MoreRSS

site iconHackerNoonModify

We are an open and international community of 45,000+ contributing writers publishing stories and expertise for 4+ million curious and insightful monthly readers.
Please copy the RSS to your reader, or quickly subscribe to:

Inoreader Feedly Follow Feedbin Local Reader

Rss preview of Blog of HackerNoon

Secret of the Summerhouse

2026-03-25 17:30:30

:::info Astounding Stories of Super-Science October 2022, by Astounding Stories is part of HackerNoon’s Book Blog Post series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here. THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD - THE GOOSE QUILL

\

Astounding Stories of Super-Science October 2022: THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD - THE GOOSE QUILL

\ By Agatha Christie

:::

\ That evening, at Poirot’s request, I went over to his house after dinner. Caroline saw me depart with visible reluctance. I think she would have liked to have accompanied me.

Poirot greeted me hospitably. He had placed a bottle of Irish whisky (which I detest) on a small table, with a soda water siphon and a glass. He himself was engaged in brewing hot chocolate. It was a favorite beverage of his, I discovered later.

He inquired politely after my sister, whom he declared to be a most interesting woman.

“I’m afraid you’ve been giving her a swelled head,” I said dryly. “What about Sunday afternoon?”

He laughed and twinkled.

“I always like to employ the expert,” he remarked obscurely, but he refused to explain the remark.

“You got all the local gossip anyway,” I remarked. “True, and untrue.”

“And a great deal of valuable information,” he added quietly.

“Such as——?”

He shook his head.

“Why not have told me the truth?” he countered. “In a place like this, all Ralph Paton’s doings were bound to be known. If your sister had not happened to pass through the wood that day somebody else would have done so.”

“I suppose they would,” I said grumpily. “What about this interest of yours in my patients?”

Again he twinkled.

“Only one of them, doctor. Only one of them.”

“The last?” I hazarded.

“I find Miss Russell a study of the most interesting,” he said evasively.

“Do you agree with my sister and Mrs. Ackroyd that there is something fishy about her?” I asked.

“Eh? What do you say—fishy?”

I explained to the best of my ability.

“And they say that, do they?”

“Didn’t my sister convey as much to you yesterday afternoon?”

C’est possible.

“For no reason whatever,” I declared.

Les femmes,” generalized Poirot. “They are marvelous! They invent haphazard—and by miracle they are right. Not that it is that, really. Women observe subconsciously a thousand little details, without knowing that they are doing so. Their subconscious mind adds these little things together—and they call the result intuition. Me, I am very skilled in psychology. I know these things.”

He swelled his chest out importantly, looking so ridiculous, that I found it difficult not to burst out laughing. Then he took a small sip of his chocolate, and carefully wiped his mustache.

“I wish you’d tell me,” I burst out, “what you really think of it all?”

He put down his cup.

“You wish that?”

“I do.”

“You have seen what I have seen. Should not our ideas be the same?”

“I’m afraid you’re laughing at me,” I said stiffly. “Of course, I’ve no experience of matters of this kind.”

Poirot smiled at me indulgently.

“You are like the little child who wants to know the way the engine works. You wish to see the affair, not as the family doctor sees it, but with the eye of a detective who knows and cares for no one—to whom they are all strangers and all equally liable to suspicion.”

“You put it very well,” I said.

“So I give you then, a little lecture. The first thing is to get a clear history of what happened that evening—always bearing in mind that the person who speaks may be lying.”

I raised my eyebrows.

“Rather a suspicious attitude.”

“But necessary—I assure you, necessary. Now first—Dr. Sheppard leaves the house at ten minutes to nine. How do I know that?”

“Because I told you so.”

“But you might not be speaking the truth—or the watch you went by might be wrong. But Parker also says that you left the house at ten minutes to nine. So we accept that statement and pass on. At nine o’clock you run into a man—and here we come to what we will call the Romance of the Mysterious Stranger—just outside the Park gates. How do I know that that is so?”

“I told you so,” I began again, but Poirot interrupted me with a gesture of impatience.

“Ah! but it is that you are a little stupid to-night, my friend. You know that it is so—but how am I to know? Eh bien, I am able to tell you that the Mysterious Stranger was not a hallucination on your part, because the maid of a Miss Ganett met him a few minutes before you did, and of her too he inquired the way to Fernly Park. We accept his presence, therefore, and we can be fairly sure of two things about him—that he was a stranger to the neighborhood, and that whatever his object in going to Fernly, there was no great secrecy about it, since he twice asked the way there.”

“Yes,” I said, “I see that.”

“Now I have made it my business to find out more about this man. He had a drink at the Three Boars, I learn, and the barmaid there says that he spoke with an American accent and mentioned having just come over from the States. Did it strike you that he had an American accent?”

“Yes, I think he had,” I said, after a minute or two, during which I cast my mind back; “but a very slight one.”

Précisément. There is also this which, you will remember, I picked up in the summer-house?”

He held out to me the little quill. I looked at it curiously. Then a memory of something I had read stirred in me.

Poirot, who had been watching my face, nodded.

“Yes, heroin ‘snow.’ Drug-takers carry it like this, and sniff it up the nose.”

“Diamorphine hydrochloride,” I murmured mechanically.

“This method of taking the drug is very common on the other side. Another proof, if we wanted one, that the man came from Canada or the States.”

“What first attracted your attention to that summer-house?” I asked curiously.

“My friend the inspector took it for granted that any one using that path did so as a short cut to the house, but as soon as I saw the summer-house, I realized that the same path would be taken by any one using the summer-house as a rendezvous. Now it seems fairly certain that the stranger came neither to the front nor to the back door. Then did some one from the house go out and meet him? If so, what could be a more convenient place than that little summer-house? I searched it with the hope that I might find some clew inside. I found two, the scrap of cambric and the quill.”

“And the scrap of cambric?” I asked curiously. “What about that?”

Poirot raised his eyebrows.

“You do not use your little gray cells,” he remarked dryly. “The scrap of starched cambric should be obvious.”

“Not very obvious to me.” I changed the subject. “Anyway,” I said, “this man went to the summer-house to meet somebody. Who was that somebody?”

“Exactly the question,” said Poirot. “You will remember that Mrs. Ackroyd and her daughter came over from Canada to live here?”

“Is that what you meant to-day when you accused them of hiding the truth?”

“Perhaps. Now another point. What did you think of the parlormaid’s story?”

“What story?”

“The story of her dismissal. Does it take half an hour to dismiss a servant? Was the story of those important papers a likely one? And remember, though she says she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty until ten o’clock, there is no one to confirm her statement.”

“You bewilder me,” I said.

“To me it grows clearer. But tell me now your own ideas and theories.”

I drew a piece of paper from my pocket.

“I just scribbled down a few suggestions,” I said apologetically.

“But excellent—you have method. Let us hear them.”

I read out in a somewhat embarrassed voice.

“To begin with, one must look at the thing logically——”

“Just what my poor Hastings used to say,” interrupted Poirot, “but alas! he never did so.”

Point No. 1.—Mr. Ackroyd was heard talking to some one at half-past nine.

Point No. 2.—At some time during the evening Ralph Paton must have come in through the window, as evidenced by the prints of his shoes.

Point No. 3.—Mr. Ackroyd was nervous that evening, and would only have admitted some one he knew.

Point No. 4.—The person with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty was asking for money. We know Ralph Paton was in a scrape.

These four points go to show that the person with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty was Ralph Paton. But we know that Mr. Ackroyd was alive at a quarter to ten, therefore it was not Ralph who killed him. Ralph left the window open. Afterwards the murderer came in that way.

“And who was the murderer?” inquired Poirot.

“The American stranger. He may have been in league with Parker, and possibly in Parker we have the man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. If so, Parker may have heard enough to realize the game was up, have told his accomplice so, and the latter did the crime with the dagger which Parker gave him.”

“It is a theory that,” admitted Poirot. “Decidedly you have cells of a kind. But it leaves a good deal unaccounted for.”

“Such as——?”

“The telephone call, the pushed-out chair——”

“Do you really think the latter important?” I interrupted.

“Perhaps not,” admitted my friend. “It may have been pulled out by accident, and Raymond or Blunt may have shoved it into place unconsciously under the stress of emotion. Then there is the missing forty pounds.”

“Given by Ackroyd to Ralph,” I suggested. “He may have reconsidered his first refusal.”

“That still leaves one thing unexplained?”

“What?”

“Why was Blunt so certain in his own mind that it was Raymond with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty?”

“He explained that,” I said.

“You think so? I will not press the point. Tell me instead, what were Ralph Paton’s reasons for disappearing?”

“That’s rather more difficult,” I said slowly. “I shall have to speak as a medical man. Ralph’s nerves must have gone phut! If he suddenly found out that his uncle had been murdered within a few minutes of his leaving him—after, perhaps, a rather stormy interview—well, he might get the wind up and clear right out. Men have been known to do that—act guiltily when they’re perfectly innocent.”

“Yes, that is true,” said Poirot. “But we must not lose sight of one thing.”

“I know what you’re going to say,” I remarked: “motive. Ralph Paton inherits a great fortune by his uncle’s death.”

“That is one motive,” agreed Poirot.

“One?”

Mais oui. Do you realize that there are three separate motives staring us in the face. Somebody certainly stole the blue envelope and its contents. That is one motive. Blackmail! Ralph Paton may have been the man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Remember, as far as Hammond knew, Ralph Paton had not applied to his uncle for help of late. That looks as though he were being supplied with money elsewhere. Then there is the fact that he was in some—how do you say—scrape?—which he feared might get to his uncle’s ears. And finally there is the one you have just mentioned.”

“Dear me,” I said, rather taken aback. “The case does seem black against him.”

“Does it?” said Poirot. “That is where we disagree, you and I. Three motives—it is almost too much. I am inclined to believe that, after all, Ralph Paton is innocent.”

\ \

:::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: OCTOBER 2, 2008, from https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/69087/pg69087-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.

:::

\

What is Agentic Testing?

2026-03-25 17:02:55

\ Riddle me this: if your test suite breaks every time a button moves, a div changes, or – gods forbid – an A/B test runs, is it really testing anything?

If you had to pause, chances are your team – like most engineering teams – is spending far too much time fixing and maintaining script-based tests that break with every UI change.

Luckily, with AI in the workflow, releases cycles winded down, UI does't break, and everything is fine, right? Right?

In this post, we’ll break down what AI testing is and how QA agents work under the hood – so you can decide if it’s actually any help for your team.

What Traditional Test Automation Does

Test automation tools like Playwright or Selenium follow a set of step-by-step directions. It goes something like: go to this URL, find the element with the specific CSS selector, click it, assert this text appears… It all works great, as long as your product never changes.

But there’s something called the selector treadmill. Basically, scripts don’t break just because the UI changes but also because the instructions go stale. Teams report spending 30%-40% of their dev time maintaining existing tests rather than finding and fixing real bugs or building new features. AI code generation has only increased the friction to maintain good tests.

Tools like Cursor, Claude Code, and Copilot are helping companies ship code faster than ever. But more output also means more UI changes per sprint, more code refactors, more components being rewritten… Each and every one of those brings a risk of your testing workflow breaking.

According to a Forrester TEI study on automation platforms, high-performing teams without a proper QA solution were experiencing around 20 bugs per sprint reaching production within a two-week cycle. As code volume continues to grow, this number increases exponentially, and neither manual testing nor classic test automation is capable of catching up.

The unfortunate reality is that traditional test automation does deliver excellent return on investment (ROI) when things are stable (the same Forrester study reports a 209% ROI over three years for one of these platforms). But that assumes a pre-AI level of development stability that doesn’t exist any more. Instead of helping, scripted tests quickly become liabilities. They start slowing you down, because keeping them up to date becomes a job in itself.

Enter agentic testing.

What Is Agentic Testing?

Simply put, agentic testing focuses on AI achieving given goal. You don’t tell the tool how to test (click this, assert, then that), you tell it what to verify.

Here’s an example statement: “Make sure the user can successfully add an M-size hoodie to the cart and complete checkout with GooglePay”.

The AI agent is tasked with carrying out that goal.

QA.tech agentic testing architecture

With agentic testing, the QA agent receives a goal from the user and then figures out how to complete it inside the system. It navigates across web, desktop, or mobile apps and interacts with elements. Then, it checks whether the goal was actually achieved.

ReAct Pattern

Most agentic systems, including the one we’ve built at QA.tech, follow the ReAct pattern:

observe —> decide —> act —> evaluate

  • Observe: The QA agent first looks at the current state of the page, both the DOM and the visual layout.
  • Decide or think: It reasons about the goal. “I need to find the ‘Add to Cart’ button. I see a blue button with a cart icon.”
  • Act: It acts like a user would.
  • Evaluate: It checks if the action worked and decides what to do next (repeats).

Here, we’re talking about an autonomous system that understands the structural and visual hierarchy of a web app, and recreates a path that a user would take.

Memory Layer

QA.tech creates a structural understanding of your application before running a single test. Our agents crawl your website or an app to map all the pages, flows, interactive elements, and relationships between elements into a knowledge graph.

Contextual knowledge graph built by QA agents doing exploratory tests

Let’s use our map analogy once again. Think about the difference between a tourist wandering a city and a local who knows every street by heart. Both can go from A to B, but because of their familiarity with the city, the local knows how to take shortcuts and where the dead ends are.

How Agentic Testing Works in Practice

Before you write a single test, the agent crawls your app. QA.tech calls this epistemic foraging, which is basically agents autonomously exploring your app to map and understand the user flows and the UI elements.

QA.tech agent crawling a web app with intent scores before tests run

Intent

You write a simple and natural prompt to tell the agent what the end goal is, such as “Verify that the user can successfully search, browse, view, and book a property.”

QA.tech agent crawling a web app with intent scores before tests run

Discovery

The agent then loads the application using the structure it has already learned during the crawl. Now that it has a map of the pages and elements, it can start looking for the homepage, browser properties feature, booking buttons, and every other required option the way a human user would.

Execution Flow

The agent proceeds to complete the test run step by step (you can watch the full process through a recording session). If something happens unexpectedly, like an unwanted suggestion, the agent sees it, realizes it’s an obstacle to the goal, and closes it.

Assertion

Once the flow is completed, the agent evaluates the pass or fail based on whether the goal has been met.

Now, compare this result to the equivalent Playwright script. You have to go to the /home page, locate the property search input using a specific selector or data-testid, enter a location, trigger the search, wait for the results page to load, click on a property listing, and then find and press the booking button. Finally, you need to check if the confirmation page or message shows up.

It all works, as long as nothing changes. The moment a CAPTCHA is added, a test ID is renamed, or the booking process is split across additional pages, you will be back in maintenance mode.

What Makes Agentic Test Automation Different from AI-Assisted Testing

Honestly, a loot of tools marketed as AI test automation are really just wrappers generating scripts for obsolete tech like Playwright. True, they get you higher test coverage faster, but they are brittle and unreliable in the same way.

We think using agentic automation this way is just using AI on wrong paradigm – the outcome of using AI wrappers is worse when compared to AI agents who act independently. When evaluating AI testing tools, always look for these five markers:

  1. Goal-driven: Tests are focused on outcomes rather than the implementation process and how you can get there.
  2. Perceptual: The agent views your application just like a real user would (visually + via HTML). It doesn’t rely on selectors created by an individual to reference an element. This is why your agentic tests won’t break due to UI modifications.
  3. Adaptive: This is your agent’s ability to self-heal. If you move the position or a “Submit” button, or add an additional step as an A/B test, the agent will be able to find its way to complete the goal, even though the original elements moved, or the path changed.
  4. Self-evaluating: In agentic testing, the agent determines pass or fail based on whether the stated goal was achieved. Tests stay aligned with user intent even as the codebase evolves underneath.
  5. Continuously learning: The more interaction the agent has with your application, the better it becomes at recognizing happy path scenarios and what is considered “normal” task performance for specific user interface components.

When Agentic Testing Is (and Isn’t) the Right Fit

It’d be easy to oversell this, so let me be straight. I don’t think you should throw out every single script written for Playwright you own tomorrow.

There are some areas where this approach is a really strong fit:

  • End-to-end (E2E) user flow: Anything that involves onboarding, checkout, managing accounts, and doing all CRUD activities;
  • Regression suites: Continuously changing UIs that release faster than you can manually test;
  • Fast-moving UIs: Validation of new releases on time.
  • Complex products: products where the best way to validate the experience was manual testing, but to obvious reasons, it doesn’t happen fast enough.

However, at the moment, it’s a less-than-ideal solution for:

  • Highly interactive apps, like Notion. Webgl games or webgl-based UI are also hard for agents to test.
  • UI that is highly dynamic from session-to-session.

The reality is that most teams we talk to use a hybrid approach. They rely on scripts for small details and let AI agents handle the broad and complex user flows.

That being said, we’ve seen companies adopting agentic QA gain up to 529% ROI with a 3-month payback.

Wrapping Up

Agentic testing represents a completely different approach from the traditional testing framework, with a one-to-one relationship between your desired goals and your actual results. There are no brittle tests in between that could collapse when your development team releases a product at lightning speed.

If your team is spending more time maintaining test infrastructure than finding real bugs, agentic test automation can help you close that gap.

Want to go deeper? Here are some useful materials:

Book a demo with QA.tech and see how our agents can validate your critical flows for your next release.

\

RoyFlow Earns a 40 Proof of Usefulness Score by Building Sync Infrastructure for Independent Musicians

2026-03-25 17:00:00

RoyFlow is a workflow platform that gives independent musicians structured tools to manage sync licensing, match tracks to briefs, and track placement outcomes.

Poirot’s Final Warning

2026-03-25 16:45:08

:::info Astounding Stories of Super-Science October 2022, by Astounding Stories is part of HackerNoon’s Book Blog Post series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here. THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD - ROUND THE TABLE

\

Astounding Stories of Super-Science October 2022: THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD - ROUND THE TABLE

\ By Agatha Christie

:::

\ A joint inquest was held on Monday.

I do not propose to give the proceedings in detail. To do so would only be to go over the same ground again and again. By arrangement with the police, very little was allowed to come out. I gave evidence as to the cause of Ackroyd’s death and the probable time. The absence of Ralph Paton was commented on by the coroner, but not unduly stressed.

Afterwards, Poirot and I had a few words with Inspector Raglan. The inspector was very grave.

“It looks bad, Mr. Poirot,” he said. “I’m trying to judge the thing fair and square. I’m a local man, and I’ve seen Captain Paton many times in Cranchester. I’m not wanting him to be the guilty one—but it’s bad whichever way you look at it. If he’s innocent, why doesn’t he come forward? We’ve got evidence against him, but it’s just possible that that evidence could be explained away. Then why doesn’t he give an explanation?”

A lot more lay behind the inspector’s words than I knew at the time. Ralph’s description had been wired to every port and railway station in England. The police everywhere were on the alert. His rooms in town were watched, and any houses he had been known to be in146 the habit of frequenting. With such a cordon it seemed impossible that Ralph should be able to evade detection. He had no luggage, and, as far as any one knew, no money.

“I can’t find any one who saw him at the station that night,” continued the inspector. “And yet he’s well known down here, and you’d think somebody would have noticed him. There’s no news from Liverpool either.”

“You think he went to Liverpool?” queried Poirot.

“Well, it’s on the cards. That telephone message from the station, just three minutes before the Liverpool express left—there ought to be something in that.”

“Unless it was deliberately intended to throw you off the scent. That might just possibly be the point of the telephone message.”

“That’s an idea,” said the inspector eagerly. “Do you really think that’s the explanation of the telephone call?”

“My friend,” said Poirot gravely, “I do not know. But I will tell you this: I believe that when we find the explanation of that telephone call we shall find the explanation of the murder.”

“You said something like that before, I remember,” I observed, looking at him curiously.

Poirot nodded.

“I always come back to it,” he said seriously.

“It seems to me utterly irrelevant,” I declared.

“I wouldn’t say that,” demurred the inspector. “But I must confess I think Mr. Poirot here harps on it a little too much. We’ve better clews than that. The fingerprints on the dagger, for instance.”

Poirot became suddenly very foreign in manner, as he often did when excited over anything.

“M. l’Inspecteur,” he said, “beware of the blind—the blind—comment dire?—the little street that has no end to it.”

Inspector Raglan stared, but I was quicker.

“You mean a blind alley?” I said.

“That is it—the blind street that leads nowhere. So it may be with those fingerprints—they may lead you nowhere.”

“I don’t see how that can well be,” said the police officer. “I suppose you’re hinting that they’re faked? I’ve read of such things being done, though I can’t say I’ve ever come across it in my experience. But fake or true—they’re bound to lead somewhere.”

Poirot merely shrugged his shoulders, flinging out his arms wide.

The inspector then showed us various enlarged photographs of the fingerprints, and proceeded to become technical on the subject of loops and whorls.

“Come now,” he said at last, annoyed by Poirot’s detached manner, “you’ve got to admit that those prints were made by some one who was in the house that night?”

Bien entendu,” said Poirot, nodding his head.

“Well, I’ve taken the prints of every member of the household, every one, mind you, from the old lady down to the kitchenmaid.”

I don’t think Mrs. Ackroyd would enjoy being referred to as the old lady. She must spend a considerable amount on cosmetics.

“Every one’s,” repeated the inspector fussily.

“Including mine,” I said dryly.

“Very well. None of them correspond. That leaves us two alternatives. Ralph Paton, or the mysterious stranger the doctor here tells us about. When we get hold of those two——”

“Much valuable time may have been lost,” broke in Poirot.

“I don’t quite get you, Mr. Poirot?”

“You have taken the prints of every one in the house, you say,” murmured Poirot. “Is that the exact truth you are telling me there, M. l’Inspecteur?”

“Certainly.”

“Without overlooking any one?”

“Without overlooking any one.”

“The quick or the dead?”

For a moment the inspector looked bewildered at what he took to be a religious observation. Then he reacted slowly.

“You mean——”

“The dead, M. l’Inspecteur.”

The inspector still took a minute or two to understand.

“I am suggesting,” said Poirot placidly, “that the fingerprints on the dagger handle are those of Mr. Ackroyd himself. It is an easy matter to verify. His body is still available.”

“But why? What would be the point of it? You’re surely not suggesting suicide, Mr. Poirot?”

“Ah! no. My theory is that the murderer wore gloves149 or wrapped something round his hand. After the blow was struck, he picked up the victim’s hand and closed it round the dagger handle.”

“But why?”

Poirot shrugged his shoulders again.

“To make a confusing case even more confusing.”

“Well,” said the inspector, “I’ll look into it. What gave you the idea in the first place?”

“When you were so kind as to show me the dagger and draw attention to the fingerprints. I know very little of loops and whorls—see, I confess my ignorance frankly. But it did occur to me that the position of the prints was somewhat awkward. Not so would I have held a dagger in order to strike. Naturally, with the right hand brought up over the shoulder backwards, it would have been difficult to put it in exactly the right position.”

Inspector Raglan stared at the little man. Poirot, with an air of great unconcern, flecked a speck of dust from his coat sleeve.

“Well,” said the inspector, “it’s an idea. I’ll look into it all right, but don’t you be disappointed if nothing comes of it.”

He endeavored to make his tone kindly and patronizing. Poirot watched him go off. Then he turned to me with twinkling eyes.

“Another time,” he observed, “I must be more careful of his amour propre. And now that we are left to our own devices, what do you think, my good friend, of a little reunion of the family?”

The “little reunion,” as Poirot called it, took place about half an hour later. We sat round the table in the dining-room at Fernly—Poirot at the head of the table, like the chairman of some ghastly board meeting. The servants were not present, so we were six in all. Mrs. Ackroyd, Flora, Major Blunt, young Raymond, Poirot, and myself.

When every one was assembled, Poirot rose and bowed.

“Messieurs, mesdames, I have called you together for a certain purpose.” He paused. “To begin with, I want to make a very special plea to mademoiselle.”

“To me?” said Flora.

“Mademoiselle, you are engaged to Captain Ralph Paton. If any one is in his confidence, you are. I beg you, most earnestly, if you know of his whereabouts, to persuade him to come forward. One little minute”—as Flora raised her head to speak—“say nothing till you have well reflected. Mademoiselle, his position grows daily more dangerous. If he had come forward at once, no matter how damning the facts, he might have had a chance of explaining them away. But this silence—this flight—what can it mean? Surely only one thing, knowledge of guilt. Mademoiselle, if you really believe in his innocence, persuade him to come forward before it is too late.”

Flora’s face had gone very white.

“Too late!” she repeated, very low.

Poirot leant forward, looking at her.

“See now, mademoiselle,” he said very gently, “it is Papa Poirot who asks you this. The old Papa Poirot who has much knowledge and much experience. I would not seek to entrap you, mademoiselle. Will you not trust me—and tell me where Ralph Paton is hiding?”

The girl rose, and stood facing him.

“M. Poirot,” she said in a clear voice, “I swear to you—swear solemnly—that I have no idea where Ralph is, and that I have neither seen him nor heard from him either on the day of—of the murder, or since.”

She sat down again. Poirot gazed at her in silence for a minute or two, then he brought his hand down on the table with a sharp rap.

Bien! That is that,” he said. His face hardened. “Now I appeal to these others who sit round this table, Mrs. Ackroyd, Major Blunt, Dr. Sheppard, Mr. Raymond. You are all friends and intimates of the missing man. If you know where Ralph Paton is hiding, speak out.”

There was a long silence. Poirot looked to each in turn.

“I beg of you,” he said in a low voice, “speak out.”

But still there was silence, broken at last by Mrs. Ackroyd.

“I must say,” she observed in a plaintive voice, “that Ralph’s absence is most peculiar—most peculiar indeed. Not to come forward at such a time. It looks, you know, as though there were something behind it. I can’t help thinking, Flora dear, that it was a very fortunate thing your engagement was never formally announced.”

“Mother!” cried Flora angrily.

“Providence,” declared Mrs. Ackroyd. “I have a devout belief in Providence—a divinity that shapes our ends, as Shakespeare’s beautiful line runs.”

“Surely you don’t make the Almighty directly responsible for thick ankles, Mrs. Ackroyd, do you?” asked Geoffrey Raymond, his irresponsible laugh ringing out.

His idea was, I think, to loosen the tension, but Mrs. Ackroyd threw him a glance of reproach and took out her handkerchief.

“Flora has been saved a terrible amount of notoriety and unpleasantness. Not for a moment that I think dear Ralph had anything to do with poor Roger’s death. I don’t think so. But then I have a trusting heart—I always have had, ever since a child. I am loath to believe the worst of any one. But, of course, one must remember that Ralph was in several air raids as a young boy. The results are apparent long after, sometimes, they say. People are not responsible for their actions in the least. They lose control, you know, without being able to help it.”

“Mother,” cried Flora, “you don’t think Ralph did it?”

“Come, Mrs. Ackroyd,” said Blunt.

“I don’t know what to think,” said Mrs. Ackroyd tearfully. “It’s all very upsetting. What would happen to the estate, I wonder, if Ralph were found guilty?”

Raymond pushed his chair away from the table violently. Major Blunt remained very quiet, looking thoughtfully at her. “Like shell-shock, you know,” said Mrs. Ackroyd obstinately, “and I dare say Roger kept him very short of money—with the best intentions, of course. I can see you are all against me, but I do think it is very odd that Ralph has not come forward, and I must say I am thankful Flora’s engagement was never announced formally.”

“It will be to-morrow,” said Flora in a clear voice.

“Flora!” cried her mother, aghast.

Flora had turned to the secretary.

“Will you send the announcement to the Morning Post and the Times, please, Mr. Raymond.”

“If you are sure that it is wise, Miss Ackroyd,” he replied gravely.

She turned impulsively to Blunt.

“You understand,” she said. “What else can I do? As things are, I must stand by Ralph. Don’t you see that I must?”

She looked very searchingly at him, and after a long pause he nodded abruptly.

Mrs. Ackroyd burst out into shrill protests. Flora remained unmoved. Then Raymond spoke.

“I appreciate your motives, Miss Ackroyd. But don’t you think you’re being rather precipitate? Wait a day or two.”

“To-morrow,” said Flora, in a clear voice. “It’s no good, mother, going on like this. Whatever else I am, I’m not disloyal to my friends.”

“M. Poirot,” Mrs. Ackroyd appealed tearfully, “can’t you say anything at all?”

“Nothing to be said,” interpolated Blunt. “She’s doing the right thing. I’ll stand by her through thick and thin.”

Flora held out her hand to him.

“Thank you, Major Blunt,” she said.

“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, “will you let an old man congratulate you on your courage and your loyalty? And will you not misunderstand me if I ask you—ask you most solemnly—to postpone the announcement you speak of for at least two days more?”

Flora hesitated.

“I ask it in Ralph Paton’s interests as much as in yours, mademoiselle. You frown. You do not see how that can be. But I assure you that it is so. Pas de blagues. You put the case into my hands—you must not hamper me now.”

Flora paused a few minutes before replying.

“I do not like it,” she said at last, “but I will do what you say.”

She sat down again at the table.

“And now, messieurs et mesdames,” said Poirot rapidly, “I will continue with what I was about to say. Understand this, I mean to arrive at the truth. The truth, however ugly in itself, is always curious and beautiful to the seeker after it. I am much aged, my powers may not be what they were.” Here he clearly expected a contradiction. “In all probability this is the last case I shall ever investigate. But Hercule Poirot does not end with a failure. Messieurs et mesdames, I tell you, I mean to know. And I shall know—in spite of you all.”

He brought out the last words provocatively, hurling them in our face as it were. I think we all flinched back a little, excepting Geoffrey Raymond, who remained good humored and imperturbable as usual.

“How do you mean—in spite of us all?” he asked, with slightly raised eyebrows.

“But—just that, monsieur. Every one of you in this room is concealing something from me.” He raised his hand as a faint murmur of protest arose. “Yes, yes, I know what I am saying. It may be something unimportant—trivial—which is supposed to have no bearing on the case, but there it is. Each one of you has something to hide. Come, now, am I right?”

His glance, challenging and accusing, swept round the table. And every pair of eyes dropped before his. Yes, mine as well.

“I am answered,” said Poirot, with a curious laugh. He got up from his seat. “I appeal to you all. Tell me the truth—the whole truth.” There was a silence. “Will no one speak?”

He gave the same short laugh again.

C’est dommage,” he said, and went out.

\ \

:::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: OCTOBER 2, 2008, from https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/69087/pg69087-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.

:::

\

AML Compliance in 2025: How Financial Institutions Can Stay Ahead of Evolving Financial Crime Risks

2026-03-25 16:42:55

Never has financial crime been more advanced. In the estimation of money laundered annually, two to five percent of the world’s GDP is the amount involved, and this figure denotes the presence and magnitude of financial crime in the global financial sector. Criminal networks are still streamlining their operations. This implies that compliance is no longer just a regulatory obligation for financial institutions. It has also become a strategic function that protects trust, stability, and reputation. As the year 2025 continues to take shape, banks and financial institutions are being forced to take a second look at how they comply in order to stay ahead of the emerging risks of financial crime.

The Rising Complexity of Financial Crime

Money laundering is based on three conventional processes that include placement, layering, and integration. Even though this structure is decades old, it has undergone significant changes in its implementation.

The availability of digital banking, universal payment systems, and emerging financial technologies has expanded opportunities for criminals beyond what previously existed. In the traditional banking environment, the flow of transactions was regulated, and the majority of activity was carried out through controlled channels, thereby making it easier to identify aberrant behavior. Financial activity is now trans-platform and transnational in nature and may not exhibit identifiable patterns. Because the financial system is becoming increasingly interconnected, compliance teams must handle ever larger volumes of transactions and interpret less straightforward behavior.

Global Regulations Driving Stronger AML Frameworks

Global regulatory organizations have intervened by strengthening anti-money laundering mechanisms. Different regions apply their own sets of regulations and monitoring procedures, yet the aim is the same. Financial institutions are expected to be able to profile customers, identify risks, and track transactions. As one compliance expert explains, “Institutions that fail to evolve their monitoring and risk assessment frameworks in line with emerging threats are far more exposed to regulatory breaches and financial crime.”

Beneficial ownership disclosure and centralized registries have been subjected to particularly intense scrutiny by regulators throughout Europe. Regulatory control in the United Kingdom is centered on enhanced due diligence, tightening sanctions controls, and expanding checks on digital assets. Beneficial ownership reporting and risk-based monitoring attract particular attention, and the United States government continues to operate frameworks based on the Bank Secrecy Act and the Anti-Money Laundering Act.

There is also enhanced supervision by regulators in the Asia-Pacific region, ensuring cross-border cooperation and adherence to international standards. In these regions, the general aim is clear. Banks must develop systems that can identify suspicious behavior within the shortest possible time and maintain proper and accurate customer records.

Technology Transforming Compliance Operations

One of the most prominent trends shaping AML compliance in 2025 is the emergence of advanced technology used to detect financial crimes. Traditional rule-based monitoring systems are generally inadequate for handling the volume and complexity of financial transactions today. New technologies include analytical tools that help institutions analyze vast amounts of data and identify patterns that would otherwise go unnoticed.

By using historical transaction data analysis and behavioral patterns, institutions can begin to distinguish between legitimate financial activity and potential laundering schemes. Such systems can identify suspicious transaction behavior, detect irregularities in large networks of accounts, and assist investigators in assessing risk more effectively, as illustrated in the graph below.

\n Evolution of AML Monitoring Effectiveness

The reduction of false alerts is not the only important change, but it is also beneficial to institutions. When compliance teams no longer have to spend time on unnecessary investigations, they have more time to focus on high-risk cases and conduct more in-depth analysis. This improves decision-making, reduces operational pressure, and transforms compliance into a more proactive and risk-based practice.

The Shift Toward Real Time Monitoring

In the traditional compliance model, the benchmark was to review customer information and transactions periodically. This can no longer be done in the modern context. Banks and other financial institutions are now moving towards twenty-four-hour surveillance systems that monitor the behavior of their customers.

Continuous monitoring allows institutions to adjust risk profiles when significant changes occur. This may happen when there is a sudden increase in cross-border transfers or an alteration in the ownership structure that may trigger immediate alarms. This helps investigators take immediate action before suspicious funds move further into the financial system.

Compliance is evolving into real-time compliance, whereby it is oriented towards prevention. By continuously analyzing customer behavior and transactions, institutions can address risks at an earlier stage rather than reacting to suspicious behavior that has already occurred. This tightening of control means that such a proactive approach allows banks to be less vulnerable to emerging threats while strengthening control mechanisms at the same time.

Regulatory Technology and the Future of Compliance

Regulatory technology is playing a bigger role in current compliance programs. These tools can be used to automate processes, consolidate information, and make risk assessment more accurate. With continuously changing regulatory requirements, institutions now have to contend with a growing amount of information while maintaining high standards of reporting.

Through the use of technology in compliance work, financial institutions are able to support investigations, enhance the accuracy of their reporting, and strengthen internal risk management. Not only does this enable organizations to operate within a regulated environment, but it also allows them to identify financial crime more effectively.

Staying Ahead in an Evolving Risk Landscape

The fight against financial crime will continue to evolve with developments in technology and changes in international regulation. Criminal networks are constantly adapting their methods and seeking new vulnerabilities in the financial system. A major issue for financial institutions will be the need to remain agile while simultaneously strengthening internal controls.

To achieve compliance, strong governance, continuous monitoring, and awareness of regulatory requirements are essential in 2025. Institutions that maintain transparency while implementing strict measures will be in a better position to identify potentially suspicious activity and uphold the integrity of the financial system.

AML compliance is no longer just regulatory compliance in an increasingly complex marketplace. It involves the creation of resilient mechanisms to detect and manage emerging risks while maintaining trust in the global financial system.

AI-Powered Micro Frontends: The Future of Intelligent Web Applications

2026-03-25 16:06:52

A micro frontend is an architectural pattern where a web application is composed of independent, self-contained UI modules, each owned by a different team. Think of it like microservices but for the browser. Instead of one massive React app with 200 components all tangled together, you have a shell application that pulls in discrete frontend "slices"