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Virtual Reality Fast-developing VR technology allows businesses to watch and record consumers’ physiological responses as they are immersed in increasingly realistic, sensory-rich scenarios (sight, sound, space) designed to evoke powerful emotional responses.
These changes sound like something that we’ve often talked about in software development: continuousintegration and continuous delivery. Just as CI/CD requires IT departments to automate software deployment pipelines, continuous business processes come from automating–together–all of the processes that make businesses work.
We took a separate look at the “continuous” methodologies (also known as CI/CD): continuousintegration, continuous delivery, and continuous deployment. This growth comes largely from a huge (40%) increase in the use of content about continuous delivery. Will that continue? What does this tell us?
Virtual and augmented reality are technologies that were languishing in the background; has talk of the “metaverse” (sparked in part by Mark Zuckerberg) given VR and AR new life? Startups like Oculus (now part of Meta) have made VR goggles aimed at consumers, but they’ve never broken beyond a small segment of the gamer market.
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