Tuesday, May 5, 2026

 CAS4Drones:

Content‑addressable storage for aerial imagery is a mature topic. We extend it is as a practical lever for turning a high‑volume livestream into a tractable, cost‑aware analytic stream. Replace raw frame retention with a content fingerprinting layer that lets the pipeline treat visually redundant frames as the same “object” for downstream processing, and then use that deduplicated stream to drive importance sampling, selective perception, and observability events. Two technical families make this work in practice: fast perceptual fingerprints for cheap, near‑real‑time deduplication, and richer deep‑feature hashing for semantic deduplication when the scene semantics matter. Both feed the same operational pattern: compute a compact signature per frame, cluster or threshold those signatures to identify repeats, score novelty relative to recent history, and promote only the frames that cross a novelty threshold into expensive perception or archival storage.

The first stage is perceptual hashing because it is cheap, robust to small compression and alignment differences, and easy to index. Perceptual Hashing (pHash): Unlike standard cryptographic hashes (where one pixel change creates a new hash), perceptual hashes like dHash or pHash generate a compact digital fingerprint that remains stable even if the image is slightly rotated, compressed, or shifted. That stability is helpful to a nadir camera on a drone flying straight edges: most consecutive frames will be near‑duplicates and should collapse to the same fingerprint. A simple operational rule is to compute a 64–128 bit pHash per frame and use Hamming distance as the similarity metric. We use clustering thresholds. To identify 'near‑duplicates' (frames with high overlap), systems calculate the Hamming distance between hashes. In practice, we pick a Hamming threshold empirically from a small labeled set of flights; values that work for nadir imagery are typically small (e.g., 2–8 bit differences on a 64‑bit hash) because the viewpoint is stable.

That cheap layer buys us two things. First, it collapses the vast majority of frames along straight edges into a single representative per short interval, which immediately reduces compute and storage cost. Second, it produces a stream of deduplication events—“new fingerprint”, “repeat fingerprint”, “fingerprint expired”—that are perfect observability primitives. Those events are deterministic, small, and easy to correlate with other telemetry (frame index, FlightID, altitude, inferred ground speed). They become the low‑latency signals an agent or rule engine uses to decide whether to run heavier perception.

Semantic sensitivity requires something more. Two frames can be visually similar yet differ in the presence of a new object or a subtle scene change that matters for coverage. Deep hashing or CLIP‑style embeddings is helpful to this case. A practical hybrid pipeline computes both a pHash and a compact deep descriptor per sampled frame. The pHash is used for immediate deduplication and eventing; the deep descriptor is used for semantic clustering and importance scoring on a slower cadence (for example, every N seconds or when a pHash change is observed). Deep descriptors are clustered with density‑aware algorithms such as HDBSCAN so that the system can identify persistent semantic clusters (e.g., “building cluster”, “water cluster”, “open field cluster”) and detect when a frame belongs to a new semantic cluster even if its pHash is close to a previous one.

Operationally, we perform importance sampling with CAS. For each incoming frame compute pHash and a small motion proxy (mean optical flow or translation vector). If the pHash matches the most recent representative within the Hamming threshold and motion is within the expected range for the edge, mark the frame as redundant and emit a low‑priority “repeat” event. If the pHash is new or the motion proxy indicates a directional change, compute the deep descriptor and evaluate a novelty score against a short‑term memory buffer of recent descriptors. The novelty score can be a weighted combination of descriptor distance, motion direction change, and semantic histogram drift. If the novelty score exceeds a configured threshold, promote the frame for full perception (object detection, high‑resolution stitching, Vision‑LLM analysis) and emit a high‑priority “NovelFrame” event into the observability pipeline. The observability agent then correlates that event with other telemetry—dependency calls, inference latencies, catalog insertions—and can trigger verification steps or human review if needed.

The design can be tightened further. First, use a sliding composite window for memory: keep a short, high‑resolution buffer (seconds) for pHash and motion checks and a longer, lower‑resolution buffer (tens of seconds to minutes) for semantic descriptors. This mirrors the composite window idea used in streaming clustering: short windows catch transient noise, long windows capture persistent regimes. Second, make thresholds adaptive: compute baseline Hamming and descriptor distances per flight segment and scale thresholds by a small factor to tolerate environmental variability (lighting, wind). Third, attach deterministic metadata to every CAS event—FlightID, frame index, altitude, estimated ground speed, pHash value, descriptor cluster id—so that downstream agents and auditors can reproduce decisions. Deterministic event generation is essential for verification: the agent’s reasoning can be stochastic, but the underlying CAS events must be reproducible.

CAS events are high-value to observability. They are compact, explainable, and correlate directly with mission semantics: long runs of “repeat” events indicate stable edges; bursts of “NovelFrame” events indicate corners or scene transitions. Those event patterns can be formalized as inflection signatures: a corner is a short burst where pHash churn increases, motion direction changes beyond a threshold, descriptor novelty spikes, and the rate of “NovelFrame” events exceeds a local baseline. An agent can implement a simple rule that requires co‑occurrence of at least two of these signals within a small temporal window to declare a corner, which reduces false positives while preserving recall.

Cost and importance sampling are tightly coupled. Treat the cost of full perception as a budgeted resource and use CAS‑driven novelty scores to allocate it. For example, define a per‑mission budget of heavy inferences (N per flight hour) and spend it on the top‑N novel frames as ranked by the novelty score. Track TCO per square mile and TCO per analytic query as mission metrics and expose them in dashboards; correlate them with corner detection coverage to quantify the trade‑off between cost and mission completeness. Because corners are high‑value for tiling and mosaicking, we can bias the sampling policy to favor frames that are both novel and temporally spaced to maximize geometric coverage.

Evaluation is straightforward. Measure deduplication rate (fraction of frames collapsed by pHash), corner recall (fraction of ground‑truth corners with at least one promoted frame within ±K frames), precision of promoted frames (fraction that are true positives), and cost savings (reduction in heavy inference calls). Use a small labeled corpus of rectangular flights to tune Hamming and novelty thresholds, then validate on held‑out flights with different altitudes and ground textures.

CAS for aerial livestreams is a practical, auditable mechanism for importance sampling. Perceptual hashes provide a cheap, deterministic first pass; deep descriptors provide semantic sensitivity; both feed an observability fabric of structured events that agents use to make selective, cost‑aware decisions. The result is a pipeline that reduces compute and storage, preserves the frames that matter for coverage and corner detection, and produces a transparent evidence trail for verification and cost analysis.


Monday, May 4, 2026

 This is a summary of a book titled “Lead With (un)Common Sense: Simple truths great leaders live by — that most leaders miss” written and self-published by David Mead in 2025. The book argues that leadership is far less about authority, titles, or technical expertise than most people assume. Instead, it is grounded in something both simpler and more demanding: who a leader is as a human being and how consistently they live out their values in everyday actions.

Mead begins by challenging the conventional image of an effective leader. Many aspiring leaders focus heavily on developing operational skills—setting goals, managing performance, and driving results. While those capabilities are undeniably important, organizations often elevate them at the expense of something more fundamental: the human side of leadership. True leadership, Mead suggests, requires “dual mastery”—a careful balance between hard skills and soft skills. Leaders must be competent, but they must also be compassionate, principled, and trustworthy.

This view leads to a broader and more meaningful definition of leadership. Rather than seeing it as a position of authority, Mead frames leadership as the daily practice of building one’s character so that one’s influence enables others to thrive. Influence, in this sense, does not come from credentials or hierarchy. People do not follow leaders simply because of their title; they follow those they trust—leaders who demonstrate honesty, humility, and genuine humanity in their actions.

Trust, therefore, becomes the cornerstone of effective leadership. Mead emphasizes that leaders who rely on power or control may achieve short-term gains, but they rarely inspire lasting commitment. When there is a gap between what leaders say and what they do, employees quickly notice. Over time, these inconsistencies erode trust, leaving teams disengaged and unmotivated. People may comply with such leaders, but they will not bring their full energy, creativity, or loyalty to their work.

Research cited in the book reinforces this point. A study by FMI Consulting found that a leader’s effectiveness is driven primarily by character and a focus on others, accounting for the vast majority of what makes a leader successful. Traits such as emotional maturity, self-awareness, empathy, and curiosity far outweigh commonly prized attributes like charisma or intelligence. Leadership, in other words, is not a mysterious formula but a deeply human endeavor rooted in integrity and care for others.

Living in alignment with one’s values is essential to building this trust. Mead underscores that values alone are meaningless if they are not reflected in behavior. Employees and customers alike look for consistency between what leaders claim to stand for and how they actually make decisions. When leaders act in ways that contradict their stated principles—especially during times of pressure or crisis—the damage to credibility can be swift and lasting. A leader who cannot be trusted, Mead notes, is simply someone issuing instructions, not truly leading.

Of course, no leader is perfect. Mead acknowledges that even well-intentioned individuals sometimes fall short of their ideals. The real test of leadership lies not in flawless behavior but in how leaders respond when they recognize a misalignment. Self-aware leaders notice these gaps early, acknowledge their mistakes, and take meaningful steps to correct them. By doing so, they reinforce rather than weaken trust.

Modern work environments introduce additional challenges. In remote and hybrid settings, for example, employees have fewer opportunities to observe their leaders’ behavior firsthand. This makes transparency and communication even more critical. Leaders must be deliberate in explaining their decisions and demonstrating consistency, as silence or ambiguity can quickly give rise to doubt and mistrust.

Another central theme of the book is humility. Far from being a weakness, humility is presented as one of a leader’s greatest strengths. Humble leaders focus on the growth and success of others rather than on their own ego. They acknowledge their limitations, remain open to new ideas, and actively seek input from those closest to the work. This openness not only strengthens relationships but also leads to better decision-making and more innovative teams.

At the same time, humility requires confidence. It means being secure enough to admit when a strategy is not working and to change course when necessary. Leaders who cling to their own expertise or insist on being the smartest person in the room can stifle creativity and hinder progress. By contrast, those who create space for others to contribute foster environments where people feel valued and empowered.

Mead argues that leadership grounded in humanity has a profound impact. When leaders genuinely care about their employees as people—not just as resources—workplaces become places where individuals want to show up and do their best. This sense of belonging and respect transforms compliance into commitment, strengthens collaboration, and drives sustained performance.


Saturday, May 2, 2026

 Continuous Replication and network connectivity in Azure for databases.

Problem statement: when Azure creates a replica for Azure MySQL server that has connectivity only through a private endpoint, it does not create the replica with another private endpoint but somehow replicates the database snapshot from primary. Does it need a private endpoint to the replica to facilitate automatic continuous replication?

Solution:

Even experts find themselves in opposite directions when answering this question because replication traffic and operational requirements go hand in hand. The short answer is no — you do not need to create a private endpoint on the replica for replication to function.

When Azure creates a read replica for a MySQL Flexible Server that is reachable only through a private endpoint, the replication traffic never flows through your VNet, your private endpoint, or any customer‑visible network surface. The private endpoint only governs how your clients reach the server. It does not govern how Azure’s internal control plane and data plane communicate with the managed MySQL instances. Azure MySQL Flexible Server is built on a managed compute fabric where the primary and replica servers live inside the same Azure-managed network boundary, even if they are in different regions. The replication channel is established entirely inside that boundary, using Azure’s internal service network, not your VNet. That means the replication protocol — which is MySQL’s native asynchronous binlog-based replication — is carried over an internal, non-customer-routable link. The wire traffic never touches your private endpoint, so the existence or absence of a private endpoint on the replica is irrelevant to the replication channel.

The initial snapshot is not copied through your private endpoint either. Azure uses an internal storage-layer snapshot mechanism to seed the replica. This is not a logical dump and not a network copy through your VNet. It is a block-level clone operation inside Azure’s storage fabric. Because the snapshot is taken and materialized inside the managed service boundary, there is no scenario in which Azure would need to traverse your private endpoint to hydrate the replica.

Once the replica is seeded, continuous replication begins. MySQL’s binlog replication requires the replica to connect to the primary’s replication endpoint. In a self-managed MySQL deployment, that would require network reachability between the two servers. But in Azure’s managed service, the replication endpoint is exposed only inside Azure’s internal network. The primary and replica are placed in a topology where they can reach each other without ever touching customer VNets. Azure enforces isolation at the service boundary, not by routing replication traffic through customer-controlled network constructs. This is why the private endpoint is irrelevant to replication: the private endpoint is a consumer-facing ingress point, not a service-to-service communication path.

The opposing view — that replication should require a private endpoint on the replica — cannot hold because it would imply that Azure routes internal service traffic through customer VNets, which would violate Azure’s network isolation model, break multi-tenant guarantees, and create circular dependencies where replication availability depends on customer-managed routing, NSGs, firewalls, or DNS. Azure’s managed database services are explicitly designed so that internal operations, including replication, backups, failover, and patching, are independent of customer networking. If replication depended on your private endpoint, a misconfigured NSG or DNS zone could break Azure’s ability to maintain replicas, which would contradict the service’s reliability guarantees.

If you inspect the replica’s network configuration, you will see that Azure does not create a private endpoint for it unless you explicitly request one for client access. Replication still works. If you delete the private endpoint on the primary, replication still works. If you isolate your VNet completely, replication still works. The only consistent explanation is that replication is not using your private endpoints at all.

So the answer is no, you do not need to add a private endpoint to the replica. Replication is an internal Azure operation that bypasses customer networking entirely, and the architecture of the service makes the opposite scenario impossible without breaking Azure’s isolation and reliability guarantees. However, you will need a private endpoint for client connections to the replica just like the primary and this is an operational requirement for some deployments.


Friday, May 1, 2026

 Minimum Operations to Make Array Non Decreasing

You are given an integer array nums of length n.

In one operation, you may choose any subarray nums[l..r] and increase each element in that subarray by x, where x is any positive integer.

Return the minimum possible sum of the values of x across all operations required to make the array non-decreasing.

An array is non-decreasing if nums[i] <= nums[i + 1] for all 0 <= i < n - 1.

Example 1:

Input: nums = [3,3,2,1]

Output: 2

Explanation:

One optimal set of operations:

• Choose subarray [2..3] and add x = 1 resulting in [3, 3, 3, 2]

• Choose subarray [3..3] and add x = 1 resulting in [3, 3, 3, 3]

The array becomes non-decreasing, and the total sum of chosen x values is 1 + 1 = 2.

Example 2:

Input: nums = [5,1,2,3]

Output: 4

Explanation:

One optimal set of operations:

• Choose subarray [1..3] and add x = 4 resulting in [5, 5, 6, 7]

The array becomes non-decreasing, and the total sum of chosen x values is 4.

Constraints:

• 1 <= n == nums.length <= 105

• 1 <= nums[i] <= 109

class Solution {

    public long minOperations(int[] nums) {

        long sum = 0;

        for (int i = 0; i < nums.length-1; i++) {

            if (nums[i] > nums[i+1]) {

                long diff = nums[i] - nums[i+1];

                for (int l = i+1; l < nums.length; l++) {

                    nums[l] += diff;

                }

                sum += diff;

            }

        }

        return sum;

    }

}

Test cases:

Case 1:

nums=[3,3,2,1]

Expected: 2

Actual: 2

Case 2:

nums=[5,1,2,3]

Expected: 4

Actual: 4


Thursday, April 30, 2026

 This is a summary of a book titled “Wait, You Need It When?!?: The Essential Guide to Time Management, Productivity, and Powerful Habits That Get Things Done” written by Peter Economy and published by Career Press in 2026. This book argues that time is the one resource you can never replenish, yet many people treat it as if it were infinite. The result is a workday filled with drift: low-value tasks, constant interruptions, and habits that quietly consume hours. One estimate suggests employees spend about 51% of the workday on tasks that add little value, while social media, email checking, and unnecessary meetings further erode focus. The author stresses that this isn’t merely an efficiency issue; it is a life-management issue. “Money you can get more of, belongings come and go, but once you’ve burned through a particular piece of time, you can never retrieve it….There’s no going back, only forward.”

When time management breaks down, the consequences show up everywhere. Individually, it can mean rushed or sloppy work, missed deadlines, and fewer opportunities to grow. For organizations, it translates into productivity losses, lower quality, delayed delivery, and higher turnover. The damage can ripple outward to customers when follow-through falters, and to colleagues who may feel they are compensating for someone else’s disorganization. The author also highlights a less visible cost: when work expands to fill evenings and weekends, personal relationships and basic self-care are often the first to be squeezed out, leaving people both less present at home and less effective at work.

To regain control, the book emphasizes making deliberate choices about attention and priorities. That starts with ranking tasks by importance and urgency, setting goals that are challenging but realistic, and then translating those goals into small, actionable steps. It also means protecting concentration by eliminating distractions, delegating where appropriate, and using breaks strategically so focus can recover before it collapses. Practical tactics—like scheduling blocks of uninterrupted time for demanding work, tracking how you actually spend your hours, and learning to say no to nonessential requests—create the conditions for consistent progress. He encourages mindfulness as well: noticing the patterns that sabotage your intentions and staying flexible enough to adapt when circumstances change.

Because time feels different depending on what you’re doing, The author recommends building awareness of your subjective experience of it. Meaningful work can make hours pass quickly, while monotonous tasks can feel endless; stress and feeling “behind” can warp your sense of the day. A brief reset—such as a short mindfulness practice—can reduce the sensation of rushing and help you return to the present, where better choices are easier to make.

The author calls for a “serious business mindset”—a purpose-driven attitude that builds credibility and keeps your efforts aligned with your goals. One concrete way to support that mindset is to design a workspace that signals focus. Ergonomic tools, lighting and noise adjustments, and an organized layout all reduce friction. Even small environmental choices matter: research cited in the book suggests that the freedom to personalize a workspace can raise productivity, while plants can provide a modest boost; clutter, by contrast, makes sustained attention harder. He also notes that productivity is not simply a function of longer hours. Regular breaks and clear boundaries protect both performance and work-life balance, and they prevent others from assuming you are available at all times.

Interruptions are especially costly because each shift of attention has a recovery price; the book cites an average of 23 minutes and 15 seconds to fully return to a task after an interruption. To reduce that tax, he advises setting expectations with colleagues by blocking deep-work periods and clearly communicating when you will and won’t be reachable. Technology can reinforce these boundaries through “do not disturb” settings and website blockers, while collaboration tools can replace meetings that don’t require real-time discussion. Physical cues—like closing a door or using headphones—can help others recognize focus time. Just as important is practicing single-tasking: scheduling one to three hours for a single priority rather than bouncing between demands, and keeping “digital hygiene” strong by unsubscribing from unwanted lists, turning off nonessential notifications, and maintaining an orderly file system.

Sustained performance, the book suggests, comes from routines that balance structure with adaptability. By identifying your peak energy windows and building time blocks around them, you can create consistency without becoming rigid. Techniques like the Pomodoro method—working in focused 20- to 30-minute intervals followed by short breaks, with a longer break after several rounds—provide a simple rhythm that prevents burnout while keeping momentum. Goal setting, too, should be both disciplined and flexible. The author highlights the CLEAR framework (Collaborative, Limited, Emotional, Appreciable, Refinable), which encourages seeking input, keeping goals to a manageable number, tying them to what genuinely matters to you, breaking them into milestones you can recognize and celebrate, and refining them as conditions evolve.

Daily to-do lists play an important supporting role by freeing mental bandwidth and making priorities explicit. To make lists actionable rather than overwhelming, He draws on David Allen’s Getting Things Done approach: capture everything that demands attention, clarify the next action and desired outcome, organize tasks in a system that fits your contexts and deadlines, reflect regularly to delete, delegate, or reprioritize, and then engage with the items that will have the greatest impact. The same respect for time applies to meetings. With a significant portion of meetings viewed as ineffective and many running longer than an hour, the book recommends clarifying purpose, using a timed agenda, limiting attendance to the people who can decide or contribute meaningfully, and ending with clear action items and follow-up dates. Finally, he connects productivity to intrinsic motivation: when your work aligns with values, passions, and purpose, focus becomes easier to sustain. He encourages experimentation—trying new classes, volunteering, or networking in inspiring spaces—and reflecting on what energizes you, because “As long as you’re still living and breathing, you can do something different. So if you need to make a change, don’t hesitate: The time is now.”


Wednesday, April 29, 2026

 What Confluent can tell us about video sensing applications?

Confluent’s Streaming Data platform is a cloud-native, fully managed event streaming system built on Apache Kafka but rearchitected from the ground up for elastic scalability, real-time processing, and enterprise-grade governance. At its heart, the platform turns raw data in motion into reliable, governed data products that power real-time applications, analytics, and AI.

The Foundation: KORA, Confluent’s Cloud-Native Kafka Engine

Everything starts with KORA, Confluent’s custom-engineered version of Apache Kafka. Unlike traditional Kafka deployments, KORA is designed for a multi-tenant, serverless cloud architecture. It delivers millions of messages per second with sub-10ms latency and guarantees 99.99% uptime through multi-availability-zone clustering. Topics are partitioned across brokers for horizontal scale and fault tolerance, and producers and consumers are fully decoupled—meaning you can add or evolve services without breaking dependencies.

Storage That Scales: Tiered Storage Architecture

One of KORA’s most powerful innovations is its three-tier storage system, which replaces Kafka’s traditional single-layer local-disk storage:

• Hot tier (memory/SSD): Stores recent data for ultra-low-latency access.

• Warm tier (local SSD cache): Handles intermediate retention.

• Cold tier (cloud object storage like S3, GCS, or Azure Blob): Provides infinite, cost-effective retention.

After data segments are flushed, they’re automatically moved to colder, cheaper storage while metadata is tracked internally. This separation of compute and storage lets you scale each independently and retain data for months or years at a fraction of the cost—something vanilla Kafka can’t do efficiently.

Governance and Quality: Schema Registry and Stream Governance

To keep streaming data trustworthy, Confluent includes a centralized Schema Registry that manages Avro, Protobuf, and JSON Schema with strict compatibility rules (backward, forward, full, or none). This ensures producers and consumers stay in sync even as schemas evolve.

Built on top is the Stream Governance suite, which delivers three critical capabilities:

1. Stream Quality: Enforces data contracts with schema validation and business rule checks.

2. Stream Catalog: Provides data discovery with tagging and rich business metadata.

3. Stream Lineage: Maps end-to-end event flows, showing exactly where data comes from and where it goes.

Together, these tools turn chaotic data streams into governed, high-quality data products.

Connectors: Plug-and-Play Data Integration

Confluent ships with 120+ pre-built Kafka connectors for databases, data warehouses, cloud services, and more. These source and sink connectors abstract away the complexity of data integration. You can also apply transformations on the fly using Single Message Transformations (SMTs), making it easy to clean, enrich, or reformat data as it moves through the platform.

Stream Processing: Real-Time Computation at Scale

For real-time computation, the platform supports multiple processing engines:

• Apache Flink®: A powerful engine for stateful stream processing with automatic schema evolution handling.

• Kafka Streams: A lightweight client library for building stream processing applications with a processor topology of source, processor, and sink nodes. It uses a depth-first processing strategy and partition-based state stores, avoiding backpressure issues.

• ksqlDB: A streaming SQL engine that lets you query and transform data using familiar SQL syntax.

• Tableflow: Creates materialized views for real-time analytics.

The platform even supports LLM and ML model inference directly inside stream processing, enabling streaming agents that can invoke external tools—bringing AI capabilities into real-time data pipelines.

Multi-Cloud, Hybrid, and Geo-Replication

Confluent is built for modern cloud realities:

• Cluster Linking enables geo-replication across clusters and clouds.

• Multi-cloud support includes native integration with S3, GCS, and Azure Blob, plus a Bring-Your-Own-Cloud (BYOC) option.

• Networking security includes private linking, VPC peering, and end-to-end in-transit encryption.

• The architecture supports Kappa architecture, unifying operational and analytical workloads in a single pipeline.

This flexibility lets you run Confluent consistently across AWS, GCP, Azure, or on-premises environments.

How Data Flows Through the Platform

Imagine this journey:

1. Producers send events into Kafka topics, which are partitioned distributed logs.

2. Schema Registry validates each event against its schema.

3. Data lands in tiered storage, automatically moving from hot to cold as it ages.

4. Connectors pull data in from or push data out to external systems.

5. Flink, Kafka Streams, or ksqlDB process the data in real time.

6. Processed data flows to consumer applications, data warehouses, analytics dashboards, or AI models.

Because producers and consumers are decoupled, you can add, remove, or scale any part of this pipeline without disrupting the rest.

Why Confluent Stands Out

Compared to vanilla Kafka, Confluent delivers:

• Tiered storage for infinite retention at low cost.

• Auto-scaling that’s 30× faster than manual Kafka rebalancing.

• Built-in governance with Schema Registry and Stream Governance.

• Fully managed operations with a 99.99% uptime SLA.

• Multiple processing engines: Flink + ksqlDB + Kafka Streams, not just one.

In short, Confluent’s Streaming Data platform transforms the challenge of managing real-time data into a seamless, governed, and scalable experience—enabling event-driven architectures, real-time analytics, and AI applications powered by high-quality, trusted data in motion.

What this architecture informs for AI Agents specifically for drone video sensing applications

AI agents are usually arranged in one of the following patterns:

• Automatic Query Decomposition by one agent co-ordinating with other agents to invoke each of the queries incurring token costs in parallel per agent.

• Lambda processing or function app agents: scaling to workload for predefined routines on a task by task basis.

• Reasoning agent: forming a breakdown of step-by-step tasks for execution and query response reconstitution.

• Model Context Protocol enabled Agents: for agents to independently reach each other for fulfilment.

• Grounding Agents: with connectivity to online or specific data sources or services.

What Confluent architecture suggests is to perform this at an event-by-event basis on a perpetual agent as follows:

package com.sms.event;

/**

 * This represents an observable notification.

 * @param <T> The type of event that is to be observed.

 */

public interface Notifier<T> {

    /**

     * Attach a listener for notification type T.

     * @param listener This is the listener.

     *

     */

    void subscribe(final Listener<T> listener);

    /**

     * Detach a listener.

     */

    void unsubscribe();

    /**

     * finished notifying.

     */

    void onCompleted();

    /**

     * regular event processing.

     */

    void onNext(T notification);

    /**

     * failed event processing.

     */

    void onError(Throwable exception);

}

package com.sms.event;

/**

 * Listener interface for receiving notifications.

 * @param <T> Notification type.

 */

 @FunctionalInterface

public interface Listener<T> {

    /**

     * Attach a notifier for notification type T.

     * @param notifier This is the notifier.

     *

     */

    void subscribe(final Notifier<T> notifier);

    /**

     * Detach a notifier.

     */

    void unsubscribe();

    /**

     * finished notifying.

     */

    void onCompleted();

    /**

     * regular event processing.

     */

    void onNext(T notification);

    /**

     * failed event processing.

     */

    void onError(Throwable exception);

}

package com.sms.event;

import java.util.concurrent.Executors;

import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;

import java.util.Map;

import java.util.HashMap;

import javax.annotation.concurrent.GuardedBy;

import lombok.Data;

import lombok.Synchronized;

import lombok.extern.slf4j.Slf4j;

/**

 * Equivalent of a message broker.

 * @param <T> Type of notification.

 */

@Slf4j

public class NotificationSystem<T extends Notification> {

     @GuardedBy("$lock")

    private final Map<String, Notifier<T>> notifierMap = new HashMap<String, Notifier<T>>();

    private final Map<String, Listener<T>> listenerMap = new HashMap<String, Listener<T>>();

    private final ExecutorService executorService = Executors.newFixedThreadPool(1);

    @SuppressWarnings({ "unchecked", "rawtypes" })

    @Synchronized

    public void addListener(final String type,

                            final Listener<T> listener) {

        if (!isListenerPresent(listener)) {

            listenerMap.put(type, listener);

        }

    }

    /**

     * This method will notify listeners.

     *

     * @param notification Notification.

     * @param <T> Type of notification.

     */

    @Synchronized

    public void notify(final T notification) {

        String type = notification.getClass().getSimpleName();

        Listener<T> listener = listenerMap.get(type);

        log.info("Executing listener of type: {} for notification: {}", type, notification);

        executorService.submit(() -> {

            try {

                listener.onNext(notification);

            } catch (Throwable ex) {

                listener.onError(ex);

            }

        });

    }

    @Synchronized

    public void removeListener(final String type, final Listener<T> listener) {

        listenerMap.remove(type);

    }

    private boolean isListenerPresent(final Listener<T> listener) {

        return listenerMap.values().stream().anyMatch(le -> le.equals(listener));

    }

    @SuppressWarnings({ "unchecked", "rawtypes" })

    @Synchronized

    public void addNotifier(final String type,

                            final Notifier<T> notifier) {

        if (!isNotifierPresent(notifier)) {

            notifierMap.put(type, notifier);

        }

    }

    @Synchronized

    public void removeNotifier(final String type, final Notifier<T> notifier) {

        notifierMap.remove(type);

    }

    public boolean isNotifierPresent(final Notifier<T> notifier) {

        return notifierMap.values().stream().anyMatch(n -> n.equals(notifier));

    }

    public boolean isSubscriberPresent(final Listener<T> listener) {

        return listenerMap.values().stream().anyMatch(l -> l.equals(listener));

    }

}


Tuesday, April 28, 2026

 This is a summary of a book titled “Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust” written by Chris Brogan and Julien Smith and published by Wiley in 2009. People become less trusting, and the public’s skepticism toward institutions runs high as time passes. In this environment, traditional marketing and polished corporate messaging don’t build confidence; they often deepen suspicion. The authors argue that the web—because it is connective, searchable, and radically transparent—offers companies a different path. Instead of trying to control the message or hide imperfections, organizations can earn credibility by showing up as real participants in online communities. The people who make this work are what Brogan and Smith call “trust agents”: individuals who represent a business without acting like salespeople, who trade pressure for presence, and who build influence by being useful and genuine. For implementors of OAuth protocol, this relates to bringing audience from third party websites.

A trust agent’s influence comes from understanding a core shift: online, people don’t want to be “managed” by brands; they want to be cared for by humans. The authors stress that effective participants are not infiltrators who join groups to extract value, and they are not loud promoters trying to “convert” every interaction into a transaction. They are power users of modern web tools—blogs, feeds, social networks, audio and video platforms—but the tools matter less than the approach. The web is described as a gigantic lever: once you publish something helpful publicly, it can continue to reach new people long after you press “post,” and one thoughtful answer can save you from repeating the same response in countless private emails. Over time, that visible generosity becomes reputation, and reputation becomes trust.

To act with credibility, the book says, you first have to listen. Brogan and Smith recommend building a “listening station” so you can understand what online communities already believe about your company and your competitors—what they praise, what they distrust, and what questions keep resurfacing. Their 2009 instructions are anchored in the tools of that moment (Google services, feed readers, and blog search engines like Technorati), but the underlying practice is timeless: set up a system that continuously surfaces mentions of your organization, your products, and the themes your customers care about. The goal is not surveillance for its own sake; it is awareness. Only by paying attention can you participate in ways that feel responsive rather than performative.

Once you can “see the map” of what people are saying, you can begin to contribute. The authors emphasize that the content you create online—whether posts, videos, podcasts, or simple comments—has durability. Because it remains discoverable, it can keep answering questions and demonstrating your expertise long after the moment has passed. This is where social capital forms: when you repeatedly help people solve problems, clarify confusing topics, or point them toward useful resources, the community starts to recognize you as someone worth listening to. That recognition is not merely popularity; it is a kind of stored goodwill you can draw on later when you need to introduce an idea, request feedback, or rally people around a project.

From there, Brogan and Smith organize the trust agent’s mindset into six interlocking principles. Each principle is less a rigid rule than a way of behaving that makes trust more likely to form in public spaces where anyone can evaluate you. Together they encourage experimentation, belonging, leverage, relationship-building, empathy, and collective action—skills that turn the web from a broadcasting channel into a place where influence is earned.

The first principle, “Make Your Own Game,” argues that the internet rewards those willing to challenge industry habits. Online you can set new terms, reach audiences directly, and bypass gatekeepers who once controlled distribution. The book highlights musicians who rewrote the rules: the Arctic Monkeys built momentum through MySpace, and Radiohead experimented with a pay-what-you-want release that still generated massive sales. These examples illustrate the broader point: trust agents don’t wait for permission. They watch what the community values, take smart risks, and create approaches that feel fresh rather than formulaic.

To support that spirit of experimentation, the authors borrow a framework from Douglas Rushkoff: treating culture—and the web—as a kind of game you can learn, hack, and even redesign. At first you “play,” learning the norms and feedback signals of your space: links, comments, followers, revenue, and the general sentiment people express in public. Then you begin to “cheat,” not by being dishonest but by thinking laterally—finding unusual, effective ways to use familiar tools or sell familiar offerings. Finally, you may move into “programming,” building something new entirely and discovering its rules through trial, error, and persistence. In the trust agent’s world, that willingness to learn and iterate becomes a visible marker of competence and confidence.

The second principle, “One of Us,” focuses on belonging. Trust online is rarely granted to outsiders who sound like advertisements, and it is quickly withdrawn from anyone who appears self-serving. The book points to an early and influential example: Microsoft employee Robert Scoble, who blogged candidly about his company—even criticizing products. That openness helped him gain standing in technical communities, not because he was perfect, but because he was plainly real. Brogan and Smith connect this to the “trust equation” described in The Trusted Advisor: credibility, reliability, and intimacy raise trust, while self-orientation lowers it. Online, these factors still apply, but they are shaped by what other people publicly say about you, by the consistency of your visible actions over time, and by the surprising power of “verbal intimacy” in a world with fewer nonverbal cues.

The third principle, the “Archimedes Effect,” explains how the web turns small efforts into outsized outcomes. Like a lever, online platforms amplify reputation, relationships, and time: a single introduction can connect networks, and a single well-placed resource can help thousands. Yet the authors warn that leverage collapses the moment you treat your audience as targets. Trust agents serve as helpful gatekeepers for their communities, curating information, connecting people, and staying focused on long-term value rather than short-term selling.

Using that leverage well requires what the authors call “multicapitalism”: the ability to recognize different forms of value—money, attention, credibility, access, goodwill—and to exchange them intelligently. They offer Donald Trump as an example of turning one kind of capital into another: wealth into visibility, visibility into new ventures. For a trust agent, the more ethical version of this is building a presence online, meeting people in person when possible, and then sustaining the relationship with ongoing online touches. Over time, those repeated, generous interactions become the compounding force behind influence.

The fourth principle, “Agent Zero,” describes a particular kind of network position. Trust agents often sit at the hub of conversations, not because they demand attention, but because they continuously connect people and ideas. They comment, respond, congratulate, and share—quickly and sincerely. They use their network to solve problems, introduce collaborators, and spotlight other people’s work. Ironically, by staying out of the spotlight and acting with a service mindset, they become highly visible in the way that matters: as dependable human links within a community.

The fifth principle, “Human Artist,” is about interpersonal skill—especially empathy, observation, and respect for social norms. Brogan and Smith argue that trust agents succeed because they are good at reading the room, even when “the room” is a comment thread, a forum, or a fast-moving social feed. They take time to learn which communities matter to them, what those people value, and what behavior is considered acceptable. They listen before they speak, match the tone of the space, and follow a web-friendly version of the Golden Rule: treat online contacts the way you would want to be treated. Most importantly, they resist the temptation to market to new online friends. In community settings, aggressive selling is often treated as a violation, and it can damage reputation faster than any single mistake.

The sixth principle, “Build an Army,” highlights the web’s ability to coordinate people at scale. With platforms such as wikis, review sites, and social networks, trust agents can gather large groups around a shared purpose, helping them collaborate in ways that were once impractical. Wikipedia is an obvious example of crowdsourcing’s potential, but the authors also point to corporate efforts that succeed when they prioritize participation over persuasion. General Motors’ GMNext.com, for instance, gave customers wiki-style tools and space to share stories about vehicles they loved. The initiative worked precisely because GM didn’t treat the community like a pipeline for hard sales; it treated it as a place where customers could express identity and enthusiasm in their own words—marketing that feels credible because it isn’t forced.

In the final pages, the advice becomes practical and immediate: show up where your communities already gather, and communicate more than you think you need to. Join relevant networks, build a base of contacts, and don’t be overly cautious about connecting with people you haven’t met yet—online, relationships often begin as lightweight interactions that deepen over time. Use tools like Twitter (and today’s equivalents) to learn what people care about in real time. Comment thoughtfully on blogs and forums, answer questions, and “check in” regularly so your presence is steady rather than sporadic. The authors’ challenge is simple: aim to become the best communicator the web has ever seen, not by talking the most, but by listening well, contributing generously, and earning trust one visible interaction at a time.