Digital business acceleration is pressuring IT leaders to dramatically increase application delivery speed and time to value, which is where low-code comes to the rescue.
People drive and define the principles of a company’s data governance framework and are ultimately responsible for executing the framework and data strategy.
The structure of many of today’s networks is rooted in past technologies and has not evolved to accommodate the needs of the modern digital, cloud-aligned enterprise.
Low-code capabilities circumvent lengthy development cycles and rigid legacy systems to rapidly produce new applications that meet immediate business needs.
Greatly increased computing power, cloud technology, machine learning and autonomous decision-making are revolutionising the role devices play in our lives.
Performance engineering is transforming software development and the job descriptions of all those engaged in it, ensuring consistent production performance results.
COVID-19 turned technology expense management on its head, as business resilience faced its toughest test when excessive spending was not an option.
The business world must become more welcoming and safer for women, so they can go all the way from the classroom to the boardroom, in all sectors, including technology.
Both companies and customers benefit when firms are POPIA compliant and secure permission to contact customers, as this ensures a target of willing clients.
There is a long way to go to regain trust in architecture. For this to be possible, we need business to change how it perceives data architecture.
As software scales in complexity, companies recognise that performance engineering and testing are essential DevOps processes, but performance is not only about speed.
While the internet of things (IOT) offers huge opportunities for economic growth and job creation, IOT vendors must ensure they have a disciplined handle on costs.