Of course we were prepared for the pandemic, say modest, honest IT pros
A survey suggests that hubris is one of the many fine qualities of today's IT professionals.
A survey suggests that hubris is one of the many fine qualities of today's IT professionals.
'IT collaboration is still paramount in delivering the complex system-of-systems architectures that enterprise requires.'
Survey shows dev team productivity has held up very well through the crisis. Credit the fact that many developers have been working remotely for decades.
These COVID times have forced many of us to consider not just how we are going to communicate, but how we are going to create and distribute content. Turns out, equipment and production values really do matter. Paul Greenberg provides an amateur's guide to everything required for delivering high definition values to your audience.
Unfortunately, a good deal of IT time is spent firefighting, survey shows. DevOps to the rescue?
DevOps -- which syncs, organizes and automates the pace of software releases -- 'is by default built for remote operations' such as that required for the COVID-19 crisis. However, DevOps skills have been hard to find.
Low-code and no-code have been well-suited for disruptive startups, and now may prove their mettle in highly scattered enterprises.
Adapting to change is a key survival skill for every modern CIO. Two prominent CIO leaders share their advice on how to thrive in today's rapidly-changing digital environment.
Survey of 10,000 managers and professionals finds more non-developers working with APIs. Small teams, internal APIs are more the rule.
IT leaders agree shadow IT serves as a force of innovation and productivity. End-users simply need more guidance and support.