softwareens
Softwareens are a theoretical construct in software studies that describe small, autonomous software agents that act as catalysts within a larger system. They aim to coordinate, optimize, and accelerate workflows by applying domain-specific rules and transformations without becoming the primary executors of business logic. The term, derived from the combination of software and enzymes, emphasizes catalytic influence rather than direct production of results.
In usage, softwareens appear in discussions of distributed, event-driven architectures. There is no single formal standard
An average softwareen architecture includes a sensing component, a decision module, and an action interface, layered
Applications mentioned in speculative literature include dynamic data pipelines, adaptive load balancing, automated experimentation, and complex