The fact is that we approach software development much differently than we did a decade ago. That is because the world has dramatically changed since a decade ago. Software development is a highly complex process and requires a team to build it correctly.
For many years, the creation of a software application was approached, much like the manufacturing of an automobile.
The project phases traditionally were planning, design, architecture, development, testing, and release. Once launched, the support and maintenance phases started as application developers then repeated the entire process to create version 2. X and so forth. It was typical for the period between planning and product launch to exceed a year or more. This elongated process is outdated today in a world of digital transformation that demands total agility and responsiveness.
Below we have outlined some of the significant changes witnessed in software development over the past decade. It is essential to realize these changes and understand why the traditional approach to development is no longer applicable today.
It is hard to believe that a decade ago, many organizations still relied on physical servers to host applications. Each physical server hosted a single app. Physical servers proved extremely costly due to inefficient resource utilization. Then to compound the problems of a single point of failure, there were expensive hardware redundancy architecture, time-consuming upgrades.
Then, came virtualization and the software development world suddenly sped up. A single server can now host a multitude of virtual machines, thus maximizing resource utilization. Virtual machines are then members of large server farms that enforce automated redundancy. Virtualization began reducing server deployment from months to minutes.
Reducing the implementation time for application host structure reduces software deployment time as well. This lead to the natural transition to containers and microservices. It is useful for checking program installations. There are two steps for using WhatChanged, first it takes a snapshot to get the current state of the computer and second, it runs it again to check the differences since the previous snapshot. WhatChanged uses the brute force method to check files and the registry.
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Desktop Enhancements. Networking Software. Trending from CNET. Download Now. Developer's Description By Vista Software. WhatChanged is a system utility that scans for modified files and registry entries. It is useful for checking program installations. There are two steps for using WhatChanged, first it takes a snapshot to get the current state of the computer and second, it runs it again to check the differences since the previous snapshot.
WhatChanged uses the brute force method to check files and the registry.
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