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A new wave of startups is looking to help developers secure their containerized applications after they go into production. Is this the future of application security?
Microsoft’s Fluid Framework offers an interesting approach to collaborative distributed applications. An Azure service aims to make it easier to deploy and deliver Fluid code.
Developers quickly understood the value of containers for building cloud-native applications, and that the Docker command-line tool was better than all of the bells and whistles they got with PaaS.
Many traditional enterprises see monetary opportunities to incorporate their market knowledge into new or specialized SaaS applications and data sets.
Despite the mudslinging over its licensing change from open source, company growth indicates that customers are likely less concerned with source code.
Containers go beyond the hype to move enterprises forward with cloud-native applications. Abstracting services with them could commoditize public clouds.
Much more than a no-code builder, Power Apps lets you add functionality with Excel-like formulas, easily connects to external data sources, and integrates with Power Automate for flow editing and Power BI for data analysis.
Azure Container Apps is a serverless Kubernetes service that manages scaling for you. Just bring your application’s containers, ready to run.
Determining the performance metrics that really matter for your application can make life a lot easier for your team and express your standards clearly across the business.
Luckily, we will not have to live in the metaverse. How do I know? We have been here before.