Building an AI demo application is easy, but making it work reliably is hard. Open-ended user inputs, model reasoning, and agentic tool use require a new workflow to iteratively measure, evaluate, and improve these systems as a team.
Langfuse helps developers solve that problem. Its open-source LLM engineering platform gives teams the tools to trace, evaluate, and improve performance, whether they’re debugging prompts, testing model responses, or analyzing billions of interactions.
For companies working with sensitive or large-scale data, part of Langfuse’s appeal lies in its flexibility: it can be self-hosted or used as a managed cloud service. his flexibility helped Langfuse gain early traction with large enterprises—but it also created a scaling challenge. By mid-2024, the simple Postgres-based architecture that powered both their cloud and self-hosted offerings was under pressure. The platform was handling billions of rows, fielding complex queries across multiple UIs, and struggling to keep up with rapidly scaling customers generating massive amounts of data. Something had to change.
At a March 2025 ClickHouse meetup in San Francisco, Langfuse co-founder Clemens Rawert shared how the team re-architected their platform with ClickHouse as the “centerpiece” of their data operations. He also explained how they rolled out that change to thousands of self-hosted users, turning a major infrastructure change into a win for the entire community. — Read More
Daily Archives: June 26, 2025
Begun, the AI Browser Wars Have
About a week ago, I bit the bullet. Reading the writing very clearly on the wall, I abandoned the Arc browser and jumped ship over to Dia, the new AI-first web browser built by The Browser Company. It took a while, but now I think I’m sold. I’m not sure that Dia itself will be the browser of the future, but I’m more certain than ever that an AI-centric browser will be.
At first, I found Dia to be a bit too simple for my taste. Because Arc had such a plethora of power-user features, many of which took a lot of training to get used to, it was hard to “downgrade”. Of course, that’s also the exact reason why The Browser Company shifted the focus to Dia. While Arc had a dedicated fan base, it was also clearly never going to go fully mainstream. They had made a better browser for web power users, but most people were not web power users – at least not in the sense that they would take the time to learn new tricks when Chrome was likely good enough for them. It was a tricky spot for the company to be in, they had sort of painted themselves into a dreaded middle ground.
So they sort of went down a third path, letting Arc live on, but really just with underlying engine (Chromium) updates. — Read More
I really don’t like ChatGPT’s new memory dossier
Last month ChatGPT got a major upgrade. As far as I can tell the closest to an official announcement was this tweet from @OpenAI:
Starting today [April 10th 2025], memory in ChatGPT can now reference all of your past chats to provide more personalized responses, drawing on your preferences and interests to make it even more helpful for writing, getting advice, learning, and beyond.
This memory FAQ document has a few more details, including that this “Chat history” feature is currently only available to paid accounts:
Saved memories and Chat history are offered only to Plus and Pro accounts. Free‑tier users have access to Saved memories only.
This makes a huge difference to the way ChatGPT works: it can now behave as if it has recall over prior conversations, meaning it will be continuously customized based on that previous history. — Read More
Federal Judge Rules AI Training Is Fair Use in Anthropic Copyright Case
A federal judge in California has issued a complicated pre-trial ruling in one of the first major copyright cases involving artificial intelligence training, finding that, while using legally acquired copyrighted books to train AI large language models constitutes fair use, downloading pirated copies of those books for permanent storage violates copyright law. The ruling represents the first substantive judicial decision on how copyright law applies to the AI training practices that have become standard across the tech industry over the full-throated condemnation of the book business. — Read More