#FutureStack
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meraakidesigns · 3 days ago
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𝐘𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐁𝐚𝐜𝐤𝐞𝐧𝐝 𝐈𝐬𝐧’𝐭 𝐚 𝐖𝐚𝐫𝐞𝐡𝐨𝐮𝐬𝐞 𝐀𝐧𝐲𝐦𝐨𝐫𝐞—𝐈𝐭’𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐁𝐫𝐚𝐢𝐧. Once upon a time, backends served code. Today, they serve context. Gone are the days when AI was bolted on like a plugin. Now it’s infused—woven through the very infrastructure that powers your product. 𝐖𝐞'𝐫𝐞 𝐰𝐚𝐭𝐜𝐡𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐧𝐞𝐱𝐭-𝐠𝐞𝐧 𝐭𝐞𝐚𝐦𝐬 𝐟𝐥𝐢𝐩 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐬𝐜𝐫𝐢𝐩𝐭: • Moving from monoliths to modular—so AI runs where it works best • Deploying models with FastAPI & TensorFlow to cut latency by 40%+ • Using event-driven backends to make real-time decisions feel native • Automating pipelines with MLOps—turning weeks into minutes • Building with governance-first thinking, not governance-later panic And what’s the payoff? AI that adapts. Infra that scales. Experiences that feel like magic—but run on precision. 𝐀 𝐛𝐞𝐭𝐭𝐞𝐫 𝐛𝐚𝐜𝐤𝐞𝐧𝐝 𝐝𝐨𝐞𝐬𝐧’𝐭 𝐣𝐮𝐬𝐭 𝐥𝐨𝐚𝐝 𝐟𝐚𝐬𝐭—𝐢𝐭 𝐭𝐡𝐢𝐧𝐤𝐬 𝐟𝐚𝐬𝐭. Building with AI in mind? 𝐋𝐞𝐭’𝐬 𝐭𝐚𝐥𝐤 𝐛𝐚𝐜𝐤𝐞𝐧𝐝 𝐝𝐞𝐬𝐢𝐠𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐥𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐧𝐬 𝐰𝐢𝐭𝐡 𝐲𝐨𝐮. 🔗https://meraakidesigns.com/
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ticketstubs-and-pits · 12 years ago
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Cake
@ the galleria at SF design center
the opening party for futurestack. they did not seem interested in being there
added 9/26/23
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netmarkjp · 2 years ago
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#ばばさん通信ダイジェスト : 全世界1,800万人が利用する「家族アルバム みてね」におけるNew Relic活用法 / FutureStack Tokyo 2023
賛否関わらず話題になった/なりそうなものを共有しています。
全世界1,800万人が利用する「家族アルバム みてね」におけるNew Relic活用法 / FutureStack Tokyo 2023
https://speakerdeck.com/isaoshimizu/futurestack-tokyo-2023?s=09
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releaseteam · 3 years ago
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via Twitter https://twitter.com/releaseteam
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devopsengineer · 4 years ago
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New relic devops
New relic devops New relic devops Latest it news New relic devops New Relic Extends Observability Reach and Scope By Mike Vizard on September 19, 2019 2 Comments At its FUTURESTACK 2019 event in New York today, New Relic announced it has extended the New Relic One Observability Platform to add support for its new Logs, Traces, Metrics and AI module offerings. Related Categories Application…
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americanfreighttrucking · 6 years ago
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Global Survey Reveals Key Challenges and Technologies Expected to Drive the Next Phase of Digital Transformation
Global Survey Reveals Key Challenges and Technologies Expected to Drive the Next Phase of Digital Transformation
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Findings show global organizations are making significant progress with digital transformation projects with 39 percent of global respondents saying projects are completed or close to completion and satisfaction levels at over 90 percent
LONDON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–#NewRelicOne—FUTURESTACK — New Relic, Inc.(NYSE: NEWR), the industry’s largest and most comprehensive cloud-based observability platform…
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un-enfant-immature · 6 years ago
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New Relic launches platform for developers to build custom apps
When Salesforce launched Force.com in 2007 as a place for developers to build applications on top of Salesforce, it was a pivotal moment for the concept of SaaS platforms. Since then, it’s been said that every enterprise SaaS company wants to be a platform play. Today, New Relic achieved that goal when it announced the New Relic One Observability Platform at the company’s FutureStack conference in New York City.
Company co-founder and CEO Lew Cirne explained that in order to be a platform, by definition, it is something that other people can build software on. “What we are shipping is a set of capabilities to enable our customers and partners to build their own observability applications on the very same platform that we’ve built our product,” Cirne told TechCrunch.
He sees these third-party developers building applications to enable additional innovations on top of the New Relic platform that perhaps New Relic’s engineers couldn’t because of time and resource constraints. “There are so many use cases for this data, far more than the engineers that we have at our company could ever do, but a community of people who can do this together can totally unlock the power of this data,” Cirne said.
Like many platform companies, New Relic found that as it expanded its own offering, it required a platform for its developers to access a common set of services to build these additional offerings, and as they built out this platform, it made it possible to open it up to external developers to access the same set of services as the New Relic engineering team.
“What we have is metrics, logs, events and traces coming from our customers’ digital software. So they have access to all that data in real time to build applications, measure the health of their digital business and build applications on top of that. Just as Force.com was the thing that really transformed Salesforce as a company into being a strategic vendor, we think the same thing will happen for us with what we’re offering,” he said.
As a proof point for the platform, the company is releasing a dozen open source tools built on top of the New Relic platform today in conjunction with the announcement. One example is an application to help identify where companies could be over-spending on their AWS bills. “We’re actually finding 30-40% savings opportunities for them where they’re provisioning larger servers than they need for the workload. Based on the data that we’re analyzing, we’re recommending what the right size deployment should be,” Cirne said.
The New Relic One Observability Platform and the 12 free apps will be available starting today.
New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
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dizzedcom · 7 years ago
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New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
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New Relic CEO Lew Cirne was feeling a bit nostalgic last week when he called to discuss the announcements for the company’s FutureStack conference taking place tomorrow in San Francisco. It had been 10 years since he first spoke to TechCrunch about his monitoring tool. A lot has changed in a decade including what his company is monitoring these days.
Cirne certainly recognizes that his company…
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roberttbertton · 7 years ago
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New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape - BerTTon
New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape – BerTTon
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New Relic CEO Lew Cirne was feeling a bit nostalgic last week when he called to discuss the announcements for the company’s FutureStack conference taking place tomorrow in San Francisco. It had been 10 years since he first spoke to TechCrunch about his monitoring tool. A lot has changed in a decade including what his company is monitoring these days.
Cirne certainly recognizes that his company…
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jimivaey · 7 years ago
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New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
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New Relic CEO Lew Cirne was feeling a bit nostalgic last week when he called to discuss the announcements for the company’s FutureStack conference taking place tomorrow in San Francisco. It had been 10 years since he first spoke to TechCrunch about his monitoring tool. A lot has changed in a decade including what his company is monitoring these days.
Cirne certainly recognizes that his company…
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releaseteam · 8 years ago
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via Twitter https://twitter.com/releaseteam
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deepfinds-blog · 7 years ago
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New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
New Relic CEO Lew Cirne was feeling a bit nostalgic last week when he called to discuss the announcements for the company’s FutureStack conference taking place tomorrow in San Francisco. It had been 10 years since he first spoke to TechCrunch about his monitoring tool. A lot has changed in a decade including what his company is monitoring these days.
Cirne certainly recognizes that his company…
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New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape – TechCrunch
New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape – TechCrunch
New Relic CEO Lew Cirne was once feeling a bit of nostalgic closing week when he known as to talk about the bulletins for the corporate’s FutureStack convention going down day after today in San Francisco. It have been 10 years since he first spoke to TechCrunch about his monitoring instrument. So much has modified in a decade together with what his corporate is monitoring at the moment.
Ci…
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releasesoon · 7 years ago
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New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
New Relic CEO Lew Cirne was feeling a bit nostalgic last week when he called to discuss the announcements for the company’s FutureStack conference taking place tomorrow in San Francisco. It had been 10 years since he first spoke to TechCrunch about his monitoring tool. A lot has changed in a decade including what his company is monitoring these days.
Cirne…
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fmservers · 7 years ago
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New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
New Relic CEO Lew Cirne was feeling a bit nostalgic last week when he called to discuss the announcements for the company’s FutureStack conference taking place tomorrow in San Francisco. It had been 10 years since he first spoke to TechCrunch about his monitoring tool. A lot has changed in a decade including what his company is monitoring these days.
Cirne certainly recognizes that his company has come a long way since those first days. The monitoring world is going through a seismic shift as the ways we develop apps changes. His company needs to change with it to remain relevant in today’s market.
In the early days, they monitored Ruby on Rails applications, but gone are the days of only monitoring a fixed virtual machine. Today companies are using containers and Kubernetes, and beyond that, serverless architecture. Each of these approaches brings challenges to a monitoring company like New Relic, particularly the ephemeral nature and the sheer volume associated with these newer ways of working.
‘We think those changes have actually been an opportunity for us to further differentiate and further strengthen our thesis that the New Relic way is really the most logical way to address this.” He believes that his company has always been centered on the code, as opposed to the infrastructure where it’s delivered, and that has helped it make adjustments as the delivery mechanisms have changed.
Today, the company introduced a slew of new features and capabilities designed to keep the company oriented toward the changing needs of its customer base. One of the ways they are doing that is with a new feature called Outlier Detection, which has been designed to address changes in key metrics wherever your code happens to be deployed.
Further, Incident Context lets you see exactly where the incident occurred in the code so you don’t have to go hunting and pecking to find it in the sea of data.
Outlier Detection in action. Gif: New Relic
The company also introduced developer.newrelic.com, a site that extends the base APIs to provide a central place to build on top of the New Relic platform and give customers a way to extend the platform’s functionality. Cirne said each company has its own monitoring requirements, and they want to give them ability to build for any scenario.
In addition, they announced New Relic Query Language (NRQL) data, which leverages the New Relic GraphQL API to help deliver new kinds of customized, programmed capabilities to customers that aren’t available out of the box.”What if I could program New Relic to take action when a certain thing happens. When an application has a problem, it could post a notice to the status page or restart the service. You could automate something that has been historically done manually,” he explained.
Whatever the company is doing it appears to be working It went public in 2014 with an IPO share price of $30.14 and a market cap of $1.4 billion. Today, the share price was $103.96 with a market cap of $5.8 billion (as of publishing).
Via Ron Miller https://techcrunch.com
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un-enfant-immature · 7 years ago
Text
New Relic shifts with changing monitoring landscape
New Relic CEO Lew Cirne was feeling a bit nostalgic last week when he called to discuss the announcements for the company’s FutureStack conference taking place tomorrow in San Francisco. It had been 10 years since he first spoke to TechCrunch about his monitoring tool. A lot has changed in a decade including what his company is monitoring these days.
Cirne certainly recognizes that his company has come a long way since those first days. The monitoring world is going through a seismic shift as the ways we develop apps changes. His company needs to change with it to remain relevant in today’s market.
In the early days, they monitored Ruby on Rails applications, but gone are the days of only monitoring a fixed virtual machine. Today companies are using containers and Kubernetes, and beyond that, serverless architecture. Each of these approaches brings challenges to a monitoring company like New Relic, particularly the ephemeral nature and the sheer volume associated with these newer ways of working.
‘We think those changes have actually been an opportunity for us to further differentiate and further strengthen our thesis that the New Relic way is really the most logical way to address this.” He believes that his company has always been centered on the code, as opposed to the infrastructure where it’s delivered, and that has helped it make adjustments as the delivery mechanisms have changed.
Today, the company introduced a slew of new features and capabilities designed to keep the company oriented toward the changing needs of its customer base. One of the ways they are doing that is with a new feature called Outlier Detection, which has been designed to address changes in key metrics wherever your code happens to be deployed.
Further, Incident Context lets you see exactly where the incident occurred in the code so you don’t have to go hunting and pecking to find it in the sea of data.
Outlier Detection in action. Gif: New Relic
The company also introduced developer.newrelic.com, a site that extends the base APIs to provide a central place to build on top of the New Relic platform and give customers a way to extend the platform’s functionality. Cirne said each company has its own monitoring requirements, and they want to give them ability to build for any scenario.
In addition, they announced New Relic Query Language (NRQL) data, which leverages the New Relic GraphQL API to help deliver new kinds of customized, programmed capabilities to customers that aren’t available out of the box.”What if I could program New Relic to take action when a certain thing happens. When an application has a problem, it could post a notice to the status page or restart the service. You could automate something that has been historically done manually,” he explained.
Whatever the company is doing it appears to be working It went public in 2014 with an IPO share price of $30.14 and a market cap of $1.4 billion. Today, the share price was $103.96 with a market cap of $5.8 billion (as of publishing).
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