Advisor

The API Economy

Posted January 30, 2013 | Technology |

In the API Economy, an API is an application programming interface that is exposed (publicly or privately) on the Internet. It is the means by which one piece of Internet-based software can access the data and/or computational services of another, using standard Internet-based communications technologies. Until recently, the primary firms producing APIs were the vendors of operating systems such as Microsoft Windows, Apple Macintosh, and IBM Linux/390.

About The Author
Jim Plamondon
Jim Plamondon has helped accelerate the adoption of state-of-the-art disruptive computing platforms, including OO application frameworks in the 1980s, Windows in the 1990s, .NET in the 2000s, and cloud computing in recent years. His ability to "win in the API Economy" stems from his experience as Microsoft's internal guru of API evangelism in the 1990s, consultant for other firms throughout the 2000s, and most recently as Director of Developer… Read More
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