
Since 1998, DevX has helped people start businesses, build websites, and provide enterprise technology to people globally. Interviewing the likes of Microsoft’s co-founder, Steve Ballmer, the publication brings comprehensive, reliable, and accessible insights to the Internet.

Internal platforms are supposed to accelerate teams. In theory, they abstract complexity, enforce consistency, and help developers ship faster. In practice, many evolve into what engineers quietly call friction factories:

APIs are the connective tissue of your product. They also expand your attack surface every time you ship a new route, a new integration, or a new team’s microservice. Let’s

4 Tips for Harnessing the Power of Negative Space in Design Negative space can transform a cluttered design into something clean, purposeful, and memorable. We asked industry experts to describe

How to Overcome Public Speaking Fears: Tips for Small Business Owners Public speaking anxiety affects professionals at every level, but it doesn’t have to derail your career or business growth.

16 Agile Strategies to Foster Innovation from Leading Organizations Innovation doesn’t happen by accident — it requires intentional strategies that empower teams to experiment, learn, and adapt quickly. We asked

12 Must-Attend Tech Conferences for Developers Choosing the right tech conference can accelerate skill development, expand professional networks, and open doors to new career opportunities. We asked industry experts to

Website Security Breaches: 13 Lessons Learned from Small Businesses Website security breaches hit small businesses harder than many people realize, often turning minor oversights into costly disasters. We asked industry

You’ve got a great product, a hungry sales team, and a clear strategy — but your campaign still isn’t getting enough leads. After hours of scouring LinkedIn and cold email

Fully remote sales teams use cold outreach to convert prospects and make sales. However, it’s pretty problematic when cold outreach is done manually, because it becomes difficult to scale sales.

As artificial intelligence systems become a routine part of how people seek information, questions are growing about whether these tools give fair answers and cite reliable sources. Recent concerns focus

U.S. stocks slumped Thursday as investors questioned the high prices of major tech names and shifted to safer assets after fresh labor data pointed to a weakening job market. The

Commercial surveillance companies insist their spyware is used only against terrorists and serious criminals. Yet a growing list of victims tells a different story. Reports from civil society groups and

Smartphone makers are sharpening their focus on what different buyers want, carving the market into clear camps built around cameras, size, multitasking, and battery life. Across major brands this year,

A recent UK tutoring advert calling for “an extraordinary tutor” to guide a child “on his first steps to becoming an English gentleman” has stirred debate over class, education, and

Former newspaper editor David Yelland has alleged that BBC leaders Tim Davie and Deborah Turness were undermined by people close to the corporation’s board. His claim adds fuel to ongoing

A new Seattle startup is asking employers to rethink how they hire, arguing that resumes miss the most important signal: real work. The company is promoting portfolios and challenge-based assessments
Perplexity’s Comet doesn’t just sit in your dock. It drives. It reads your tabs, checks your history, takes control of pages, and can even add items to a cart while

A fresh tie-up between SoftBank and OpenAI is stirring debate on how long the current wave of AI funding can last and whether new public listings will follow. The discussion,

Every on-call engineer knows the moment: it’s 2:13 AM, a service is red, dashboards light up like a Christmas tree, and no one can tell what’s actually wrong. You’re staring

You can run a modern microservices platform for years without ever touching a service mesh. You can also hit a point where mTLS by default, uniform retries, and traffic shaping

Why Identity Federation Is the Backbone of Modern SaaS Imagine managing ten SaaS apps, each with its own login system, password policy, and user database. Now scale that across a

In distributed systems, the CAP theorem feels almost mythical. It is the rule that says you cannot have it all, that between Consistency, Availability, and Partition Tolerance, you must pick

You have a hot path that reads a lot, a critical path that writes a little, and a team asking whether Command Query Responsibility Segregation belongs in your system. CQRS
A simple question is echoing across tech and faith circles: Is a new wave of digital spirituality about to surge? The idea touches culture, commerce, and politics, and it asks

A fresh call to reframe how the nation talks about food aid is challenging old political talking points and urging Congress to revisit its assumptions about who needs help and

A new message to users makes one point clear: texting 911 over satellite does not require a paid plan. The change matters for anyone who loses cell service in an

A brief meeting between a government officer and a business analyst is drawing attention to the value of cross-sector conversations among younger professionals. The encounter brings public and private viewpoints

Magnum Ice Cream Company said late Tuesday that the chair of Ben & Jerry’s independent board no longer meets the criteria to serve, escalating an internal feud and signaling a

Google is bringing its Gemini artificial intelligence to its newest Nest cameras and doorbell, signaling a push to make home security smarter and more proactive. The move, announced this week,

A UPS freighter crash in Louisville has brought fresh scrutiny to the age of cargo aircraft and how they are managed for safety. The aircraft was a 34-year-old jet, an










