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#4448 Google Ultra

#4448 Google Ultra #4448  Given my background and interests, why should I use Google Ultra? With your extensive background as a high-level systems engineer, multi-disciplinary maker, and developer of complex architectures, your AI needs are likely far closer to an advanced computing environment than a standard conversational assistant. The top-tier Google AI Ultra subscription is specifically designed for power users who push AI past basic prompting and into automated, large-scale workflows. Here is exactly how the capabilities of Ultra line up with your specific engineering and development profile: 1. Massive Context Window for Architecture and Standards Standard LLMs choke when you feed them massive technical documents, forcing you to rely entirely on RAG chunking. Ultra provides an industry-leading, massive context window (up to 2 million tokens). The Value to You: You can drop massive software standards (like entire, un-redacted NASA compliance documents, flight software requ...

#4447 Mathematica TSP Studies

#4447 Mathematica TSP Studies Quantum supremacy just ran into an unexpected rival: An ordinary laptop armed with new math https://phys.org/news/2026-05-quantum-supremacy-ran-unexpected-rival.html #4447  Can I get Mathematic to create a graph for a list of cities with mileages along edges? Yes, you absolutely can! In Wolfram Mathematica, you can easily create graphs from a list of cities and the distances (mileages) between them using the built-in Graph and WeightedAdjacencyGraph functions. Depending on how your data is structured, here are the two easiest ways to do it. Method 1: Using a List of Rules (Best for direct city-to-city connections) If you have a list showing which city connects to which, you can use the DirectedEdge ( -> ) or UndirectedEdge ( <-> ) format and style the edges with their weights (mileages). (* Define the connections with distances as weights *) cityGraph = Graph[ {"New York" <-> "Chicago", "Chicago" <->...

#4446 Prompt Building: Complete, Correct, Consistent, Repeatable Results from Run to Run

#4446 Prompt Building: Complete, Correct, Consistent, Repeatable Results from Run to Run #4446  Once I have a prompt that does mostly what I want, how can I use and LLM to improve it to produce complete, correct, consistent, repeatable results from run to run? Systematically refining a prompt to achieve strict engineering-grade reliability ( completeness, correctness, consistency, and repeatability ) requires moving away from conversational phrasing and toward structured, deterministic instructions. When you use an LLM to optimize its own prompts, you aren't just asking it to "make this better." You are treating the LLM as a metaprompter —a compiler that transforms a loose concept into a rigorous execution framework. Here is the structured strategy and the exact meta-prompts you can use to force an LLM to harden your prompt for production-level consistency. 1. The Core Strategy: What the LLM Must Inject To achieve near-deterministic output from non-deterministic models, t...