All the latest
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Can You Trust Your Logs?
Log output is the lifeblood of operations. Whether important events go to statistics, monitoring, your dev Slack channel, or even to PagerDuty and mobile phone alerts,… Read more
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Smart Alerts for Anomaly Detection and Data Aggregations
When something is going wrong with your application, you’ll want to know about it as quickly as possible. That’s where alerting, a feature of Loggly Standard,… Read more
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#LogglyGDC: Powering-up at GDC16
We had a great time at the Game Developers Conference last week! The Loggly team had good discussions with awesome gamers interested in our newest features: Anomaly… Read more
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Confessions of a Logging Fanboy
I love podcasts. Really, I love them. I love to learn from some of the best mentors and life hackers from pretty much all over the… Read more
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tail -f Revolutions: Loggly Live Tail Enters Your Browser
Going to the Game Developers Conference next week? Stop by booth #2305 to see a demonstration. Earlier this year, Loggly introduced Live Tail, a real-time… Read more
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How to Monitor Third-Party Services Using Log Data
Web services are a fundamental part of many modern applications, from large-scale service oriented architectures that develop and maintain many internal and external services to small-scale… Read more
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Come See Us at the Game Developers Conference 2016
We are excited to get out of the office to attend the Game Developers Conference (GDC) once again. It’s just a hop, skip and a jump away… Read more
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How to Detect and Analyze DDoS Attacks Using Log Analysis
The cloud delivers many benefits to companies and users alike, but it has one clear disadvantage: its vulnerability to cyber threats. This was brought to light… Read more
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Docker Datacenter (DDC) and What It Means to DevOps and the Industry
Or: Why Cloud Providers Should Be Nervous Docker’s latest offering was announced just today. Docker Datacenter (DDC) is basically a virtual, portable datacenter designed to… Read more
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Logging Tips for Power Users: Contextual Logging
Logs are often treated as independent items. Events are generated independently of each other, and while they may share some information, their main purpose is to… Read more