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The latest News and Information on Log Management, Log Analytics and related technologies.

How to improve uptime with real-time monitoring, Grafana dashboards, and Grafana Loki: Inside Dish Network's observability stack

Dish Network is on a mission to connect people and things by changing the way the world communicates. With products ranging from Dish and Sling TV to retail wireless services and 5G networks, monitoring their satellite communications equipment is mission critical to maintaining extreme uptime for Dish’s 20 million customers across the United States.

Status Pages: The Ultimate Guide

Status pages have become the end-users window into your team’s operations. Companies with status pages are doing the right thing for their users — building in some transparency while mitigating frustration and support contact. For the benefits of status pages to pay off, organizations need to treat them as something more than active wiki-pages run by support.

The Next Frontier for Observability: Data Ownership with OpenTelemetry

Observability is a mindset that lets you use data to answer questions about business processes. In short, collecting as much data as possible from the components of your business — including applications and key business metrics — then using an AI-powered tool to help consolidate and make sense of this huge volume of data gives you observability into your business. Having observability for your business and applications lets you make smarter decisions, faster.

How to gain Kubernetes visibility in a few clicks

Enterprises are increasingly adopting Kubernetes for the value that it brings to their organizations, from IT cost savings to improved time to market for application development. See how Sumo Logic can help you realize the value of Kubernetes faster with a guided onboarding setup that only requires a few clicks to go from zero to visibility.

Tracing vs. Logging: What You Need To Know

Log tracking, trace log, or logging traces… Although these three terms are easy to interchange (the wordplay certainly doesn’t help!), compare tracing vs. logging, and you’ll find they are quite distinct. Logs, traces, and metrics are the three pillars of observability, and they all work together to measure application performance effectively. Let’s first understand what logging is.

How Does Observability Help an Organization Move the Needle?

If you’re new to the concept or just trying to keep up with the conversation, Gartner defines Observability as the evolution of monitoring into a process that offers insight into digital business applications, speeds innovation and enhances customer experience. Some folks think that Observability is a new buzzword, but in fact the term was coined in 1960 by Rudolf E. Kalman, a Hungarian-American engineer.

Logging in Python: A Developer's Guide

Have you ever had a tough time debugging your Python code? If yes, learning how to set up logging in Python can help you streamline your debugging workflow. As a beginner programmer, you’ll have likely used the print() statement—to print out certain values across runs of your program—to check if the code is working as expected. Using print() statements to debug could work fine for smaller Python programs.

What is Tracing? Everything You Need to Know

Tracing, or more specifically distributed tracing or distributed request tracing, is the ability to follow a request through a system, joining the dots between all the individual system calls required to service a particular request. Although tracing logs have been around for some time, the trend toward distributed architectures, microservices, and containerization has elevated it from nice-to-have status to an essential piece of the observability puzzle.

Introduction to reliability management

Ensuring your digital customer experiences are exceptional is a goal of any modern business. However, managing the reliability of ever more complex applications is a challenge. Developers are releasing new capabilities in fast-moving sprints and the business wants maximum velocity with minimal risk. SRE teams create a structure of continuous improvement that focuses on ensuring the application is reliable above all else.