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从RAG到即时知识获取:让具备市场意识的智能体接入实时市场

2026-03-30 22:46:50

While everyone was busy grounding LLMs in their corporate history, the perimeter of necessary knowledge for AI agents has shifted. Now, if you are thinking that standard RAG is the right solution to the need for knowledge, regardless of the actual application, think twice.

RAG is excellent for institutional memory. It answers questions like “What was our Q3 policy on remote work?” or “How do I reset the server config?”. But for market-aware agents, you need more than that.

Here is the hard truth: Standard RAG crystallizes knowledge. Even if you scrape the web to populate your vector database, that data begins to decay the moment it is indexed. To bridge the gap between a “smart” model and a “useful” agent, the AI industry is embracing a new infrastructure category: Instant knowledge acquisition. This is the evolution of RAG: from a static library to a live newsroom. 🧠

In this article, you’ll discover what instant knowledge acquisition is, why it matters for market-aware agents, and why standard RAG is becoming an outdated concept for companies that need live data. Let’s go to it!

The Limits of “Crystallized” RAG

To understand why you need this shift, you have to look at the limitations of the current architecture. In a standard RAG setup, retrieval is decoupled from the moment of query. You scrape a competitor’s website on Monday, embed it, and store it. If an agent queries that data on Thursday, it is retrieving a “crystallized” snapshot of reality. 📷

Thank you, Internet, for storing tons of (live) data!

For static applications (like internal documentation or legal statutes), this is fine. But for dynamic markets, it is dangerous. If a competitor drops their price on Wednesday, your agent will confidently hallucinate that your pricing is still competitive. But the agent is not lying🤥: it just remembers a world that no longer exists.

This is why market-aware agents cannot rely on memory only. They need perception. They don’t have to remember the price: they need to go look at it in this very moment. This demand companies have for “near-real-time” comparison is what birthed “Agentic RAG”. Basically, it transforms knowledge retrieval from a database lookup into an active investigation. 🔍

The “Naive Search” Trap

So, how do you give agents eyes 👀? The first attempt usually involves “Naive Web Retrieval.” \n But here’s the thing that doesn’t work for dynamic markets: most implementations treat web search like a simple tool to call. The agent generates a query, hits a search API, gets ten links, and tries to answer the prompt based on the snippets. 🤖

Are your agents actively searching the web, before responding?

This is a disaster for high-stakes enterprise applications. Why? Because search engines are built for humans, not agents. Search engines prioritize clicks, ad revenue, and SEO. They are tolerant of ambiguity because a human is the final filter.

Humans scan the results, ignore the spam, and click the credible link. Agents don’t have that luxury. When an agent relies on a search snippet, it is relying on shallow evidence. If that snippet is misleading, your agent ingests that toxicity directly into its reasoning chain. ☠️

For a market-aware agent, this fragility is unacceptable. An agent tasked with adjusting trading parameters based on a Federal Reserve announcement cannot rely on a hallucinated summary or a blog post from last quarter. It requires the primary source instantly.

Defining Instant Knowledge Acquisition

So, what does “good” look like? Instant knowledge acquisition is the infrastructure layer that solves the reliability gap. It goes beyond simple retrieval by enforcing a rigorous pipeline of discovery, extraction, and verification. 🕵️

For market-aware agents, you need the right pipeline

Unlike traditional web crawlinginstant knowledge acquisition is designed to give agents the broadest possible context around a topic, not just a single answer to a single query. Think of it as the infrastructure layer that delivers all the related content your agent needs to reason with confidence, in seconds. This infrastructure usually looks like a three-stage process: \n 1. Intelligent discovery 🧭:It’s not enough to just match keywords. The system needs to understand the intent of the data requirement. Does the agent need a specific number or a synthesis of a narrative? Intelligent discovery generates multiple search queries to triangulate the information space. This ensures your agent isn’t trapped in the filter bubble of a single keyword. \n 2. Deep extraction 🕷️: The modern web is hostile to bots. Content is hidden behind dynamic JavaScript, complex DOM structures, and anti-scraping walls. A data acquisition infrastructure that actually works employs several headless browsers that can render pages fully, execute JS, handle cookies, and navigate the visual layout to extract the actual content without getting blocked. And it also scales as your data retrieval needs increase. \n 3. Syntactic and semantic cleaning 🧹: The raw HTML of the web is noisy. Nav bars, footers, ads, and “read next” widgets are just token bloat that degrades LLM performance. This layer converts the DOM into clean, semantic markdown or JSON that preserves the hierarchy without the noise.

The Accuracy Equation: Breadth + Verification

Let’s talk about the metric that actually matters: Accuracy. In the context of the live market, accuracy is not a function of your model’s parameter count. LLMs cannot “reason” their way to the correct price of Bitcoin if they don’t have access to the data. In other words, accuracy for market-aware agents is a function of evidence breadth and verification. 🪪

Don't forget that!

In standard RAG, an agent finds a single source claiming a fact. Without a mechanism to verify it, the agent accepts it as truth. This is “error propagation,” where a single hallucinated blog post can poison your entire financial analysis. 📉

Instant knowledge acquisition systems, instead, drop this risk by enforcing redundancy. The infrastructure is configured to fetch evidence from multiple, independent domains. If an agent is verifying a rumor, it doesn’t stop at one URL. It autonomously retrieves data from financial news outlets, official press wires, and regulatory databases. Only when the facts align, the system marks the knowledge as “acquired.”

This mimics the workflow of a human analyst: never trust a single source. The formula is simple:

  • Breadth of evidence + verification protocols = Accurate outputs 👍
  • Shallow evidence = Avoidable inaccuracy 👎

The Engineering Headache: Latency vs. The Bot War

But let’s be honest. For the development teams, building this pipeline is often more about surviving a distributed systems nightmare than anything else. 🥶

Who wants migraines from distributed systems??

Consider, for instance, a full headless browser that takes 3-5 seconds to render a complex news site. If your agent needs to visit 10 sites to verify a claim, you’re looking at 30+ seconds of latency. That’s an eternity! 🕰️

The fix? Massive parallelism. The infrastructure must manage dozens of browser instances concurrently. It transforms a linear operation into a parallel one, bounded only by the slowest single-page load.

Also, let’s not forget that anti-bots are aggressively blocking automated traffic today. Web retrieval for agents is caught in the crossfire, and a robust infrastructure requires a networking layer that manages:

  • Residential proxy networks: You need to route traffic through residential IPs, so you look like a human, not a data center. 🌐
  • TLS fingerprinting: Your bot’s handshake needs to match a standard browser, or you get blocked at the TCP level. ☝️
  • Behavioral heuristics: You need to mimic human scrolling and mouse movements to pass CAPTCHAs. 🏃

Maintaining this is a full-time DevOps burden, which slows down your operations. Particularly, if your core business is not web scraping.

The Platform Lead’s Dilemma: Buy vs. Build

For enterprise Leads, this forces a strategic decision: Do you build this scraping infrastructure in-house, or do you treat the web as a utility? Building in-house offers control, but the maintenance tax is exorbitant. 🔧

The web changes every day. Selectors break. Anti-bot systems update. Your engineering team will spend the majority of their time just keeping the scrapers alive.

The good news is that the industry is moving toward managed infrastructure, just as we don’t build our own vector databases from scratch anymore. This lets your team focus on the cognitive architecture rather than the plumbing of HTTP requests. 🥳

How Bright Data Brings You Instant Knowledge Acquisition Throughout Architecture

So, how do you get the architecture to manage instant knowledge acquisition for your market-aware agents? Easy: That’s exactly what Bright Data delivers.

Surpriseeeeeeeeeee!

In detail, Bright Data’s web access infrastructure provides you with:

  • High-recall data management: It delivers infinite context with 100+ results per query, automatically handles unlocking, and returns clean Markdown for token efficiency.
  • A production-ready system that scales: Let your market-aware agents discover hundreds of relevant URLs for any query, retrieve the full content of any public URL, and effortlessly crawl and extract entire websites, even from dynamic ones.
  • Reliable high-recall workflows: Ingest the full spectrum of web data to build a comprehensive vector store and build instant knowledge. Resolve missing attributes by cross-referencing multiple sources instantly to enrich your data.

Discover more about how Bright Data’s web access infrastructure can empower your instant knowledge acquisition needs!

Conclusion

In this article, you discovered why market-aware agents need a new approach than standard RAG. You also learned that this approach means getting instant knowledge acquisition, which requires the right architecture.

Bright Data helps you manage instant knowledge acquisition by providing you with the perfect infrastructure. No more overheads on discovering, unlocking web resources, and retrieving data.

:::tip Discover what Bright Data can do for your instant knowledge acquisition system with its AI solutions!

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Disclaimer: This article is published under HackerNoon Business Blogging Program.

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从数据管道到人工智能平台:代理式人工智能如何重新定义数据工程师的角色

2026-03-30 22:35:05

Artificial intelligence is no longer just a predictive model. In this article, data engineering leader Manushi Sheth examines how agentic AI is reshaping modern data infrastructure. A new system, called agentic AI, is capable of planning multi-step tasks, retrieving knowledge, using external tools, and updating as new information is received.

This change puts strain on the data infrastructure on which such systems operate and alters what data engineers are supposed to develop.

Analytics had been developed on traditional data platforms. The engineers developed pipelines that gathered events, converted the data, and loaded it into warehouses to enable analysts to study trends. This structure was effective because the human was the most valuable consumer.

Agentic AI systems change that model.

They rely on continuous data flows, reliable feature pipelines, and fast access to context across distributed data sources. When pipelines fail or data becomes stale, system behavior can degrade quickly. Data platforms no longer sit in the background. They now serve as core infrastructure for continuously running AI systems.

As a result, data engineering is evolving. The discipline is no longer only about building pipelines. It increasingly involves designing data ecosystems that support autonomous AI systems.

The Limits of Traditional Data Engineering

For years, data engineering has focused on structured workflows. Teams built pipelines that moved data from applications into warehouses and dashboards. Batch processing dominated these architectures. Pipelines ran hourly or nightly. Analysts reviewed the results later.

That model worked because analytical workloads tolerate delays and small imperfections. A dashboard that refreshes once a day rarely causes operational issues.

AI systems behave differently.

Machine learning models depend on fresh context. Recommendation engines rely on constantly updated behavioral signals from users. Autonomous agents retrieve external knowledge while generating responses. Data that arrives hours late can lead to outdated outputs or incorrect decisions.

Organizations adopting AI often discover that infrastructure readiness is a major constraint [1].

These limitations have existed for years, but AI systems have made them far more critical. Legacy pipelines often struggle to support:

  • continuously updated datasets;
  • machine learning feature pipelines;
  • vector pipelines that structure and index data for efficient semantic retrieval and model use;
  • observability systems that monitor data quality, freshness, lineage, and pipeline reliability.

When models depend on dynamic data instead of static datasets, pipeline reliability becomes just as important as the models themselves.

What Makes Agentic AI Systems Different

AI agent system coordinating tasks, tools, and data | Shutterstock

Agentic systems introduce a different operating model for AI. Instead of producing outputs from static inputs, they operate through ongoing decision loops.

They retrieve context, interact with tools, evaluate results, and adjust based on feedback. For example, an AI agent addressing a support request can use product documentation, service logs, and internal APIs to update a support ticket and generate its response.

Figure 1. Key aspects of agentic AI systems

A few characteristics define agentic systems. They work independently, achieve goals not isolated stimuli, interact with the environment, and learn through feedback loops. Many also coordinate specialized agents that collaborate to complete complex tasks. These capabilities introduce new infrastructure demands [2].

Autonomous Systems Depend on Reliable Data Context

Agentic systems require continuous access to contextual information. A retrieval query might access product documentation, customer history, operational metrics, or external knowledge sources.

Any weakness in the pipeline affects the outcome.

An outdated dataset can lead to incorrect reasoning. Missing metadata can prevent models from retrieving the correct information. Broken lineage tracking makes tracing errors difficult when system behavior deviates from expectations.

The architecture becomes more fragile as the number of data dependencies grows. At the same time, storing the context and history of these systems could rely on significantly increased data volume, making efficient and cost-aware data strategies critical. Traditional analytics workloads often tolerate these issues. Agentic systems do not.

Why AI Systems Expose Weak Data Foundations

Data quality problems do arise in analytics workflows, but their impact is often less pronounced than in AI and machine learning systems. Delayed updates or inconsistent schemas typically result in minor discrepancies in reports.

AI systems expose those weaknesses quickly.

Small inconsistencies cascade through machine learning workflows. Feature pipelines generate model inputs. When upstream data shifts unexpectedly, model outputs change as well.

When teams evaluate whether a data platform can support AI workloads, a few practical questions usually emerge:

  1. How quickly can pipelines surface schema changes across services?
  2. How visible are data anomalies before they affect model outputs?
  3. Can engineers trace the lineage of features used in production models?

These questions often reveal a familiar set of problems in AI deployments:

  • stale feature pipelines
  • missing contextual data
  • schema drift across services
  • delayed ingestion pipelines

These challenges limit organizations’ ability to scale AI workloads [3]. In many cases, the hardest problems in AI adoption involve data reliability rather than model development.

The Emerging Architecture of AI Data Platforms

Modern AI systems rely on a different architecture for retrieval and reasoning.

Figure 2. Common Retrieval-Augmented Generation workflow

Instead of storing all knowledge in a single model, the system retrieves relevant information when needed.

Several components make this possible:

  • embedding pipelines that convert text or data into vector representations
  • vector databases storing semantic relationships
  • similarity search systems that retrieve relevant context
  • integration with unstructured knowledge sources

Vector pipelines allow models to query external knowledge without retraining. They support dynamic reasoning over documents, repositories, or operational data [4].

Vector Pipelines and Context Retrieval

Embedding generation becomes a new responsibility for data infrastructure. Pipelines must process large volumes of unstructured content. Engineers must manage vector indexing, storage, and retrieval latency.

Trade-offs appear quickly. Large vector stores improve retrieval quality but increase storage and query complexity. Frequent embedding updates improve freshness but add computational overhead.

The cost of these pipelines must be balanced with data freshness, query performance, and system cost, especially as autonomous AI systems rely on stable data platforms.

Real-Time Data Systems and Autonomous AI Workflows

Real-time data pipeline supporting automated AI workflows | Shutterstock

Agentic systems rarely operate in isolation. They interact with APIs, services, and operational data sources while executing tasks.

Many of these interactions require real-time data.

Streaming architectures help deliver this context. Event pipelines capture application updates and deliver them quickly to downstream systems. Autonomous agents can then react to changes in near real time.

This architecture reduces the delay between events and decisions [5].

Agents frequently combine multiple sources of context while completing tasks. Some systems coordinate interactions between models, APIs, and data services using structured orchestration patterns such as agentic AI orchestration architectures [6].

Those systems rely heavily on reliable data infrastructure.

If streaming pipelines lag or event schemas change unexpectedly, autonomous workflows can break.

The Expanding Role of Data Engineers

Changing these architectural features alters the job description of data engineers.

Conventionally, data engineering focused on ingestion pipelines, warehouse modeling, and transformation frameworks. New AI platforms require broader capabilities.

Data engineers increasingly design systems supporting:

  • feature pipelines feeding machine learning models
  • LLM data pipelines supporting generative AI systems
  • embedding pipelines powering vector retrieval
  • streaming data infrastructure for real-time systems
  • observability platforms monitoring pipeline reliability
  • governance systems ensuring trustworthy data

Supporting these systems requires skills in orchestration frameworks, streaming platforms, AI infrastructure, and data product thinking.

Data engineers increasingly sit at the center of these systems. The role of data engineers becomes even more critical in AI-driven environments. Machine learning engineers rely on reliable feature pipelines, product teams depend on accurate model outputs, and platform engineers coordinate distributed infrastructure.

The Future of Data Engineering in an AI-Native World

AI systems are moving toward greater autonomy. Agents retrieve knowledge, interact with tools, and make decisions using evolving data.

Reliable data infrastructure makes this possible. Pipelines must deliver fresh context, vector systems must retrieve knowledge quickly, and observability platforms must detect failures before models are affected.

The role of data engineers continues to expand.

They are not only building pipelines but also designing feature pipelines, vector data systems, and real-time data flows that support AI applications. Many AI initiatives succeed or fail based on the reliability of data systems. This places data engineers at the center of the modern AI stack.

As organizations adopt more agentic systems, the architecture of their data platforms will play a bigger role in determining how reliable and scalable those systems become.

Sources:

  1. McKinsey & Company. (2025 June). Seizing the agentic AI advantage. McKinsey & Company. https://www.mckinsey.com/~/media/mckinsey/business%20functions/quantumblack/our%20insights/seizing%20the%20agentic%20ai%20advantage/seizing-the-agentic-ai-advantage.pdf

  2. Hosseini, S., & Seilani, H. (2025 July). The role of agentic AI in shaping a smart future: A systematic review. Array. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.array.2025.100399

  3. Deloitte. (2024 January). State of Generative AI in the Enterprise. Deloitte. https://www.deloitte.com/ce/en/services/consulting/research/state-of-generative-ai-in-enterprise.html

  4. Han, Y., Liu, C., Wang, P., Han, Y., Yu, S., Zhang, R., et al. (2023 October). A comprehensive survey on vector database: Storage and retrieval technique, challenge. arXiv. https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.11703

  5. Confluent. (2025 March 25). AI agents using Anthropic MCP. Confluent Blog. [Blog]. Complete URL: https://www.confluent.io/blog/ai-agents-using-anthropic-mcp/

  6. IBM. (n.d.). Navigating the complexities of agentic AI. https://www.ibm.com/think/insights/navigating-the-complexities-of-agentic-ai

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:::tip This article is published under HackerNoon's Business Blogging program.

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从早期开发者到19岁担任CTO:亚历山大·热内斯特的故事

2026-03-30 22:29:23

For many people, tech starts in school.

For Alexandre Genest, it started earlier. He began coding at 10, building small games and simple systems to understand how software behaves under real conditions.

By his mid-teens, he was designing internal tools and automating operations for small businesses. A few years later, he moved into environments where performance and reliability carried direct financial consequences. Today, at 20, he serves as CTO of Hilt, via its Canadian entity, 17587597 Canada Inc., leading the company’s technical direction in cybersecurity and data infrastructure.

The path moves quickly, but the pattern is clear. Start early, work on real systems, and stay focused on how things behave outside ideal conditions.

Learning Early and Taking on Real Work Fast

Alexandre Genest started programming at 10. Like many young developers, he began with small projects such as games and simple tools.

What stands out is how he approached them. He focused less on finishing and more on understanding where systems slow down, where they break, and how they can be improved. That habit carried into his early work.

At 15, he joined a small business with no internal engineering team. There were no systems in place and no one to pass work to. He had to solve practical problems in a live environment.

He worked on digitizing operations, building internal tools, and setting up infrastructure that made daily processes more reliable. These systems were used every day, so failures had an immediate impact.

By 17, he was supporting multiple businesses at once. The work included infrastructure, automation pipelines, and internal tools across different environments.

Each business had different priorities. Some needed automation, others needed scalability. That forced clear trade-offs around reliability, cost, and maintainability.

This kind of experience shifts how engineers think. The focus moves from adding features to building systems that hold up under real use.

Moving Into Performance-Critical Systems in Finance

After working with smaller businesses, Genest joined the National Bank of Canada in algorithmic trading.

The environment changed, and so did the stakes. Systems had to process large volumes of data with strict latency requirements. Small inefficiencies could have a measurable impact.

One example stands out. He identified and resolved a bug affecting hundreds of Kafka topics. Issues at that scale require understanding how systems behave under load and how failures spread across components.

Work in this setting reinforces a key idea. Performance has to be considered during design, not added later.

Alongside his professional work, Genest competed in hackathons and won eight international competitions.

Hackathons reward speed and execution. With limited time and resources, there is little room for unnecessary complexity. You need to identify the core problem quickly and build something that works.

He was also selected as a Z Fellow, a highly selective program with an acceptance rate below 1%, that supports early-stage builders working on new ideas.

Leading Engineering and Building Infrastructure at Hilt

Genest now serves as CTO at Hilt, a cybersecurity and data infrastructure company.

He leads technical direction across architecture, platform engineering, and product development. He also defines the long-term roadmap and oversees engineering execution.

His role is central to the development of Hilt’s core platform, which relies on the architecture and systems he designed.

The systems he oversees are designed to secure environments used by organizations managing billions of dollars in assets while maintaining minimal performance overhead.

Balancing security and performance is a known challenge. Security controls often introduce friction, slow systems down, or complicate development workflows.

His approach focuses on integrating security into the infrastructure itself. Instead of adding it as a separate layer, it becomes part of how the system operates.

This reduces friction while maintaining protection and connects directly to his earlier experience with performance-sensitive systems.

Rethinking Trade-Offs and Focusing on Observability

A consistent theme across Genest’s work is his approach to trade-offs.

In many environments, complexity is treated as unavoidable. Systems become harder to manage, and inefficiencies are accepted over time.

His approach is to revisit those assumptions. Instead of working around constraints, he looks for ways to redesign systems so those limitations are reduced.

This thinking connects closely to his focus on observability.

Modern systems rely heavily on data, yet many teams lack visibility into how that data moves across services, environments, and access points. As systems grow, that visibility becomes harder to maintain.

When something fails, teams often struggle to identify where the issue began or how it spread. This affects both performance and security.

Genest’s work focuses on making low-level telemetry more usable. The goal is to give teams a clearer view of system behavior in real time so they can respond faster and with better context.

His long-term direction is to build a governance layer across observable systems, including endpoint, network, and cloud environments. The aim is to turn raw telemetry into information that can be understood and acted on more easily.

Choosing Experience and Looking Ahead

Genest chose to leave the university to focus on building Hilt.This was not due to academic difficulty. He maintained a strong academic record while working and building at the same time.

His path reflects a consistent pattern of choosing applied, high-responsibility engineering environments over purely academic progression.

Across startups, hackathons, and infrastructure-focused engineering work, he has repeatedly operated in environments that required ownership of technical decisions and exposure to systems under real operational constraints. These experiences provided continuous feedback loops and accelerated his development in tech.

What stands out across his path is consistency. He started early, worked on real systems, and moved toward environments where technical decisions carry more weight.

He also questions assumptions that others accept by default. Many constraints in engineering are treated as fixed, even though they often come from earlier design choices.

He has worked across small business systems, financial infrastructure, and startups. He has taken on technical responsibility early and stayed focused on how systems behave under real conditions.

For engineers and founders, the takeaway is simple.

Work on real problems. Stay close to fundamentals. Revisit assumptions that others treat as fixed.

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:::tip This article is published under HackerNoon's Business Blogging program.

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如何在数据生命周期各阶段优化大数据平台成本

2026-03-30 20:29:38

The power of big data analytics unlocks a treasure trove of insights, but the sheer volume of data ingested, processed, and stored can quickly turn into a financial burden. Organizations running big data platforms that handle millions of events per second face a constant challenge: balancing the need for robust data management with cost-effectiveness.

This article uses an example of a general-purpose Big Data Platform and walks through different strategies to methodically inspect and control costs.

An End-To-End Big Data Platform Components

An end-to-end big data platform streamlines the journey of your data, from raw format to actionable insights. It comprises several key components that work together to efficiently manage the entire data lifecycle.

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  • Data ingestion layer: This acts as the entry point, seamlessly bringing in data from various sources, regardless of format (structured, semi-structured, unstructured). It can filter out irrelevant data to improve efficiency and transform it into a consistent, well-defined structure (schema) for better analysis.
  • Low-latency analytics layer: Here, real-time or near real-time processing takes center stage. This layer is crucial for applications requiring immediate action, such as fraud detection systems that analyze transactions for suspicious activity.
  • Ad-hoc search and indexing: This layer empowers flexible exploration of your data. It creates searchable indexes, enabling users to conduct quick and targeted searches to meet both anticipated and unforeseen analytical needs.
  • Storage layer: The platform provides storage solutions tailored to different use cases:
  • Short-term storage: This tier holds data readily accessible for batch processing tasks common in data science projects, investigations, and model development or execution.
  • Long-term storage: This tier houses data for extended periods, where retrieval is less frequent. It's ideal for audit purposes or historical analysis where long-term accessibility is essential.

Prioritizing Efficiency in the Ingestion Layer

A core principle in computer science, not just big data, is addressing issues early in the development lifecycle. Unit testing exemplifies this perfectly, as catching bugs early is far more cost-effective. The same logic applies to data ingestion: filtering out unnecessary data as soon as possible maximizes efficiency. By focusing resources on data with potential business value, you minimize wasted spend.

Another optimization strategy lies in data normalization. Transforming data into a well-defined schema (structure) during ingestion offers significant advantages. This upfront processing reduces the parsing burden on subsequent components within the data platform, allowing them to focus on their core tasks.

While not yet ubiquitous, low-latency computation layers offer significant advantages for organizations willing to invest. By harnessing modern streaming technologies, these layers can dramatically reduce processing costs and generate insights at lightning speed. This real-time capability empowers businesses to address critical use cases like fraud detection, security incident response, and notification processing in a highly cost-effective way.

Optimizing Ad-Hoc Search for Cost and Efficiency

While ad-hoc search offers flexibility, it can become a significant cost factor due to the resources required for indexing, replication, and processing queries. Here are strategies to optimize ad-hoc search and streamline data management:

  • Analyze search patterns: By meticulously examining user queries, both ad-hoc and scheduled saved searches, you can identify opportunities to refine the data feeding into the ad-hoc search tools. This can involve filtering out irrelevant data or pre-processing data to improve search efficiency.
  • Leverage low-latency analytics: Reviewing scheduled saved searches can reveal opportunities to migrate them to the low-latency analytics layer. This is particularly beneficial for searches requiring real-time insights or those involving high compute costs, such as regular expression (regex) or substring searches. By processing this data in the low-latency layer, you can free up resources in the ad-hoc search system and potentially reduce overall costs.
  • Normalization for efficiency: Analyze usage patterns to identify opportunities for normalization during data ingestion. Extracting relevant data upfront, during normalization, can significantly reduce compute costs associated with complex searches like regex or substring searches later in the ad-hoc search process.

Optimize Data Storage

The cost involved in storing the data is directly proportional to the amount of data that needs to be stored and the usage of the data. Cloud Providers charge based on the size of the data, and then there is extra cost involved in compute, network, and transport to perform any computations on the data. There are two simple ways to optimize Storage costs:

Understanding Your Data Usage Frequency

The first step towards cost optimization is gaining a clear understanding of your data environment. This involves classifying your data based on its access frequency:

  • Hot data: Frequently accessed data critical for real-time analytics and decision-making. Examples include streaming sensor data, user activity logs, and financial transactions.
  • Warm data: Data accessed periodically, but not in real-time. This could include historical logs, customer data, and clickstream data.
  • Cold data: Rarely accessed data with long-term retention requirements. This might include historical backups, compliance archives, and log data from inactive projects.

By classifying your data, you can tailor its storage strategy. Hot data demands high-performance storage like Solid State Drives (SSDs) for fast retrieval. Warm data can reside on cheaper Hard Disk Drives (HDDs), while cold data is best suited for cost-effective object storage solutions.

Data Lifecycle Management

Data accumulates rapidly, and without proper management, it can lead to storage bloat and unnecessary costs. Implement data lifecycle management policies to automate data movement and deletion.

These policies can be defined:

  • Data retention periods: Set specific timeframes for storing different data types based on regulatory and business requirements. Older data exceeding these periods can be archived or deleted.
  • Data quality checks: Automate checks for data integrity and consistency. Identify and delete duplicate or erroneous data to optimize storage utilization.
  • Data tiering: As data ages, automatically move it to lower-cost storage tiers based on your data classification. This ensures hot data remains readily available while keeping the overall storage cost efficient.

Architect for Efficiency

The architecture of your big data platform significantly impacts its overall cost. Here's how to optimize resource utilization:

  • Right-sizing instances: Analyze the resource usage patterns of your processing jobs. Don't fall prey to overprovisioning; scale your instances (virtual machines) up or down based on actual workload demands. This can be achieved through auto-scaling features offered by cloud providers.
  • Cloud cost management tools: Leverage cost management tools provided by your cloud platform. These tools offer detailed insights into resource utilization, and cost breakdowns, and identify potential savings. Explore features like:
  • Reserved instances: Purchase computing resources at a discounted rate for a committed usage period. This can be beneficial for predictable workloads.
  • Spot instances: Utilize unused cloud capacity at significantly lower on-demand prices. This can be ideal for batch processing jobs with flexible scheduling needs.
  • Scheduled jobs: Schedule resource-intensive data processing tasks for off-peak hours when cloud resource prices are typically lower.

Monitoring and Reporting Cost

Cost optimization is an ongoing process. To maintain cost-effectiveness, implement robust cost monitoring and reporting practices:

  • Cost dashboarding: Develop dashboards that provide real-time and historical cost insights across different resource categories. Visualizing cost trends allows for proactive identification of potential cost increases. Treat cost metrics as operations metrics that need to be monitored for changes in trends so actions can be taken before the cost becomes a problem.
  • Cost attribution: Allocate costs to specific departments and projects based on their data usage. This fosters cost awareness among internal stakeholders and encourages responsible data management practices.

Conclusion: The Road to Cost-Effective Big Data Management

Optimizing the cost of your big data platform is a continuous journey. By implementing the strategies outlined above, you can achieve significant cost savings without compromising the functionality and value of your data ecosystem. The most effective approach will depend on your specific data landscape, workloads, and cloud environment. Regular monitoring, cost awareness throughout the development lifecycle, and a commitment to continuous improvement are key to ensuring your big data platform delivers insights efficiently and cost-effectively.

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常规提交:结构化 Git 提交信息编写指南

2026-03-30 20:23:37

\ Conventional Commits is a lightweight specification for writing commit messages that are human-readable and machine-processable.

Instead of writing vague messages like "fixed bug" or "updates", this convention provides a rigorous rule set for creating an explicit commit history. This makes it easier to understand what happened in a project and why, and it enables potent automation tools (like automatic changelogs and version bumping).


1. Anatomy of a Commit Message

A conventional commit message mimics the structure of an email, with a clear header (subject), optional body, and optional footer.

<type>[optional scope]: <description>

[optional body]

[optional footer(s)]

The Header (Required)

The first line is the most important. It contains three parts:

  1. Type: What kind of change is this? (e.g., feat, fix, chore)
  2. Scope (Optional): What part of the codebase is affected? (e.g., (auth), (checkout))
  3. Description: A short, imperative summary of the change.

The Body (Optional)

This provides more context. Use it to explain the "why" behind the change, not just the "how".

  • Example: "The previous regex was causing a memory leak on large inputs. Switched to a stream-based parser."

The Footer (Optional)

Used for referencing issues or indicating breaking changes.

  • Example: Closes #123 or BREAKING CHANGE: API endpoint /users renamed to /profiles

2. Commit Types (Cheat Sheet)

You only need to memorize a few major types.

| Type | Meaning | SemVer Correlation | Example | |----|----|----|----| | feat | A new feature for the user. | MINOR (1.1.0) | feat(search): add voice search capability | | fix | A bug fix for the user. | PATCH (1.0.1) | fix(login): handle null token gracefully | | docs | Documentation only changes. | PATCH | docs: update API usage in README | | chore | Maintenance changes that don't affect src or test files. | PATCH | chore: upgrade flutter dependencies | | style | Code style changes (formatting, missing semi-colons, etc). | PATCH | style: apply dart format | | refactor | A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature. | PATCH | refactor(auth): simplify login logic | | test | Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests. | PATCH | test: add unit tests for user_service | | perf | A code change that improves performance. | PATCH | perf: optimize image loading in listview | | ci | Changes to CI configuration files and scripts. | PATCH | ci: add github actions workflow |


3. Practical Examples

✨ Feature (feat)

Used when adding new functionality.

feat(cart): add "Undo" button after removing item

Allows users to quickly recover an item if they accidentally deleted it.

🐛 Bug Fix (fix)

Used when fixing a bug.

fix(navigation): prevent double-pushing the home screen

The "Home" button was pushing a new route instead of popping to root.
This caused the navigation stack to grow indefinitely.

Closes #42

💥 Breaking Change (!)

There are two ways to mark a breaking change (which triggers a MAJOR version bump):

  1. Using a ! after the type/scope.
  2. Adding a BREAKING CHANGE: footer.

Example 1 (Using !):

feat(api)!: remove support for XML responses

We now strictly return JSON. XML parsers will fail.

Example 2 (Using Footer):

chore: drop support for Node 12

BREAKING CHANGE: The project now requires Node 14 or higher due to new crypto dependencies.

4. Good vs. Bad Examples

See the difference between a messy history and a clean one.

| ❌ Bad / Vague | ✅ Good / Conventional | Why it's better | |----|----|----| | fixed it | fix(login): handle timeout error | Tells us what was fixed and where. | | added stuff | feat(profile): add user avatar upload | Clearly states the new feature. | | wip | (Don't commit WIPs to main) | Keep history clean. Use git rebase to squash WIPs. | | changed color | style(theme): update primary button color | Categorizes the change as stylistic. | | API change | feat(api)!: rename getAll to fetchAll | The ! warns everyone this is a BREAKING change. |


5. Why Should You Care?

  1. Automated Changelogs: You can use tools to generate standard changelogs automatically. No more manual writing!
  2. Semantic Versioning: Tools can look at your commit history (feat, fix, BREAKING) and determine if the next version should be 1.0.1, 1.1.0, or 2.0.0 automatically.
  3. Better Collaboration: When reviewing history (e.g., git log), it's immediately obvious what happened.
  • Scan for fix to see recent bug patches.
  • Scan for feat to see what's new.
  1. Discipline: It forces you to think about the nature of your change. If you can't categorize it, your commit might be doing too many things at once.

6. FAQ

Q: What if I accidentally use the wrong type?

A: If you haven't pushed yet, use git commit --amend. If you have pushed to a shared branch, it’s usually okay to leave it unless your team relies heavily on automated releases.

Q: Can I use my own types?

A: Yes! The spec is flexible. Some teams use build:, revert:, or even emojis. Just be consistent.

Q: Should I use lower case or Title Case?

A: The spec allows either, but lower case is the most common convention in the industry (e.g., feat: not Feat:).

Q: What if a commit does multiple things?

A: That's a sign you should split it! A commit should ideally do one thing. If you fixed a bug AND added a feature, split it into two commits: fix: ... and feat: ....

Q: How do I handle revert commits?

A: The convention suggests using a revert: type. The header should contain the header of the specific commit being reverted, and the body should contain This reverts commit <hash>..

Q: Is there a character limit for the header?

A: It is meant to be a summary. A good rule of thumb is to keep it under 50 characters where possible, and strictly under 72 characters to avoid wrapping in various git tools.

Q: How granular should the scope be?

A: Scopes should be distinct modules or features (e.g., auth, payment, ui). Avoid using precise filenames (like user_service.dart) as scopes; stick to the "concept" of the component.


Reference(s)

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2026-03-30 20:04:34

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