The latest News and Information on Incident Management, On-Call, Incident Response and related technologies.
In the early days of Amazon, Jeff Bezos set a rule: teams shouldn’t be larger than what two pizzas can feed, no matter how large a company gets. Setting this rule of small teams meant individuals spent less time providing status updates to each other and more time actually getting stuff done. It also allowed team members more time to focus on continuous improvement. PagerDuty, like Amazon, has a strong culture of continuous improvement.
What better way to start off the new year than reflecting on the past 12 months and conducting a retrospective of your systems, processes, and culture at your organization? For instance, what did your overall incident response look like in 2019? Was it a smooth and streamlined process or did chaos reign during incident conference calls? But when burning sage and holding magic crystals don’t refresh your office vibes or your incident response process, PagerDuty University has got you covered.
In this article I will highlight the 6 key docker commands I use on a daily basis while using Docker in the real world. By no means is this an extensive list of commands, I kept it short on purpose so you could use it as a quick reference guide. I’ve also omitted the topic of building images and the commands that are associated with that.
OnPage welcomes the new year with open arms. Though the team is excited for the new decade, we’d like to look back at our organizational growth and success in 2019. The previous year consisted of several Gartner mentions and the release of innovative, new OnPage capabilities. This post discusses and provides detail into these notable accomplishments.
According to a study from the University of Maryland, a hacking attack occurs every 39 seconds. During a quick coffee break, your systems could be attacked up to a dozen times. Depending on how your alerts are set up, you might miss a dozen or more notifications. Missed or delayed alerts, and the resulting slow responses, provide attackers with more time. Every minute provides attackers another opportunity to damage your systems or steal your data.
New Year’s Eve marks the transition into a new decade, beginning with personal resolutions and expectations for 2020. Much is the same in the IT industry, as support teams expect to adopt trending technologies to reduce their mean time to repair (MTTR) and improve incident resolution. This post will provide an in-depth look into five trends, discussing how growing technologies streamline IT workflows in the new year.