Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

Logic Apps - A Beginner's Guide

Logic Apps helps you build solutions that integrate apps, data, systems, and services across enterprises by automating tasks and business processes as workflow. Logic Apps is a cloud service in Azure that simplifies how you design and create scalable solutions for app integration, enterprise application integration (EAI), and business-to-business (B2B) communication both in cloud and on-premise.

Logic App Patterns and Best Practices

Logic Apps was released in July 2016 for the public and has since then evolved into a leader in the integration Platform as a Service (iPaaS) space in two years. Moreover, Logic Apps succeeded Microsoft's first attempt at offering an iPaaS in the Cloud - BizTalk Services. It later received some updates and branded as Microsoft Azure BizTalk Service, MABS for short - a version 2 of BizTalk Services. However, MABS was deprecated, and both the VETER pipelines and the EDI/B2B functionality Microsoft moved to Logic Apps.

The Business Case for Unified IT

Maximizing operational efficiencies, reducing IT costs, and improving service quality and compliance are just a few of the primary concerns for IT organizations looking to improve their efficiency and deliver more strategic value to their companies. This challenge is made more complex when IT Service and Unified Endpoint Management processes are managed manually, or across a number of disparate systems or applications, which can be costly and time intensive in an increasingly complex IT environment.

Ivanti IT Asset Management (ITAM)

By using a process-driven IT asset management (ITAM) program to analyze what you own and how you're using it, you lighten your load at audit time by being in command of the information your software and hardware vendors will demand. You also stand to trim your costs by recovering and reallocating underutilized software licenses, buying only what you need when you need it, and making more lucrative agreements with your vendors.

DevOps: 8 Reasons for DevOps to use a Binary Repository Manager

Over the last several years, software development has evolved from deploying products periodically to building them on an ongoing basis using CI servers. A company's end product may be built on a daily or even hourly basis. This means that DevOps must support the continual flow of code from the individual developer's machine to the organization's production environment.

Leapfrog to the Future of DevOps

Two numbers are shaking the foundations of business. What do these two figures mean to your business? They mean that, odds are your competitive landscape is irrevocably changed - already. To start, expectations for delivery speed for new products, services, and everything are faster. The new table stakes in the DevOps world have raised the bar on collaboration, cross-organizational visibility, efficiency, even company culture. Another thing these two simple stats mean is that most businesses are already there, or heading there now.