{"agent_type":"crawler_discovery","ai_model":"Qwen2.5-3B-Instruct-GPTQ-Int4","ai_pass":true,"ai_provider":"vllm","completed_at":"2026-07-16T07:33:51.590461+00:00","duration_seconds":2e-06,"id":1729945,"input_summary":"chars=774","metadata":{"auto_dispatch":false,"candidates":[{"confidence":0.84,"domain":"hamnet.org","guess_source":"llm_3b","llm_name":"Seattle HamNet","llm_reason":"ham radio club mentioned","probe":{"alive":true,"final_host":"hamnet.org","relevant":true,"scheme":"http","status_code":200,"url":"http://hamnet.org/"},"reason":"guessed_domain","source_text":"Yeah I just ignore that hum but there is a little bit of hum there that I'm hearing. Is anybody else hearing it? Okay 7ftt, I am hearing just a touch but I'm also hearing the repeater side of it as well. I also don't think necessarily that a ferrite would solve your problem. I think if that hummer being generated by your power supply, I would suspect that you had a failing output capacitor, you know, a filter capacitor that's slowly going up in impedance and is causing your s","url":"http://hamnet.org/"}]},"output_summary":"candidates=1 domains=hamnet.org","recording_id":167504,"started_at":"2026-07-16T07:33:51.590459+00:00","status":"completed","step_name":"crawler.extract_candidates","transcription_id":163629}