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The latest News and Information on Observabilty for complex systems and related technologies.

Achieve comprehensive observability with Sensu and Elasticsearch

Elasticsearch is a great platform for any data lake initiative, and ideal for analyzing your monitoring and observability data. But if you’re working with a number of different monitoring and observability tools, especially across multiple cloud environments, you might find it challenging to get all your data into Elasticsearch.

How to Address the Most Common Microservice Observability Issues

Breaking down larger, monolithic software, services, and applications into microservices has become a standard practice for developers. While this solves many issues, it also creates new ones. Architectures composed of microservices create their own unique challenges. In this article, we are going to break down some of the most common. More specifically, we are going to assess how observability-based solutions can overcome many of these obstacles.

Observability: is it a future of monitoring

As a concept, observability has been a relatively recent entrant into the world of information technology and cloud technology. The idea originated initially from controls system engineering. Observability refers to the concept of inferring the internal status of the system based on the outputs derived from the same. This is the conventional definition of observability.

Setting Business Goals with SLOs

‘Tis the season to set 2021 goals. Whether setting OKRs, KPIs, KPAs, MBOs, or any other flavor of goal-setting frameworks in an endless sea of acronym soup, chances are that you’re still dealing with a sizable disconnect between business objectives and daily engineering work. Service Level Objectives (SLOs) have boomed in popularity because they provide a common language between business stakeholders and engineers to set aligned goals.

What do dog's pondering and "Observability" have in common?

Observability is arguably the tech buzzword of the year. Whether or not you believe the hype, observability is all about how to ensure overall system health and deliver reliable customer experiences. This is done by observing the system, and when a problem arises, using real-time analytics to quickly help identify the what, where, and why of the problem. In this video, Sumo Logic co-founder and CTO Christian Beedgen takes a closer look at: In addition, the video features a live demo of Sumo Logic’s end-to-end observability solution.

Achieve Business Objectives with Data Driven Observability - Webinar

Modern financial services company Snoop uses open banking and artificial intelligence (AI) to analyse customers’ transactions and spending. But as the volume, variety, and sensitivity of data it manages increases, so does the complexity. Watch this “fireside chat” style webinar to learn how to gain unified visibility across your Amazon Web Services (AWS) infrastructure. Listen as experts from Snoop, Sumo Logic, and AWS share tips and tools to help you glean game-changing insights in real time, economically, and at scale.

Monitoring Azure infrastructure with Filebeat and Elastic Observability

The ability to access the internal state of your application ecosystem is critical to optimizing your applications and the experience of your users. Elastic Cloud on Microsoft Azure gives you access to Elastic Observability, allowing you to monitor your infrastructure and see how every signal interrelates by utilizing a wide variety of resources that can be deployed in minutes.

Operations - Past, Present and Glorious Future

People with infrastructure experience and operational experience like “DevOps Engineer”, “SRE”, “Platform Engineer” have started to see those two skill sets diverge. It’s not very clear what that split means for these skilled technical people as they approach the next phase of their careers.

The Business Case for Observability with Context

My team was not happy with me. I had just convened a meeting of my direct reports — and the managers that reported to them — to deliver the news personally. “No more new tools,” I told them. “We have everything we need to do our job. Our environment just doesn’t change that fast. So stop bringing me requests for new tools. The answer is no.” It was unquestionably the right call at the time, but today, it would be laughable.