Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

How to Evaluate a Mobile App Testing Platform

Selecting a mobile app testing platform is a strategic engineering decision. It affects release velocity, defect escape rates, infrastructure costs, and long-term product stability. As mobile ecosystems become more diverse, platform evaluation must move beyond feature comparisons and focus on operational alignment. Mobile environments today include wide variations in device hardware, operating system versions, accessibility configurations, and browser implementations. A testing platform must reflect this complexity if it is to reduce production risk effectively.

Role of Control Room Design in Improving Monitoring Accuracy

Monitoring mistakes rarely happens randomly. Most of them originate in control rooms where operators struggle with poorly positioned screens, awkward equipment placement, or lighting that makes critical data difficult to see. In high-stakes environments like power grids, security operations, transportation systems, and manufacturing plants, monitoring accuracy directly affects operational stability and safety. Even highly skilled operators can make mistakes when their workspace works against them.

Observability for distributed IoT systems: reducing alert fatigue through modular architecture

Many distributed IoT teams hit the same wall at roughly the same stage. The fleet grows, telemetry coverage improves, dashboards multiply, and on paper the system becomes more visible. In practice, the operating picture often gets harder to read. There are more alerts to review, more exceptions that do not fit existing runbooks, more cases where someone has to cross-check device state against backend logs and integration behavior by hand. What starts to slip is not only response speed, but confidence. The team sees more signals, yet feels less sure which ones matter and which ones can wait.

How Smart Businesses Stay Ahead When Operations Get Tough

Every business hits friction points. A supplier falls through. An unexpected cost hits during your busiest quarter. A growth opportunity lands in your lap but requires cash you don't have sitting around. How you respond in those moments often determines whether you build momentum or lose it.

Understanding Certificate of Dissolution vs Dissolution and Termination

When a business decides to close its doors, the legal process involved is more layered than most people expect. Many business owners confuse the steps involved, particularly when it comes to the difference between a certificate of dissolution vs dissolution and termination.

Top 10 Platform Engineering Platforms for 2026 (March Edition)

Platform engineering is rapidly evolving as businesses look for more efficient ways to manage infrastructure, automate workflows, and improve developer productivity. In this edition, we’ll explore the top 10 platform engineering platforms for March 2026, optimized for scalability, automation, and ease of use. These platforms empower developers to focus on building code while platform engineers handle infrastructure with reduced complexity.

The Agent-Native Repo: Why AGENTS.MD is the New Standard | Harness Blog

This is part 1 of a five-part series on building production-grade AI engineering systems. Across this series, we will cover: Most teams experimenting with AI coding agents focus on prompts. That is the wrong starting point. Before you optimize how an agent thinks, you must standardize what it sees. AI agents do not primarily fail because of reasoning limits. They fail because of environmental ambiguity.

Architecting the Future: The evolution of Apache ActiveMQ for enterprise messaging and the path to mission control

Apache ActiveMQ is evolving from simple transport to intelligent fabric. Key shifts include replicated KahaDB for cloud-native resilience, Spring decoupling in v7, and OpenTelemetry observability—transforming messaging infrastructure for modern enterprise needs.

AWS App Runner: How It Works, Pricing, And Best Practices For Cost Optimization Today

Back in May of 2021, containers had already won. Kubernetes adoption was surging. ECS and EKS were powerful. But for many teams, deploying a simple containerized web service still meant stitching together clusters, networking rules, scaling policies, load balancers, IAM roles, and CI/CD pipelines. It felt heavier than it should. Developers no longer wanted more orchestration power. They wanted less operational drag.