Remove 2017 Remove Architecture Remove Microservices Remove Systems Administration
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5 key areas for tech leaders to watch in 2020

O'Reilly Media - Ideas

Software architecture, infrastructure, and operations are each changing rapidly. The shift to cloud native design is transforming both software architecture and infrastructure and operations. Up until 2017, the ML+AI topic had been amongst the fastest growing topics on the platform. Coincidence?

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How microservices and containerization make cloud migration possible at a low cost

Trigent

During the times as early as 2017, organizations were using them mainly for their portability. Today, container-based applications and microservices are being implemented the world over for the synergy they share with the cloud. Containers offer a host of benefits; many in the arena of public cloud deployments.

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Technology Trends for 2024

O'Reilly Media - Ideas

While we like to talk about how fast technology moves, internet time, and all that, in reality the last major new idea in software architecture was microservices, which dates to roughly 2015. Who wants to learn about design patterns or software architecture when some AI application may eventually do your high-level design?

Trends 118
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How containerization makes cloud migration services possible at a low cost

Trigent

During the times as early as 2017, organizations were using them mainly for their portability. Today, container-based applications and microservices are being implemented worldwide for the synergy they share with the cloud. Containers offer numerous benefits, many in the arena of public cloud deployments.

Cloud 52
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Where Programming, Ops, AI, and the Cloud are Headed in 2021

O'Reilly Media - Ideas

The most successful superstream series focused on software architecture and infrastructure and operations. The in-person O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference was small but growing. We’ll be working with microservices and serverless/functions-as-a-service in the cloud for a long time–and these are inherently concurrent systems.