Introduction to LLM
This page provides an easy-to-understand guide on LLMs (Large Language Models) from basics to applications for AI enthusiasts.
Chapter 17 — Future Threats and Emerging Defenses
Seventeenth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough — and the series finale. Agent risks and the lethal trifecta, multimodal attack surfaces, deepfakes and C2PA provenance, plus a closing map of the whole LLM Primer arc and the Physical AI sister volume.
2026-05-26Chapter 16 — Secure Fine-Tuning and Adaptation
Sixteenth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Why fine-tuning aligned models degrades safety (Qi et al.), poisoned fine-tuning data, and rollback disciplines that keep the safety envelope intact.
2026-05-25Chapter 15 — Building a Secure AI Organization
Fifteenth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Security culture for AI teams, red teams and internal audits, vendor risk (SOC 2, ISO 42001), and the emerging AI BOM.
2026-05-24Chapter 14 — Bias, Fairness, and Responsible AI
Fourteenth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Sources of bias in LLMs, measurement (BBQ, BOLD, StereoSet, HELM), and the safety-utility trade-off honestly named.
2026-05-23Chapter 13 — Regulatory Landscape
Thirteenth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. The EU AI Act (Regulation 2024/1689), US EO 14179, Colorado AI Act, NIST AI RMF + GenAI Profile, and ISO/IEC 42001 as the compliance skeleton.
2026-05-22Chapter 12 — Access Control and Identity
Twelfth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. OAuth 2.0 + PKCE, ABAC vs ReBAC (Zanzibar), multi-tenant isolation, and token-bucket rate limits for LLM APIs.
2026-05-21Chapter 11 — Observability, Logging, and Incident Response
Eleventh post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Structured LLM logging with PII redaction, OpenTelemetry GenAI conventions, and the NIST SP 800-61 IR cycle adapted for probabilistic systems.
2026-05-20Chapter 9 — Model Integrity and Supply Chain Risks
Ninth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Open-source model dependency risk, Sleeper Agents (Hubinger et al.), safetensors vs pickle, CVE-2024-3568, and the SLSA / Sigstore artifact-signing discipline.
2026-05-18Chapter 8 — Adversarial Attacks on Models
Eighth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Adversarial examples in NLP (HotFlip, TextFooler), model extraction (Tramèr et al., Carlini et al.), and the defensive strategies for API-boundary abuse.
2026-05-17Chapter 6 — Retrieval-Augmented Generation Risks
Sixth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Trust boundaries in RAG, malicious document injection, PoisonedRAG and BadRAG, and monitoring retrieval flows for the attacker's fingerprints.
2026-05-15Chapter 5 — Input Validation and Output Filtering
Fifth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Input sanitization, structured guardrails (NeMo, Llama Guard 3, Lakera, Bedrock), and red teaming with Garak, PyRIT, and promptfoo.
2026-05-14Chapter 4 — Prompt Injection and Jailbreaks
Fourth post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Prompt injection as a structural consequence, the jailbreak taxonomy (DAN, grandma, Zou et al. suffixes, Crescendo, Skeleton Key), and the four-layer mitigation matrix.
2026-05-13Chapter 3 — Data Security and Privacy
Third post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Training-data risks, memorization and extraction (Carlini et al., Nasr et al.), and the encryption, isolation, and retention disciplines that keep sensitive prompts contained.
2026-05-12Chapter 2 — Threat Modeling for LLM Systems
Second post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Adapting STRIDE, PASTA, and attack trees to LLM systems — model, prompt, data, and infrastructure as assets, and MITRE ATLAS as the LLM-specific adversary catalog.
2026-05-11Chapter 1 — Why AI Security Is Different
First post of the LLM Primer VII walkthrough. Why LLM security is structurally different from traditional security — the collapsed code/data boundary, the probabilistic core, and the OWASP LLM Top 10 as a working checklist.
2026-05-10LLM Primer VII — Series Introduction & Index
Kicking off the chapter-by-chapter walkthrough of Book VII in the LLM Primer series — AI Security. Why in LLM systems code and data are the same string, and the schedule for the seventeen posts that follow, May 10 through May 26. This is the series finale.
2026-05-09Chapter 13 — Autoscaling and Cold-Start Mitigation
Thirteenth post of the LLM Primer VI walkthrough. Why standard HPA fails for LLM serving, KEDA for TTFT-aware scaling, Knative scale-to-zero, and CRIU / CUDA graph caching for sub-5-second cold starts.
2026-05-05Chapter 8 — Next-Generation KV Cache Management
Eighth post of the LLM Primer VI walkthrough. PagedAttention, KV eviction algorithms (H2O, InfiniGen), and prefix caching for multi-turn conversations and multi-agent RAG.
2026-04-30Chapter 6 — Pruning and Knowledge Distillation
Sixth post of the LLM Primer VI walkthrough. Structured vs unstructured pruning, 2:4 sparsity on Hopper, and the distillation lineage from soft probabilities to Patient Knowledge Distillation and MiniLLM.
2026-04-28Chapter 5 — Demystifying Quantization
Fifth post of the LLM Primer VI walkthrough. From BF16 to INT4 to Blackwell FP4 — quantization algorithms (AWQ, GPTQ, GGUF, SmoothQuant), NVIDIA ModelOpt, and when quantization is safe versus lossy.
2026-04-27Chapter 4 — Specialized AI Silicon and ASICs
Fourth post of the LLM Primer VI walkthrough. Groq LPUs, AWS Inferentia2, Google TPUs, and Intel Gaudi — where specialized silicon fits alongside general-purpose GPUs.
2026-04-26Chapter 8 — Optimizing Performance, Serving, and Cost
Eighth and final post of the LLM Primer V walkthrough. Semantic caching, dynamic model routing, and what actually happens inside the inference server — plus a look ahead to Volume VI on scaling.
2026-04-21Chapter 3 — Retrieval-Augmented Generation
Third post of the LLM Primer V walkthrough. The RAG pipeline end to end — chunking, hybrid retrieval, query transformation, multimodal, and text-to-SQL — and where RAG fits versus fine-tuning and long context.
2026-04-16Chapter 1 — The Discipline of AI Engineering
First post of the LLM Primer V walkthrough. Why the demo works and production doesn't — the deterministic wrapper around the probabilistic core, and the five pillars (reliability, quality, performance, cost, evolution) that keep the wrapper honest.
2026-04-14Chapter 14 — Benchmarking, Testing, and Performance
Fifteenth and final post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. The MCP-Universe Benchmark on real servers, the two systemic failure modes it exposed, the ten-times throughput gap between session-per-request and shared session pools, and the bridge to Volume V.
2026-04-12Chapter 12 — Protocol Hardening and Defenses
Thirteenth post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. The four defense clusters — cryptographic attestation, OAuth scope discipline with bounded sessions, runtime sandboxing, and human-in-the-loop gates — compose into a posture that does not depend on the model behaving correctly under adversarial conditions.
2026-04-10Chapter 9 — Managing the Attention Budget
Ninth post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. Context rot, the lost-in-the-middle cliff, tool-loadout rot, and the three architectural answers — MCP, RAG, fine-tuning — to the question of where a model's missing knowledge actually belongs.
2026-04-07Chapter 8 — Architectural Deployment Layouts
Eighth post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. The three deployment layouts that have emerged in the MCP ecosystem — reusable agent, strict purity, hybrid — and the four binding constraints that determine which one fits which project.
2026-04-06Chapter 4 — Client Primitives: Agentic Behaviors and Control
Fourth post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. Sampling, Roots, and Elicitation are the three small, controlled holes MCP punches through the host-server wall — each a capability granted back, each a risk accepted on the user's behalf.
2026-04-02Chapter 7 — Implementing Access Control
Seventh post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. Document-level ACLs as the foundation, RBAC with Microsoft Purview sensitivity labels, ReBAC with Zanzibar and SpiceDB, and the pre-filter versus post-filter discipline that runs underneath all of them.
2026-03-24Chapter 5 — Architecting the Retrieval Pipeline
Fifth post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. Why a single vector search is not a pipeline — hybrid retrieval, reciprocal rank fusion, cross-encoder reranking, and query-side rewriting and HyDE — assembled into the production architecture that mature RAG systems converge on.
2026-03-22Chapter 1 — The Evolution of RAG Architecture
First post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. The four architectural postures of RAG — Naive, Advanced, Modular, Agentic — read as a story about handing more agency to the LLM one decision at a time, and the honest answer to when fine-tuning is the better tool than retrieval.
2026-03-18LLM Primer III — Series Introduction & Index
Kicking off the chapter-by-chapter walkthrough of Book III in the LLM Primer series — Enhancing Enterprise AI with RAG. Why retrieval-augmented generation looks simple from the outside and is a stack of disciplines underneath, who this book is for, and the schedule for the eleven posts that follow, March 18 through March 28.
2026-03-17Chapter 11 — Evaluation, Calibration, and Inference
Eleventh post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. Perplexity, calibration, the error bars that every benchmark score should carry, and the mathematics of measuring hallucination — the chapter where we ask how anyone can measure a machine that can say anything.
2026-03-13Chapter 10 — Post-Training and Alignment Mathematics
Tenth post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. The mathematics that civilizes a brilliant but feral next-word predictor into a helpful assistant — supervised fine-tuning, reward modeling, RLHF on a KL leash, and the elegant DPO derivation that collapses the whole pipeline into a single supervised loss.
2026-03-12Chapter 9 — Training at Scale
Ninth post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. How data preprocessing quietly shapes everything that follows, the mathematics of mini-batch learning and parallelism, and the surprisingly subtle question of how to keep a training run numerically stable across thousands of GPUs.
2026-03-11Chapter 8 — How Models Learn
Eighth post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. Why over-parameterized models generalize at all, the implicit bias of gradient-based optimization, the empirical scaling laws that forecast capability before training, and the open mathematical questions that still surround LLM theory.
2026-03-10Chapter 7 — Efficiency and Transformer Variants
Seventh post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. The computational complexity of attention, the GPU memory and throughput math that constrains real systems, FlashAttention derived from first principles, and the family of clever variants — multi-query, gated, low-rank — that keep big models running.
2026-03-09Chapter 1 — Mathematical Intuition for Language Models
First post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. Mathematical notation without intimidation, probability for language generation explained from scratch, and entropy as a way to measure uncertainty — the trio that makes the rest of the book readable.
2026-03-03LLM Primer II — Language Models Through Mathematics: Series Introduction & Index
Kicking off the chapter-by-chapter walkthrough of Book II in the LLM Primer series — Language Models Through Mathematics. How the book is organized, what each chapter delivers, and the schedule for the fourteen posts that follow, March 3 through March 16.
2026-03-02Chapter 12 — Building Your Own LLM System: From Datasets to Production
Chapter 12 of the LLM Primer I series. The final chapter. What it actually takes to build an LLM-powered system end to end — dataset licensing, training pipelines, evaluation frameworks, the integrated application stack, and the case-study patterns that distinguish successful deployments from failed pilots.
2026-03-01Chapter 11 — Cutting-Edge Research: MoE, Reasoning Models, and the New Scaling Axis
Chapter 11 of the LLM Primer I series. The research frontiers that are now production reality — mixture-of-experts, retrieval-augmented memory, native multimodal tokenization, continual learning, and the inference-time scaling paradigm that produced today's reasoning models. The 2026 edition's biggest content addition.
2026-02-28Chapter 10 — Safety, Ethics, & Trust: Beyond the Marketing
Chapter 10 of the LLM Primer I series. The honest picture of LLM safety — why hallucinations happen mechanistically, where bias actually lives, how layered guardrails work, and why governance is the institutional layer that technical controls can't replace. For practitioners who need to ship safely.
2026-02-27Chapter 9 — Performance, Scaling, and Costs: The Real Engineering Trade-offs
Chapter 9 of the LLM Primer I series. The operational realities of running LLMs at scale — model size vs capability, the latency–throughput trade-off, cost economics, quantization, and edge deployment. Why frontier-tier models are often the wrong choice even when you can afford them.
2026-02-26Chapter 8 — Using LLMs in Applications: Chatbots, Code, Extraction, and Agents
Chapter 8 of the LLM Primer I series. The application patterns that actually ship in production — chatbots, summarization, code assistants, structured extraction, and the rise of agentic systems where the model drives a tool-use loop. Plus the benchmarks every engineer should recognize by name.
2026-02-25Chapter 6 — Fine-Tuning & Adaptation: From Raw Model to Helpful Assistant
Chapter 6 of the LLM Primer I series. The full adaptation stack — from cheap prompt-based steering to parameter-efficient fine-tuning to full alignment with RLHF and its modern successors like DPO. Why post-training is now where closed-model APIs actually differentiate.
2026-02-23Chapter 5 — Training Large Models: What Actually Goes Into a Frontier Model
Chapter 5 of the LLM Primer I series. How frontier LLMs are actually trained — the data pipeline, the loss function, the months of GPU time, and why "training" is now an industrial-scale engineering problem more than a research problem. Demystifies what those hundred-million-dollar training runs are paying for.
2026-02-22A Chapter-by-Chapter Walkthrough of LLM Primer I — Series Introduction & Index
Introduction and index for the twelve-part chapter-by-chapter walkthrough of LLM Primer I: How Generative AI Works. One post per day, Feb 18 through March 1, 2026. Read them in order or pick the chapter that matters most to you. All twelve are listed and linked here.
2026-02-17The LLM Primer Series — A Field Guide to Generative AI, Built One Volume at a Time
The LLM Primer Series — a completed seven-volume field guide to generative AI by Sho Shimoda. From foundations to security. Includes Physical AI as sister volume. All 7 volumes available on Amazon.
2026-02-15Part I — Mathematical Foundations for Understanding LLMs
A clear and intuitive introduction to the mathematical foundations behind Large Language Models (LLMs). This section explains probability, entropy, embeddings, and the essential concepts that allow modern AI systems to think, reason, and generate language. Learn why mathematics is the timeless core of all LLMs and prepare for Chapter 1: Mathematical Intuition for Language Models.
2025-09-02