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Summary:
The no code/low code movement is getting plenty of attention. Now is the time to locate its value in the context of large IT landscapes, says Neptune Software's Matthias Steiner
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Ten years ago, Marc Andreessen argued that "
Software is eating the world," proclaiming software to be the designated driver of innovation in the digital era. Fast forward to today and we find that the gap between demand for business applications and what corporate IT can supply remains as wide as it has ever been. Efforts have been made to compress the time to value in a variety of ways, principally by rapid application development platforms. Today, these are more widely known under their rebranded monikers of no code and low code. The burning question is this: have these no code/low code delivered on the promise of easily created, rapidly deployable applications? The answer is yes and no.