Event-driven microservices are an excellent way to deliver both historical and new data to all of the systems and teams that need it, but they come with additional overhead and management requirements ...
A monthly overview of things you need to know as an architect or aspiring architect. Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with ...
A monthly overview of things you need to know as an architect or aspiring architect. Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with ...
Event-driven architecture flips the traditional request-response model on its head by letting systems react the moment something happens. Instead of waiting for scheduled updates or manual prompts, ...
Event-driven architectures let software react to events in real time, with services publishing signals like “order placed” or “payment completed” that other services can subscribe to and act on. The ...
At the Application Integration and Web Services Summit last May, Gartner analyst Roy Schulte called "event-driven architecture" the "next big thing." Indeed, he predicted more than 67% of new ...
Internet transactions, business-to-business systems, peer-to-peer processes, and real-time workflows are too dynamic and too complex to be modeled by traditional sequential-processing methods.
The worldwide growth of event-driven architecture (EDA) is a win-win scenario, just look at the facts. In a recent IDC Infobrief, 93% of companies that have deployed EDA across multiple use cases said ...