Security operations strategy has long been stagnant. Right now is the perfect time to rethink and revolutionize the Security Operations Center (SOC). If you look at the threat landscape today, a significant majority of business executives and InfoSec experts foresee imminent cybersecurity disruptions.
Please join as our Sr. Open Source Engineer, Mikolaj Swiatek, focuses on general guidance for helm chart migration between versions (e.g. moving from unsupported to supported versions).
An oft-forgotten component of robust, production-ready code is testing. The moat protects us from costly service interruptions and fortifies trust in our product with our customers. Simply put, it’s in the critical path of damn good software. However, as we scale a cloud product to serve a rapidly growing user base, our test case scenarios scale correspondingly. As far as testing goes, end-to-end (E2E) testing most closely mirrors the end-user experience.
While spring is traditionally the time for tidying up for most folks, IT and Security teams know it is important always to maintain a clean, streamlined environment. However, we understand that doesn’t always happen with growing data volumes, stagnant budgets, and changing organizational priorities. This blog is to help you understand if you are properly overdue for a clean-up.
System monitoring can be viewed as being closely related to infrastructure monitoring, but there are differences between the two concepts, particularly with their scopes within the realm of IT monitoring. Infrastructure monitoring concentrates on monitoring the physical and virtual components of an IT environment, such as servers, networks, storage systems, and cloud services.
When it comes to coding and software/app development, two trends are especially appealing to certain business users: low code and no code programming platforms. Let’s take a look at the differences here.
Eight weeks. When someone asks me about the synergies of Cisco + Splunk with regards to full-stack observability, I think about how much we’ve accomplished in just eight weeks. Eight weeks since the close of the acquisition, our teams have already come together to jointly develop, and will deliver, a new capability for enabling observability across the entire digital footprint for both Cisco and Splunk customers.
We present five common myths about platform engineering — what it is and what it isn’t — that we've heard when folks aren't considering the whole picture.