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#4256 Copilot Training Plan for Software and Safety Engineers

#4256 Copilot Training Plan for Software and Safety Engineers #4256  Provide a 10-step training plan to teach software and safety engineers to apply an LLM like Copilot for technical document analysis and technical writing Training software and safety engineers to use LLMs like GitHub Copilot requires a shift from "code generation" to "semantic reasoning" and "verification." In safety-critical environments, the focus must be on using the AI as a high-speed analyst that still requires human "sign-off." Here is a 10-step training plan designed to bridge the gap between raw engineering and high-quality technical documentation. Phase 1: Foundations & Contextual Awareness 1. Master the "Context Window" & Workspace Indexing Engineers often fail by treating the LLM as a search engine rather than a reasoning engine. The Skill: Teaching engineers how to use @workspace (Copilot) or file attachments to provide the LLM with the full archi...

#4255 Instructing an LLM to Complete Each and Every Step

#4255 Instructing an LLM to Complete Each and Every Step #4255  If I instructed you to create a checklist of 99 steps to run, and check off each step as complete only when you have completed it, then proceed to the next step and repeat for all 99 steps, could you do that faithfully? Technically, I can certainly generate a 99-step checklist and "process" each item. However, there are two important nuances to how I work that might affect what you’re looking for: 1. The "Single-Burst" Nature When I generate a response, I do it all at once. If I were to write out 99 steps and check them all off in one message, I’m not actually pausing to "perform" a physical or temporal task between step 14 and step 15. To me, checking them off is part of the text generation process, rather than a reflection of time passing or a physical action being completed. 2. Output Limits A 99-step detailed checklist is quite long. Depending on how much detail is in each step, we might r...

#4254 Cybersecurity Digital Twin Architecture Design

#4254 Cybersecurity Digital Twin Architecture Design #4254  I want to develop a two part cybersecurity analytical tool. 1) Create a RAG-able datastore of industry and company cybersecurity documents. 2) Model an company's computing and communications infrastructure. The two parts would work together to audit a company against cybersecurity standards and best practices This is a sophisticated architectural challenge. Building a tool that bridges the gap between static standards (the "What") and dynamic infrastructure (the "How") is exactly where modern automated compliance is heading. To make this work, your system needs to function as a "Security Digital Twin" where the RAG component acts as the brain and the infrastructure model acts as the body. Part 1: The RAG-able Cybersecurity Datastore Instead of a simple document folder, you need a Structured Knowledge Base . Cybersecurity documents are hierarchical (Framework --> Control -->  Requiremen...