Microservices promise to help break down monolithic applications and enable the consistent delivery of services. But they can't do the job without help. This is where event-driven architecture (EDA) ...
Event-driven architecture offers speed and flexibility but also brings risks. Learn the key pitfalls teams face and the ...
Businesses operate in real time—unlike many of their applications. In nearly all major industries and verticals, there has been an explosion of interest in microservices. Their promise to enable the ...
CEO at Solace, makers of the event-driven architecture tooling relied on by the FAA, SAP, Barclays and many other brands you know and love. In part one, I explained how event-driven architecture helps ...
Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with content, and download exclusive resources. Martha Lambert introduces the "Observability ...
Event-driven microservices are an excellent way to deliver both historical and new data to all of the systems and teams that need it, but they come with additional overhead and management requirements ...
In today’s dynamic business environment, traditional applications pose significant challenges; hampering agility, scalability, and efficiency — which are all key attributes that organizations strive ...
The proliferation of microservices architectures reflects the needs of modern business. Faster time-to-market, stack flexibility, and better scalability and resilience—each key prerequisites for AI ...
Modern microservices architectures are event-driven, reactive, and choreographed (as opposed to being centrally controlled via an orchestrator). That makes them loosely coupled and easy to change.
Today, every organisation needs a digital strategy to survive. Customers of all organisations are hungry for the best user experience. Gathering data, analyzing that data, and making relevant offers ...