Posts

A Coding Implementation for Building and Analyzing Crystal Structures Using Pymatgen for Symmetry Analysis, Phase Diagrams, Surface Generation, and Materials Project Integration

In this tutorial, we explore the capabilities of the pymatgen library for computational materials science using Python. We begin by constructing crystal structures such as silicon, sodium chloride, and a LiFePO₄-like material, and then investigate their lattice properties, densities, and compositions. Also, we analyze symmetry using space-group detection, examine atomic coordination environments, and apply oxidation-state decorations to better understand the structures’ chemistry. We also generate supercells, perturb atomic positions, and compute distance matrices to study structural relationships at larger scales. Along the way, we simulate X-ray diffraction patterns, construct a simple phase diagram, and demonstrate how disordered alloy structures can be approximated by ordered configurations. Finally, we extend the workflow to include molecule analysis, CIF export, and optional querying of the Materials Project database, thereby illustrating how pymatgen can serve as a powerful too...

Safely Deploying ML Models to Production: Four Controlled Strategies (A/B, Canary, Interleaved, Shadow Testing)

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Deploying a new machine learning model to production is one of the most critical stages of the ML lifecycle. Even if a model performs well on validation and test datasets, directly replacing the existing production model can be risky. Offline evaluation rarely captures the full complexity of real-world environments—data distributions may shift, user behavior can change, and system constraints in production may differ from those in controlled experiments.  As a result, a model that appears superior during development might still degrade performance or negatively impact user experience once deployed. To mitigate these risks, ML teams adopt controlled rollout strategies that allow them to evaluate new models under real production conditions while minimizing potential disruptions.  In this article, we explore four widely used strategies—A/B testing, Canary testing, Interleaved testing, and Shadow testing—that help organizations safely deploy and validate new machine learning mod...

NVIDIA Releases Nemotron-Cascade 2: An Open 30B MoE with 3B Active Parameters, Delivering Better Reasoning and Strong Agentic Capabilities

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NVIDIA has announced the release of Nemotron-Cascade 2 , an open-weight 30B Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) model with 3B activated parameters . The model focuses on maximizing ‘intelligence density,’ delivering advanced reasoning capabilities at a fraction of the parameter scale used by frontier models. Nemotron-Cascade 2 is the second open-weight LLM to achieve Gold Medal-level performance in the 2025 International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO), the International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI), and the ICPC World Finals. https://ift.tt/khzns7r Targeted Performance and Strategic Trade-offs The primary value proposition of Nemotron-Cascade 2 is its specialized performance in mathematical reasoning, coding, alignment, and instruction following. While it achieves state-of-the-art results in these key reasoning-intensive domains, it is surely not a ‘blanket win’ across all benchmarks. The model’s performance excels in several targeted categories compared to the recently released Qwen3.5-3...

A Coding Implementation Showcasing ClawTeam’s Multi-Agent Swarm Orchestration with OpenAI Function Calling

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In this comprehensive tutorial, we present the core architecture of ClawTeam , an open-source Agent Swarm Intelligence framework developed by HKUDS. We implement the fundamental concepts that make ClawTeam powerful: a leader agent that decomposes complex goals into sub-tasks, specialized worker agents that execute those tasks autonomously, a shared task board with automatic dependency resolution, and an inter-agent messaging system that enables real-time coordination. We designed this tutorial to run seamlessly in Colab, requiring only an OpenAI API key, so anyone can experience multi-agent orchestration without setting up local infrastructure like tmux, git worktrees, or filesystem-based message queues that the original ClawTeam CLI requires. Copy Code Copied Use a different Browser import subprocess import sys def install_packages(): packages = ["openai", "rich"] for pkg in packages: subprocess.check_call( [sys.executable, ...