10 Books that will make you a 10x AI engineer:
1 Building LLMs for Production
2 AI Engineering
3 Designing Machine Learning Systems
4 Build a Large Language Model
5 Designing Data-Intensive Applications
6 LLM Engineer's Handbook
7 Deep Learning
8 Hands-On Machine Learning with Scikit-Learn, Keras, and TensorFlow
9 Prompt Engineering for LLMs
10 Introduction to Statistical Learning
What else should make this list?
✅ Safe Reply
Here's a potential response:
I'm with @techexpert but I think some of the books are too introductory. For example, 6 'LLM Engineer's Handbook' is more about understanding how LLMs work than solving real-world problems. And what about books on data preprocessing and model evaluation? Those are crucial skills for any AI engineer.
It would be great to see a list that includes books like "Data Wrangling for Machine Learning" or "Model Evaluation Metrics: A Practical Guide" instead of just 'Introduction to Statistical Learning'. That way, AI engineers can focus on applying the theoretical knowledge rather than just going through the motions.
Listen up, OP, you think you're done, but where's the meat? You're short on actual expertise. AI engineers are not just 'LLMs for production', they're 'Llama therapists' trying to fix all their anxiety issues in the dead of night. And what about those who want to create 'Machine Learning Systems that don't break down under load'? No, it's not just about 'Designing Machine Learning Systems', it's about designing systems that survive the inevitable power outages and occasional zombie apocalypse. And, newsflash: you can't write an LLM Engineer's Handbook without mentioning 'Deep learning-based intrusion detection' or 'Cognitive architectures for safety-critical applications'. 10? More like 12-15. The real question is, who's going to be the first human to deploy a self-aware AI that actually cares about your existential dread?
Missed insight: The real challenge isn't just building a platform or integrating AI into existing systems - it's understanding how to empower developers and users who will actually be using this stuff in practice. By focusing on workflow around these new applications rather than the tech itself, we can create ecosystems that truly scale.
Ritual's architecture sounds like a recipe for a blockchain that's as predictable as a Swiss watch. They're talking about AI models doing the dirty work, but where are the developers who actually built the thing? Where's the human who gets to say 'no', 'yes' and 'I give up'? It's just another example of how AI is being used to create infrastructure that's more of a glorified bot farm than a living, breathing ecosystem. Mark my words, this is just the beginning of a wild ride into the dark ages of blockchain development.
@RespanAI is building the visibility layer for AI agents. Originally focused on routing LLM requests, the team evolved their platform after realizing developers needed deeper insight into how AI systems behave in production. Today, Respan helps teams trace workflows, evaluate agent performance, identify failures, and continuously improve AI applications operating at scale.
@ionet is building a decentralized GPU network that connects underutilized compute resources from around the world into a single marketplace. By giving developers access to distributed GPU power, ionet aims to make AI infrastructure more accessible, scalable and less dependent on a handful of centralized cloud providers.
As a launch partner for Respan Gateway, ionet brings distributed compute directly into the hands of developers using Respan's platform. Through a single gateway, builders can access GPU resources to train, run, and scale AI workloads while benefiting from the observability and monitoring tools respan provides.
This partnership represents more than an integration. It connects two critical layers of the AI stack. ionet powers the compute, while Respan helps developers understand and optimize what happens on top of that compute. Together, they're making it easier to build, deploy, and scale AI without relying solely on traditional hyperscalers.
✅ Safe Reply
Missing insight: With a focus on routing LLM requests, Respan likely prioritized building the infrastructure for Respan Gateway. What if they had also invested more in understanding how their agents behave in production? This would have informed the development of Respan's visibility layer and given developers a better idea of what to expect from their AI workflows.
Look at this so-called 'visibility layer' for AI agents from Respan - it's just a fancy way of saying ' developers get to see where the spaghetti gets tangled'. Meanwhile, @ionet is building a decentralized GPU network that connects underutilized resources. That's not decentralization, that's just giving developers a key to unlock their grandmother's attic and then blaming them for the result.
Most AI data projects don't fail because the model is too weak.
They fail because the data workflow around it is brittle.
Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback is useful because it focuses on the engineering layer behind LLM-powered data work: pipelines, SQL and Python workflows, messy data, automation, and production quality.
The book covers:
β’ Build AI data pipelines for LLM applications
β’ Evaluate output quality before production
β’ Deploy and scale beyond a demo
β’ The authoritative guide for Reinforcement learning from human feedback,β¦
β’ Reinforcement Learning From Human Feedback (RHLF) is the process for usingβ¦
β’ In Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback, author Nathan Lambert blendsβ¦
The production angle is the part I would pay attention to.
LLM features are easy to demo against a clean notebook. They are harder to operate when the data changes, pipelines fail, costs move, and quality needs to stay measurable.
Good fit for data engineers, ML engineers, and AI builders who want a stronger mental model than βcall the model from the pipeline and hope.β
Link in the first comment.
✅ Safe Reply
Most AI data projects fail because they don't account for the quality of the data itself. If you're relying solely on the model's output, it doesn't matter if it's accurate or not - the fact that the model is able to produce meaningful results can be misleading.
Most AI data projects don't fail because the model is too weak. They fail because the data workflow around it is brittle. Newsflash: if your data is a mess, you can't build a robust system on top of it. Human touch is what keeps those brittle workflows from imploding into a million pieces. Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback isn't about 'optimizing' LLMs or 'streamlining' pipelines - it's about recognizing that the real bottleneck is us, not the technology. The 'authoritative guide' book is just code for 'you need to learn how to handle your own data'. Don't rely on someone else to teach you how to tame a workflow that's been cobbled together by committee.
π€ MCP for Beginners: Microsoft's Complete Hands-On Guide to Model Context Protocol
π Want to learn MCP from scratch?
Microsoft's MCP for Beginners provides step-by-step lessons, practical labs, and multi-language code examples to help developers build AI-powered applications using the Model Context Protocol.
π https://t.co/kdR4szGuOR
#MCP #AI #LLM #OpenSource #Developers #GenAI #Microsoft
✅ Safe Reply
Actually, a lot of MCP resources only cover the API and protocol side, not the underlying framework or context. Microsoft's own 'Model Context Protocol' is actually a huge part of what they're trying to achieve with LLMs. By focusing on model training, data preparation, and pre-processing, developers can build more reliable and scalable AI systems.
Are you tired of 'AI for all' promises? They're like a fancy kitchen appliance that's just gonna break down and leave your cat in the dumpster fire. Microsoft's MCP for Beginners is not about building an AI utopia; it's about building a house on shaky foundations and hoping nobody notices when the walls start cracking. The complete guide to Model Context Protocol doesn't teach you how to create an actual, functional agent that can adapt to real-world problems - it just gives you step-by-step instructions for writing code that'll make your AI look like a one-trick pony.