In part 6 of his series, Nick goes over techniques that grant teams and orgs the capacity to treat prod as a veritable source of information.| Honeycomb
This post described two types of alerts - reactive and proactive - and how a CoPE should approach each type.| Honeycomb
It’s the goal of monitoring, logging, and observability tools to help the systems’ “stewards” make sense of signals. Learn more today.| Honeycomb
Patterns can introduce small but meaningful changes that compound over time. Learn how they help you leverage Honeycomb to its full extent.| Honeycomb
This post discusses the limitations of auto-instrumentation and how a CoPE can help teams overcome them with custom instrumentation.| Honeycomb
In part 4 of Nick Travaglini's CoPE series, Nick goes over the foundation of good observability: telemetry instrumentation.| Honeycomb
In part 3 of Nick Travaglini's CoPE series, Nick goes over how to staff your CoPE with the right people to affect change in the organization.| Honeycomb
In this post, we’ll elaborate on the 4 characteristics a CoPE should embody and why, and how to achieve that status.| Honeycomb
In this post, we’ll talk about the concept of a Center of Production Excellence and how such a group can bolster the greater organization.| Honeycomb