Remove Automotive Remove Continuous Integration Remove DevOps Remove Microservices
article thumbnail

Kubernetes and Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning (AI/ML) — Four Things to Understand Today

Blue Sentry

consumer goods, energy, healthcare, logistics, automotive, etc.) When we look at ML deployments, there are a ton of different platform and resource considerations to manage, and CI/CD (Continuous Integration & Continuous Delivery) teams are often managing all of these resources across a variety of different microservices (i.e.,

article thumbnail

Content Management Systems of the Future: Headless, JAMstack, ADN and Functions at the Edge

Abhishek Tiwari

Recently I was asked about content management systems (CMS) of the future - more specifically how they are evolving in the era of microservices, APIs, and serverless computing. In addition, traditional CMS solutions lack integration with modern software stack, cloud services, and software delivery pipelines.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

What Are Feature Flags?

LaunchDarkly

Companies utilizing continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) or Progressive Delivery rely on feature management practices to gradually roll out features to users. Continuous delivery is the ability to shorten release cycles and get new functionality in the user’s hands quickly and safely. Test user acceptance.

article thumbnail

Grown-Up Lean

LeanEssays

Roots of Lean Product Development During the 1980’s, when it became apparent that Japanese automotive companies were making higher quality, lower cost cars than US automotive companies, Boston rivals MIT and Harvard Business School started programs to investigate the situation. Clark and Takahiro Fujimoto.

article thumbnail

Lean Software Development: The Backstory

LeanEssays

In Boston, both MIT and Harvard Business School responded by launching extensive studies of the automotive industry. Clark and Fujimoto noted that the distinguishing features of Japanese product development paralleled features found in Japanese automotive production. 1990), which gave us the term “lean.”