With so much remote work, the time is ripe for low-code and no-code software development
Low-code and no-code have been well-suited for disruptive startups, and now may prove their mettle in highly scattered enterprises.
Low-code and no-code have been well-suited for disruptive startups, and now may prove their mettle in highly scattered enterprises.
'As the DevOps crew likes to say: containers won't fix your broken culture'
Cloud Native Computing Foundation survey finds DevOps making its mark, but manual processes linger.
Shadow IT has been a management concern for some time, and now shadow IoT lurks
Puppet's most recent survey of 3,000 developers finds not all DevOps efforts are created equal.
Having many hands in API creation can quickly send API programs off the rails. Here's a call for greater transparency to ensure the business is getting something for its money.
Serverless is the 'logical advancement of cloud-native,' but is still very much a work in progress.
Survey of 10,000 managers and professionals finds more non-developers working with APIs. Small teams, internal APIs are more the rule.
'The software engineer will want to build. They want to get straight to writing code. And they're seeing the designers as slowing them down, because they want to talk to two or three users.'
DevOps 'requires multiple teams to work closely with each other, side by side, on a day-to-day basis, to meet the significantly shrunken delivery timelines.'