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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Group A: Organizational Transformation from “Experimental Tools” to “Production-Grade Infrastructure”

(1) Background and Inflection Point

Taking a leading medical equipment manufacturing information system provider (hereafter referred to as “Group A”) as an example, the company has maintained a dominant market position over the past decade through economies of scale and deep vertical integration. However, as the market entered an era of hyper-segmentation and normalized supply chain volatility, Group A encountered an unprecedented structural ceiling.

Despite operating state-of-the-art automated production lines, its leadership faced a critical “decision black box”: massive volumes of unstructured data could not be translated into actionable insights, and demand forecasting errors surged under extreme weather conditions and geopolitical disruptions.

At its core, this challenge reflects a structural imbalance between organizational cognition and intelligence capabilities. While Group A possesses strong “hardware muscles,” its “neural system” (decision-making mechanisms) remains in a quasi-industrial stage—relying on “manual processes + traditional BI”—and is incapable of handling exponentially growing data complexity.


(2) Problem Awareness and Internal Reflection

Before HaxiTAG entered Group A’s strategic horizon, the organization was already undergoing deep internal reflection. According to a McKinsey report cited by Group A, although traditional manufacturing enterprises have invested hundreds of millions of dollars in digital transformation over the past three years, up to 70% of AI initiatives remain stuck at the “Proof of Concept (PoC)” stage and fail to reach production deployment.

Group A identified three core systemic issues:

  1. Data Silos: Inconsistent data protocols across R&D, supply chain, and sales result in “data abundance but knowledge scarcity.”
  2. Knowledge Gaps: The expertise of senior engineers is not codified, leading to prolonged troubleshooting cycles and low efficiency for new employees.
  3. Analytical Redundancy: Quarterly decision-making requires aggregating hundreds of cross-departmental reports, resulting in delays of 2–4 weeks.

Group A recognized that unless AI could be elevated from “peripheral experimentation” to “core infrastructure,” the organization would face systemic risks—particularly being outpaced and marginalized by emerging AI-native competitors in terms of responsiveness.


(3) Inflection Point and AI Strategy Adoption

The turning point came in 2024. Influenced by the widespread adoption and practical impact of tools such as OpenAI ChatGPT, Group A’s leadership decided to terminate fragmented AI pilot projects and instead partnered with HaxiTAG to launch a “production-grade intelligent infrastructure” strategy.

The first critical use case focused on “fully dynamic supply chain coordination and forecasting.” Beyond introducing large language model (LLM) capabilities, HaxiTAG deployed a system architecture centered on Agentic AI (autonomous decision-making agents).

This was not merely an algorithmic upgrade, but a structural transformation of decision-making mechanisms. Previously, supply chain adjustments relied on manual deliberations over multiple variables. Now, AI agents can ingest real-time global logistics data, raw material price fluctuations, and factory capacity states, autonomously generate optimal plans, and provide explainable decision recommendations.


(4) Organizational Intelligence Reconfiguration

With HaxiTAG’s support, Group A underwent a system-level transformation, conceptualized as the “XXX Operations Cockpit (AI OS) Model”:

  • From Departmental Coordination to Knowledge-Sharing Mechanisms: Leveraging NLP and semantic search, Group A established an enterprise-wide “cognitive brain,” where R&D material experiment records are automatically translated into production quality control parameters.
  • From Data Reuse to Intelligent Workflows: Each data point is no longer an isolated log but is integrated into a dynamic knowledge graph via HaxiTAG’s Graph Neural Networks (GNN). Data utilization increased from less than 15% to over 80%.
  • From Hierarchical Decisions to Model-Driven Consensus: Traditional reporting hierarchies are replaced by a “model recommendation + human audit” consensus mechanism, where decisions are driven by data relevance and predictive accuracy rather than organizational rank.
  • From Human-Tool Interaction to Human-AI Collaboration: Manual operations, repetitive data exports, and document processing are replaced by automated, monitorable, and controllable agent-based workflows, with humans focusing on orchestration, evaluation, and optimization of decision models.

(5) Performance and Quantified Outcomes

Following the implementation of HaxiTAG’s solution, Group A achieved compelling results:

  • Revenue Growth: AI-driven pricing and personalized configurations enabled a 12% organic annual revenue increase.
  • Response Cycle: Recovery decision time during extreme supply chain disruptions was reduced from 14 days to under 24 hours.
  • ROI Improvement: Within 12 months, the AI system achieved a return on investment ratio of 1:4.5, significantly outperforming traditional IT projects.
  • Data Awareness: Risk prediction accuracy improved to 92%, with early warnings issued two weeks in advance.

As the CEO of Group A stated in the annual report:
“AI is no longer an add-on—it is our oxygen. HaxiTAG has enabled us to bridge the gap from ‘seeing data’ to ‘foreseeing the future.’”


(6) Governance and Reflection: Balancing Technology and Ethics

Amid rapid transformation, HaxiTAG emphasized a closed-loop framework of “technological evolution – organizational learning – governance maturity.” A transparent model auditing system was established to ensure that every decision made by Agentic AI is traceable, addressing compliance concerns related to the “black box” nature of algorithms.

Key Insight: The real risk of intelligent transformation lies not in technology itself, but in an organization’s resistance to evolution. Transformation must be conducted within a fault-tolerant framework, accompanied by robust AI ethics and governance mechanisms.


(7) Appendix: Overview of AI Application Value in Group A

Application ScenarioAI CapabilitiesPractical ValueQuantified ImpactStrategic Significance
Supply Chain CoordinationAgentic AI + Predictive AlgorithmsAutonomous logistics and inventory optimizationInventory turnover increased by 28%Enhanced supply chain resilience
Equipment MaintenanceAnomaly Detection + Knowledge GraphPredictive maintenanceUnplanned downtime reduced by 40%Lower operational costs
R&D AssistanceMultimodal LLM + SimulationAutomated experiment reporting and parameter recommendationsR&D cycle shortened by 35%Accelerated innovation
Market AccessNLP + Compliance MonitoringAutomated analysis of multi-country policy risksCompliance costs reduced by 22%Strengthened global governance capability

(8) From Laboratory Algorithms to Industrial-Scale Practice

The case of Group A demonstrates that AI competition is no longer about isolated model performance, but about system integration capability and the depth of organizational transformation.

As HaxiTAG consistently emphasizes: AI is not merely code—it is the “digital stem cell” that regenerates organizational capability. In 2026, enterprises that internalize AI as infrastructure will gain compounding strategic advantages.

Intelligence as a Catalyst for Organizational Regeneration

According to insights from NVIDIA’s State of AI Report 2026, Industry 4.0 is entering the era of “production-grade intelligence.”

The competitive logic of enterprise AI is fundamentally shifting:

  • Competitive advantage lies not in models, but in system integration capability
  • The value of AI is defined not by technical sophistication, but by ROI
  • AI deployment is not a project, but infrastructure construction
  • The future organization = Human workforce + AI agent collaboration network

AI is evolving from a “capability” into a “production system”, and the core of enterprise competition is becoming: who can systemically operationalize AI more effectively.

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Friday, May 8, 2026

LLMs Enter Enterprise Core Systems — The Real Question Is No Longer "Is the Model Strong Enough?"

 In the past two years, enterprise AI infrastructure has undergone a distinct transformation.

Enterprises no longer lack models.

From OpenAI, Anthropic, Google Gemini to DeepSeek, vLLM, SGLang, and Ollama, model capabilities and inference performance are evolving rapidly. Yet, once enterprises enter real production environments, they begin confronting another set of more pragmatic challenges:

  • AI answers "look correct" but cannot prove their basis;
  • Different models exhibit vast capability disparities, making business systems increasingly difficult to maintain;
  • Enterprise knowledge is scattered across documents, databases, emails, and audio-visual content, unable to coalesce into a unified understanding;
  • Inference costs, model routing, data security, and protocol compatibility gradually become new sources of system complexity;
  • Enterprises have already adopted AI, yet still cannot truly "trust AI in production."

This is precisely why Yueli KGM Computing is now open-source.

It is an enterprise production-grade AI application framework.

More accurately, it is:

The "knowledge computation and inference orchestration infrastructure layer" for the enterprise AI application era.


What Is Yueli KGM Computing?

An "Inference Orchestration + Compatible Gateway + Knowledge Computation" Middleware for Enterprise AI

Yueli KGM Computing is an open-source, enterprise-grade knowledge computation engine and inference orchestration middleware.

Its core positioning is unequivocal:

Use the determinism of knowledge graphs to constrain the probabilistic nature of large language models.

It doesn't seek to "make models smarter."

Instead, it addresses:

  • How to make enterprise AI more trustworthy;
  • How to make multi-model systems governable;
  • How to truly embed inference capabilities into enterprise business systems;
  • How to equip AI infrastructure with observability, replaceability, and auditability.

It can serve as:

  • An OpenAI / Anthropic compatible gateway;
  • A multi-model routing and scheduling layer;
  • An enterprise knowledge graph and GraphRAG engine;
  • A privatized AI infrastructure control plane;
  • An enterprise AI middleware embedded into existing systems.

It can also:

  • Connect to local vLLM / Ollama / SGLang;
  • Integrate with OpenAI-compatible cloud services;
  • Orchestrate a hybrid of local inference and cloud MaaS;
  • Deliver model governance and knowledge augmentation under a unified API gateway and scheduling controller.

Why Does Enterprise AI Need a "Knowledge Computation Layer"?

For many enterprise AI projects today, the real problem is not model performance.

It is this:

Enterprise Knowledge Is Not Entering the Inference Pipeline

The problem with traditional RAG is:

  • Retrieval results are merely "similar text";
  • They lack relational structures;
  • They lack domain ontologies;
  • They lack factual boundaries;
  • They lack source verifiability.

The result:

The model generates a wrong answer that "looks exactly like the right answer."

In industries such as finance, healthcare, government, manufacturing, new energy, intellectual property, and compliance, such problems are unacceptable.

Therefore, the core capability of Yueli KGM Computing is not simple vector retrieval.

It is:

KGM (Knowledge Generation Modeling)

That is:

An LLM Inference System Constrained by Knowledge Graphs

It will:

  1. Extract entities and relationships from enterprise documents, databases, audio-visual content, and business systems;
  2. Construct an enterprise private domain ontology;
  3. Organize knowledge into a reasonable graph;
  4. Perform GraphRAG retrieval before inference;
  5. Inject factual nodes as constraint context into the LLM;
  6. Output traceable, verifiable results.

This means:

AI is no longer "freestyling."

Instead:

It performs controlled reasoning within the boundaries of enterprise knowledge.


What Does Yueli KGM Computing Actually Deliver?

A Unified Industrial Protocol AI Gateway Layer

Within the same process, KGM simultaneously provides:

  • OpenAI Compatible API
  • Anthropic Claude Compatible API

Including:

  • /v1/chat/completions
  • /v1/responses
  • /v1/messages

And automatically completes:

  • tool_calls
  • tool_use

Dual-protocol semantic mapping.

This means:

Enterprise applications only need to connect to a single Base URL.

No matter how the underlying models change, business systems remain agnostic.


Dynamic Inference Orchestration and Model Scheduling

KGM supports:

  • Local inference;
  • Cloud MaaS;
  • Multi-model hybrid scheduling;
  • Cost-based scheduling;
  • Performance-based scheduling;
  • Dynamic routing by task type.

For example:

  • Sensitive data → On-premise Ollama;
  • Long text → Gemini;
  • Highly complex reasoning → Claude;
  • High throughput → vLLM;
  • Low cost → DeepSeek.

All of this can be accomplished through declarative configuration.

Rather than rewriting a routing layer for every project.


Knowledge Graph-Driven GraphRAG

This is KGM's most central capability.

Compared to traditional vector RAG:

KGM constructs:

  • Enterprise domain ontology;
  • Relationship graphs;
  • Contextual reasoning paths;
  • Structured factual constraints.

Therefore, it not only knows:

"Which texts are similar."

It also knows:

"What relationships exist among pieces of knowledge."

This is the critical leap for enterprise AI from "chat tool" to "business system."


Enterprise-Grade Control Plane and Observability

After going live, a significant number of AI projects rapidly descend into an "ungovernable state."

Enterprises find themselves unable to answer:

  • Which model is providing the service?
  • Which requests are the most costly?
  • Which inference node is failing?
  • Which API has abnormal latency?
  • Which model has a higher hallucination rate?

KGM provides:

  • Prometheus Metrics;
  • Runtime lifecycle management;
  • Circuit breaker mechanisms;
  • Structured logging;
  • Model asset governance;
  • Runtime control plane;
  • Multi-tenant isolation;
  • Data security policies.

It is not a simple proxy.

It is a genuinely operable AI middleware.


How Do Enterprises Embed Yueli KGM?

Scenario One: Enterprise Knowledge Q&A

The typical path:

Enterprise Documents / Databases / Wikis / Emails
                    ↓
            KGM Semantic Parsing
                    ↓
          GraphRAG Knowledge Graph
                    ↓
            LLM Constrained Inference
                    ↓
        Traceable, Trustworthy Answers

R&D teams no longer depend on:

"Who remembers the solution from back then?"

Instead, they directly ask:

  • In which version did this issue appear?
  • How was it fixed at the time?
  • Which systems were affected?
  • Who was involved in the decision?

KGM will construct a complete knowledge chain from:

  • Git;
  • Confluence;
  • Emails;
  • Meeting records;
  • Technical documentation.

Scenario Two: Finance and Compliance Review

The biggest risk with traditional LLMs:

Citing non-existent regulations.

KGM's approach is:

  • Build a regulatory knowledge graph;
  • Structure regulatory clauses;
  • Restrict reasoning within knowledge boundaries;
  • Directly trigger a "knowledge gap" alert beyond those boundaries.

This means:

AI no longer "guesses."

It reasons within the enterprise's rule system.


Scenario Three: AI-Native Product Embedding

For engineering teams:

KGM can serve as the underlying AI Runtime.

Including:

  • Multi-model scheduling;
  • GraphRAG;
  • Tool Calling;
  • MCP;
  • Memory;
  • Knowledge Runtime;
  • Prompt orchestration;
  • Runtime Observability.

Engineering teams no longer need to rebuild:

  • Gateways;
  • Routing;
  • Metrics;
  • Tool Runtime;
  • Protocol adaptation;
  • Multi-model compatibility layers.

Scenario Four: Audio-Visual Semantic Computing

This is a direction often overlooked by enterprises today but is exceptionally high-value.

KGM supports:

  • Video caption parsing;
  • Semantic label extraction;
  • Meeting content knowledge transformation;
  • Training video knowledge graphs;
  • Audio-visual Q&A.

For example:

An enterprise can directly ask:

"In last quarter's product meetings, what were the disputes regarding pricing strategy?"

The system will automatically locate:

  • The corresponding meeting;
  • The corresponding individuals;
  • The corresponding viewpoints;
  • The corresponding timeline.

What Is Its Relationship to LangChain, LlamaIndex, and vLLM?

This is not a competitive relationship.

Rather, it is:

A Layered Relationship

LayerRepresentative ProjectCore Responsibility
InferencevLLM / SGLangHigh-performance inference
ApplicationLangChain / DifyAgent and Workflow
DataLlamaIndexData connection and retrieval
MiddlewareYueli KGMInference orchestration + Protocol compatibility + Knowledge constraints

Therefore, the most rational enterprise architecture often is:

  • vLLM for inference;
  • LangChain for business agents;
  • Dify or BotFactory for low-code workflows;
  • KGM as the unified AI middleware and knowledge computation layer.

Why MIT Open Source?

The Yueli KGM Computing GitHub Repository and NPM package are open-sourced under the MIT License.

This means:

  • Enterprises can use it freely for commercial purposes;
  • They can modify it for private deployment;
  • They can deeply integrate it;
  • They can build their own industry-specific versions.

The true value of Yueli KGM Computing does not lie in closed-source code.

It lies in:

  • Enterprise AI infrastructure capability;
  • Industry knowledge modeling experience;
  • Private deployment delivery capability;
  • Knowledge engineering systems;
  • Data intelligence and inference architecture practices.

The Next Phase of Enterprise AI Is Shifting from "Model Competition" to "Knowledge Governance"

Over the past two years, the industry has been discussing:

Whose model is stronger.

But in the next five years, the questions enterprises will truly care about will become:

  • Who can make AI more trustworthy?
  • Who can make AI more stable?
  • Who can make AI truly enter business systems?
  • Who can equip AI with enterprise-grade governance capabilities?

The significance of Yueli KGM Computing lies precisely here.

It is a crucial middleware layer for enterprise AI transitioning from the experimental stage to production-grade infrastructure.

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Wednesday, May 6, 2026

AI Inside and the Leap in Per-Employee Productivity: Reconstructing Organizational Efficiency Through the Snap Case

 

The Shift Beneath the Surface of Layoffs

Snap announced a workforce reduction of approximately 16%, with its CEO explicitly attributing the decision to productivity gains driven by artificial intelligence, rather than traditional financial pressures or capital market demands. At the same time, the company disclosed a set of more revealing metrics: around 65% of new code is now generated by AI, internal AI systems handle over one million queries per month, and organizational structures are evolving from large traditional teams to smaller, AI-augmented units.

The market responded immediately—shares rose in the short term. However, interpreting these signals merely as “layoffs driving positive sentiment” misses a more fundamental transformation:

Snap is not improving efficiency by reducing headcount; rather, it no longer requires its previous scale of workforce after achieving a leap in efficiency.

Layoffs are a result variable, not a causal driver. What has truly changed is the level of productive capacity that each unit of human labor can mobilize within the organization.


The Structural Rewrite of Productivity Through AI Integration

On the surface, this appears to be a typical expansion of AI applications. Structurally, however, it represents a fundamental rewrite of the production function.

1. Work Paradigm: From Tool Assistance to Capability Outsourcing

Traditional office software improves isolated points of efficiency. Snap’s AI deployment has moved beyond that into capability outsourcing:

  • Information retrieval no longer depends on human intermediaries or document lookup, but is generated instantly by AI
  • Cognitive tasks such as documentation, analysis, and summarization are automated at scale

This implies:

Employees no longer complete tasks through tools; they obtain results directly through AI.

The essence of work shifts from operating tools to orchestrating capabilities.


2. Collaboration Model: From Human Coordination to Model-Centric Systems

In traditional organizations, collaboration costs stem from information asymmetry and transmission chains. AI introduces a shared cognitive core:

  • Context is centrally maintained by models
  • Information is aligned in real time through AI
  • Multi-role collaboration is mediated indirectly via AI

The result:

Collaboration converges from a multi-node network into a model-centered radiating structure.

This significantly compresses communication costs and organizational hierarchy.


3. Innovation Pathways: From Resource-Driven to Capability-Driven

Previously, launching new initiatives required:

  • Hiring teams
  • Allocating resources
  • Gradual execution

Under an AI inside paradigm:

  • AI handles exploratory implementation and rapid prototyping
  • Humans focus on direction-setting and judgment

This leads to:

Lower innovation costs, faster experimentation cycles, and a shift toward high-frequency iteration rather than heavy upfront investment.


4. R&D Systems: From Labor-Intensive to Capability-Intensive

With 65% of code generated by AI, the shift is not merely about efficiency:

  • The implementation layer is increasingly handled by AI
  • Engineers move toward abstraction and architectural thinking

The core transformation is:

The bottleneck in R&D shifts from “writing code” to “defining problems.”

Organizational capability transitions from execution to modeling.


Extracted Scenarios and Practical Use Cases

From a practical standpoint, this transformation is not abstract—it can be decomposed into concrete, replicable patterns. The Snap case reveals several archetypal use cases:


1. AI-Driven Development Systems

Scenario: Code generation and development workflow restructuring

  • AI handles the majority of foundational coding tasks
  • Development shifts from implementation-driven to problem-definition-driven
  • Individual engineers cover broader functional scopes

Impact:

  • Significantly shortened development cycles
  • Substantial increase in per-employee output
  • Compression of demand for junior roles, with rising demand for senior capabilities

2. AI-Driven Organizational Knowledge Systems

Scenario: Internal query and knowledge access

  • Employees retrieve internal information via natural language
  • Traditional documentation and training systems are de-emphasized
  • Knowledge exists as model capability rather than static storage

Impact:

  • Near-zero information retrieval cost
  • Faster onboarding
  • Dynamic and continuously updated organizational memory

3. AI-Augmented Small Team Units

Scenario: Organizational restructuring

  • Smaller teams take on end-to-end business responsibilities
  • AI provides execution and support
  • Humans focus on decision-making and direction

Impact:

  • Higher capability density within teams
  • Reduced management layers
  • Faster organizational response times

4. AI-Enabled Role Convergence

Scenario: Blurring of role boundaries

  • Individuals simultaneously handle product, operations, and analysis tasks
  • AI compensates for gaps in specialized expertise

Impact:

  • Weakened role segmentation
  • Greater flexibility in staffing
  • Increased reliance on “generalists + AI”

Evaluating the Leap in Organizational Efficiency

From the Snap case, several generalizable insights emerge.

1. Core Metric: Productivity per Employee, Not Cost Reduction

Evaluation should not focus on:

  • Layoff ratios
  • Cost-saving targets

Instead, it should measure:

  • Sustained growth in revenue per employee
  • Increase in effective output per unit time
  • Acceleration in innovation and iteration cycles

The value of AI lies not in cost savings, but in how much value each individual can create.


2. The Critical Threshold: AI as the Default Execution Layer

The key distinction is not whether AI is used, but how it is used:

  • Is AI merely a tool?
  • Or has it become the default executor of tasks?

Only when:

Tasks are executed by AI by default, with humans orchestrating and validating

can an organization be considered truly “AI inside.”


3. Redefining Talent

Future organizations will not need more people, but different kinds of people:

  • Those who can define problems
  • Those who can orchestrate AI
  • Those who can exercise judgment under uncertainty

This implies:

Talent shifts from execution capability to leverage capability.


4. A Replicable Transformation Path

For other organizations, this case suggests a practical roadmap:

  • Start with high-frequency tasks: target coding, documentation, and query-intensive workflows
  • Restructure organizational units: transition to AI-augmented small teams
  • Redesign collaboration models: rebuild information and decision flows around models

Conclusion

Viewed superficially, Snap’s case may appear as a short-term capital market narrative centered on layoffs. Viewed structurally, it represents a profound organizational experiment.

It does not answer how many people AI will replace. Instead, it raises a more fundamental question:

How will the basic operating logic of organizations be rewritten when AI becomes an integral part of the production system?

The true shift is not about shrinking scale, but about expanding capability. As per-employee productivity continues to rise, organizational growth will no longer depend on increasing headcount, but on amplifying leverage through human–AI collaboration.

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