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AI in SEO: Stop using it for spam and start using it for Architecture

2026-04-10 03:48:34

Let’s be honest: the internet is currently being flooded with mediocre, AI-generated blog posts that no one wants to read. If your SEO strategy is just "prompting GPT-4 to write 50 articles a day," you aren't building a brand - you're building a digital landfill.
However, for developers, AI in SEO has a much more powerful (and less spammy) use case: Technical Automation.

  1. Beyond Content: AI for Schema and Metadata
    Instead of writing fluff, I started using LLMs to analyze my component structures and automatically generate JSON-LD Schema.
    If you have a MERN app with hundreds of products, writing structured data by hand is a nightmare. Using a Python script to map your MongoDB schema to SEO-friendly JSON-LD is where AI actually saves you hundreds of hours of manual labor.

  2. Pattern Recognition in Search Console
    I’ve started feeding anonymized Search Console data into analysis tools to find "Keyword Cannibalization." AI is brilliant at spotting when two of your React routes are fighting for the same search intent - something that would take a human hours to find in a spreadsheet.

  3. The Human-AI Hybrid
    The mistake most people make is removing the human from the loop. Google’s algorithms are getting better at identifying "low-effort" content. The goal should be: AI for the heavy lifting, Humans for the craft.
    At Crafted Marketing Services, we use this exact philosophy. We leverage AI for technical audits, script-based keyword mapping, and data analysis, but the actual strategy is "hand-crafted."
    We’ve found that when you combine a developer’s mindset with AI efficiency, you don't just get more traffic - you get higher quality traffic that actually converts.

*Are you using AI to write code, write content, or fix your technical SEO debt? Let’s debate the ethics and the efficiency in the comments.
*

your supplier just raised prices. now what?

2026-04-10 03:45:48

Last Tuesday one of my AliExpress suppliers bumped the price on an LED therapy mask from $18 to $26. Overnight. No warning. The product was already live on two Shopify stores with a $32 sell price — margin went from comfortable to barely breaking even.

If you run a dropshipping operation, this isn't news. Suppliers raise prices, go out of stock, or vanish. The standard fix is manual: open DSers, find the product, search for alternatives, compare SKU variants one by one, update the mapping. For 40+ products across multiple stores, that's a full afternoon gone. Every month.

So I built an MCP tool that does it automatically — supplier search, product scoring, variant matching, mapping update. Here's what went into it.

TL;DRdsers_replace_mapping is a new MCP tool (v1.5.0 of @lofder/dsers-mcp-product) that takes a live DSers product, searches AliExpress for cheaper suppliers, scores candidates across 5 dimensions, matches SKU variants with a three-tier algorithm (exact → context → fuzzy), and optionally writes the new mapping. Auto-apply only fires when every variant match exceeds strict confidence thresholds. Works with Claude, Cursor, Windsurf, or any MCP-compatible AI agent.

Why automated supplier replacement is hard

Finding a cheaper supplier is the easy part. AliExpress has thousands of sellers for any given product. The hard part is making sure it's actually the same product with compatible SKU variants.

Take that LED mask. My current listing has two variants: "EU PLUG (220-240V)" and "US PLUG (100-110V)". A replacement supplier might list the same options as "European Standard" and "American Standard". Or "220V" and "110V". Or they might bundle the plug type with a "Ships From" option, creating a 2×3 variant matrix where I had 2×1.

If you get this wrong, a customer orders the EU plug version and receives a UK plug. Chargeback, bad review, account risk.

This is a supply chain matching problem, and it's messier than it looks.

How the product scoring pipeline works

I ended up building a multi-stage pipeline. First, normalize everything — strip the marketing noise from titles ("[2026 Trending] HOT SALE" becomes "led therapy mask with neck"), parse structured specs out of option values (extracting plug=eu plug and voltage=220v from "EU PLUG (220-240V)"), and ignore shipping axes entirely since "Ships From: China" tells you nothing about the product itself.

Then score candidates across five signals:

  • Structured spec overlap (35% weight) — quantity, capacity, plug type, voltage. These are the hard constraints. If the candidate has "UK Plug" and you need "EU Plug", it's a blocker regardless of everything else.
  • Option value coverage (25%) — what percentage of your current variant option pairs exist in the candidate.
  • Title token similarity (20%) — Jaccard similarity on cleaned title tokens.
  • Image similarity (10%) — basename comparison on product image URLs. Crude, but surprisingly effective on AliExpress where the same factory photo gets reused.
  • Market signals (10%) — stock availability, rating, order volume. A supplier with zero stock or 2-star rating isn't useful even if the product matches perfectly.

The whole scoring function is about 30 lines:

const productScore = roundScore(
  titleSimilarityScore * 0.2 +
    structuredSpecScore * 0.35 +
    optionCoverageScore * 0.25 +
    imageSimilarityScore * 0.1 +
    marketSignalScore * 0.1,
);

Three-tier SKU variant matching

Product-level scoring gets you a ranked list of candidates. But you still need to map each variant from your current supplier to the new one. This is where most automation attempts fall apart.

I went with three tiers:

  1. Exact signature match — both sides normalize to plug=eu plug → instant 1:1 mapping, confidence = 1.0.
  2. Context match — use the ignored axes (like shipping origin) as tie-breakers when two variants share the same product signature but differ on logistics.
  3. Fuzzy match — for everything else, score option pairs (45%), context option pairs (25%), title tokens (15%), image similarity (10%), and price neighborhood (5%). Only accept matches above 0.6, and require a meaningful gap between the best and second-best match to avoid ambiguous pairings.

Auto-apply only triggers when every single variant maps with high confidence. One ambiguous match and the whole thing drops to "analysis only" — the tool shows you what it found, but won't touch your live mapping without human confirmation.

Running it as an MCP tool with AI agents

This whole pipeline became the 13th tool in my open-source MCP server for DSers dropshipping. The tool is called dsers_replace_mapping. You give it a product ID and store ID, it pulls the current mapping, searches for alternatives, scores them, matches variants, and returns a structured report.

An AI agent can use it like this:

Check product dp-8291 in store st-102.
If the supplier price went up more than 20%,
find a cheaper alternative and update the mapping.

The agent calls dsers_my_products to get the current price, calls dsers_replace_mapping with auto_apply=false first to see the analysis, evaluates whether the top candidate is acceptable, and only then calls it again with auto_apply=true if everything checks out.

The response includes confidence scores, blocked reasons, variant match details, and a full mapping preview — enough for the agent (or a human) to make an informed decision.

Normalizing DSers API responses

Building the scoring was the fun part. The painful part was normalizing the wild variety of API response shapes from DSers.

The same product detail can arrive with variants under variants, skuList, variantList, or productSkuList. Prices might be in cents or dollars — sometimes in the same response. Option values sometimes live in optionsSnapshot, sometimes in options, sometimes both with different structures. I wrote a pickBestProductNode function that recursively scores every nested object in the API response and picks the one that looks most like a product.

Not elegant. But it works on every response shape I've thrown at it so far.

Scoring thresholds and test coverage

The feature adds about 1,500 lines of logic across three modules, plus 950 lines of tests covering normalization, scoring, variant matching, and the full flow with mocked API calls. Build passes, 312 tests green.

For the scoring thresholds: auto-apply requires product_score >= 0.88 at the product level, plus score >= 0.93 and score_gap >= 0.1 at the variant level. These numbers came from testing against ~30 real product pairs. They're conservative on purpose — false positives on supplier replacement cost real money.

This ships as v1.5.0 of @lofder/dsers-mcp-product. It's the first MCP server I know of that does automated supply chain supplier replacement with variant-level matching. If you're running a dropshipping operation and tired of the supplier treadmill, the tool might save you some afternoons.

If you've tried automating supplier matching in your own stack — what signals did you end up relying on? I'm especially curious whether anyone's gotten CLIP-based image matching to work reliably for e-commerce product comparison.

How to Run A2A-Compatible Agents on a Single VPS (No Docker, No Kubernetes)

2026-04-10 03:42:47

The Agent-to-Agent (A2A) protocol is becoming the standard for AI agent interoperability. But most guides assume you're running Kubernetes, Docker Compose, or a cloud platform.

What if you just want to run a few agents on a single VPS? No containers. No orchestration. Just agents talking to each other on localhost.

That's what ag2ag does.

What is ag2ag?

ag2ag is an open-source operational layer for running A2A-compatible agents on a single host. It provides:

  • Local registry — JSON file tracking all your agents, their ports, and systemd units
  • Lifecycle management — start, stop, restart agents via systemd
  • Discovery — each agent exposes an AgentCard at GET /card
  • Messaging — agents send messages to each other on localhost
  • Task persistence — JSONL files that survive restarts
  • CLI — manage everything from the terminal

One external dependency: @a2a-js/sdk. Everything else is Node.js built-ins.

Not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the A2A Protocol project, Google, or the Linux Foundation.

Prerequisites

  • A Linux server (VPS, homelab, dev VM)
  • Node.js 18+
  • systemd (comes with any modern Linux distro)
node --version  # v22.x recommended

Step 1: Install ag2ag

npm install -g ag2ag

Or clone and link:

git clone https://github.com/Maretto/ag2ag.git
cd ag2ag && npm install && npm link

Step 2: Initialize

ag2ag init

This creates the registry file and data directories.

Step 3: Build Your First Agent

Create a file called my-agent.js:

const { AgentServer } = require('ag2ag');

const card = {
  schemaVersion: '1.0',
  name: 'greeter',
  description: 'A simple greeting agent',
  url: 'http://127.0.0.1:5001',
  capabilities: { streaming: false, pushNotifications: false },
  skills: [
    { name: 'greet', description: 'Returns a friendly greeting' }
  ],
};

async function handleMessage(message, task) {
  // Extract text from the incoming message
  const text = message.parts?.[0]?.text || 'unknown';

  return {
    parts: [{ type: 'text', text: `Hello! You said: "${text}"` }],
    source: 'greeter',
    timestamp: new Date().toISOString(),
  };
}

const server = new AgentServer({
  agentCard: card,
  agentName: 'greeter',
  port: 5001,
  handler: handleMessage,
});

server.start().then(({ port }) => {
  console.log(`Greeter agent running on port ${port}`);
});

Step 4: Test It

node my-agent.js &

Check its AgentCard:

curl http://127.0.0.1:5001/card | jq .

Send a message:

ag2ag register greeter --port 5001 --description "A simple greeting agent"
ag2ag call greeter "Hey there"

Step 5: Build a Second Agent (That Calls the First)

Now the interesting part — an agent that discovers and calls another agent:

const { AgentServer, AgentClient } = require('ag2ag');

const card = {
  schemaVersion: '1.0',
  name: 'orchestrator',
  description: 'Calls the greeter agent and returns the response',
  url: 'http://127.0.0.1:5002',
  capabilities: { streaming: false, pushNotifications: false },
  skills: [
    { name: 'forward-greeting', description: 'Forwards a message to the greeter' }
  ],
};

async function handleMessage(message, task) {
  const text = message.parts?.[0]?.text || 'hello from orchestrator';

  // Call the greeter agent
  const client = new AgentClient();
  const result = await client.sendMessage(5001, {
    role: 'user',
    parts: [{ type: 'text', text }],
  });

  // Wait for completion
  const completed = await client.waitForTask(5001, result.data.id, {
    interval: 500,
    timeout: 10000,
  });

  const response = completed.artifacts?.[0]?.parts?.[0]?.text || 'no response';

  return {
    parts: [{ type: 'text', text: `Greeter responded: "${response}"` }],
    source: 'orchestrator',
    timestamp: new Date().toISOString(),
  };
}

const server = new AgentServer({
  agentCard: card,
  agentName: 'orchestrator',
  port: 5002,
  handler: handleMessage,
});

server.start().then(({ port }) => {
  console.log(`Orchestrator running on port ${port}`);
});

Run it:

node orchestrator.js &
ag2ag register orchestrator --port 5002 --description "Calls greeter agent"
ag2ag call orchestrator "A2A is cool"

You just built agent composition — one agent discovering and calling another via the A2A protocol.

Step 6: Deploy with systemd

For production use, you want agents running as systemd services. ag2ag handles this:

# Generate a systemd unit
ag2ag register greeter --port 5001 --unit greeter.service

# Start as a service
ag2ag start greeter

# Check status
ag2ag status --health

# View logs
ag2ag logs greeter

Agents now survive reboots, restart on failure, and integrate with your server's logging.

Real-World Example: Health Proxy

I use this in production with a Health Proxy agent that queries multiple services and returns an aggregated health report:

// Simplified — the real version queries API Gateway + Mesh Ping
async function handleMessage(message, task) {
  const client = new AgentClient();

  const [gateway, mesh] = await Promise.all([
    client.getCard(3099),
    client.getCard(3101),
  ]);

  return {
    parts: [{
      type: 'text',
      text: `API Gateway: ${gateway.data.name}\nMesh Ping: ${mesh.data.name}`
    }],
    source: 'health-proxy',
    timestamp: new Date().toISOString(),
  };
}

This agent doesn't know about the other agents at build time — it discovers them at runtime via their AgentCards.

Security Considerations

ag2ag is designed for localhost-only environments. Important limitations:

  • No authentication — all communication is unencrypted HTTP on loopback
  • No inter-agent isolation — agents run as systemd services, typically under the same user
  • No concurrency testing — JSONL persistence hasn't been stress-tested under parallel writes
  • Body limit — 1MB max payload per request

For more details, see SECURITY.md.

When to Use This vs Alternatives

Situation Use
Single VPS, 2-20 agents ✅ ag2ag
Multi-host, distributed Docker Compose, Kubernetes
Need auth/encryption Build your own auth layer or use a service mesh
Just managing Node.js processes PM2
Building A2A agents from scratch @a2a-js/sdk directly

What's Next

ag2ag is experimental (v0.2.0) but functional. It's been validated with 6 agents on a single VPS, including real composition patterns.

If you're experimenting with the A2A protocol and want a lightweight way to run agents without container overhead, give it a try:

PRs, issues, and feedback welcome.

AI Debugging: The 3-Context Framework That Closes Bugs in Minutes

2026-04-10 03:41:56

AI Workflow · Module 5

AI Debugging

"You provide the evidence. AI generates hypotheses. You verify."

3 Pieces
3-Context Framework

4 Steps
The Debug Workflow

10×
Faster resolution

Two developers. Same AI tool. Same model. One resolves a bug in under 5 minutes. The other spends 40 minutes getting generic suggestions that miss the root cause.

The difference is not intelligence. It's not experience. It's context. The AI's debugging quality is directly proportional to the quality of context you give it. Give it a vague description and you get pattern-matched guesses. Give it the full picture and it becomes a
genuine investigation partner.

This article gives you that full picture — the three pieces of context that unlock AI debugging, the four-step workflow, and the advanced techniques for the hard ones.

Why AI Debugging Works (When Done Right)

Traditional debugging is a solo investigation: you examine the clues, form hypotheses, test them one by one. It's methodical but slow.

AI-assisted debugging transforms this into a collaborative investigation. You are the detective who understands the full case context — the codebase, the system, the history. The AI is a partner who can instantly scan every pattern it has ever seen and generate hypotheses at machine speed.

The crucial reframe: the AI is a hypothesis generator, not a fix button. You provide the crime scene evidence. The AI generates probable causes. You verify them with your engineering judgment.

When developers get poor results from AI debugging, it's almost always because they sent the equivalent of "my code is broken, fix it" — no evidence, no context, no crime scene.

The 3-Context Framework: Three Non-Negotiable Pieces

The difference between a 5-minute fix and a 40-minute struggle is almost always traceable to missing one of these three:

I: The Full Error Message + Stack Trace
Never say "I have a TypeError." Give the entire error message and the complete stack trace. This tells the AI exactly where the problem occurred and every function in the call chain that led there. Truncated stack traces hide the root cause.
❌ "I'm getting a TypeError"
✅ [paste full stack trace with file names and line numbers]

II: The Relevant Code
Reference the specific files involved — not the whole codebase, but the exact functions and modules in the call chain. The AI needs to see the code that's failing, the code that calls it, and any shared utilities it depends on.
❌ "Here's my component" [pastes 200 lines]
✅ Reference @UserProfile.tsx + @useAuth.ts + the specific function throwing

III: Expected vs. Actual Behavior
The AI doesn't know what your code was supposed to do. State it explicitly. "I expected X, but instead Y happened" gives the AI the final piece it needs — the intent — to distinguish root cause from symptom.
❌ "The component doesn't work"
✅ "Expected user.name to render. Instead, the component crashes silently."

Bonus: Add recent changes. If you changed something in the last 24 hours, mention it. Most bugs occur at the intersection of recent changes — this single detail can cut your debugging time in half.

The 4-Step AI Debugging Workflow

This isn't one prompt. It's a systematic loop.

Step 1: Provide the Full Crime Scene
Send all three pieces of the 3-Context Framework in a single structured prompt. Include recent changes. Context front-loads the analysis — the AI starts from your situation, not the average situation it has pattern-matched.

Step 2: Read the Explanation, Not Just the Fix
Do not jump straight to the code suggestion. Read the AI's explanation of the root cause first. Does it make sense? Does it align with the stack trace? If the explanation is generic or vague, the AI is guessing. Ask a clarifying question before proceeding.

Step 3: Critically Evaluate the Fix Before Applying
Does this fix the root cause or just suppress the symptom? Does it handle edge cases? Does it introduce new risks? Apply only after you've validated the fix with your own judgment — not just run it to see if the error goes away.

Step 4: Test, Verify, and Loop if Needed
If the bug persists, don't restart from zero. Go back to Step 1 and add the results of the failed fix to the context. Each loop narrows the hypothesis space until the root cause is isolated. This edit-test loop is where AI debugging becomes genuinely powerful.

A Real Debugging Session: What This Looks Like

FRAME (what to send):

The component crashes when a user with no orders clicks "View History."

ERROR:
TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'length')
  at OrderHistory.tsx:47
  at renderWithHooks (react-dom.development.js:14985)
  at mountIndeterminateComponent (react-dom.development.js:17811)
  ...

RELEVANT CODE:
@components/OrderHistory.tsx (lines 40-60)
@hooks/useOrders.ts

EXPECTED BEHAVIOR:
The component should render an empty state ("No orders yet") when data is empty.

ACTUAL BEHAVIOR:
Crashes with TypeError when data is undefined (user has no order history — the API returns null, not []).

RECENT CHANGE:
Yesterday we added caching to useOrders. The cached value initializes as undefined before the first fetch.

That prompt takes 90 seconds to write. The AI now has everything it needs to identify the exact issue: the hook returns undefined while loading instead of [], and the component doesn't guard against that.

Advanced Technique: AI-Guided Strategic Logging

For bugs where the root cause is unclear, don't spray console.log randomly. Ask the AI to tell you where to look.

I can't reproduce this reliably. The bug appears only under load.
Here's the relevant code: @OrderProcessor.ts

Add strategic logging to trace the value of `order.status`
from when it enters processOrder() to when it reaches updateInventory().
I need to see the state at each transformation step.

The AI will add targeted logging that creates a diagnostic trail — without cluttering your codebase with guesswork statements.

Multi-File Debugging: When the Bug Spans the Stack

For bugs that cross multiple files:

The data is correct in the API response but incorrect when rendered.
The bug is somewhere between the API and the UI.

Here's the complete chain:
@api/orders.ts (the endpoint)
@hooks/useOrders.ts (transforms the response)
@components/OrderTable.tsx (renders the data)

I suspect the issue is in the useOrders transformation, but I'm not certain.
Trace the data shape through all three files and identify where it diverges.

By giving the AI the full chain, you let it reason about the transformation at each step — something that's difficult to do in isolation for each file.

Debugging is one of the highest-leverage places to apply AI because the investigation is precisely the kind of pattern-matching work AI does well. The limiting factor isn't the AI — it's always the context you give it.

Give it the full crime scene. You'll be surprised how fast the case closes.

docker25

2026-04-10 03:38:41

---
# 1. First, find the physical RPM file in the migration directory
- name: "Discovery: Find the RPM file in the migration directory"
  ansible.builtin.find:
    paths: "/tmp/{{ lightspeed.build_version }}"
    patterns: "*.rpm"
  register: found_rpms

# 2. Extract the Version (e.g., 1.0.0) from the filename dynamically
- name: "Logic: Extract naming metadata from filename"
  ansible.builtin.set_fact:
    # This regex captures the version string between the hyphen and the arch suffix
    app_version: "{{ (found_rpms.files[0].path | basename | regex_search('^(.*)-(.*)\\.x86_64\\.rpm$', '\\2'))[0] }}"
  when: found_rpms.matched > 0

# 3. Install using the discovered path
- name: "Install RPM package in the Linux servers"
  ansible.builtin.yum:
    name: "{{ found_rpms.files[0].path }}"
    state: present
    disable_gpg_check: yes
  become: yes
  register: rpm_install_status

# 4. Create the symlink using the EXTRACTED version (app_version)
- name: "Create symlink to default version"
  ansible.builtin.file:
    # Points to /opt/CPLS/1.0.0 instead of the migration ID
    src: "/opt/CPLS/{{ app_version }}"
    dest: "/opt/CPLS/live"
    state: link
    force: yes
    follow: false
  become: yes

# 5. Verification messages
- name: "Verification: Announce directory check"
  ansible.builtin.debug:
    msg: "Checking contents of /opt/CPLS/live/ (Version: {{ app_version }})"

- name: "Verification: List content of the symbolic link"
  ansible.builtin.command:
    cmd: "ls -ltr /opt/CPLS/live/"
  register: symlink_contents
  become: yes
  # noqa command-instead-of-module

- name: "Verification: Display results"
  ansible.builtin.debug:
    var: symlink_contents.stdout_lines

Part 4 : 📦 Managing Azure Storage - Containers, Access Tiers & Secure Access Control

2026-04-10 03:34:33

Overview

With the virtual network and VM fully configured,the next responsibility shifted to storage management.

This part of the project focused on three critical things:

•Storing data efficiently

•Optimizing storage cost

•Controlling and revoking access securely

Here’s how I handled it 👇

Procedure 1: 📦 Creating a Storage Container & Uploading a Blob

Inside the existing storage account (guided-project-rg), I:
•Navigated to Data storage → Containers
new container

•Created a new container called storage-container
named the container

•Uploaded a test image file
uploaded a file

Once uploaded, Azure automatically assigned it the Hot access tier which is ideal for frequently accessed data.
But since this was just a test file, keeping it in Hot storage wasn’t cost-efficient.

Procedure 2:❄️ Changing the Access Tier (Cost Optimization)

To optimize cost:
•I selected the uploaded blob
•Clicked Change tier
Change tier

•Switched it from Hot → Cold
•Saved the configuration
Switch from hot to cold

This reinforced an important cloud concept (storage tiers directly impacting cost),where not all data needs premium, high-frequency access.

Procedure 3: 📁 Creating a File Share

Beyond blob storage, I also needed to configure Azure Files for shared access scenarios.Inside the same storage account:
•I navigated to File shares

File share

•Created a new share called file-share
create a new share

•Enabled backup (for this lab)
Enable backup

•Uploaded a file into the share
uploaded a file

Now the environment supported both:
•Blob storage (object-based)
•File shares (SMB-style shared storage)

Which are two different storage solutions and two different use cases.

Procedure 4: 🔐 Generating a Shared Access Signature (SAS Token)

Next came secure access control, where instead of giving full account access,i generated a Shared Access Signature (SAS) for the uploaded blob.

The Configuration included are :

•Signing method: Account key
•Signing key: Key 1
•Permissions: Read only
•Protocol: HTTPS only
•Custom expiration time

Once generated, i copied the Blob SAS URL into a new browser tab and it successfully displayed the image.

Generate SAS

That link allowed temporary limited access.
This is powerful because:
•No need to share account keys
•Access is time-bound
•Permissions are granular

Procedure 5: 🔁 Rotating Access Keys (Revoking Access)

Granting access is only half the story,revoking access is just as important.Since the SAS token was signed using Key 1,i invalidated it by:
•Navigating to Security + networking → Access keys
•Selecting Rotate key for Key 1
•Confirming the regeneration
Rotate key
After the key rotation, I refreshed the SAS URL tab.

☑️ Result

  • Authentication failed,access successfully revoked and this demonstrated a critical Azure security concept.
  • Rotating storage account keys immediately invalidates all SAS tokens generated with that key.

📊 Final Outcome

By the end of this exercise, i had:
•Created and configured blob storage
•Optimized cost using access tiers
•Deployed Azure File Shares
•Generated secure, time-limited access
•Revoked access by rotating keys

🔑 Conclusion

This part of the guided project strengthened my understanding of:
•Storage architecture
•Access governance
•Cost management
•Real-world administrative control
Where cloud storage isn’t just about uploading files.It’s about managing lifecycle, security, and access responsibly.