Sr. Content Developer at Microsoft, working remotely in PA, TechBash conference organizer, former Microsoft MVP, Husband, Dad and Geek.
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Episode 553: 2025 Year in Review

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This week, we review our 2025 predictions, discuss the big stories, and speculate on 2026. Plus, Coté dives deep into the EU broth market.

Watch the YouTube Live Recording of Episode 553

Runner-up Titles

  • I was up at 1am thinking, “are there any good billionaires.”
  • Maybe you forgot your shoes
  • Not just room temperature, but cold
  • I thought Europe was known for its soups
  • Ice, air conditioning, and, broth - we have solved those three problems.
  • Sloppy search
  • Cutlery, tupperware, COVID
  • The Young People.
  • The Automation Apologist.
  • I’m disappointed in everything
  • Models don’t matter anymore
  • Shade-tree programmer
  • An empty farm in Waco

Rundown

Conferences

  • cfgmgmtcamp 2026, February 2nd to 4th, Ghent, BE.
    • Coté speaking and doing live SDI with John Willis.
  • DevOpsDayLA at SCALE23x, March 6th, Pasadena, CA
    • Use code: DEVOP for 50% off.
  • Devnexus 2026, March 4th to 6th, Atlanta, GA. Coté has a discount code, but he’s not sure if he can give it out. He’s asking! Send him a DM in the meantime.
  • Whole bunch of VMUGs, mostly in the US. The CFPs are open, go speak at them! Coté speaking in Amsterdam.
    • Amsterdam (March 17-19, 2026), Minneapolis (April 7-9, 2026), Toronto (May 12-14, 2026), Dallas (June 9-11, 2026), Orlando (October 20-22, 2026)

SDT News & Community

Recommendations

Photo Credits





Download audio: https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/9b74150b-3553-49dc-8332-f89bbbba9f92/83ed14a8-e68b-4571-b62b-f3652ee13922.mp3
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The Cost of Relying Only on Static Code Review

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Static code review has been part of software engineering for decades. Long before AI entered the workflow, teams relied on static analysis to catch bugs early, enforce standards and reduce obvious risks before code ever ran.

And it still matters.

But as codebases grow and pull request velocity increases, many teams are discovering that static code review alone is no longer enough. It’s a foundation not a complete review strategy.

What Is Static Code Review?

Static code review is the process of analyzing source code without executing it. The goal is to identify issues by inspecting the structure, syntax, and patterns in the code itself.

Static code analysis reviews typically look for:

  • Syntax errors and obvious bugs
  • Style and formatting violations
  • Unsafe or deprecated patterns
  • Common security vulnerabilities
  • Code smells and duplication

Because the code never runs, static analysis is fast, repeatable and easy to automate.

Static Analysis Code Review vs Human Review

Static code review answers a very specific question:

“Does this code violate known rules or patterns?”

Human reviewers answer a different one:

“Does this change make sense in context?”

Both are important but they operate at different levels.

Static code analysis is excellent at enforcing consistency and catching low-level issues early. It struggles with intent, tradeoffs and system-level reasoning.

That distinction becomes critical as teams scale.

Static Code Review Tools: Where They Shine

Static code review tools are still essential in modern workflows. Used correctly, they deliver real value.

They are especially good at:

  • Early feedback during development
  • Consistency across large teams
  • Preventing regressions in style and safety
  • Reducing trivial review comments

Popular static code review tools integrate directly into CI pipelines and pull requests, making them a reliable first line of defense.

For many teams, static analysis is the baseline non-negotiable and always on.

The Limits of Static Code Analysis Reviews

Static code review tools operate on rules and patterns. That’s also their limitation.

They generally cannot:

  • Understand why a change was made
  • Evaluate architectural impact
  • Distinguish between blocking and non-blocking issues
  • Reduce review noise on their own
  • Adapt feedback based on repository context

This is why teams often experience “alert fatigue.” The tool is technically correct but not always helpful.

As pull requests grow larger and more frequent, static analysis alone can turn reviews into a checklist instead of a conversation.

Best Static Code Analysis Reviews Start with Structure

The most effective teams treat static code review as the first pass, not the final word.

A strong review flow often looks like this:

  1. Static code review tools catch obvious issues
  2. Automated systems filter and prioritize findings
  3. Human reviewers focus on design, intent, and risk

This is where tools like PRFlow fit naturally.

PRFlow doesn’t replace static code review. It builds on it adding structure, consistency and context-aware review logic so humans don’t have to sift through low-signal feedback.

Static Code Review + PRFlow: A Better Review Baseline

PRFlow is designed around a simple idea:

Every pull request deserves a clean, predictable starting point.

Static analysis provides raw signals. PRFlow helps turn those signals into a usable review baseline by:

  • Reducing noise
  • Applying consistent review rules
  • Highlighting what actually matters
  • Keeping reviews focused and deterministic

Instead of reviewers repeating the same comments across PRs, they start from a higher-quality foundation.

Why Static Code Review Still Matters

Despite its limits, static code review isn’t going away and it shouldn’t.

It’s still the fastest way to catch:

  • Obvious bugs
  • Unsafe patterns
  • Style drift
  • Basic security issues

What’s changing is how teams use it.

Static analysis is no longer the review. It’s part of the review system.

Final Thoughts

Static code review is a powerful tool but it works best when paired with systems that understand context and workflow.

As teams grow, the challenge isn’t finding more issues. It’s deciding which issues deserve attention.

Static code review tools provide the signal.PRFlow helps teams act on it consistently, predictably and without friction.

That’s how code reviews scale without losing quality.

Check it out : https://www.graphbit.ai/prflow

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Daily Tech News Roundup - 2026-01-02

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1. A guide to choosing the right Apple Watch
Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/01/is-the-apple-watch-se-3-a-good-deal/
Summary: The gap between Apple's standard and budget smart watches has never felt smaller.

2. A beginner’s guide to Mastodon, the open source Twitter alternative
Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/01/what-is-mastodon/
Summary: Unless if you’re really in the know about nascent platforms, you probably didn’t know what Mastodon was until Elon Musk bought Twitter and renamed it X. In the initial aftermath of the acquisition, as users fretted over what direction Twitter would take, millions of users hopped over to Mastodon, a fellow microblogging site. As time […]

3. European banks plan to cut 200,000 jobs as AI takes hold
Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/01/european-banks-plan-to-cut-200000-jobs-as-ai-takes-hold/
Summary: The bloodletting will hit hardest in back-office operations, risk management, and compliance.

4. OpenAI bets big on audio as Silicon Valley declares war on screens
Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/01/openai-bets-big-on-audio-as-silicon-valley-declares-war-on-screens/
Summary: The form factors may differ, but the thesis is the same: audio is the interface of the future. Every space -- your home, your car, even your face -- is becoming an interface.

5. LG’s new karaoke-ready party speaker uses AI to remove song vocals
Source: https://www.theverge.com/news/852362/lg-xboom-stage-501-karaoke-launch-ces-2026
Summary: LG is adding a karaoke-focused party speaker to its lineup of Xboom devices, which is built in collaboration with Will.i.am. Announced this week, LG says the Stage 501 speaker comes with an "AI Karaoke Master" that can remove or adjust vocals from "virtually any song," similar to the Soundcore Rave 3S. It can also adjust […]

6. Public domain 2026: Betty Boop, Pluto, and Nancy Drew set free
Source: https://www.theverge.com/policy/852332/public-domain-2026-betty-boop-nancy-drew-pluto
Summary: Some years ago, I was writing a science fiction short story in which I wanted to incorporate verses from a 1928 song, "Button Up Your Overcoat." However, when I sold the story, my editor told me that since the song was still copyrighted, it was safer not to include the verses. If I had written […]

7. The top 6 media/entertainment startups from Disrupt Startup Battlefield
Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/01/the-top-6-media-entertainment-startups-from-disrupt-startup-battlefield/
Summary: Here is the full list of the media/entertainment Startup Battlefield 200 selectees, along with a note on what made us select them for the competition.

8. Meet the new tech laws of 2026
Source: https://www.theverge.com/policy/851664/new-tech-internet-laws-us-2026-ai-privacy-repair
Summary: As usual, 2025 was a year of deep congressional dysfunction in the US. But state legislatures were passing laws that govern everything from AI to social media to the right to repair. Many of these laws, alongside rules passed in past years, take effect in 2026 - either right now or in the coming months. […]

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Using the VSCode Claude Code Extension with Bedrock and Claude Sonnet 4.5

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Lots of folks use the Claude IDE, or the Claude Code VSCode extension. Unfortunately, your prompts and completions are used (by default) to train Claude models. [0]

AWS Bedrock, on the other hand, doesn't use your prompts and completions to train any AWS models or give them to 3rd parties. [1]

For these reasons (privacy, data sovereignty) I'm more inclined to use Bedrock as an LLM in my IDE. Today we'll go over how to set up the VSCode Claude Code extension with AWS Bedrock and use the Claude Sonnet 4.5 foundation model.

Overview

In order to use the Claude Code VSCode extension with Bedrock and the Claude Sonnet 4.5 model, we need to perform these tasks:

  1. Setup AWS IAM permissions to allow Bedrock usage
  2. Install and configure Claude Code VSCode extension
  3. Integrate AWS credentials, configure extension
  4. Test our setup works

To do this, we'll use Terraform to create our AWS IAM user and policies (but you could use the AWS console.)

Then we'll integrate this all together and verify it works as expected.

Unfortunate Missing Features and a Bug/Regression with the Claude Code Extension

AWS Bedrock enables generating short lived API tokens via their SDK. [2] Claude Code does support two methods for automatic AWS credential refresh, but Bedrock API tokens is not one of them.

If it did support this feature it would be the best solution from a security perspective. Tokens would expire in 12 hours and when expired and the extension is used it would automatically refresh them.

Instead it only supports AWS SSO (or rather AWS Identity Center) for it's awsAuthRefresh option, or AWS IAM credentials for its awsCredentialsExport refresh methods. [3] This deficiency is a poor decision, or at least an oversight by the Claude Code development team.

Unfortunately, a more egregious issue is that they claim the above awsCredentialsExport refresh method is functional when it is not. Whether it's a regression or bug, or maybe never worked, I couldn't get it working within a couple hours. (Including time spent conversing with the Claude Code VSCode extension using a working AWS Profile and it couldn't suggest a workaround to this problem.) In addition to all these setbacks, using the Claude Code settings file (~/.claude/settings.json) didn't work either so I have to use the VSCode settings file to set all Claude Code extension configuration options.

Since using AWS Identity Center for a personal account is overkill, refreshing Bedrock API tokens in Claude Code is not supported, and the AWS credential export method to automatically refresh my credentials for the Claude Code VSCode extension is not functional, I'll settle for the lowest common denominator and use the AWS Profile in my configuration. I don't love this method because it uses a long lived AWS IAM user credential (access key and secret access key.) But I can't improve security due to the poor state of affairs in the Claude Code VSCode extension.

Create IAM User and Bedrock Permissions

Create an IAM user and attach IAM policy to the user with this Terraform:


resource "aws_iam_user" "bedrock_user" {
  name = "bedrock-user"
}

resource "aws_iam_access_key" "bedrock" {
  user = aws_iam_user.bedrock_user.name
}

data "aws_iam_policy_document" "bedrock" {
  statement {
    effect = "Allow"
    actions = [
      "bedrock:InvokeModel",
      "bedrock:ListFoundationModels",
      "bedrock:ListInferenceProfiles",
      "bedrock:InvokeModelWithResponseStream",
      #   "bedrock:CallWithBearerToken" # required if using Bedrock API token which we're not doing here
    ]
    resources = ["*"]
  }
  statement {
    effect = "Allow"
    actions = [
      "aws-marketplace:ViewSubscriptions",
      "aws-marketplace:Subscribe"
    ]
    resources = ["*"]
    condition {
      test     = "StringEquals"
      variable = "aws:CalledViaLast"
      values   = ["bedrock.amazonaws.com"]
    }
  }
}

resource "aws_iam_user_policy" "bedrock" {
  name   = "bedrock"
  user   = aws_iam_user.bedrock_user.name
  policy = data.aws_iam_policy_document.bedrock.json
}

Setup AWS Profile

I typically use aws-vault to manage my AWS credentials, for enhanced security and to use short lived credentials. But again we're going to have to use the standard AWS method of storing long lived credentials in our ~/.aws/credentials file, and then access that profile from the Claude Code extension.

Above in the IAM user creation section, we only created the IAM user and policy. Now you will need to create an Access Key to use as the credential in your profile. Go to the AWS Console and create an access key for this user, follow the instructions to create it for the CLI use case.

After creating it, copy your Access Key and Secret Access Key somewhere for safe keeping (I use a password manager for this purpose.)

To setup your profile in the ~/.aws/credentials file, use the command:

aws configure --profile YOUR_AWS_PROFILE_NAME

It will prompt you to provide the AWS Access Key and Secret Access Key, which will be added to the ~/.aws/credentials file using the profile name you specified in the command (choose wisely!)

Enable Bedrock Claude Sonnet 4.5 and Validate Access

After creating the above IAM user and policy, and setting up the profile, we'll login to the AWS console. Choose the AWS region that you normally use, but be aware that these Bedrock foundation models aren't available in every single global AWS region. I used region us-west-2 but us-east-1 and us-east-2 are also supported.

Anthropic requires first-time customers to submit use case details before invoking a model once per account or once at the organization's management account. [4] This is a rather antiquated policy in the cloud era, but required nonetheless.

Go to the Bedrock section of the AWS console, then to "Chat/Text Playground" and select Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5. You'll be presented with a dialog to fill out and enable the foundation model.

Install and Configure VSCode

Install the VSCode extension:

code --install-extension anthropic.claude-code

Identify your Bedrock Claude Sonnet 4.5 inference profile ARN:

aws bedrock list-inference-profiles  --region us-west-2 --profile YOUR_AWS_PROFILE_NAME --no-cli-pager | jq '.inferenceProfileSummaries | .[] | select(.inferenceProfileId | match("us.anthropic.claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929-v1:0")) | .inferenceProfileArn'

NOTE: This assumes you're in the US, if using another global region use the global Anthropic Claude Sonnet profile name in the above command.

Add the following to your VSCode user settings.json file (usually this is ~/.config/Code/User/settings.json):

{
  "claudeCode.selectedModel": "us.anthropic.claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929-v1:0",
  "claudeCode.environmentVariables": [
    {
      "name": "AWS_PROFILE",
      "value": "YOUR_AWS_PROFILE_NAME"
    },
    {
      "name": "AWS_REGION",
      "value": "YOUR_AWS_REGION_FROM_ABOVE"
    },
    {
      "name": "BEDROCK_MODEL_ID",
      "value": "INFERENCE_PROFILE_ARN_FROM_ABOVE"
    },
    {
      "name": "CLAUDE_CODE_USE_BEDROCK",
      "value": "1"
    }
  ],
  "claudeCode.disableLoginPrompt": true,
}

Did it work?

You'll probably have to restart your VSCode session if it was running. Then, open the Claude window and type a question or request and you should see a successful response like below:

Conclusion

We did it! I'm not super impressed with the missing/broken/overlooked features of the Claude Code VSCode extension related to AWS IAM credentials. But it works fine for the time being and I'll revisit this issue and report back when these issues are resolved and we can all begin using short lived credentials with the extension.

Resources

I borrowed some information from this incredibly detailed blog post by Vasko Kelkocev. [5]

But even though that blog was written in October 2025, it was already out of date by the time I found it. I had to add more IAM permissions to get the extension to work with Bedrock (specifically bedrock:InvokeModelWithResponseStream), and there were some other issues with the configuration I had to play with. Thanks for the great blog Vasko.

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Azure AI Search at Scale: Building RAG Applications with Enhanced Vector Capacity

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In the rapidly evolving landscape of Generative AI, the Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) pattern has emerged as the gold standard for grounding Large Language Models (LLMs) in private, real-time data. However, as organizations move from Proof of Concept (PoC) to production, they encounter a significant hurdle: Scaling.

Scaling a vector store isn't just about adding more storage; it’s about maintaining low latency, high recall, and cost-efficiency while managing millions of high-dimensional embeddings. Azure AI Search (formerly Azure Cognitive Search) has recently undergone massive infrastructure upgrades, specifically targeting enhanced vector capacity and performance.

In this technical deep-dive, we will explore how to architect high-scale RAG applications using the latest capabilities of Azure AI Search.

1. The Architecture of Scalable RAG

At its core, a RAG application consists of two distinct pipelines: the Ingestion Pipeline (Data to Index) and the Inference Pipeline (Query to Response).

When scaling to millions of documents, the bottleneck usually shifts from the LLM to the retrieval engine. Azure AI Search addresses this by separating storage and compute through partitions and replicas, while offering specialized hardware-accelerated vector indexing.

System Architecture Overview

The following diagram illustrates a production-grade RAG architecture. Note how the Search service acts as the orchestration layer between raw data and the generative model.

System Architecture

2. Understanding Enhanced Vector Capacity

Azure AI Search has introduced new storage-optimized and compute-optimized tiers that significantly increase the number of vectors you can store per partition.

The Vector Storage Math

Vector storage consumption is determined by the dimensionality of your embeddings and the data type (e.g., float32). For example, a standard 1536-dimensional embedding (common for OpenAI models) using float32 requires:

1536 dimensions * 4 bytes = 6,144 bytes per vector (plus metadata overhead).

With the latest enhancements, certain tiers can now support up to tens of millions of vectors per index, utilizing techniques like Scalar Quantization to reduce the memory footprint of embeddings without significantly impacting retrieval accuracy.

Comparing Retrieval Strategies

To build at scale, you must choose the right search mode. Azure AI Search is unique because it combines traditional full-text search with vector capabilities.

Feature Vector Search Full-Text Search Hybrid Search Semantic Ranker
Mechanism Cosine Similarity/HNSW BM25 Algorithm Reciprocal Rank Fusion Transformer-based L3
Strengths Semantic meaning, context Exact keywords, IDs, SKU Best of both worlds Highest relevance
Scaling Memory intensive CPU/IO intensive Balanced Extra latency (ms)
Use Case "Tell me about security" "Error code 0x8004" General Enterprise Search Critical RAG accuracy

3. Deep Dive: High-Performance Vector Indexing

Azure AI Search uses the HNSW (Hierarchical Navigable Small World) algorithm for its vector index. HNSW is a graph-based approach that allows for approximate nearest neighbor (ANN) searches with sub-linear time complexity.

Configuring the Index

When defining your index, the vectorSearch configuration is critical. You must define the algorithmConfiguration to balance speed and accuracy.

from azure.search.documents.indexes.models import (
    SearchIndex,
    SearchField,
    SearchFieldDataType,
    VectorSearch,
    HnswAlgorithmConfiguration,
    VectorSearchProfile,
    SearchableField
)

# Configure HNSW Parameters
# m: number of bi-directional links created for each new element during construction
# efConstruction: tradeoff between index construction time and search speed
vector_search = VectorSearch(
    algorithms=[
        HnswAlgorithmConfiguration(
            name="my-hnsw-config",
            parameters={
                "m": 4, 
                "efConstruction": 400,
                "metric": "cosine"
            }
        )
    ],
    profiles=[
        VectorSearchProfile(
            name="my-vector-profile",
            algorithm_configuration_name="my-hnsw-config"
        )
    ]
)

# Define the index schema
index = SearchIndex(
    name="enterprise-rag-index",
    fields=[
        SimpleField(name="id", type=SearchFieldDataType.String, key=True),
        SearchableField(name="content", type=SearchFieldDataType.String),
        SearchField(
            name="content_vector",
            type=SearchFieldDataType.Collection(SearchFieldDataType.Single),
            searchable=True,
            vector_search_dimensions=1536,
            vector_search_profile_name="my-vector-profile"
        )
    ],
    vector_search=vector_search
)

Why m and efConstruction matter?

  • m: Higher values improve recall for high-dimensional data but increase the memory footprint of the index graph.
  • efConstruction: Increasing this leads to a more accurate graph but longer indexing times. For enterprise datasets with 1M+ documents, a value between 400 and 1000 is recommended for the initial build.

4. Integrated Vectorization and Data Flow

A common challenge at scale is the "Orchestration Tax"—the overhead of managing separate embedding services and indexers. Azure AI Search now offers Integrated Vectorization.

The Data Flow Mechanism

The Data Flow Mechanism

By using integrated vectorization, the Search service handles the chunking and embedding logic internally. When a document is added to your data source (e.g., Azure Blob Storage), the indexer automatically detects the change, chunks the text, calls the embedding model, and updates the index. This significantly reduces the complexity of your custom code.

5. Implementing Hybrid Search with Semantic Ranking

Pure vector search often fails on specific jargon or product codes (e.g., "Part-99-X"). To build a truly robust RAG system, you should implement Hybrid Search with Semantic Ranking.

Hybrid search combines the results from a vector query and a keyword query using Reciprocal Rank Fusion (RRF). The Semantic Ranker then takes the top 50 results and applies a secondary, more compute-intensive transformer model to re-order them based on actual meaning.

Code Example: Performing a Hybrid Query

from azure.search.documents import SearchClient
from azure.search.documents.models import VectorQuery

client = SearchClient(endpoint=AZURE_SEARCH_ENDPOINT, index_name="enterprise-rag-index", credential=credential)

# User's natural language query
query_text = "How do I reset the firewall configuration for the Pro series?"

# This embedding should be generated via your choice of model (e.g., text-embedding-3-small)
query_vector = get_embedding(query_text)

### results = client.search(

| search_text=query_text,  # Keyword search query | vector_queries=[VectorQuery(vector=query_vector, k_nearest_neighbors=50, fields="content_vector")], | select=["id", "content"], | query_type="semantic", | semantic_configuration_name="my-semantic-config", |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |

for result in results:
    print(f"Score: {result['@search.score']} | Semantic Score: {result['@search.reranker_score']}")
    print(f"Content: {result['content'][:200]}...")

In this example, the semantic_reranker_score provides a much more accurate indication of relevance for the LLM context window than a standard cosine similarity score.

6. Scaling Strategies: Partitions and Replicas

Azure AI Search scales in two dimensions: Partitions and Replicas.

  1. Partitions (Horizontal Scaling for Storage): Partitions provide more storage and faster indexing. If you are hitting the vector limit, you add partitions. Each partition effectively "slices" the index. For example, if one partition holds 1M vectors, two partitions hold 2M.
  2. Replicas (Horizontal Scaling for Query Volume): Replicas handle query throughput (Queries Per Second - QPS). If your RAG app has 1,000 concurrent users, you need multiple replicas to prevent request queuing.

Estimating Capacity

When designing your system, follow this rule of thumb:

  • Low Latency Req: Maximize Replicas.
  • Large Dataset: Maximize Partitions.
  • High Availability: Minimum of 2 Replicas for read-only SLA, 3 for read-write SLA.

7. Performance Tuning and Best Practices

Building at scale requires more than just infrastructure; it requires smart data engineering.

Optimal Chunking Strategies

The quality of your RAG system is directly proportional to the quality of your chunks.

  • Fixed-size chunking: Fast but often breaks context.
  • Overlapping chunks: Essential for ensuring context isn't lost at the boundaries. A common pattern is 512 tokens with a 10% overlap.
  • Semantic chunking: Using an LLM or specialized model to find logical breakpoints (paragraphs, sections). This is more expensive but yields better retrieval results.

Indexing Latency vs. Search Latency

When you scale to millions of vectors, the HNSW graph construction can take time. To optimize:

  • Batch your uploads: Don't upload documents one by one. Use the upload_documents batch API with 500-1000 documents per batch.
  • Use the ParallelIndex approach: If your dataset is static and massive, consider using multiple indexers pointing to the same index to parallelize the embedding generation.

Monitoring Relevance

Scaling isn't just about size; it's about maintaining quality. Use Retrieval Metrics to evaluate your index performance:

  • Recall@K: How often is the correct document in the top K results?
  • Mean Reciprocal Rank (MRR): How high up in the list is the relevant document?
  • Latency P95: What is the 95th percentile response time for a hybrid search?

8. Conclusion: The Future of Vector-Enabled Search

Azure AI Search has evolved from a simple keyword index into a high-performance vector engine capable of powering the most demanding RAG applications. By leveraging enhanced vector capacity, hybrid search, and integrated vectorization, developers can focus on building the "Gen" part of RAG rather than worrying about the "Retrieval" infrastructure.

As we look forward, the introduction of features like Vector Quantization and Disk-backed HNSW will push the boundaries even further, allowing for billions of vectors at a fraction of the current cost.

For enterprise architects, the message is clear: Scaling RAG isn't just about the LLM—it's about building a robust, high-capacity retrieval foundation.

Technical Checklist for Production Deployment

  1. Choose the right tier: S1, S2, or the new L-series (Storage Optimized) based on vector counts.
  2. Configure HNSW: Tune m and efConstruction based on your recall requirements.
  3. Enable Semantic Ranker: Use it for the final re-ranking step to significantly improve LLM output.
  4. Implement Integrated Vectorization: Simplify your pipeline and reduce maintenance overhead.
  5. Monitor with Azure Monitor: Keep an eye on Vector Index Size and Search Latency as your dataset grows.

For more technical guides on Azure, AI architecture and implementation, follow:

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Article: The Architect’s Dilemma: Choose a Proven Path or Pave Your Own Way?

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Software platforms and frameworks act like paved roads: they accelerate MVP/MVA delivery but impose decisions teams may not accept. If the paved roads don't reach your destination, then you may have to take an exit ramp and build your own solution. Experiments are necessary to determine which path meets your specific needs.

By Pierre Pureur, Kurt Bittner
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