ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alex Bykow

Solution Architect

Alex Bykov is a Solution Architect with an extensive portfolio of achievements spanning various leadership roles and technical domains. His technical proficiency is evident in his diverse skill set, including Go, REST APIs, Agile methodologies, automation, and quality assurance. His ability to navigate complex technical landscapes and provide comprehensive solutions is a testament to his expertise. He has experience in developing rapid development platforms for mobile devices and backends, the assessment and improvement of technical architecture, and the creation of roadmap strategies.

Alex Bykow

CONNECT WITH ALEX BYKOW

Linkedin

Recent posts by Alex:

Thumbnail of an article about Microservices Security Monitoring: ensuring optimal protection and performance
OBSERVABILITY
SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT

Microservices Security Monitoring: ensuring optimal protection and performance

In the digital age, the security of microservices has taken center stage. As businesses pivot towards microservices architectures, it becomes crucial to address the security challenges that arise with their popularity. However, identifying security threats isn’t possible without adequately designed and continuously carried monitoring. Read this article and join us as we delve into the significance of microservices security monitoring, exploring key strategies and tools that enable organizations to maintain the integrity and resilience of their microservices-based applications.
Thumbnail of an article about Clean architecture — everything you need to know
SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT

Clean architecture — everything you need to know

Many developers are aware of the clean code principles but there is a further way to level up, clean architecture. Not many are aware of the concept of clean architecture, although it is definitely worth exploring. My own experience proves that implementing clean architecture principles in your project can solve a number of issues. In this article I decided to take a closer look at what clean architecture means and why it can be important. Probably every developer and project manager has met this situation at least once in a career: a project shows rapid growth in the beginning then slows down or even becomes completely stuck.