The content outlines the setup process for a development environment aimed at contributing to the Bee API and Bee UI repositories within the broader Bee Stack. It details the steps of cloning repositories, starting infrastructure, configuring .env files, and launching both the Bee API and UI servers, ensuring readiness for development.
Create a Full-Screen Web-Chat with watsonx Assistant, IBM Cloud Code Engine and watsonx.ai
The blog post shows integrating watsonx Assistant and watsonx.ai to create a full-screen user interface for interacting with a large language model (LLM) using minimal coding. It outlines the motivation, architecture, setup process, and specific actions necessary to deploy the integration on IBM Cloud Code Engine.
Bee Agent example for a simple travel assistant using a custom tool and observe the agent behavior in detail (Bee Framework 0.0.34 and watsonx.ai)
This blog post explains the implementation of a custom travel assistant agent using the Bee Agent Framework. It covers creating a tool to suggest vacation locations and utilizing weather data, integrating with MLFlow for observability. The article emphasizes practical execution steps, system requirements, and the motivation behind combining location and weather insights for user queries.
CheatSheet: Essential Steps to Configure Podman Machines
Podman is enhancing its capabilities in managing containers, allowing seamless integration with Kubernetes. This blog outlines how to configure a Podman machine, including creating a machine with specific resources and modifying configurations without deletion. It highlights essential commands like podman machine init and podman machine set.
Unlock watsonx Capabilities: Where do you start finding implementation examples when you are an AI engineer or developer?
IBM has launched the watsonx Developer Hub, consisting of four sections: Get Started, Capabilities, Guides, and Support. This Hub is a valuable resource for developers looking to learn about watsonx, emphasizing its significance in the development process.
An Example of how use the “Bee Agent Framework” (v0.0.33) with watsonx.ai
This blog post explores the Bee Agent Framework integration with watsonx.ai, detailing the setup process for a weather agent example on MacOS. It discusses necessary installations, environment variable configurations, and code updates needed due to framework changes. The execution output illustrates how the agent retrieves current weather data for Las Vegas.
IBM Granite for Code models are available on Hugging Face and ready to be used locally with “watsonx Code Assistant”
IBM Granite for Code models on Hugging Face are beneficial for developers, allowing seamless integration with VS Code. They support 116 programming languages and are available under an Apache 2.0 license.
Land of Confusion using Classifications, and Metrics for a nonspecific Ground Truth
This blog post examines the Confusion Matrix as a metric for evaluating the performance of large language models (LLMs) in classification tasks, especially legal document analysis. It discusses the calculation of key classification metrics like Accuracy, Precision, Recall, and F1 score, emphasizing the challenges of using a broadly defined Ground Truth.
Enhance the LangChain AI Agent Weather Query Example with a Dependency Graph Visualization
This blog post demonstrates how to simply add a dependency graph to a runnable chain for a LangChain AI Agent example with WatsonxLLM for a Weather Queries application.
Implementing LangChain AI Agent with WatsonxLLM for a Weather Queries application
This blog post describes the customization of the LangChain AI Agent example from IBM Developer using Watsonx in Python. It demonstrates the implementation of a weather query application with detailed steps. The post offers insight into model parameters, creating prompts, agent chains, tool definitions, and execution. Additionally, it provides links to additional resources for further exploration.
