Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

How to Detect Network Congestion | Obkio

Network Congestion, similar to road congestion, occurs when your network cannot adequately handle the traffic flowing through it. While network congestion is usually temporary, it can cause annoying network problems that can affect performance and can be a sign of a larger issue in your network. That's why you need an end-to-end monitoring tool to help you proactively detect network congestion. Obkio Network Monitoring continuously monitors end-to-end network performance from your local network (LAN, VPN), as well as third-party networks (WAN, ISP, and Internet Peering).

Application Discovery with DX Unified Infrastructure Management

Having any form of application discovery can be of great benefit. With these capabilities, you can determine what is deployed within your infrastructure and better understand what monitoring to apply to each device. When you know which applications are running within your environment, you can group devices by their associated applications.

Getting Started with C++ and InfluxDB

While relational database management systems (RDBMS) are efficient with storing tables, columns, and primary keys in a spreadsheet architecture, they become inefficient when there’s a lot of data input received over a long period of time. Databases designed specifically to store time series data are known as time series databases (TSDB). For example, an RDBMS might look like this.

Challenges Faced While Implementing Predictive Maintenance

Implementing predictive maintenance is not an easy task. To execute it professionally, organizations need to go from several predictive maintenance challenges. What are those challenges? What are the advantages of predictive maintenance or how it will be beneficial for your organization? What is predictive maintenance anyway? You will find answers to all these questions in this blog. So, let us begin!

Jitter vs Latency - What are the Differences and Why Those Things Matter

The jitter and latency are the characteristics related to the flow in the application layer. Jitter and latency are the metrics used to assess the network's performance. The major distinction between jitter and latency is that latency is defined as a delay via the network, whereas jitter is defined as a change in the amount of latency. Increases in jitter and latency have a negative impact on network performance, therefore it's critical to monitor them regularly.

Optimize your signal with Rollbar

Learn some helpful tips on reducing noise and improving the value of your Rollbar events. In this session, we will be discussing the different ways to improve your signal in a dual manner. First, we'll review the ways to improve and modify your item grouping, and then we'll discuss how to reduce noise inside your stack traces and boost the value of your individual events by enhancing their content.

Platform Engineering teams are the developer's cloud provider

Organizations rely more than ever on their engineering teams to get in front of their customers. Quickly delivering the latest functionalities to end-users in a reliable way can make or break a company these days. This need raises the pressure on engineering to deliver a scalable platform, rollout application updates faster, and manage applications efficiently once in production.

We think Grafana Labs has built something special - and two prestigious lists agree

We have always thought of our organization as special. Our plans were never to build a traditional business, and we know we have a unique culture. But it is nice when others outside of our company recognize that Grafana Labs is something special, too. This week, we were excited to be included on two very prestigious lists: The Enterprise Tech 30 and America’s Best Startup Employers.

What Does AIOps Mean for SREs? It's Complicated.

If you’re an SRE, you might view AIOps with great excitement. By automating complex workflows and troubleshooting processes, AIOps could make your life as an SRE much easier. Alternatively, SREs may choose to view AIOps with disdain. They might think of AIOps as just a fancy buzzword that doesn’t live up to its promises, and that can become a distraction from the SRE tools that really matter. Which perspective is right?