News

Has low-code arrived? With the number and variety of low-code success stories, you’d think that every enterprise would be sold on the approach. Unfortunately, that is not the case.
Low code is for developers, too: Here comes the next programming revolution A big shift is underway in how we build and use apps, and low code will be a key feature.
Low-code programming is growing at an astounding rate, with Forrester predicting a compound annual growth rate of 40% through to 2022, where the total market will be valued at $21.2 billion.
Low-code and no-code tools with an assist from AI will allow both business users and IT teams to work more effectively and quickly.
Building on its strategy to enable application developers to connect to its platform faster, and in turn bring their applications to market faster, Dwolla Inc. is offering what it calls Drop-in ...
Low code will eat software because the trade-off becomes less and less painful as low-code systems become more and more powerful.
We’re now moving towards not just low-code programming and software application development, but also low-code core data operations (analytics, integration, storage) as well as related systems ...
Though low-code platforms are popular now and are going through a hype cycle, especially with Covid-19 accelerating digital transformation, they are not going to replace professional software ...
Microsoft is separating its low-code programming tools from Power Apps. What does that mean for you and for your apps?
As popular and robust as these tools and platforms have become, low-code/no-code is not going to replace professional developers anytime soon, experts say.
Low-code, no-code, and citizen-development platforms have a place—but they need the guidance and oversight of professional IT developers to really deliver ...
The productivity gains low-code gives developers come primarily from the ability to reuse abstractions at the component or module level, reducing the time needed to develop customized software.