I was intrigued by two recent IoT related survey and reports. They emphasise use cases about efficiencies and return on investments but, surprisingly, there is no mention of people-safety nor productivity. I think it is imperative to place people at the heart of the IoT universe. Today, people related use cases have been greatly understated. We will be doing a great injustice if we continue to ignore the human angle.
Migrating your applications from on-prem infrastructure to the cloud comes with a number of benefits, including increased agility, resilience, and scalability, as well as potential cost and IT overhead reductions. But it can be complex, which is why organizations moving to Azure often use Microsoft’s Cloud Adoption Framework for Azure and its strategy for successful migrations.
Gone are the days when AIOps was merely used as a buzzword to draw attention to the growing popularity of AI in IT service management. Today, factors such as the never-ending COVID 19 pandemic and the great resignation have pushed AIOps to emerge as a vital instrument for enterprises looking for ways to optimize their digital operations.
With rising shopper worries about the ecological effect and data security, all organizations should consider how unproductive assets need to be disposed of! As assets can be a danger to the environment and it can create compliance issues. Nowadays Organizations keep track of their asset and keep maintaining them but do not pay attention to asset disposal. Asset & equipment disposal needs to be done in the right way. Otherwise, it can impact your business as we have discussed below.
Keeping your systems secure is a never-ending challenge. Not only is it necessary to monitor and secure your own tech stack, but each new service a company uses creates another potential avenue for bad actors to try to exploit for their own ends.
Forget the latest tech gadgets and the newest products. One of the most talked about trends in observability right now? “SLOs have really become a buzzword, and everyone wants them,” said Grafana Labs principal software engineer Björn “Beorn” Rabenstein on a recent episode of “Grafana’s Big Tent,” our new podcast about people, community, tech, and tools around observability.
Recently microservices-based applications became very popular and with the rise of microservices, the concept of Service Mesh also became a very hot topic. Unfortunately, there are only a few articles about this concept and most of them are hard to digest.