Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

Business Continuity vs. Business Resilience: Key Differences

In IT, change is the only constant, and sometimes it arrives as a major disruption. This could include a power outage, a cyberattack, or even a global pandemic. While it’s impossible to foresee every crisis, you can be ready for them. Two key concepts for this are business continuity and business resilience. Although these terms are often used interchangeably, they refer to two separate yet complementary strategies for ensuring your organization keeps operating under any circumstances.

When Automation Finally Flows: Eliminating the Layers Between AI and IT

Enterprises like yours have sunk considerable time and money into trying to stitch together automation. This pattern is always the same: someone buys a variety of IT tools, and a small team of specialists spends months wiring them together. One tool tries to understand human language while another launches a workflow. Between them sits a tangle of mappings, connectors, triggers, and “custom glue” that only one engineer understands. That’s not automation, though.

Logs Are Your Data Platform: Dynamic, Queryable, S3Backed

Modern systems move fast. Features ship daily, user behavior shifts hourly, and risks surface in minutes. In that reality, logs are not just a troubleshooting artifact. They are your most expressive data source. Logs capture the words developers write to their future selves. They carry the full story of requests, users, experiments, errors, feature flags, and revenue events.

A different view for the performance timings of an uptime monitor

When you monitor a website at Oh Dear, the monitoring also includes the historical performance insights that belong to that monitor. It gives you a historical overview of the speed of that monitor, allowing you to see anomalies and changes over time. As of today, there's a second view available, one that matches the webbrowser visualisation of the timing of a single request. This view shows the same waterfall information you'd find in Chrome or Firefox, providing a familiar view to developers worldwide.

Debugging in Elixir with Observer

Erlang's Observer is often discussed in passing and regarded as a curiosity during Elixir courses. However, Observer provides many powerful tools for monitoring and debugging your application, both in development and production. Together, we will learn how to access the Observer GUI and debug a project that leaks memory, both locally and through a remote node. We will set up process tracing and track garbage collections to find the offending code in our sample project. Let's get started!

From Telemetry to Truth: Why Observability Must Be Service-Centric

Modern enterprises depend on systems that appear calm: dashboards glow, availability reads steady, and metrics suggest composure. But the signals only tell part of the story. Conversion softens at the margins, regional sign-in times drift, a compliance report misses an expected field. The puzzle isn’t visibility; it’s meaning. Components describe status; services carry outcomes.

How to Improve Your Microsoft ExpressRoute Resilience with Megaport Connectivity

Improve ExpressRoute reliability with these deployment models and strategies for stronger cloud resilience, powered by Megaport. Every year, businesses become even more reliant on their network for the success of their entire operations. For the 350,000+ companies using Microsoft Azure, building resilient, reliable network connectivity to this service is essential.

Diagnosis to Growth - CMOs Playbook to Win with Data, AI, and Unified Execution

Marketing leaders are facing mounting demands to deliver measurable ROI, yet many lack the unified visibility needed to understand what truly works across channels. Significant portions of marketing budgets are lost to inefficiency, and the problem is magnified when teams operate in silos, limiting access to data and insights that drive growth. The impact is evident.

Grafana Tempo: Setup, Configuration, and Best Practices

As systems grow, understanding how a request moves across multiple services becomes harder. Traces help bring this picture together by showing the exact path a request takes, along with the timings that matter. Grafana Tempo is built for this kind of workload. It stores traces efficiently, works well with OpenTelemetry, and keeps the operational overhead low.