Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

A deep dive into Java garbage collectors

Historically, developers have relied on languages like C and C++ for explicit control over memory allocation and deallocation. This approach can yield very low overhead and tight control over performance, but it also increases complexity and risk (e.g., memory leaks, dangling pointers, and double frees). This often results in runtime issues that are difficult to diagnose, which can become a drag on team velocity.

Track, debug, and roll back changes with Version History for Synthetic Monitoring tests

A synthetic test is only useful if you can trust what it’s telling you. When one fails, the reason may not be obvious. Was the application updated? Did the test change? Or both? As more people contribute and refine the same test, it becomes harder to understand what changed or restore a working version. Without clear visibility into those updates, teams can spend more time tracking down the cause of a failure than resolving it.

Onboarding Microsoft Sentinel data lake with DataStream

Modern security operations teams face an overwhelming challenge: a rapidly growing volume of logs, alerts, and telemetry from cloud services, on-premises infrastructure, and third-party security tools. Traditional SIEM platforms often struggle to scale cost-effectively and provide the agility needed for advanced analytics and threat hunting.

SharePoint Server Monitoring: Uptime, Performance & SLAs

SharePoint is the backbone of internal collaboration for countless organizations. It hosts documents, drives workflows, powers intranets, and underpins team communication across departments. But when it slows down—or worse, goes dark—productivity grinds to a halt. The problem is that most monitoring approaches treat SharePoint like a static website. They check availability, not experience.

Kubernetes Security Guide: Risks, Strategies, And Tools

In 2018, attackers gained access to Tesla’s AWS cloud environment through an unprotected Kubernetes console (admin console). Because it lacked proper authentication, the hackers could see and control cluster resources. Once inside, they deployed new pods running cryptocurrency mining software, using Tesla’s compute power for profit. During the breach, the attackers also uncovered credentials stored in the cluster.

Powering Mexico's Digital Future: Expanded Internet Observability with Catchpoint

As of 2025, more than 110 million Mexicans are online, putting digital‐access penetration at roughly 83% of the population. Mexico is already one of Latin America’s anchor markets, leading the region in startup momentum, cloud adoption, and cross-border digital trade. A few days ago, CloudHQ announced a $4.6B investment in Mexico to open multiple datacenters. Yet even with this scale, service quality still varies dramatically across cities, states, and ISPs.

How Leading Businesses Achieved Greater Uptime with Atatus Monitoring

When every second of downtime can mean lost revenue and frustrated customers, leading businesses can’t afford to leave performance to chance. That’s why leading companies are turning to Application Performance Monitoring (APM) tools like Atatus, a Datadog alternative to keep their applications healthy, detect issues before customers do, and achieve higher uptime than ever. But how exactly are they doing it?

A Launch Day in the Life with AI Teammates

Alex, an SRE at Greenagonia, starts the day knowing there’s a big launch coming. Pre-orders suggest a 5-10x increase in normal traffic, which means coffee needs to be extra strong this morning. As Alex scans through overnight alerts, he realizes he’s completely forgotten about a dentist appointment that overlaps with his upcoming on-call shift. Six months ago, this would have meant frantic Slack messages or at least one phone call. Today? Alex’s AI teammate has it covered.

What is the Statute of Limitations in New York and Why Does It Matter?

Every legal case in New York follows a clock that starts the moment an event occurs. That clock is set by the statute of limitations, which defines how long someone has to bring a lawsuit or face criminal charges. The statute of limitations in New York sets the legal deadline for starting a case, and once that time runs out, the right to sue or prosecute usually ends.