Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

From basics to benefits: A beginner's guide to cloud computing

Cloud computing powers everything from startups to global enterprises. With it, a new business can scale quickly without investing in expensive servers, while large organizations can store vast amounts of data and run applications seamlessly across the world. Simply put, cloud computing delivers computing resources over the internet that are scalable, cost-effective, and accessible—anytime, anywhere. Let’s break down the fundamentals of cloud computing and why it matters.

Bilateral and Multilateral Peering: What's the Difference?

These two types of peering relationship may seem similar at first glance, but there are a few considerations you should make to get the most out of your connection to an IX. When you join an internet exchange, the first thing you’ll need to do after physically connecting is establish some BGP sessions in order to get traffic flowing and to start enjoying the benefits of peering at an IX.

Should you run your database on Kubernetes?

In the early days, people debated how safe it was to store their money in the bank; now, we debate running databases on Kubernetes. Over the years, Kubernetes has evolved significantly, transforming into a capable platform for handling various workloads, including stateful ones. In this blog, I will consolidate some of the best arguments from both sides and provide you with some points to discuss with your team lead in your next conversation. It's an interesting topic with varying answers.

Networks are everyone's business - TCP Checks for app developers

Checkly is the industry’s best tool to monitor your production applications. With the power of playwright, developers can test the systems they’ve developed, and roll out those tests as production monitors running from multiple geographies on the Checkly system. And Checkly monitors thousands of API endpoints with complex validation, setup and cleanup scripts, and reliable alerting. So why are we expanding into TCP-based checks?

Integration roundup: Monitoring your modern data platforms

Modern applications increasingly rely on specialized databases and platforms to power real-time analytics and support advanced AI/ML capabilities. These tools help teams accelerate development by consolidating workflows and processes, enabling faster and more efficient data operations. That’s why Datadog has launched three new data platform integrations with Supabase, DuckDB, and Milvus.

Search and analyze unsampled logs in real time with Live Tail

With thousands of logs generated every minute from your infrastructure, applications, services, and devices, retaining all of this data for active search and analysis can be cost-prohibitive. Because log volumes continue to grow rapidly as operations scale, it’s common for organizations to implement log management strategies and limit the amount that they store in order to minimize costs.

How to avoid blowing the budget on Azure AI

So you had a great day playing with really awesome new tech, solving big business challenges, and feeling like you really nailed it. Then you wake up the next day to an alert from Azure telling you you've blown your monthly budget and its only the first week of the month. We've all been there... right? Using any cloud service comes with a cost, but for most services the budget risk is low. Cost calculated daily isn't a problem when usage is predictable, but not everything works like that.

OpenTelemetry Metrics Explained: A Guide for Engineers

OpenTelemetry (often abbreviated as OTel) is the golden standard observability framework, allowing users to collect, process, and export telemetry data from their systems. OpenTelemetry’s framework is organized into distinct signals, each offering an aspect of observability. Among these signals, OpenTelemetry metrics are crucial in helping engineers understand their systems.

Monitor Microsoft Azure in Grafana Cloud: simplify and centralize your cloud provider observability

Organizations around the world use Microsoft Azure to power their businesses. The cloud computing platform includes hundreds of products and services organizations can use to build and manage applications, but monitoring those environments can often feel like navigating a maze of fragmented data, tools, and processes.