Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

IoT Sensor Data into Graylog: A Lab Guide

Graylog has always been associated with log management, metrics, SIEM and security monitoring—but it’s also a great tool for creative, low-cost experiments in a home lab. I wanted to use it for real-world sensor data, so I built a DIY temperature and humidity monitor using an ESP-WROOM-32 development board and a DHT22 sensor.

Wireless Devices: Simplifying Transportation Management with IoT Solutions

IoT fleets bring big gains, but they also widen the attack surface. This article looks at how transportation teams can protect connected vehicles and data while still using real-time insights. It explains core safeguards like end-to-end encryption, TLS links, device-level checks, and role-based access. You will also find notes on audits and compliance, plus why monitoring matters after rollout. The second half reviews market trends, from AI-based analytics and autonomous vehicle support to edge computing and emissions tracking.

Top Companies Specializing in IoT Software Development

The Internet of Things often sounds abstract until you witness it in action. A sensor flags a failing pump before it breaks. A truck reroutes itself around traffic. A hospital bed reports patient movement in real time. That seamless flow of data is powered by software that runs quietly in the background, connecting devices, networks, and analytics. Building such systems is complicated. IoT software operates at the intersection of hardware, networks, and cloud services, while users expect it to work flawlessly. When a system fails, the impact is tangible: downtime, lost inventory, safety risks.

Why Monitoring the Physical Environment Matters: From Data Centers to Factory Floors

Physical environment monitoring is the practice of measuring and tracking environmental conditions that directly affect equipment, people, and operational continuity. While digital systems dominate modern operations, physical conditions still determine whether those systems perform reliably or fail unexpectedly. A single temperature spike, humidity imbalance, or power fluctuation can undo layers of software redundancy.