OutSystems announced the general availability (GA) of Mentor on OutSystems Developer Cloud (ODC).
Can DevOps and low code work hand in hand?
Philosophically, the two are at odds; DevOps inherently insinuates that code will be involved, while low code/no code insinuates the opposite.
So, how can LC/NC and DevOps work together in harmony if they are intrinsically opposed to one another?
Can they really be friends, or are they resigned to being foes?
Low Code's Coming of Age
COVID-19 has been an enormous driver for low-code development. COVID forced companies more than ever to accelerate digital transformation. LC/NC was alive before COVID but has come to the forefront in the last few years, especially amidst the Great Resignation, which has significantly increased the cost of development resources.
To add insult to injury, companies are amid significant digitalization caused by sudden remote workforces, forcing them to deliver more software faster for their internal and external resources to remain productive.
As a result, companies have turned to non-developers to assemble workflows and business apps without coding — I can already hear the developers screaming.
DevOps' Beef with Low Code
Low code got off on the wrong foot in the first place by name alone. Many developers see low-code as a misnomer or a marketing ploy. For example, they say low-code uses programmatic languages, like NLP, or they rely on code behind the UI, so they have code. Many developers see low code as marketing buzzwords to create interest and hype — but that doesn't deliver on its promise.
The alternative to this line of thinking is that low code is an existential threat to developers. Marketers and companies lean in on marketing a code-devoid utopia where the nontechnical thrive and developers are a thing of the past.
So why should DevOps even consider low code an option if it's a threat to their livelihoods?
DevOps & Low Code Sitting in a Tree? Maybe
Here's the reality: there aren't enough developers. According to Forbes, as of December 2020, the global talent shortage amounted to 40 million skilled workers worldwide. By 2030, the global talent shortage is expected to reach 85.2 million. As a result, every company has a backlog they're sitting on composed of new features, enhancements, and technical debt that is costing them revenue because of the lack of skilled talent.
So, what if you could make low code and no code work for you?
That's the promise that LC/NC brings to the table. The reality is that code varies in complexity from simple to really complex, brain-engaging code. I bet developers would prefer to steer clear of simple code and stay focused on complex code.
Instead of writing off LC/NC, companies can push simple code needs to LC/NC environments while maintaining complex stuff.
For example, writing integrations, workflows to stitch it together, and peripheral apps extending further with the existing environment and architecture?
Developing code for complex, really configured stuff that is so unique that low code/no code can't go there?
Keep it with your development team. Low-code definitely needs developers. Just not for everything. Indeed not the simple things.
Low-code still needs devs. Devs can benefit from low-code. Everyone can be friends and not force the other out of existence. And how do friendships happen?
By embracing each other and then working out how to work together. By meeting in the middle for a common cause: to combine cultural philosophies, practices, and tools that increase an organization's ability to deliver applications and services at high velocity.
Industry News
Kurrent announced availability of public internet access on its managed service, Kurrent Cloud, streamlining the connectivity process and empowering developers with ease of use.
MacStadium highlighted its major enterprise partnerships and technical innovations over the past year. This momentum underscores MacStadium’s commitment to innovation, customer success and leadership in the Apple enterprise ecosystem as the company prepares for continued expansion in the coming months.
Traefik Labs announced the integration of its Traefik Proxy with the Nutanix Kubernetes Platform® (NKP) solution.
Perforce Software announced the launch of AI Validation, a new capability within its Perfecto continuous testing platform for web and mobile applications.
Mirantis announced the launch of Rockoon, an open-source project that simplifies OpenStack management on Kubernetes.
Endor Labs announced a new feature, AI Model Discovery, enabling organizations to discover the AI models already in use across their applications, and to set and enforce security policies over which models are permitted.
Qt Group is launching Qt AI Assistant, an experimental tool for streamlining cross-platform user interface (UI) development.
Sonatype announced its integration with Buy with AWS, a new feature now available through AWS Marketplace.
Endor Labs, Aikido Security, Arnica, Amplify, Kodem, Legit, Mobb and Orca Security have launched Opengrep to ensure static code analysis remains truly open, accessible and innovative for everyone:
Progress announced the launch of Progress Data Cloud, a managed Data Platform as a Service designed to simplify enterprise data and artificial intelligence (AI) operations in the cloud.
Sonar announced the release of its latest Long-Term Active (LTA) version, SonarQube Server 2025 Release 1 (2025.1).
Idera announced the launch of Sembi, a multi-brand entity created to unify its premier software quality and security solutions under a single umbrella.
Postman announced the Postman AI Agent Builder, a suite empowering developers to quickly design, test, and deploy intelligent agents by combining LLMs, APIs, and workflows into a unified solution.
The Cloud Native Computing Foundation® (CNCF®), which builds sustainable ecosystems for cloud native software, announced the graduation of CubeFS.