Moesif is offering a new Envoy plugin for Envoy’s latest proxy supporting WebAssembly. Envoy is an open-source edge and service L7 proxy designed for cloud-native applications. Originally built at Lyft, it’s now part of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation. It provides a universal data plane API and is commonly used as a service mesh in microservices architectures, where it provides advanced load balancing, and API observability.
As part of our mission to serve developers, product managers, and other Moesif users better, we’ve teamed up with the API experts over at WSO2 to connect the capabilities of Moesif and Choreo. Choreo was created by WSO2 to push forward the next generation of application development. Inside Choreo is a SaaS application development suite designed to accelerate the creation of digital experiences.
Harmonya relies on BigQuery to build and maintains data pipelines and train and serve machine learning models for its product enrichment service.
In January 1983 the computing world changed forever: Lotus 1-2-3 was released. This early spreadsheet program for IBM PCs ushered in the modern business computing environment by providing business users with a way to take ownership of their own solutions. Instead of relying on the IT department, users could use 1-2-3 to build applications by themselves, ushering in the era of end-user computing (EUC). Fast forward to today, and end-user computing is as popular as ever.
We recently sat down with several supply chain experts to identify the trends impacting global supply chains and what to expect going forward. KPMG Partner Peter Liddell weighed in on everything from the continuous disruption caused by materials shortages and geopolitical conflict to best practices for adapting to these challenges.