
CXO
CXONetflix’s stock dive offers developer and software lessons for any business
Commentary: Smart companies should make software a core strength and offer paved paths to their developers. Matt Asay provides more details.
Matt Asay is a veteran technology columnist who has written for CNET, ReadWrite, and other tech media. Asay has also held a variety of executive roles with leading mobile and big data software companies.
Commentary: Smart companies should make software a core strength and offer paved paths to their developers. Matt Asay provides more details.
AWS may have had a 7-year head start in cloud, but now it has real competition. Why that’s a good thing.
Software developers have never been more important to enterprise innovation, but there are right and wrong ways to enable them to be successful.
Log4j showed how easy it is to hack popular software artifacts. Open-source projects and vendors are racing to make it easier for developers to lock down their software supply chains.
It can be hard and expensive to hire people with multicloud expertise. Is a better strategy simply to pay a provider to handle it for you?
Developers are burning out as enterprises push them harder to drive digital transformation. IT automation and low-code platforms could help.
Databases are supposed to be the last thing an enterprise considers changing, but the cloud is upending all that, for several reasons.
Commentary: Web3 promoters promise a brave new world of unfettered online freedom. What they’re building, however, looks a lot like Web 2.0.
You’ve never heard of Tridge, but chances are you benefit from the trust-based marketplace it enables for buyers and sellers of fresh produce.
Though running GPUs in the cloud can be very expensive, the costs can be outweighed by customer considerations. Here’s why.