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Showing posts with the label vectorization

MCP + Context: engineering for the context – hard lessons learned

  Intro I have built my own orchestration framework because most of what I’ve seen was too complex or tried to lock you into creating workflows a certain way. I wanted something very simple and yet maximally flexible. I’m not going into details here on the framework — that’s another blog post — but I will in some cases explain why I could do what I did thanks to the flexibility of the framework, which is a dynamic DAG, can do call-backs, and uses functions and MCP servers. I will also not explain in detail what I’m doing with my current workflow, other than to say I was looking for a way to bypass large language models and instead run it on my own system at home. I succeeded with that — but that’s another blog post. Instead, what I will try to explain in this post is the most important thing after prompt engineering: context engineering, and why it’s so crucial to manage that aspect (especially when you run this at home). Stage setting A couple of weeks ago, Anthropic posted this: ...