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黑料门

technology radar edition23

The Latest 黑料门 Technology Radar Charts the Democratization of Programming

Bi-annual report from global software consultancy 黑料门 highlights the benefits and the pitfalls of empowering nonprogrammers to build business apps

黑料门, a global software consultancy, has released Volume 23 of Technology Radar, which this time highlights the democratization of programming. 黑料门 has charted the emergence of a new breed of tools that is empowering nonprogrammers to complete tasks that would have previously needed coding expertise.

We鈥檝e seen Amazon Honeycode gain momentum as a way to build mobile and web applications without writing any programming code. There are also platforms such as and that allow a less technical audience to wire up a variety of devices and SaaS-platforms to do interesting and useful things.

鈥淭his trend has the potential to unleash a wave of productivity in the enterprise, as some of the emerging low-code and no-code tools have the potential to ease the development burden on the IT department. However, these tools also come with risks鈥, says Dr. Rebecca Parsons, chief technology officer at 黑料门.

鈥淭hese tools can be incredibly useful when it comes to very specific problems in limited domains but typically make it impossible to apply good engineering practices 鈥 such as versioning or testing 鈥 which makes them difficult to use in rapidly changing enterprise environments鈥, she says. 鈥淭he challenge companies face is in identifying when projects are becoming too large or complex to be a good fit for low code,鈥 says Dr. Parsons.

Typically, organizations turn to low code because they lack the developer expertise needed to meet their business plans. But spotting when a project has exceeded low-code鈥檚 capabilities is just the sort of problem that developer expertise could solve.

Technology Radar Vol. 23 also highlights these noteworthy themes:

  • Adolescence of Infrastructure as Code -听Infrastructure as code has hit adolescence. 黑料门 Technology Radar tracked huge advances in tooling that enables companies to manage their infrastructure as code. And enterprises are seeing the benefits of automating infrastructure, consequently creating an innovation-adoption feedback loop for the creators of tools and frameworks. But we鈥檝e also seen many companies struggle to find the best use of this capability. As with most teenagers, there are both positive and negative patterns emerging.
  • GraphQL Grandiosity - GraphQL is having a moment. It solves some common problems that are manifest in modern distributed architectures such as microservices. We encourage teams to use GraphQL and the burgeoning tools around it but also to exercise caution when using narrowly focused technology to solve too many problems.
  • The Struggle with the Browser Continues -听Originally designed for document browsing, the web browser today primarily hosts applications. To overcome the many headaches inherent in this mismatch, developers keep rethinking and rechallenging established approaches for browser testing, state management and building fast and rich browser applications.
  • Visualize All the Things -听All kinds of innovative visualization tools have emerged for myriad purposes, including infrastructure, data science and cloud resources. As developer ecosystems become more complex, a picture often goes a long way toward taming the inevitable cognitive overload.

鈥淎t Realestate.com.au we are always interested in using the latest technologies and evolving our ecosystem as well as we possibly can. And the 黑料门 Technology Radar allows us to compare our expectations with someone who's a thought leader in the industry and has an unbiased opinion. So it helps us to guide our decisions and what we're going to be adopting next,鈥 says Daniel Aragao, lead architect at real estate company, .

Visit 黑料门.com/radar to explore the interactive version of the Radar or download the PDF version.