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Elastic: Using Elastic to solve InfoSec problems

Organizations across the globe use Elastic to solve a wide array of security problems. Mature security teams use Elastic to perform threat hunting at scale, perform fast investigation to scope incidents, and leverage high-volume data sources to ensure accuracy and the right amount of context to make good security decisions. See a hands-on demo with real-world context to learn how Elastic has enabled security teams to: Matteo Rebeschini

Elastic: Understanding ingest pipeline with the Elastic Stack

Elasticsearch is a powerful search and analytics engine, but it's only as good as the data you put into it. In this webinar we'll show how data can be transformed before being stored inside Elasticsearch. We'll start with an overview of the various data ingest capabilities offered by the Elastic Stack. Then, you'll learn about architectural best practices for building scalable and highly available ingestion pipelines.

IT Spring Cleaning: Making the best of the current situation

Spring is just around the corner. And since we're at home a lot right now due to the coronavirus pandemic, it's all the more worthwhile to take some time for spring cleaning. But it's not just in our own four walls that the winter grumpiness should disappear; the IT landscape is also in need of a digital spring cleaning.

Runbooks: What They Are and Why You Need One Yesterday

Let’s talk about The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past, and how it relates to DevOps. The game tasks our hero with finding three pendants, which unlock a Master Sword he can use to travel to an alternate realm and ultimately take down the bad guy. The US version of this SNES masterpiece came packaged with a fairly detailed instruction manual that contained an optional guide at the end to help locate the three pendants.

HAProxy Enterprise 2.3 and HAProxy 2.4 Support the Financial Information eXchange Protocol (FIX)

A floor of commotion bustling with people holding phones and shouting out purchase and sell orders, some using hand signals to communicate over the noise. This was a common scene on Wall Street in the 1980s. Nowadays, transactions happen at the push of a button with traders sitting directly in front of a computer. In fact, the computer has made it possible to automate the buying and selling of securities, leading to an era of high-frequency, algorithmic trading.