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New Relic One Digs the Diverse Data Disruption

As the IT environment, and especially as applications evolve, the way in which they need to be monitored must evolve was well. Sometimes these changes in how things need to be monitored are not evolutions, but are in fact revolutions that usher in wholesale...

What Is Observability and How to Implement It

There are many vendors of and approaches to implementing Observability. Before we go through them all, however we first need to ask, what is Observability really (what distinguishes it from monitoring), and who needs Observability? In other words, what kinds of...

Not Everything Should be a Microservice

One of the core developers of ISTIO (the Service Mesh designed to make deploying and operating microservices easier in production) has made a compelling case that ISTIO itself is an example of an application is is better off being implemented as a monolith vs. being a...

Observability Is About the Data

Observability Is About the Data

Observability should mean that we have the data – the logs, metrics, traces, flows and dependencies to understand the behavior of the application system of interest. Unfortunately there is no one source of all of this data for each application which is where things get complicated.

The Gaps in Observability

Gaps in Observability exist with applications, networks and the public clouds. Therefore true full stack Observability is currently impossible.

The Changing Physics and Economics of Monitoring

The Changing Physics and Economics of Monitoring

New Relic has just announced New Relic One and a focus upon “entity-centric observability”. The idea is that the set of things that need to be monitored is exploding at an exponential rate, requiring not just metrics from all of these things, but an understanding of how they relate to each other.

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