The article provides a step-by-step guide on how to merge schemas using these tools, making it easier for developers to organize and scale their GraphQL APIs.
This article takes a journey into the future of cloud computing, discussing emerging trends such as autonomous and distributed cloud-generative AI tools.
Modular data centers are moldable and upgradable, unlike conventional data centers, which are fixed designs. Why are modular data centers more sustainable?
A developer discusses the idea of quarantining as a means of mitigating risk in software and how it can be applied to the development of microservices.
Curious about Vue's application data store? Read on to learn how to move your exiting Vue.js project to Vuex, and get an expert's opinion on what this does.
Everybody's trying to get in on the big-money future of IoT, and now "everybody" includes Microsoft with Windows 10. Larry Dignan at ZDNet put together a look at Windows 10's role in IoT - as it's been described by Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella at the Gartner Symposium ITXpo, at least - which suggests that the new OS will be a central platform for IoT systems of all types. Specifically: Windows will be able to run on everything from sensors to wearables to whatever computing shift emerges. Or, as Patrick Thibodeau at ComputerWorld interpreted it: [Nadella] sees the company's upcoming operating system Windows 10 as integral in managing every aspect of the IoT, from the sensors, mechanical systems, to the applications and analytics that underlie it. Those are some pretty big promises, but as Nadella said, Windows 10 is "the first step in a new generation of Windows as opposed to just another release after Windows 8." After all, that would be Windows 9, right? Check out Dignan and Thibodeau's coverage of Nadella at the Gartner Symposium ITXpo for more details on Windows 10 in general. It looks like a promising future: Yo Ebola, I'ma let you finish but #Windows10 is gonna have the greatest virus of all time #WindowsTillIDie — Bill Gates (@BillKingGates) October 6, 2014
Microservies and Docker have become the peanut butter and jelly of modern app delivery. They allow organizations to work in a consistent, isolated runtime environment.