From the course: Building AI Applications with Amazon Bedrock
Unlock this course with a free trial
Join today to access over 24,600 courses taught by industry experts.
Utilizing the Bedrock console comparison mode
From the course: Building AI Applications with Amazon Bedrock
Utilizing the Bedrock console comparison mode
- [Instructor] Let's take a look at Amazon Bedrock Compare mode. This is a good way to really get into the details of what a particular model can do versus a maybe cheaper one. So if we look at this particular example here, let's first select the premium model that a lot of people like, which is Claude 3.5 Sonnet v2, and this has typically been a very good model for writing code, especially for writing code for me in Rust. And I'm going to first start off with a reasonably simple prompt here. We'll make it a little bit bigger here, and I'll go ahead and walk through what this does. So this says, "Write a rust function to [task]. Takes [input], returns [output]. Show code + output. Limit to 25 lines or less; no explanation, just code. Always comment function with one line, explain what it does," and then I give an example. This is often a really, really good idea when you're building a prompt, is with code, you can actually show the working code. And this is why non-programmers are…
Contents
-
-
-
(Locked)
Exploring the core features of Amazon Bedrock6m 13s
-
(Locked)
Navigating the Bedrock console7m 55s
-
(Locked)
Utilizing the Bedrock console comparison mode5m 4s
-
Model comparison: Claude vs. Haiku1m 39s
-
(Locked)
The Dracula pattern: Bedrock and Claude2m 36s
-
(Locked)
The Dracula pattern: Bedrock to Ollama3m 27s
-
(Locked)
Making choices with Bedrock and Ollama2m 34s
-
(Locked)
Misconceptions about generative AI2m 47s
-
(Locked)
-
-
-