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  2. Monolithic application - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monolithic_application

    In software engineering, a monolithic application is a single unified software application that is self-contained and independent from other applications, but typically lacks flexibility. [1] There are advantages and disadvantages of building applications in a monolithic style of software architecture , depending on requirements. [ 2 ]

  3. Strangler fig pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strangler_fig_pattern

    One use of this pattern is during software rewrites. Code can be divided into many small sections, wrapped with the strangler fig pattern, then that section of old code can be swapped out with new code before moving on to the next section. This is less risky and more incremental than swapping out the entire piece of software. [1]

  4. Microservices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microservices

    In the monolithic approach, an application supporting three functions would have to be scaled in its entirety even if only one of these functions had a resource constraint. [6] With microservices, only the microservice supporting the function with resource constraints needs to be scaled out, thus providing resource and cost optimization ...

  5. Scale cube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale_cube

    Y axis scaling starts to break away chunks of monolithic code bases and creates separate services, or sometimes microservices. [12] This separation creates clearly defined lanes for not only responsibility and accountability, but also for fault isolation. If one service fails, it should only bring down itself and not other services. [6] [13]

  6. Microapp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microapp

    Microservices is an architectural style that is systems-centric, meaning it decouples the presentation and data layer using web services APIs. On the other side, micro apps behave more as a super-architecture style (that embraces microservices among other types), and it is user-centric, meaning they decouple the whole monolith system onto ...

  7. Self-contained system (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-contained_system...

    While self-contained systems are similar to microservices there are differences: A system will usually contain fewer SCS than microservices. Also microservices can communicate with other microservices – even synchronously. SCS prefer no communication or asynchronous communication.

  8. Couple Accused of Faking 6-Year-Old Son's Cancer, Raising ...

    www.aol.com/couple-accused-faking-6-old...

    A couple in Australia have been accused of faking their young son's cancer diagnosis "It will be alleged that the accused shaved their 6-year-old child’s head, eyebrows, placed him in a ...

  9. Talk:Monolithic application - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Monolithic_application

    There seems to be the need to distinguish between a Monolithic Application and a Monolithic Architecture. In the context of Microservices there are many references to Monolithic Systems that are layered and component based. Consider this reference from the Microservices page [1] which refers to a "a monolithic, layered system."