Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

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Four ways observability can enhance IT resilience in 2025

Enterprises are yet to hit a sweet spot with their IT infrastructure monitoring. Despite investing thousands of dollars and getting a bunch of monitoring tools, it is almost always true that the customer catches the issue before the monitoring tool does. In today’s time, teams are looking at more than just monitoring tools. In fact, they want a system that can detect and resolve the issue in the same platform without any delays or intervention.

Secure IT Success with Enhanced Physical Security

The first line of defense in any robust IT infrastructure is controlling who can physically access critical hardware and data centers. Implementing security measures like biometric authentication, RFID badges, and access control systems drastically reduces the risk of unauthorized entry. This is particularly crucial for preventing insider threats and external breaches that could lead to data theft or system tampering.

Key Risks in Managing Enterprise Vulnerabilities and Assets

With the rapid adoption of cloud environments, IoT devices, and remote workforces, the attack surface of many organizations has grown exponentially. Each new system or endpoint introduces potential vulnerabilities that need to be identified, managed, and mitigated. This expanded attack surface makes it difficult to track all the moving parts, leaving organizations vulnerable to breaches.

Navigating Modern Network Security Challenges with Managed Firewalls

One significant challenge organizations encounter is the management and maintenance of network security infrastructure. Many businesses do not have the in-house expertise or resources required to operate and manage complex firewall systems effectively. Deploying, configuring, and continually updating these systems to protect against the latest threats demands a level of technical proficiency and time investment that can strain internal IT teams.

The Growing Trend of K-12 Schools Adopting Managed Services

One of the primary advantages of adopting managed services is cost efficiency. By outsourcing IT functions, K-12 schools can reduce operational and capital expenditures. Managed services providers (MSPs) such as C1, help schools lower costs associated with network management, device maintenance, and security, eliminating the need for costly in-house IT staff or frequent technology upgrades.

The Risks of Not Migrating to a Cloud-Based Unified Communications Solution

On-premises communication systems often require managing separate platforms for phone, email, video conferencing, and instant messaging. This fragmentation creates operational inefficiencies that slow down workflows. Employees waste time switching between tools, leading to delays in communication and collaboration. The risk of staying with outdated systems is that your team will continue to operate with these silos, ultimately reducing productivity and making it harder to compete in fast-paced markets.

Shaping the Next Generation of AI-Powered Observability

Observability is crucial for maintaining complex systems’ health and performance. In its traditional form, observability involves monitoring key metrics, logging events, and tracing requests to ensure that applications and infrastructure run smoothly. The emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI) promises to revolutionize the way organizations approach observability.

End-to-end tracking of APIM and Azure Functions

In this video, Michael Stephenson, Turbo360's Product owner, demonstrates how to design and implement a seamless end-to-end tracking system for API management and Azure Functions, providing real-time visibility into business processes. Discover how to create a transaction, add stages, map fields, and create a query to retrieve data from App Insights. Also, learn how to create a simplified view of an end-to-end process for users, allowing them to see what's happening behind the scenes.

Downtime happens, fix it faster - Uptime monitoring now in open beta

That moment when everything’s running smoothly—users engaged, conversions flowing—until your site takes a break, and you find out from a tweet. We’ve all been there, scrambling to fix an issue that’s been broken for who knows how long while social media lights up. A few minutes of downtime, and now you’re not just fixing the issue—you’re dealing with frustrated users and a reputation hit.