If you embrace the inherent complexity of multi-cloud and address it by modernizing operations, you can effectively turn a challenge into a competitive advantage.
The industry needs standard practices, tools, and even processes that promote – and perhaps even reward – those who diligently participate in the effort to secure the software supply chain.
Edge will ultimately succeed (or fail) based on its ability to address the operational experience of those tasked with deploying and operating the its workloads.
Organizations need an enterprise-wide data and observability strategy, and standardization of visibility to combat the complexity of the digital world.
Whether we call it supercloud or distributed cloud, it serves the same need: simplifying the reality of operating in a multi-cloud world and making it possible to realize the aspirational capabilities of cloud.
To achieve API governance requires putting the right tools, frameworks, and guardrails in place. That will enable organizations to securely embrace the growing digital economy.
Organizations are tacitly agreeing to accept greater risk by moving quickly without equal attention to security. The new normal we heard so much about throughout the pandemic is apparently “insecure by default.”
Network modernization is resulting in a new, distributed model for security and delivery technologies. Increasingly these services will be delivered not just as SaaS, but as micro-SaaS: the delivery of individual app security and delivery technologies as SaaS offerings.
If you can step back and establish security practices that address each of the two types of vulnerabilities, you’ll go a long way toward simplifying security.
The reality of modernization as a survival skill for business is seen in the way modernization has morphed from competitive advantage to mainstream initiative.
The emerging Edge will finally eliminate the gamer's nemesis, lag, and fix my digital gaming experience, And it will help with enterprise app performance, too.