Top 3 Software Development Trends to Follow in 2023

Business Continuity Planning

Greater acceptance of low code. Hackers become an accepted part of the “system.” The rise of Web 3.0. The tech experts have weighed in and named these the top three software development trends that everyone in the industry, from programmers to CIOs, should watch for.

All of them have been happening for some time and accelerating in recent years. But expect greater adoption in 2023.

Low-code application development.  Call it a user-friendly way of coding for the novice and the uninitiated. Its visual style and drag-drop functionality have literally removed the mystique that accompanies hard tech coding. Even newbies and other professionals who have shied away from coding can understand the process, learn it, and—surprise!—make their own app development.

While the tech-savvy will definitely still lead the pack towards both maintenance and innovation, low code opens up several advantages for the corporation. Non-IT personnel who can learn low code can contribute to app development and propose solutions for their own departments. Cross-functional teams can make their tech-driven collaboration more efficient. Because solutions to long-standing tech issues are being created by this software development trend, talents are being maximized and costs incurred by inefficiencies can go down.

Another advantage of adopting low-code applications: is the specialized developers can focus on more challenging, complex tasks that can make the company even more productive and profitable.

Hackers are integrated into mainstream IT processes and systems. There are black-hat hackers and there are white-hat hackers—and these good guys are getting recognized for foiling the cyber thieves and bringing improvements to formerly vulnerable systems.

White-hat hackers can also give their non-IT colleagues and leaders insight into how the more hostile online forces think, strategize, and attack. The next step would be teaching and training them how to prepare and act accordingly just in case they do spot malware, virus, phishing, and some other lethal assault being unleashed in real-time.

Another benefit of this software development trend is that hackers who have application development skills can work and collaborate with the IT specialists in the company. They can create and build more tools that the company needs, but which have stronger defenses against cyber-criminals.

The continuing rise of Web 3.0.  It is still challenging to identify Web 3.0, but what everyone agrees on is that businesses are and should be migrating from Web 2.0 to it.

Web 1.0 is the simple model that emerged during the early days of dot-com. It was an online brochure that had very little or nil interactivity with the users or customers. Web 2.0 is the model we are using now, with the website integrated with social media, chatbots, analytics, payments, and other kinds of digital tools.

Web 3.0 embraces the latest cutting-edge and still new technology in its systems such as blockchain, decentralization, AI, and the metaverse, among others. A lot of its digital terrain is still unexplored as these software development trends have just been launched and are still evolving.

In a few years, though, it is expected that using blockchain for online transactions, for example, can be as commonplace as digital payments. Another example would be AI becoming an integral and visible part of crucial processes in the workplace, from assisting creative work to providing advice to the CEO.

The first two software development trends mentioned above can further fuel this rise. IT and software specialists acquire the freedom to focus on more important strategies. The non-IT personnel becomes more tech-savvy. Their leaders have an overview of how all this tech can shape and benefit their companies.

As a result, they would be more open to working with and implementing Web 3.0. They would also be the first on the horizon to see the changes it brings to the economy, lifestyle habits, the government, national infrastructures, and the way people live, relate, and communicate.


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