Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

New roadmap & feature request hub

We’re excited to announce that StatusGator has officially moved to a new platform for collecting feature requests, organizing our roadmap, and keeping you updated on what we’re building. This new system makes it easier than ever to share ideas, vote on improvements, and follow the progress of the features that matter most to you.

Introducing our new service monitor APIs

We’re pleased to announce new enhancements to the StatusGator API platform that make it easier to automate how you monitor third-party services. The new Service Search, Create Service Monitor, and Update Service Monitor endpoints give developers more control over how monitors are created, labeled, and maintained across projects and environments. These APIs are designed for teams that integrate StatusGator into their deployment processes, internal tooling, or infrastructure automation.

November 2025 - Early Warning Signals

November brought a steady flow of service disruptions across productivity, finance, developer tools, and major consumer platforms. Two incidents stood out as the month’s most significant: a major Google Workspace outage on November 12 affecting Docs and Sheets globally, and a widespread Cloudflare issue on November 18 that caused cascading failures across multiple services.

European enterprises prioritise governance in AI deployments, as North America accelerates towards full autonomy

Digitate report reveals differing approaches to AI deployment between Europe and North America, but ROI remains consistent. Europe leading on governance while NA organisations show faster progress towards autonomous operations.

Here's What a Network Needs After a Cloud Migration

By now, most organizations have realized the benefits of moving some, most, or all of their business applications to the cloud. The cloud typically offers better security and performance, at a lower price, than housing resources on-premises. You may have helped them in that migration or you may have been hired after it was complete. Either way, a client with cloud hosting has different network requirements than one whose infrastructure is primarily on-premises.

Configuring an Internet Connection for a Cloud-Hosted Environment

Part 2 in our series on Here’s What a Network Needs After a Cloud Migration. Part 1 looked at how to redesign the LAN. When a company’s application infrastructure moves to the cloud, a reliable Internet connection becomes mandatory. Hiccups in Internet service that might have been an inconvenience when apps were in-house now grind the business to a halt. Unfortunately, the Internet link happens to be the single least reliable element in an IT infrastructure.

Managing User Access & Authentication in a Cloud-Hosted Environment

This is the third and final instalment in a series on Here’s What a Network Needs After a Cloud Migration. Part 1 looked at how to redesign the LAN. Part 2 outlined strategies for the Internet connection. One of the things that becomes more important in a cloud-based application environment is managing user access and authentication.

Stop the Insanity! Quit Doing These 7 Manual Network Management Tasks

Active network infrastructure management is a key element of any managed service offering. Traditionally, network management has involved a lot of tedious manual work, making it expensive and very hard to scale. And that’s why many MSPs have shied away from actively managing the network. But not managing network infrastructure at all is a risk to your business. Your clients likely expect you’re looking after the network whether you’ve promised it or not.

Monitor Everything is an Anti-Pattern!

Bullshit and nonsense. But let’s take it from the beginning. The industry’s story goes something like this: Then, in the same breath: You see the contradiction already, right? The same industry that tells you “collect less, simplify, trust the experts” is also the industry where: This isn’t an observability strategy. It’s observability by hindsight. Right. Good. Now we’re having fun.