Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

10 Indispensable Amazon EKS Features and Updates You Ought to Know

Amazon’s Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) is the company’s managed option for Kubernetes clusters. We have several articles on using AWS and Kubernetes on our blog, and felt there was a need to highlight some of the key features that AWS EKS offers. Many of these features have been rolled out or updated over the last year. We have mentioned some of these features in other posts, such as our comparison of EKS with AKS and GKE.

Intelligently Monitor Your Work From Home Infrastructure for Business Continuity

Working remotely is becoming the norm for more and more businesses. Many companies have offices spread throughout the world, decentralized employees or contractors, or they simply have a flexible work from home (WFH) policy. Remote work is an aspect of digital transformation that is often left out of conversations when it comes to ensuring business continuity and driving growth.

How to visualize free disk space available in Azure via Microsoft and 3rd party technologies

We are delighted to have a guest blog from Cameron Fuller, System Center MVP for Cloud and Datacenter Management, Solution Director for Catapult Systems and automation evangelist. Today, Cameron shares how we can visualize free disk space in Azure using Microsoft tools and third party solutions. Scroll down to final section to see what he's got to say about SquaredUp!

IT Teams Under "High Stress" Resolving Faster Than Ever Before

Seemingly simple digital moments, like checking into a flight, trigger a complex technical flow of events under the IT covers. A simple swipe or click relies on a complex IT ecosystem made up of millions of lines of code, spanning multiple software applications, hybrid and multi-cloud technologies, state-of-the-art IT infrastructure, security apps, and more.

Visualizing observability with Kibana: Event rates and rate of change in TSVB

When working with observability data, a good portion of it comes in as time series data — things like CPU or memory utilization, network transfer, even application trace data. And the Elastic Stack offers powerful tools within Kibana for time series analysis, including TSVB (formerly Time Series Visual Builder). In this blog post, I’m going to attempt to demystify rates in TSVB by walking through three different types: positive rates, rate of change, and event rates.

How to design your Elasticsearch data storage architecture for scale

Elasticsearch allows you to store, search, and analyze large amounts of structured and unstructured data. This speed, scale, and flexibility makes the Elastic Stack a powerful solution for a wide variety of use cases, like system observability, security (threat hunting and prevention), enterprise search, and more. Because of this flexibility, effectively architecting your deployment’s data storage for scale is incredibly important.