Remove 2001 Remove Programming Remove Security Remove Software Development
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What Executives Should Know About Shift-Left Security

CIO Business Intelligence

By Zachary Malone, SE Academy Manager at Palo Alto Networks The term “shift left” is a reference to the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC) that describes the phases of the process developers follow to create an application. How did the term shift-left security originate?

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What is TOGAF? An enterprise architecture methodology for business

CIO Business Intelligence

The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) is an enterprise architecture methodology that offers a high-level framework for enterprise software development. The Open Group developed TOGAF in 1995, and by 2016, 80% of Global 50 companies and 60% of Fortune 500 companies used the framework. Software architect.

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Windows turns 35: a visual history

The Verge

If you wanted to run multiple programs, then you needed a PC with a hard disk and 512 kilobytes of memory. Microsoft took the important step of focusing on apps and core software. PC manufacturers flocked to Windows, and the operating system attracted support from important software companies. Windows XP (2001).

Windows 145
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Ready…Set…Start Your Containers

CIO Business Intelligence

Consequently, operating system distributions and underlying infrastructure configurations are abstracted from application programs, allowing them to run correctly and identically regardless of the environment. A great benefit of isolating applications into containers is the inherent security provided. How we got here. Advantages.

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How Australia became the test bed for tech regulation

The Verge

We started off really building one product in Sydney called Jira — which is still our largest product — that started off as a bug tracker for software developers. One was we were in Australia, which is sort of an unusual place to start a company in 2001. In early 2000, enterprise software was not the thing, right?