Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

The latest News and Information on Monitoring for Websites, Applications, APIs, Infrastructure, and other technologies.

You can't understand digital experience without monitoring from where your users actually are!

If you’re monitoring your applications, you’re missing what your customers are actually seeing. Performance issues don’t happen in a vacuum. They happen at the edges, on mobile devices, over congested networks, in last-mile dead zones. Monitoring only works when it’s aligned with reality. And reality starts at the user.

Track the performance of your HPC workloads with Datadog's AWS PCS integration

AWS Parallel Computing Service (AWS PCS) is a managed service that helps users run and scale their high performance computing (HPC) workloads. AWS PCS uses Slurm, an open source workload manager, for scheduling and orchestrating simulations, which enables users to build their scientific and engineering models in a familiar HPC environment.

Announcing Dynamic Service Insights in LogicMonitor Envision

If you’re in IT operations, you’ve likely faced the disconnect firsthand: your dashboards say everything’s green, but your business stakeholders are asking why the website is slow, the customer portal is timing out, or a regional service is underperforming. Your team is usually on top of issues, such as monitoring infrastructure health, resolving alerts, and keeping systems online. But the business isn’t looking at device uptime.

Redefining Resilient IT: Edwin AI, Service Intelligence, and What's Next for LogicMonitor

Downtime is more than an inconvenience these days, nor is it solely a problem for the ITOps team. Since every organization is a digital business, downtime can cost millions of dollars per hour, stall innovation, and erode customer trust. Yet most IT teams are still trapped in reactive mode, scrambling across fragmented tools and drowning in alert fatigue. That model no longer works. The future of IT is about foresight, not firefighting.

Future-Proofing Your Historian with a Time Series Database

As technology scales and data volumes accelerate, organizations face a pressing challenge: how can they modernize data infrastructure without putting daily operations at risk? Data historians, specialized databases that capture and store time-stamped machine and sensor data, have long been the foundation for reliability and compliance. However, they were not designed for the openness and advanced analytics that modern workloads demand.

BYOS with Cribl Lake: Data ownership meets flexibility

Today, more than ever, organizations face a difficult balancing act: how to keep sensitive data fully under their control while still making it accessible and usable so teams can unlock the value and insights they need. Industries such as financial services, healthcare, and government agencies often must comply with strict regulations that require data to remain in environments they directly own and manage.