Cloud-native services are the future of enterprise
AWS is more than just EC2s and S3. Obviously, most of us know that, but EC2s and S3s are still a primary focus for many organizations looking at migrating workflows to AWS.
Cloud-native services are the future of enterprise
AWS is more than just EC2s and S3. Obviously, most of us know that, but EC2s and S3s are still a primary focus for many organizations looking at migrating workflows to AWS.
It’s the age-old question, whether it’s better to purchase software from a vendor or create that software yourself. Since FormKiQ is a document management system, we wanted to look at this question from our particular perspective.
Retain and grow your MPS client base by offering an additional way for your clients to manage their documents
An introduction to headless software and headless architecture, with use cases and examples
How front-end developers can now easily launch and update websites using Amazon S3 and Amazon CloudFront within minutes
Why Amazon Web Services will be moving toward Serverless Stacks
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is daunting, especially once you look beyond creating servers in EC2 and adding some static content into S3. There are now hundreds of services that span across multiple areas of computing and industry, with new services appearing regularly. AWS is so large that it is incredibly difficult for any one engineer to know every service or feature, which means that AWS is now too big to master. Another way of saying this: you can’t know everything about AWS, so you won’t always know the right architectural solution to every technical problem. It’s not easy to know whether your solution is a near-perfect implementation of the right AWS products, or if it’s an over-engineered solution that will hurt you in performance or pocketbook. AWS is now too big to master. This is where serverless stacks come in.