver that pins identity before evidence starts flowing, and a tracer that turns every decision into an auditable record—exists because I got burned by that exact pattern.
The five modules aren't clever engineering for its own sake. Each one addresses a specific failure I hit in production:
Every module is scar tissue from a real failure, turned into a guard rail.
The trick with multi-agent research isn't the web scraping. It's building a system where "I'm not sure yet" is a first-class state—observable, testable, and cheaper than a confident lie.
That's how you debug reality.
2026-03-15 03:00:06
I present a simple algorithm for enumerating the trees generated by a Context Free Grammar (CFG). The algorithm uses a pairing function to form a bijection between CFG derivations and natural numbers, so that trees can be uniquely decoded from counting. This provides a general way to number expressions in natural logical languages, and potentially can be extended to other combinatorial problems. I also show how this algorithm may be generalized to more general forms of derivation, including analogs of Lempel-Ziv coding on trees.
While context-free grammars (CFGs) are important in computational linguistics and theoretical computer science, there is no simple, memoryless algorithm for enumerating the trees generated by an arbitrary CFG. One approach is to maintain a priority queue of partially expanded trees according to probability, and expand them through (e.g.) the leftmost unexpanded nonterminal in the tree. This, however, requires storing multiple trees in memory, which can become slow when enumerating many trees. Incremental polynomial time algorithms are also known [1] and related questions have been studied for lexicographic enumeration [2–4]. These algorithms are not particularly well-known, and the tools required to state and analyze them are complex. In contrast, simple techniques exist for enumerating binary trees with a fixed grammar (e.g. S → SS | x). A variety of techniques and history is reviewed in Section 7.2.1.6 of [5], including permutation-based methods and gray codes [6–9]. These algorithms, however, do not obviously generalize to arbitrary CFGs.
\ The goal of the present paper is to present an variant of integer-based enumeration schemes that works for arbitrary CFGs. The algorithm is itself very basic—just a few lines—but relies on a abstraction here called an IntegerizedStack that may be useful in other combinatorial problems. The proposed algorithm does not naturally enumerate in lexicographic order (though variants may exist) but it is efficient: its time complexity is linear in the number of nodes present in the next enumerated tree, and it does not require additional data structures or pre-computation of anything from the grammar. Because the algorithm constructs a simple bijection between a the natural numbers N and trees, it also provides a convenient scheme for G¨odel-numbering [10, 11], when the CFG is used to describe formulas. We then extend this algorithm to a tree-based algorithms analogous to LZ compression.
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\ \
:::info Author:
(1) Steven T. Piantadosi.
:::
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:::info This paper is available on arxiv under CC BY 4.0 license.
:::
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