Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

April 2022

The AIOps Journey by NN Bank: Driving Business Performance With Observability in Financial Services

Too often IT sees the impact of issues on infrastructure and eventually determines the causes, but has a hard time figuring out the relationship between them. Most enterprise organizations have some form of monitoring in place but are drowning in data from the systems in use and not getting the visibility they need to understand what is going on.

New StackPod Episode: OpenTelemetry - the Future of Observability?

OpenTelemetry has been getting a lot of attention in the observability field. Moreover, in StackState’s latest release, we added support for OpenTelemetry traces. Melcom van Eeden, software developer at StackState, was one of our developer champions who made this possible. In addition to joining us on this episode of StackPod, he wrote a blog post on how to leverage OpenTelemetry with StackState and he recorded a tutorial video about the topic.

How to Use OpenTelemetry to Troubleshoot a Serverless Environment with StackState

Losing track of communication between applications or code has become a problem with the tech world growing more into supporting Serverless cloud architectures and allowing the developer to maintain, upgrade and update these services. One might say that services and code are becoming more loosely coupled, allowing code to run and execute in silos. Let's take an AWS Lambda function as an example.

Where are Monitoring Tools Headed? Help from Innovation Insight for Observability by Gartner

Enterprises are getting fed-up with their existing system monitoring tools. Despite decades of investments in monitoring tools, many businesses fail to notice a problem in their digital services until a customer calls to complain about it. So, it’s no surprise that businesses are looking for better solutions, and this has sparked an increasing interest in observability, according to Gartner in its updated report, “Innovation Insight for Observability.”