Introduction to LLM
This page provides an easy-to-understand guide on LLMs (Large Language Models) from basics to applications for AI enthusiasts.
Chapter 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 13 — Frameworks and Cloud Integration
Fourteenth post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. Strands with Bedrock, the AWS state-layer pattern, the Microsoft Agent Framework, LangChain, Semantic Kernel — and the three production integration shapes teams keep arriving at independently.
2026-04-11Chapter 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 11 — Attack Surfaces and Protocol Vulnerabilities
Eleventh post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. The classical attacks adapted to MCP — Confused Deputy, Token Passthrough, Session Hijacking — the protocol-level flaws around capability escalation and unauthenticated sampling, and the implicit trust propagation that makes context poisoning a structural problem rather than a hygiene one.
2026-04-09Chapter 10 — Long-Horizon Task Memory
Tenth post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. Short-term memory through windows and ReAct scratchpads, long-term memory through episodic vectors and semantic stores, and the compaction techniques that keep an agent productive over hours and days.
2026-04-08Chapter 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 7 — Advanced Collaborative and Dynamic Patterns
Seventh post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. Roundtable consensus, handoff routing, and magentic orchestration — the patterns that emerge when the topology has to be built per request, with the failure modes (non-termination, mis-routing, runaway planning) the simpler patterns avoid.
2026-04-05Chapter 6 — Fundamental Orchestration Strategies
Sixth post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. The two foundational orchestration shapes — sequential pipelines and concurrent scatter-gather — and the prior question every team should ask: is a multi-agent system the right answer at all?
2026-04-04Chapter 5 — Transport Protocols and Discovery
Fifth post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. The three transports MCP supports, the .well-known discovery layer with Server Cards, and the boring operational concerns — CORS, origin validation, caching — that decide whether a server is a cooperative network citizen or a liability.
2026-04-03Chapter 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 3 — Server Primitives: Exposing Context and Capabilities
Third post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. The three nouns an MCP server can offer — Resources (read state), Prompts (reusable scaffolding), Tools (write actions) — their schemas, their lifecycles, their error models, and the discipline of choosing the right primitive.
2026-04-01Chapter 2 — Unveiling the Model Context Protocol (MCP)
Second post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. What MCP actually standardizes, the three-role split of Host, Client, and Server, why dynamic discovery and bidirectional messaging differ from REST in the cases that matter, and the session lifecycle that opens with capability negotiation.
2026-03-31Chapter 1 — The AI Integration Crisis and the Rise of Agentic Architecture
First post of the LLM Primer IV walkthrough. Why monolithic agents fray as system prompts grow, the N times M integration problem hiding underneath, and the move from prompt engineering to context engineering that MCP was built to enable.
2026-03-30Chapter 11 — Continuous Updates and Pipeline Optimization
Eleventh and final post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. CDC and incremental indexing keep the corpus fresh, semantic caching and model tiering keep latency down, and a four-stage feedback loop closes the gap between what production tells the team and what the team actually changes — plus a bridge to Volume IV on Model Context Protocol.
2026-03-28Chapter 10 — Leading Evaluation Frameworks
Tenth post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. A field guide to the frameworks that turn the Evaluation Triad into something a team can actually run — RAGAS, TruLens, DeepEval on one side, Braintrust, LangSmith, Phoenix, Galileo, Opik on the other, and the Evaluation Gap none of them has yet closed.
2026-03-27Chapter 9 — The RAG Evaluation Triad
Ninth post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. A RAG system can fail in three different places and the failures look identical from the outside — the Evaluation Triad of Context Relevance, Groundedness, and Answer Relevance is the small vocabulary that prevents fixing one bug while measuring another.
2026-03-26Chapter 8 — Data Anonymization in the RAG Pipeline
Eighth post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. Pre-generation versus post-generation anonymisation, the three technique families — masking, synthetic replacement, differential privacy — and the utility-privacy tradeoff that determines whether the system remains useful at all.
2026-03-25Chapter 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 4 — Selecting the Right Vector Database
Fourth post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. The architectural split between purpose-built vector databases and Postgres-style extensions, the managed leaders (Pinecone, Vertex), the open-source field (Qdrant, Milvus, Weaviate), the embedded options, and the three operational axes — residency, ops, cost — that decide the real choice.
2026-03-21Chapter 3 — Advanced Chunking Frameworks
Third post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. The chunking spectrum from fixed-size to structure-aware, the overlap myth, the context cliff that destroys retrieval quietly, and the contextual-retrieval and late-chunking techniques that have reshaped the frontier.
2026-03-20Chapter 2 — Intelligent Document Parsing
Second post of the LLM Primer III walkthrough. Why a PDF is not a text file, what layout-aware parsers actually preserve, the current tool landscape (LlamaParse, Docling, Unstructured, Marker-PDF, Firecrawl, DeepSeek-OCR), and the multimodal track that retrieves over page images directly.
2026-03-19Chapter 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.
2026-03-18Chapter 13 — Limitations, Risks, and Open Challenges
Eleventh post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. The honest chapter — the compute and energy ceilings that constrain the field, the biases that scale with the data, and the ethical and societal questions that math alone cannot answer.
2026-03-15Chapter 12 — Real-World Applications of LLMs
Twelfth post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. Text generation, summarization, QA, translation, reasoning — and the constrained decoding, agent loops, and multimodal generalization that turn one next-token machine into a dozen kinds of product.
2026-03-14Chapter 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 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 6 — Transformer Blocks and Representation Power
Sixth post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. Feed-forward layers, activation functions, why "attention + FFN" is exactly the right pair, and what mathematical guarantees depth and width give you about expressivity.
2026-03-08Chapter 5 — Position, Order, and Sequence Structure
Fifth post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. How transformers acquire a sense of order — from the original sinusoidal encoding to relative position to RoPE — and a striking final view that ties the whole apparatus to Fourier analysis.
2026-03-07Chapter 3 — Mathematical Tools for Language Models
Third post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. The probability and statistics you actually need for language modeling, the slice of linear algebra that matters, and embeddings as the first place those two tools meet inside an LLM.
2026-03-05Chapter 2 — LLMs in Context: Concepts and Background
Second post of the LLM Primer II walkthrough. What an LLM actually is, the three things "pretraining, parameters, scale" really stand for, the unusual nature of language as a data source, and why the transformer rewrote the field in a single year.
2026-03-04Chapter 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 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 7 — Beyond Next-Token Prediction: Embeddings, Retrieval, and Multimodality
Chapter 7 of the LLM Primer I series. The capabilities that turn a next-token predictor into something much more — embeddings, semantic search, retrieval-augmented generation, and the move into multimodal inputs. How RAG actually keeps an LLM grounded in real documents instead of confabulating.
2026-02-24Chapter 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.
2026-02-22Chapter 4 — The Transformer Architecture: Inside the Engine of Modern AI
Chapter 4 of the LLM Primer I series. A tour of the Transformer block — how self-attention, positional encoding, and stacked layers combine to produce the architecture every modern LLM is built on. Includes a clear explanation of why scaling Transformers works, and what it costs.
2026-02-21Chapter 3 — Neural Networks for Language: From RNNs to Self-Attention
Chapter 3 of the LLM Primer I series. Why feedforward networks couldn't handle language, how RNNs hit a wall, and what attention changed. A clean conceptual progression through the three neural-network shapes that defined modern NLP — without the math anxiety.
2026-02-20Chapter 2 — Probability, Tokens, and Text: The Game of Next-Word Guessing
Chapter 2 of the LLM Primer I series. How LLMs convert text into tokens, why language modeling is fundamentally a probability problem, and how the old n-gram approach gave way to neural models that can generalize. Includes plain-English explanations of perplexity and why every token boundary matters.
2026-02-19Chapter 1 — What Is a Large Language Model? (Beyond the Headlines)
Chapter 1 of the LLM Primer I series. We unpack what 'Large,' 'Language,' and 'Model' actually mean, walk through the move from rule-based systems to neural networks, and address the three biggest misconceptions about how modern LLMs work. A clear, accessible foundation for everything that follows.
2026-02-18A 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.
2026-02-171.3 Entropy and Information: Quantifying Uncertainty
A clear, intuitive exploration of entropy, information, and uncertainty in Large Language Models. Learn how information theory shapes next-token prediction, why entropy matters for creativity and coherence, and how cross-entropy connects probability to learning. This section concludes Chapter 1 and prepares readers for the conceptual foundations in Chapter 2.
2025-09-064.4 How LLMs Write Code: The Rise of AI-Powered Programming Assistants
Explore how large language models (LLMs) generate and complete code from natural-language prompts, and what it means for the future of software development.
2024-09-274.3 LLMs in Translation and Summarization: Enhancing Multilingual Communication
Learn how Large Language Models (LLMs) leverage Transformer architectures for accurate translation and summarization, improving efficiency in business, media, and education.
2024-09-18