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Apigee

The Path of Most Resilience Chapter 3: Data and Analytics

If a company hopes to remain competitive in today's hyper-connected world, it must speak to individuals, not broad segments. Businesses must consider all types of data generated by their customers-contextual and real-time, structured and unstructured-to deliver relevant and precise results on the most appropriate channel and device.

Announcing API management for services that use Envoy

Among forward-looking software developers, Envoy has become ubiquitous as a high-performance pluggable proxy, providing improved networking and observability capability for increased services traffic. Built on the learnings of HAProxy and nginx, Envoy is now an official Cloud Native Computing Foundation project, and has many fans—including among users of our Apigee API management platform.

The Path of Most Resilience Chapter 2: Security and Scalability

Sudden changes in consumption patterns of customers, employees, and partners may lead companies to experience an increasing demand for their digital services. These may come as a result of market shifts, technological shifts, or due to times of uncertainty. The more adaptive and resilient companies are internally, the faster they can evolve alongside their customers and markets to overcome challenges during times of uncertainty.

Reusing Existing Assets: Your Guide to Doing More With Less

With tightening budgets, many enterprises will look to cut their digital transformation and innovation budgets in order to focus on keeping the lights on. But an API program provides an easy way for enterprises to keep the lights on while still pushing towards digital transformation. With an API-first approach, enterprises can continue their digital transformation initiatives, but with a focus on maximizing existing resources to boost developer productivity.

API design: Understanding gRPC, OpenAPI and REST and when to use them

As most software developers no doubt know, there are two primary models for API design: RPC and REST. Regardless of model, most modern APIs are implemented by mapping them in one way or another to the same HTTP protocol. It has also become common for RPC API designs to adopt one or two ideas from HTTP while staying within the RPC model, which has increased the range of choices that an API designer faces. This post tries to explain the choices, and give guidance on how to choose between them.

Global supply chains: How Maersk is connecting & simplifying the world's movement of trade with APIs

Join Oliver Ogg in conversation with Dave Holliday, API Platform Product Manager at A.P. Moller - Maersk. Maersk is the world’s largest shipping company and is a global orchestrator of logistics. It is a complex business with multiple business units that include container manufacturing, shipping, and operating vast terminals that can unload some of the world’s largest ships. The supply chain world has been using EDI formats to exchange data between the many participants, but it was always expensive for both sides to understand, build against, and maintain.

How EBSCO delivers dynamic research services with Apigee

For more than 70 years, EBSCO has supported research at private and public institutions, including libraries, universities, hospitals, and government organizations. One of the reasons that customers have continued to rely upon us over the decades is because we actively innovate and adapt new technologies to give customers access to the growing pool of digital resources in the information age.

Womply: Helping small businesses compete through API management

Editor's note: Today we hear from Brad Plothow and Mihir Sambhus from Womply, a software-as-a-service company that makes CRM, email marketing, and reputation management software for small businesses. The company recently developed APIs to help small businesses use data to gain a clearer picture of their markets—and how to compete in them.

Emaar: Improving customer engagement across industries with APIs

Based in Dubai, Emaar is a real-estate development company operating across a number of verticals, including properties, shopping malls, hospitality, and entertainment. Learn how Emaar develops new customer experiences using APIs. Emaar is known worldwide for our luxurious properties and communities. Our most well-known property is likely the Burj Khalifa, which is the tallest structure in the world at 829 meters.