The latest News and Information on AIOps, alerting in complex systems and related technologies.
As an ITOps professional, it can be challenging to justify all of your actions to your organization. After talking with many of you, we saw first-hand the pains and gaps around showing the impact of your team and the constant struggle to measure how you’re improving. That’s where Unified Analytics comes into play.
This is part two of a three-part blog series on Observability—the challenges and the solutions.
The average organization can have ten or more monitoring or observability tools in their IT stack. These tools keep generating an overwhelming amount of noise. IT Ops, NOC and DevOps teams drown in this noise and can’t focus on real incidents until it’s too late. Your organization’s alerts don’t have to turn into an untameable tsunami with no end in sight—there’s a better way forward.
Breaking down cloud management platforms and hybrid/multicloud management In our recent Whiskey and Wisdom session, we discussed how ITOps teams are coping with the evolution of cloud management. Whiskey and Wisdom is a monthly executive-only forum where IT operations leaders can network independently and discuss high-level AI operations and ITOps strategies with their industry peers.
ScienceLogic’s SL1 is engineered to excel in today’s hybrid IT environments, discovering legacy gear buried in your on-premises data center as well as services and applications that live out in the cloud. SL1 is serious AIOps for IT operations teams that are serious about getting the most out of their investments in IT.
The world of software is growing more complex, and simultaneously changing faster than ever before. The simple monolithic applications of recent memory are being replaced by horizontal cloud-native applications. It is no surprise that such applications are more complex and can break into infinitely more ways (and ever new ways). They also generate a lot more data to keep track of. The pressure to move fast means software release cycles have shrunk drastically from months to hours, with constant change being the new normal.