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The Benefits of Software Architecture: Hierarchical Digital Twins

ScaleOut Software

Attending technical conferences creates the opportunity to step away from focusing on day-to-day concerns and reflect more deeply about the key principles that guide our work. One indicator of a useful software architecture is that it provides unexpected benefits. By Dr. William L. This is the case with digital twins.

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The Benefits of Software Architecture: Hierarchical Digital Twins

ScaleOut Software

Attending technical conferences creates the opportunity to step away from focusing on day-to-day concerns and reflect more deeply about the key principles that guide our work. One indicator of a useful software architecture is that it provides unexpected benefits. By Dr. William L. This is the case with digital twins.

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Quantum computing’s potential is still far off, but quantum supremacy shows we’re on the right track

O'Reilly

I was introduced to programming in 1972, on computers that were incredibly small by modern standards—but they were still useful. Our analysis of speaker proposals from the 2019 edition of the O’Reilly Velocity Conference in Berlin turned up several interesting findings related to infrastructure and operations: Cloud native is preeminent.

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5 key areas for tech leaders to watch in 2020

O'Reilly

This combination of usage and search affords a contextual view that encompasses not only the tools, techniques, and technologies that members are actively using, but also the areas they’re gathering information about. It’s the single most popular programming language on O’Reilly, and it accounts for 10% of all usage. Figure 3 (above).

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Reflections from a Year of Project to Product

Tasktop

I was very much inspired by those learnings, as well as the impact that Gene Kim’s The Phoenix Project had on me, and more importantly on how Gene’s book was starting to change the mindset of the technology leaders that I was meeting. . My fateful first meeting with Gene happened three years ago this week.

DevOps 45
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The death of Agile?

O'Reilly

Fetishizing pair programming. If you were involved with professional programming in the 80s and 90s, you may remember how radical it was (and, in many shops, still is) to put software developers in touch with users and customers. It’s the single most popular programming language on O’Reilly, and it accounts for 10% of all usage.