Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
IBM is one of the leading companies in quantum computing hardware, with its roadmap targeting more than 1,000 qubits by the end of 2023. That’s the so-called “quantum advantage” level, when quantum computing will out-perform classical computing in certain use cases.
Tigera sponsored this post. Architecturally speaking, cloud native applications are broken down into smaller components that are highly dynamic, distributed and ephemeral.
Edge data is exploding, but organizations’ struggles to pool the data together for where and when its developers, data scientists and other DevOps team members need it are among the challenges it poses.
Boot.dev has been my side-project for the last couple of years now. Being a learning path for backend developers focused on quality over quantity, I knew early on that it needed to have a really tight feedback loop from students.
What’s a remote worker to do when they’re tired of working from their home? Great chat with @Levitskyyy at @protocol about how I run Rock from my converted sprinter van!
Last week, I posted an introductory piece about TypeScript (“TypeScript Tutorial: A Guide to Using the Programming Language“) where I not only introduced you to the language but walked you through creating your first application.
“Open source, small secure and why burn down the world?” — Listening to one of the key developers of Tauri describe his motivations on a Changelog podcast made me reflect on how developers choose to make small native apps.
Early-stage founders who have yet to achieve product-market fit feel particularly vulnerable during these uncertain economic times. At the same time, the popular press cites examples of companies that started in downturns and have become behemoths since.
If you have an idea for a startup, sometimes there’s an obvious group of people to embark on the startup journey with — for example, if you co-created an open source project with one, two or three others at your day job and jointly decide to start a company around it.
Welcome to the fifth installment of our learning React.js tutorial series (Part 1), (Part 2), (Part 3), (Part 4). Here’s a link to the GitHub Repo. The Read Me has all the instructions needed to get started plus some helpful links for anyone unfamiliar with GitHub.
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