17 Burst results for "Splunk"

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:51 min | 4 months ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"State's board of public works in the first item he took up was a request from prince George's county executive Angela also Brooks to start issuing $400 million in bonds that will fund construction of a series of projects, including a makeover of the land here at FedEx field. We want to provide greater access to amenities that prince Georgians have awaited for decades. Also, Brooks didn't have to speak long in the work will begin with or without a football team playing in the stadium here, the governor calling it a great win for our state and bar regions. At FedEx field, John dome in WTO, he news. Still ahead here on WTO. The backstory of one of the weirdest thefts ever. It's a life sized gorilla. I'm Nick Allen Ellie. 7 O 7. Today's innovation in government report highlights the government's IT modernization opportunities. Bill Rowan, the vice president of public sector at Splunk, says even with all the progress over the last few years, agencies have a unique opportunity to change their approaches to security and services even more. As we start to see modern applications now come up online, where we can start to put some of these security parameters in the applications as microservices as they're built. How does that redefine the way we actually manage some of these environments? Can we build some of the automation, some of the observability of what's going on in the environment? Can we actually build those into services that are part of modern applications? That has the ability to help redefine the way we actually operationalize security across the board. Let's Splunk Kara soft and their reseller partners help you imagine what your agency is capable of. Listen to the full program at federal news network dot com, keyword, innovation in government. It's 7 O 8. Michael and sons heeding tune up for only $69. Traffic

Brooks FedEx John dome WTO Nick Allen Ellie Bill Rowan prince George Angela Splunk football government Michael
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:18 min | 5 months ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"Just don't know, but what you do know is that the roads are very slippery from The Rain right now, and you're just looking at that temperature. It's been amazing. 32° stuck there all morning long so far. All right, is everybody using a little caution driving neck or are they still tailgating you? Well, you know what? If you're on the highway, the odds are you're going to get those tailgaters. And there was a moment earlier when the sun was not out yet, someone was right behind me flashing their brights. I'm going it's 32°. I'm trying to avoid the ice. Come on. So you do get that all the time for sure, but you know, there are signs, electronic signs overhead that tell you to slow down due to possible ice. It is good to keep that caution in mind this morning because of the temperature because of all that rain on the roadway. And because of those crazy drivers Nick, thank you so much. Coming up here on WTO. Do you remember the January debacle on I 95? We will talk with one U.S. senator who was stuck at it. It's 8 O 7. Today's innovation and government report highlights the government's IT modernization opportunities. Bill Rowan, the vice president of public sector at Splunk, says agencies can no longer rely on the old ways of understanding the health and security of their networks. Today, because of that transformation, we now have to gather even more data and the time to analyze that data has gotten even more compressed. We need close to real time. The other part of it is, as innovation continues, how do we take in that new innovation? How do we take in that data and now start to compare and contrast it to the rest of the environment? Those type of activities is what's leading us to have a much better perspective on where the threat actors are or for that matter, where we are just making mistakes in the way we operationalize these environments. And their reseller partners help you imagine what your agencies capable of. Learn more at karosa dot com slash innovation. It's 8 O 8. Michael and sons peting tune up for only $69. Traffic and weather on the 8s, back to Jack now in the traffic center. With the yuck and the mass and the wet just take it easy if you have to be out there two 70s looking good at a Frederick so far,

Bill Rowan Splunk WTO Nick U.S. government Michael Jack
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:55 min | 5 months ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"Learn how Splunk and support your missions by visiting Splunk dot com slash public sector, 1128. Time again for traffic and weather on the 8s, here's Carlos. Thanks, Michelle. So watching the delays on the outer loop of the beltway and the interlude for that matter if you're headed across the Wilson bridge. It is a little crowded there. They did have traffic stopped for just about 20 minutes or so, not to worry, they're not planning on doing that any longer tonight, just gotta wait through the delays leading up to the Wilson bridge right now. All lanes are available to you, by the way, nothing's blocked, as you head across. However, we did hear reports of an accident scene on the ramp from the inner loop of the beltway onto two 95, sounds like it's on the shoulder. So just be extra careful for them there. In Virginia, the westbound side of 66 has the work zone near the fairfax county park waits on the right side, but then as you continue westbound after the manassas rest area headed toward sudley road, you got some crash activity, sounds like a multi vehicle crash there, mostly blocking the left side of the roadway. Also sounds like it was developing not vehicles at the right side of the express lanes are actually blocked, so be careful there as well. Got plenty of delays building, so you should have plenty of time to move over. I 95 looks great from the Fredericksburg area to the Springfield interchange. Three 95 looks good as well for now. No issues to report right now in Maryland other than a few work crews here and there if you're headed in the district though Connecticut Connecticut avenue right by devonshire place still got the right side blocked with a crash scene canal road. It looks like they're in the process of clearing up the accident scene we were dealing with, but it seems the northbound side is still closed right at chain bridge follow police direction through the area. Carlos Ramirez WTO traffic. Your storm team four forecast tonight freezing rain developing, roads becoming slippery before the morning commute Lowe's near 30 tomorrow freezing rain changing to all rain, fog in the nearby hills, highs upper 30s to mid 30s, north and west, Thursday night, rain tapering to drizzle then ending lows upper 30s

Wilson bridge fairfax county park Carlos Michelle manassas Virginia Fredericksburg Springfield Carlos Ramirez Maryland Lowe
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:49 min | 7 months ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"Standards, including fed rap moderate and il 5. Learn how Splunk and support your missions by visiting Splunk dot com slash public sector It's Tuesday morning the election Tuesday midterms. November 8th. Welcome to WTO P at three 28. I think it was on the 8th and when it breaks first as always over to rich on her in the doublet traffics and all right traveling 66 eastbound between the two centerville interchanges works on blocks of single right lane then as you approach and pass the fairfax county park rated toward route 50, you have been getting by the work zone single file to left, but they may have stopped traffic on that works and can't get a good visual, but it does appear that traffic may be stopped. So again, you should be getting by single file left once you start moving again. Keep in mind the exits to the fairfax county Parkway both north and south are closed as far the work sound you're diverted further east up to route 50 beyond that there are working between one 23 and not least street single left language you buy there. The on ramp from one 23 to go east on 66 as well as the exit ramp to go to nutly street exit 62, where both blocked as part of the work sounds, eastbound 66, the ramps to both the outer loop and the inner loop have been blocked by the overnight work, posted detour is gonna take you up to route 7 to work your way back, the left exit, which takes you to the inner and ate loop express lanes, should now find that open once more, still working nor found 28 between 29 and 66 in the center, stay left past the work, whether you're moving down the street across the country around the world. Interstate moving has been delivering quality moves you can trust for over 75 years, visit their website, have move interstate dot com, rich hundred WTF traffic. Well, what a difference a couple of days makes here are coming off what was the warmest start to the month of November? We can say goodbye to the warmer temperatures and hello to cooler weather moving in. Going to be a cool start to your Tuesday temperatures and rarely wind chills

fairfax county park WTO fairfax county
"splunk" Discussed on CNBC's Fast Money

CNBC's Fast Money

03:12 min | 7 months ago

"splunk" Discussed on CNBC's Fast Money

"Starboard founder Jeff Smith telling CBC's David Faber this morning, he believes Salesforce is cheap right now, and then he wants to be a long-term investor in the name. Starboard also revealed a new stake in Splunk betting that the software company could be a takeover target as well. Splunk shares popping about 3% in today's session, Tim Seymour, Salesforce. I'm a little surprised. Starboard is a big company. Salesforce is a very big company to be trying to take a little activist stake in. Well, but part of this is just putting pressure and jostling a little bit. They don't like the business mix. They don't like the margin. They think they should be growing more than 20%. And this is an environment where this company has had enormous growth. By the way, Salesforce has also been growing through acquisition. And at some point, that becomes a little difficult. Talk to Oracle, even though successfully done. So it gets back to a place where you look at companies like this and certainly in the software space, the multiples were not things we were comfortable with 6 months ago. Certainly not a year ago. And the question is, do you want to pay them here? I think in Salesforce, you start to want to own this thing. Yeah, Nathan, you take on CRM. Yeah, I do think it's interesting. I think our viewers should know that when you see starboard, they said long term, they're not trying to shake up the management ranks. I think the co CEOs and benioff and Brett Taylor are considered two of the best in tech. It really is getting them to think about how differently other than acquisition to kind of grow that business. And again, they're going to take a long-term approach to this. I just say this, it feels like and I got to tell you, up four and a half percent on that news, down 50% on the year was not particularly impressive, that Splunk, up 3%, not impressive. So to me, I look at CRMs estimates for next year, fiscal 2024 expected EPS growth of 20% on 15% sales growth and I say, you know what? There's probably another downgrade to that guy. I think you're having an opportunity to buy this thing lower in my opinion. Enjoy the stock is $50 under its 50 day moving average. To Dan's point. I mean, the weakness even relative to the macro market in 9 months has been overwhelming. Yeah, I mean, if you look at this business writ large, it barely barely occupies the space it's in. It's you should think looking at it if I described it to you that this would be producing incredible levels of profitability and it's pretty mediocre and so then it becomes a question of how is this business allocating its capital because it's really not meeting its potential. It's worse than I was in high school, honestly. No one is underperformed like that. And I think long term, you have to be wondering if this is just a business that's going to grow through acquisition, why should I own that? I'm perfectly competent diversifying my portfolio. I don't need a company to do that. Making those synergies actually work is critical. The one liners out of Julie Beale with a straight face that tremendous. I mean, tremendous effort right there. You didn't give any salute. I just did. I just literally, if you're driving home, you're on the radio, you can't see me. Genius, thank you. I was just literally given a salute. Julie, I like it. Leakage. Coming up with the earnings

Salesforce Starboard David Faber Tim Seymour Jeff Smith co CEOs Brett Taylor Splunk CBC benioff Oracle CRMs Nathan
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:10 min | 8 months ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"Splunk and support your missions by visiting Splunk dot com slash public sector. Good morning, it's 8 O 8. Traffic and weather on the 8s and its back over to Jack now in the traffic center. We had had an issue in the district down in southeast, northbound, south capital street near Martin Luther King Jr. avenue, the earlier wreck has now cleared. We've got some slowing on I two 95 northbound, up near laboratory road, then exiting to go in on the 11th street bridge, D.C. two 95 will slow after eastern avenue just beyond east capital street. We're a little slower now northbound in the third street tunnel headed up toward the light of New York avenue and heavy traffic only northeastern and northwest going in battle, New York avenue so far this morning so good. Bellway, Maryland, south of town, a little heavy inner loop, two ten toward the Wilson bridge, slower, topside outer loop from 95 over to Georgia avenue. We've got a delay again on two 70 mainline southbound toward Georgetown road riding toward three 55 and a delay building now near democracy boulevard in the southbound spur, getting onto the outer loop. Two 70 pretty much cleared out south from Frederick, you may find a brake light or two passing one O 9, but nothing reported in your way. Third wreck of the morning out of the roadway now delays yeast, Middletown east on 70 toward Frederick, the crash after route 40 moved over onto the right shoulder. Now you will find in Virginia looking a little bit better now in 66 going eastbound. We were just heavy leaving 28 in centerville, then heavy, one 23 toward the beltway. West 66, the crash after the beltway was along the right, side, now new trouble 66 east after the Prince William Parkway, there's a new wreck along the left side of the roadway. Police investigation and lacy Woods park that's affecting George Mason drive basically between Washington boulevard and 66 follow any police direction in the area. Visit Fitz mall dot com to find a safe used car Fitzgerald has hundreds of cars, trucks and SUVs next to a new car of its way used car is best. Visit fit small dot com today. Jack Taylor TOP traffic is slow or clogged drains called Michael and son and get $100 off I trained cleaning today. Not a storm T four Mike stunner. The remnants of E and are coming our way, going to be cloudy today. It's going to turn windy. We'll see rain developing this afternoon that rain may be heavy at times by

Bellway Frederick New York D.C. Jack Prince William Parkway lacy Woods park Maryland Middletown centerville Fitz mall Virginia George Mason Jack Taylor Fitzgerald Mike stunner Michael
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:10 min | 9 months ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"Manage risk, learn how at Splunk dot com slash public sector. It's a 38. We go to marry to pomp in the WTO traffic center. All right, Luke Luke, and we're going straight toward the district in northwest. Everything's running pretty well. There are no issues on your freeway, tunnels, bridges, but in foggy bottom, a new crash rescue heading 23rd eye street near the foggy bottom metro so watch for response. New Hampshire avenue as well as 23rd until they pinned this one down. Now, beyond that, two 95, your corridor project, not causing any big issues this morning yet, we're keeping an eye on things suit and Parkway was doing okay. So we'll move to the beltway. That's our one working accidents on the Maryland side of the beltway, and the inner loop as you pass branch avenue exit 7, gear yourself two to the left, two lanes to the left to get by the crash retrieval one went into the Woods in the 5 o'clock hour. That's the breakaway point that temple hill road overpass and you're good to go crossing into Virginia on the beltway, not really seeing much of anything you're doing well just to remind her that the inner loop beltway ramp that goes to 66, that is a new ramp configuration. You're going to fly up and over to the left to go westbound, Google might not catch up yet, but WTO traffic has your back. So if you're traveling that ramp do so with caution, it's even changed the direction which exit comes first. So on guard and you're doing okay, there are no slowdowns, just cautionary tale. If you're westbound on 66, they were looking for the disabled vehicle near nutley street. Watch out along the right side should be out of travel, but you know how shoulders are tight with this work happening and eastbound 66 the ramp to westbound 50, that is close until Tuesday for reconfiguration there. With discover, you can redeem your rewards for cash in any amount at any time. Learn more discovered dot com slash cash, redeem rewards and terms apply married upon the WTF traffic. Now for your storm team four, four day forecast with Lauren ricketts. Gorgeous yesterday, gorgeous today, feeling like a typical summertime day. Temperatures are going to be in the low 90s for daytime highs today. It'll

Luke Luke WTO Maryland Virginia Google Lauren ricketts
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

03:42 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"50s on Sunday early showers giving way to some sunshine and Monday is a nice looking day partly cloudy lower 60 You just have to get through tonight and all this rocky weather It is 70 and Sterling right now in 68 and Rockville Michelle It's 7 41 as the Washington commanders continue to be investigated by Congress for accusations of widespread sexual harassment We're now also learning lawmakers are looking at accusations of financial wrongdoing under owner Dan Snyder Liz Clark with The Washington Post who helped break the story explains how this new wrinkle in the investigation came about One thing that was emphasized to me is that the committee is not actually expanding the scope In other words it's not like they started out looking at sexual harassment and then it became a fishing expedition to look for all sorts of things But in the course of looking at the sexual harassment and all the documents they've gotten from the NFL these allegations came to them about financial improprieties To warrant their attention But it's not as if it's entered a whole new theater They're looking at these set of financial allegations and where they lead Liz Clark is with The Washington Post You heard her earlier on WTO The so called people's convoy is reportedly leaving the D.C. area to head west many participants are bound for California to challenge proposed health legislation there The protests here which mainly focused on COVID restrictions began about three weeks ago They consisted of the trucks sitting in traffic on the beltway and later driving through D.C. some of the group's supporters and drivers do plan to stay at their de facto home base in Hagerstown in hopes that more truckers will show up to the speedway And who exactly are these folks You had people that kind of believe that the 2020 election was rigged You have of course Trump supporters You have QAnon supporters But then perhaps you also have some more just some average truckers that roped into this by fellow truckers Zachary patrizio is with The Daily Beast He's been reporting from Hagerstown in recent weeks Here are the full interview with him next hour at 8 ten on WTO And coming up on WTO the NFL's rich get richer the rams make a $50 million deal with Pro Bowl linebacker Bobby Wagner It's 7 43 Here's a highlight from Bill Wright The senior director for North American government affairs at Splunk on the DoD cloud exchange sponsored by Splunk In today's complex world of distributed services and microservice based applications but it's really imperative that organizations cut through the noise of their multi cloud hybrid environments so that they're able to detect and eliminate those incidences quickly Listen to the entire discussion on federal news network search DoD cloud exchange Splunk I recognized later in log management and security orchestration automation and response is helping strengthen our national cybersecurity posture by designing packages for federal agencies that address cyber incident response requirements per executive order OMB M 21 31 agencies must act quickly Splunk understands the cybersecurity challenges agencies are facing and is prepared to enhance federal cyber capabilities to help the federal government meet their mission Splunk We turn data into doing visits plunk dot com slash public sector The severe thunderstorm warnings keep popping up a new one now severe thunderstorm warning until 8 30 tonight for parts of northern Maryland that includes Carol county Hartford county and Baltimore county so in fact not only northern but northeastern Maryland a severe thunderstorm warning now in effect until 8 30 for parts of Carol harford and Baltimore counties stay with your weather alerts station for the latest 7 44 Your happiest spring starts with Lowe's and it all starts with a beautiful green line Keep it looking sharp and save $50 on the cobalt 40 Volt self propelled mower Was three 99.

Liz Clark WTO The Washington Post COVID Hagerstown Dan Snyder D.C. Zachary patrizio Rockville NFL Bobby Wagner North American government Splunk In today Michelle Congress The Daily Beast Bill Wright Washington rams
"splunk" Discussed on Software Engineering Daily

Software Engineering Daily

02:31 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on Software Engineering Daily

"But <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> I guess <Speech_Male> as <Speech_Male> recommend as I started <Speech_Male> becoming bigger, <Speech_Male> it's impossible to do <Speech_Male> both. It <Speech_Male> probably even <Speech_Male> at the service to <Speech_Male> everyone else, if you <Speech_Male> are the CEO of a company <Speech_Male> that has <Speech_Male> more than <Speech_Male> maybe ten 20 <Speech_Male> employees and trying to <Speech_Male> still be a <Speech_Male> coder because I think <Speech_Male> you're probably ignoring <Speech_Male> a lot of the other aspects <Speech_Male> that make a company successful. <Speech_Male> So I <Speech_Male> try to and <Speech_Male> over time I became better <Speech_Male> and better at actually delegating, <Speech_Male> costing others <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> completely. <Speech_Male> And focusing maybe on <Silence> the next <Silence> <Advertisement> big problem. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> As you begin <Speech_Male> to wind down, <Speech_Male> I'd like to get <Speech_Male> your <Speech_Male> perspective on <Speech_Male> the observability <Speech_Male> market as a whole, <Speech_Male> there's <Speech_Male> just kind of a <Speech_Music_Male> lot of products out <Speech_Music_Male> there after these <Speech_Music_Male> days. <Speech_Music_Male> And <Speech_Music_Male> I think <Speech_Male> staying competitive <Speech_Male> is pretty <Speech_Male> difficult. <Speech_Male> There's something to <Speech_Male> product differentiation, <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I feel <Speech_Male> like Splunk is <Speech_Male> more on the <Speech_Male> comprehensive <Speech_Male> side <Speech_Male> relative to <Speech_Male> other providers that might <Speech_Male> be a little bit <Speech_Music_Male> more specialized <Speech_Music_Male> and <Speech_Male> maybe they do <Speech_Male> one or two things <Speech_Music_Male> really, really well, <Speech_Music_Male> whereas Splunk <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> does a wide <Speech_Male> variety of things <Speech_Music_Male> quite well, but <Speech_Music_Male> may lead to, <Speech_Male> you know, <Speech_Male> maybe a difficulty <Speech_Music_Male> in <Speech_Male> just because there's so many <Speech_Male> products. So <Speech_Male> how <Speech_Music_Male> do you maintain <Speech_Male> quality <Speech_Male> of an overall <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> product <SpeakerChange> when <Silence> <Advertisement> there's so much product <Silence> <Advertisement> breath? <Silence> <Advertisement> So <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> I think <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> it's a photo assessment that <Silence> <Advertisement> we try to be very comprehensive. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Male> But that doesn't mean that <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> we still feel like we have <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> the best <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> technology when it <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> comes to log analytics, <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> metrics, <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Advertisement> and tracing. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> But <Speech_Male> our goal is need to be <Speech_Male> comprehensive because I think <Speech_Male> that's what the <Speech_Male> customers <Speech_Male> and users require, right? <Speech_Male> As I described, <Speech_Male> the one task to bring all <Speech_Male> of these together <Speech_Male> in one single <Speech_Male> system and <Speech_Male> consolidate as much <Speech_Male> as possible, right? It's <Speech_Male> much much easier to be dealing <Speech_Male> with one application <Speech_Male> than three <Speech_Male> and probably <Speech_Male> even easier to be doing with <Speech_Male> one vendor than <Speech_Male> three or four, right? <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> of course, there are many <Speech_Male> solutions out there, many <Speech_Male> of them are great solutions. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> I'm not claiming we <Speech_Male> are the only one. <Speech_Male> But we truly try <Speech_Male> to be the best when it comes <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> to enterprise <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> scale, comprehensive, <Silence> <Advertisement> observability <Speech_Male> solution. <Speech_Male> And our focus <Speech_Male> has always been from the <Speech_Male> beginning to have all of <Speech_Male> these operators as a single <Speech_Male> application <Silence> <Speech_Male> So it's not <Speech_Male> an after the fact thought, <Speech_Male> right? Maybe have the advantage <Speech_Male> that we designed observability, <Speech_Music_Male> Planck observability, <Speech_Male> from <Speech_Male> the beginning, to <Speech_Male> rely upon telemetry <Speech_Male> and to be a single <Speech_Male> application, right? So it's not <Speech_Male> an afterthought, <Speech_Male> but we brought let's say <Speech_Male> APM and infrastructure <Speech_Male> monitoring together. <Speech_Male> And that's what <Speech_Male> makes it possible and <Speech_Male> allows us to deal <Silence> with the challenge <SpeakerChange> we described. <Silence> <Speech_Male> Well, <Speech_Music_Male> spurs,

"splunk" Discussed on Software Engineering Daily

Software Engineering Daily

04:55 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on Software Engineering Daily

"How do tags play a role in designing and observability workflow? Dogs, you mean tags like essentially they are talking about might come from the data that flows into the system. Yes. So again, bags to structure, right? Ideally you have essentially key values that come along with the data that describe what the data might have come from. Let's say you might have the Kubernetes pod, where these logs or traces might have come from, right? Or have the service name. And a lot of other details. So these are very, very important information as I'm trying to slice and dice and troubleshoot an application. And that's where the analytical approach I described earlier comes into play as well, right? So you have to be able to essentially to store all that in a way that allows you later to aggregate data, dynamically, in any possible way. Meaning, let's say I have an application that is facing some issues. Oftentimes, I might want to ask, is this for all the users or just, let's say, users that come from iOS. Or users that come from let's say Canada. Or users that run on a very specific version of our client. And let's say I isolated down to a very specific subset of users. Then I might want to ask, okay, does this happen for all the types of requests or the requests that hit a database? And maybe I isolated further. And maybe I can further ask iteratively. Okay, now that I know the types of users and the types of requests that happen on all my infrastructure or my infrastructure, the transgender particular pod let's say, show me all the pods and how they behave. So obviously you understand all these kind of questions on top of each other, create an explosion of dimensionality and of course that's where data comes in, but that's how you also need to have a way to be able to handle all of that at any scale. Makes sense. It does, yes. So do you work at all on frontend monitoring? Yes. So is there a way to connect frontend traces to back end infrastructure? Correct. So the way we have built, I guess, what's called real user monitoring. And terror reporting on top of that now, for us that occur on the client side on JavaScript is that we use the same, let's say, principles, very visual way, full fidelity. So a product every transaction, and as a result, that allows us to fully connect the data to back end. Because traditional, let's say, user end user monitoring, collect the very small sample of the user interactions, had another small sample of the backend interactions, the two randomly connected the collected. So it was almost impossible to connect the two. Every time I had an end user trace, it was very unlikely I would have the backend trace as well. So anyway, in our case, because we collect all the data, both on the client and the backend, the traces are fully connected. So this allows me to say, if my user is facing a problem, it allows me very, very quickly to know if a problem comes from the front end or it's a backend issue that has propagated to the front end. And then further iterate and solvation. And it's worth noting that data collection technology have built for a JavaScript, but also now contributing to open dilemma. So it will be available for an analysis once a year. How does Splunk fit into a proactive monitoring workflow? Or how do you build a proactive monitoring workflow around Splunk rather than just having to be reactive to failures? First of all, even when it comes to let's say reactive monitoring, one of the principles we have is that we want to end our editing in real time, right? So if you have a problem, you will know as quickly as it happens. So you can react to it much more quickly. Let's say it won't take minutes from the moment problem happens until you know about it. Assuming there is an alert in place for it. Now, beyond that, we go back to what I was describing before. Because I think we have now a lot of data, a lot more than with traditionally had and generally the data is more structured and has a lot more dimensional in them. Instead of being more proactive and that's kind of where I think observability and maybe this concept of AI ops come together. We talk about AI ops for a while, but I don't think we were able to be very effective because the data was on structured enough, like the signal to noise ratio was never good enough with the data we had until maybe more recently with all of the standardization I was describing. So what we try to do is, because we have all the signal, we try to essentially as quickly as an issue happens. We try to visually and proactively tell the user what the problem might be. Of course, if you have implemented this allows or anything else, which is general purpose, then we can also help us be a lot more proactive. But the point generally is that we try to understand how the system behaves normally and identify abnormal behavior patterns that might indicate the problem, right? And kind of surface those and have the user take a look at where the problem might be right now, right? As opposed to all the data that is available.

Canada
"splunk" Discussed on Software Engineering Daily

Software Engineering Daily

05:24 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on Software Engineering Daily

"And automated analytics on top, AI ops as we call it, as well as incident response, essentially alerting and notifying the users. Or otherwise in terms of the areas that we're solving this problem is log analytics, infrastructure monitoring, APM, real user monitoring, et cetera. So this is a cohesive solution. It looks like a single application, unlike, let's say, how we dealt with all these parts of monitoring in the past. Single user interface, the data is fully connected, it all relies on OpenTelemetry. So we believe that has improved quite a bit how effective and powerful. Let's say monitoring and it can be because we bring everything in one place. It works at any scale, we have some of the largest customers in the world, some of the largest retail ecommerce name it. Using it at a very, very, very large scale. And that's our focus as a company in general. And also the other big focus we have is that analytics and AI ops, right? Now that we have all these data fully connected, not only we can, let's say, manually do more powerful troubleshooting. But it allows us to build analytics on top. Let's start connecting the dots for the user. And that's kind of the other foundation for what have built, right? So OpenTelemetry, data fully connected, and a single application, all in all place. And analytics on top enterprise scale really. And when you talk about developing a product that's comprehensive in that sense, can you explain how it differs from what was available maybe two or three years ago and what are the kind of engineering problems that you've been addressing that were not available or were not addressed in previous iterations of observability technology? Sure. First of all, I think we built the observability cloud as we call it in the way we built it, because we have been responding to the customer to users and customers, right? What we see is because of the increased complexity of these systems and how connected now they are, we don't monitor and troubleshoot infrastructure separately from applications anymore, right? And when let's say an end user faces a problem, it's oftentimes connected back to the backend application. And that might be connected to the underlying infrastructure, which is usually in the cloud. So that was the problem, the users were facing, and that's what we are responding to, right? The difference from the past is typically we used to have some system that would monitor my infrastructure, maybe how the different systems that monitor, let's say, my virtual infrastructure on top, I usually had a different system that monitored maybe my network devices. I definitely had a different APM system that only monitored my application. Oftentimes, the API provider might have given me a real user monitoring application as well, but that was also not really connected. To the way I was troubleshooting backend applications. So all of these were separate and not connected, right? So whenever a problem accurate, it was up to the user. Oftentimes, in a war room, multiple, let's say, admins of all these tools, getting together, trying to understand where the problem might be, right? And all the troubleshooting and monitoring. All the troubleshooting, all the advanced level shooting was happening in people's heads, right? Because I had to maybe some data in one system. But that had to connect the data in another system somewhere else completely manually. So that was and still is the life of most, let's say, network operating centers in the world, right? And observability is trying to change that. And I think the whole industry is moving towards the direction of described in my opinion. So when a user hooks into Splunk and they start collecting logs, metrics and traces, can you give a sense of the backend infrastructure that's storing that information, I just love to get a sense of the databases and the just the infrastructure that you use to serve that data, caching infrastructure, et cetera. So first of all, in trying to build a system ourselves, but as I said, is enterprise scale and really handled data when volume at real time is a very hard engineering problem by itself. As I mentioned, all our let's say IP when it comes to data collection is part of open telemetry and in the open-source. So a lot of the additional value will provide in how we deal with this data. So we're dealing usually with structured and unstructured data. So metrics and traces tend to be very, very structured and logs them to be more structured. So there is, in any case, there is usually a processing layer for all this data as soon as it arrives. So we're trying to with a very, very low latency to ingest the data and route it to the appropriate place, and then when it comes to monitoring, let's say, alerting, for example, it has to happen in real time, right? Our goal is to be able to alert the user within, let's say, ten seconds from the moment a data point is generated, right? So they know immediately in real time. If you have a problem. So we have built, let's say, our own streaming metrics and monitoring infrastructure that was a lot of the technologies that signal effect had built action before the acquisition that allows us to monitor all this in real time as it comes to the system. So traditional time series databases tend to store all this data, and then let it rest and coordinate the data for, let's say, alerting or dashboards. But out oftentimes means that you have to wait for.

"splunk" Discussed on Software Engineering Daily

Software Engineering Daily

07:06 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on Software Engineering Daily

"Are off, then you need to know what has happened, right? And then that's what I think tracing comes to play, because it can fully connect the dots all the way from the user to whatever backend system you might be using. So we know let's say we can isolate where the problem might be coming from, right? So in a microservices architecture, and then user might be facing problems, but that might be from an upstream service that the user doesn't talk to directly. And of course, logs give us, let's say, the most free form visibility so that once we have isolated the problem down to a particular part of our system, maybe we can go look for anything that might be off or wrong during the period of time that we're interested in. So all these work together to troubleshoot problems quite frequently. Can you give me a sense of the usage of OpenTelemetry and maybe describe why a open-source project is relevant to a generally closed source company. Yes, I guess blind originally started obviously as cloud source provider software. But we have been embracing open-source more and more as a company, right? Including, of course, open elementary. OpenTelemetry started a combination company where one of the co creators of the project. And several of the founding members of open elementary are now Planck, either via the acquisition of omniscient, or people who join the subsequently. The reason we believed OpenTelemetry project like open telemetry was important is because, as I said, with observability, what we're trying to do is bring together the data across all telemetry signals so we can have more effective monitoring and troubleshooting of applications and infrastructure. And that is impossible if you rely on proprietary protocols and data collection mechanisms, right? So I might have one way of collecting logs. I might have another way still proprietary of collecting metrics. I might have an APM agent that is totally appropriate instruments my application. And collects the data and all of these end up in some data silos, right? That are impossible to connect. By design and definition in some sense. So we found that this was very important to democratize the data collection and give the user the power of what we want to do with that data. First of all, and second give us, let's say, give the ability to tools to connect these data together. So OpenTelemetry is, of course, the merger of open sensors and open tracing. Projects that started with similar goals, but at the end of the day, open telemetry is trying to necessarily create a set of standards and an implementation on top of it. For most popular languages, so we can instrument applications, whereas the case, auto instrument applications with auto instrumentation agents, and data collection, let's say, infrastructure for transferring all that data to whatever backend is the search of the user. And the backend can be a proprietary backend. It's our service or it could be an open-source solution like Prometheus, let's say. And it's worth saying that augmented elementary today is the second most popular project in CNCF in terms of contributions, only second to Kubernetes. It should have been fully embraced by the industry and a lot of end users. When you started up telemetry at omniscient, what were the goals of the project? The goal for us was I guess we had to believe that anything that goes into the user's environment, modern cloud environment has to be open-source, otherwise the users who don't trust it, right? And secondarily, we had the goal of democratizing the data, right? In the past, especially when it came to application monitoring, all the technology and IP that we had created as an industry was all about instrumentation. So how we can intelligently collect a very small subset of the data and based on that, troubleshooting application. In our view, in modern environments, that doesn't work anymore, right? So we wanted to move all that intelligence to how we analyze the data and to the analytics we were able to provide on top of that data, right? So our belief was let's have the goal of building an open-source solution that would be very powerful. And very simple, let's say to use in terms of collecting data as much as data as possible, and then give the users the option to use whatever backend, they believed would solve their problem best. So automation that was playing subsequently, we focused a lot on building, let's say, a very powerful analytics on top of this data and we think that's where the value is, right? And we decided to contribute all our IP, let's say, an effort in making open telemetry successful. So let's say that data collection is not any more differentiation because we don't think that's where the value of the users is. Can you tell me more about how the spec for OpenTelemetry was developed and exactly what it gave to people that did not exist in the open-source telemetry ecosystem before? Because there were other open-source projects around telemetry before. Yes. So first of all, open the elementary is not a single spec, right? Because the project had fairly ambitious and first of all, deals with metrics, traces, and logs. It deals with transfer protocols of this data. It deals with, let's say, the definition of spans metrics, all of that as they are emitted and generated in the application. But the goal for the project from the beginning was to standardize how we essentially collect and transmit this data. It would never have the goal. We had the explicit explicitly we didn't want to be a back end for this data, right? We just wanted to standardize in democratize how this data is being collected. From all the applications. And I don't think there was an effort like this before. It was open tracing, of course, that tries to standardize the tracing aspect, and it was open sensors that tried to do the same for tracing and metrics, but generally speaking, we didn't feel like there was another project that was trying to standardize this. That's why we because that's why the project was created in the first place. And that's why we put our effort behind it. And this standardization is very, very important because once you define the specs, then first of all, anybody can be a little implementation. The result provides an implementation, but then the data, let's say, is fairly well described, and structured at the source. So then you can build, let's say, analytics on top, or a backend, open-source proprietary, that can actually be a lot more powerful because the data is truly structured at the source. Unlike let's say traditionally how logs look like, which were free form. And was very, very difficult to build something more than a simple, let's say, text search and full extraction on top, right? Here, let's say we have a lot of metadata, but come from the source, but help us connect all these data together. Gotcha. And was there any connection between the emergence of the OpenTelemetry project and the growth of Kubernetes? Of course, I think the correlation that for the most.

OpenTelemetry
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:30 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"Test Mike Murillo TOP news Time now on WTO T three O 7 traffic and whether an update a minute away on double DT open 19 lane Today's innovation and government report highlights the government's IT modernization opportunities Julianna Vida the group vice president and chief strategy adviser for public sector at Splunk says the log management requirement under the cyber executive order is front and center for many agencies When you start with the logs that's like the ground truth of we talk in general terms about listen to your data or go back and look at the logs and figure out where the cybersecurity event happened But that takes a lot of deep inspection And unless you have this robust data analytics platform to do it it can just be another burden If agencies want to use their workforce to manually go through logs and try to meet these requirements of the EEO but also still maintain a good cybersecurity posture that's a losing proposition So that's where we come in to talk about let's look again at your investment that you haven't Splunk and figure out how to make the best value of it Let's flunk Cara soft and their reseller partners help you imagine what your agency is capable of Learn more at Cara soft dot com slash innovation It's Tuesday morning December 14th where the time now on WTO P is three O 8 Welcome to get a $49 furnace tuna by calling 809 for 8 Mike I'm thinking about the Yates and what it breaks Good morning to rich hunter and the double to COP.

Mike Murillo Julianna Vida WTO Splunk government Yates Mike hunter
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:54 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"Agent Lisa Burton still works at the department as a firearms compliance specialist but officer Felicia Carson was fired in 2019 for alleged poor performance We all know that my performance rating was false It was inaccurate It was retaliation for me using family lead She says instead it was because of her investigation into a white officer for excessive use of force against a black man If I don't stand up for this then they're going to continue Luke lugert WTO P news WTP has reached out to D.C. police for comment D.C. police investigating vandalism in a religious garden at one of the region's largest and most famous churches the attacker wielded a hammer knocked off a statue's hands and then pummeled its face It happened in the rosary walk and garden of the basilica of the national shrine of the immaculate conception late Sunday Night On senior Walter Rossi rector of the basilica says the church community is praying for the perpetrator surveillance video of the attack on our lady of Fatima statue shows a man knocking off the statue's hands with a hammer stepping back pausing to examine the effect returning to pound the statue's face then leaving with the hands Christy king W TOP news Straight ahead money news things are looking up for Southwest Airlines and there are new D.C. restaurants at the Michelin guide says you should try It's 7 23 Here's Bill Wright the senior director for North American government affairs at Splunk on the discussion strategies for a zero trust architecture sponsored by Splunk Real trap I think is to try to throw technology at the strategy for those tools at the strategy and hope it works Instead it's probably better to embrace the plan the idea and then leverage technology iteratively And the good news is I think in many cases agencies already have many of the tools they'll need Listen to the entire discussion on federal news network search Splunk Splunk a recognized leader in log management and security orchestration automation and response is helping strengthen our.

Lisa Burton Felicia Carson Luke lugert D.C. Walter Rossi Christy king WTO North American government basilica Michelin guide Bill Wright Southwest Airlines Splunk Splunk Splunk
"splunk" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:30 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"It's a company with a market cap in excess of $25 billion in late last month You might remember piper Sandler came out saying it was a top pick heading into the fourth quarter We're talking about the infrastructure software and data platform company Splunk where Teresa Carlson serves as president and chief growth officer Her background is pretty impressive She previously led Amazon Web Services public sector business for more than a decade And in just 6 months at her new company she says her work with clients to access use and secure data more important than ever There's no literally customers that I talk to people where I came here that didn't tell me that their use of black citizen is mission critical for their business And I think it's demonstrated through the tax of customers We work with which are really the fortune 100 90 plus of the fortune 100 customers work with us But it's going really well We are amazing to the clouds very quickly and that's one of the reasons I came over here to continue to have our customers move to the cloud and take full advantage of quant cloud How much was that move to the cloud accelerated during the pandemic And again I know you've only been there for 6 months but I know that you know about what's been happening there over the last 18 months during the pandemic I know that you have 93 of the 100 fortune 100 companies using the product How much of that how much was that accelerated during the pandemic and how much more room is there to grow Well we grew our annual cloud revenue over 70% for the tenth straight quarter And so it just continues to show you the acceleration of the cloud And I will share some my previous experience that AWS has given this because I ran our public sector business and industry's groups at AWS and during COVID we saw acceleration within our customers like two years to three years of acceleration to the cloud during the pandemic because they could not get into their data centers They could not give in and take advantage of their application So many of them had to port or rebuild those applications very quickly So especially if you're talking in mission critical areas like government and healthcare financial services telco areas that really the world can not do without They have to keep going So we had to figure out how they got use of their technology when many of their employees could not go into the data centers So you saw the growth of cloud computing really moving fast and I heard so many customers say it was such a differentiator for them in their business and their mission during that time And it also accelerated the use of cloud skills And of course one of the primary things that is as a data company the customers need to be able to take advantage of news or data as a result of that customers really started banking themselves How do I make that move more rapidly You guys think too And you have such a great perspective Theresa because you were leading the Amazon Web Services public sector business for more than a decade And then you of course are now at Splunk but I am curious about data democratization Is that truly achievable And what there always be some entities or parties or countries China for example that will have access to more and better data And so there will always be some kind of imbalance and power plays or power powerful components when it comes to the data universe Well I don't know about better data but efficiency of these to that data And there's still no company that drives innovation more rapidly than U.S. companies I mean if you look at the youth and the growth of cloud tools you know AWS that kind of started from scratch They are data They are web services from day one when nobody really even knew what cloud was And then you have Google you have Microsoft And you have this explosion of startups as a result of cloud computing And the company's in the U.S. and around the world that are developing as a result of cloud computing the access and lead that they have with data is quite amazing But I would say the most important is the ability to take advantage and use your data And one of the big key trends that's happening is open-source data that's out there can be utilized in massive ways to actually understand a problem set And you saw this as an example happening during COVID where you saw crowdsourcing going on So people could solve the problems faster or what was going on and have deeper understanding Right In terms of the data elements itself I would just say if you look at all the company like talent to your confluent and others have gone public you're seeing companies that are truly data driven and they have slices of the way they use their data and tag it that allows these companies to really do things that they never thought of doing Now I can throw their data in somewhere and it gets organized I don't have to put it in all these tables That's Teresa Carlson president and chief growth officer at the publicly traded software maker and data company Splunk You're listening to Bloomberg businessweek coming up next We pick up on our conversation from last week with the founder chairman and CEO of Dell Technologies None other than Michael Dell including his thoughts on the next big technological breakthrough and facing down Carl icahn Gotta say in the book he talks about having dinner at Carl icahn's house and misses icon cooked for them It's a great read And that's another addition of Bloomberg businessweek talks.

Teresa Carlson piper Sandler Splunk Amazon AWS Theresa U.S. China Microsoft Google Dell Technologies Michael Dell businessweek Carl icahn Bloomberg
"splunk" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:09 min | 1 year ago

"splunk" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"It's a company with a market cap in excess of $25 billion in late last month You might remember piper Sandler came out saying it was a top pick heading into the fourth quarter We're talking about the infrastructure software and data platform company Splunk where Teresa Carlson serves as president and chief growth officer Her background is pretty impressive She previously led Amazon Web Services public sector business for more than a decade and in just 6 months at her new company she says her work with clients to access use and secure data more important than ever There's no literally customer that I talked to before I came here that didn't tell me that their use of things that is mission critical for their business And I think it's demonstrated through the ties to customers We work with which are really the fortune 100 90 plus of the fortune 100 customers or with us But it's going really well We are moving to the cloud very quickly and that's one of the reasons I came over here to continue to have our customers move to the cloud and take full advantage of quant cloud How much was that move to the cloud accelerated during the pandemic And again I know you've only been there for 6 months but I know that you know about what's been happening there over the last 18 months during the pandemic I know that you have 93 of the 100 fortune 100 companies using the product How much of that how much was that accelerated during the pandemic and how much more room is there to grow Well we grew our annual cloud revenue over 70% for the tenth straight quarter And so it just continues to show you the acceleration of the cloud And I will kind of share some of my previous experience that AWS had given straight at this because I ran our public sector business and industries groups at AWS and during COVID we saw acceleration within our customers like two years to three years of acceleration to the cloud during the pandemic because they could not get into their data centers They could not give in and take advantage of their applications So many of them had the port or rebuild those applications very quickly So especially if you're talking in mission critical areas like government and healthcare financial services telco areas that really the world can not do without They have to keep going So we had to figure out how they got used of their technology when many of their employees could not go into the data centers So you saw the growth of cloud computing really moving fast and I heard so many customers say it was such a differentiator for them in their business and their mission during that time And it also accelerated the use of cloud skills And of course one of the primary things that black is as a data company the customers need to be able to take advantage of news or data So as a result of that customers really started saying to themselves how do I make that move more rapidly You guys think too And you have such a great perspective Theresa because you were leading the Amazon Web Services public sector business for more than a decade And then you of course are now at Splunk but I am curious about data democratization Is that truly achievable And what there always be some entities or parties or countries China for example that will have access to more and better data And so there will always be some kind of imbalance and power plays are power powerful components when it comes to the data universe Well I don't know about better data that efficiency of the use of that data And there's still no company that drives innovation more rapidly than U.S. companies I mean if you look at the youth and the growth of cloud tools you know AWS that kind of started from scratch They are data they are with services from day one when nobody really even knew what cloud was And then you have Google you have Microsoft and you have this explosion of startups as a result of cloud computing And the company's in the U.S. and around the world that are developing as a result of cloud computing the access and lead that they have with data is quite amazing But I would say the most important is the ability to take advantage and use your data And one of the big key trends that's happening is open-source data that's out there can be UIs in massive ways to actually understand a problem set And you saw this as an example happening during COVID where you saw crowds or some going on So people could solve the problems faster if what was going on and have deeper understanding Right In terms of the data elements itself I would just say if you look at all the companies like talent to your confluent and others have gone public you're seeing tempting that are truly data driven And they have slices of the way they use their data and tag it that allows these companies to really do things that they never thought of doing Now I can throw their data in somewhere and it gets organized They don't have to put it in all these tables That's Teresa Carlson president and chief growth officer at the publicly traded software maker and data company Splunk You're listening to Bloomberg business week Coming.

Teresa Carlson piper Sandler AWS Splunk Amazon Theresa U.S. China Microsoft Google Bloomberg
"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:31 min | 2 years ago

"splunk" Discussed on WTOP

"Officials has said the crash appeared to be accidental. There were no signs of mechanical failure. Okay, so you can identify some songs right away. Sometimes just by the sound of the guitar. Some phony guitars won't be making their way into the recording studio or on stage. When you hear this solo, you can picture Jimmy page on his Gibson double neck guitar that was just one of 36 counterfeit guitars seized the Dulles Airport. 36 different shipments came in one day in December from China. Gibson's fenders, Martin's and one Paul Reed Smith, guitar, Customs and Border Protection officers checked the mouth. All counterfeit the most expensive was a Gibson a stray lead guitar valued at $9000 Good cars were headed to 21 States feel Log stain. Wtl P. News money News Ahead. 6 24 blocks data to everything D to a platform drives fast, confident decisions and decisive actions through powerful real time insights to ensure mission success. Here's Julianne Evita chief technical advisor. Public sector was flunk. Really all after is not just modernization for modernization, say, because that's what we should do, but I like to talk about it. In terms of providing a sublime citizen experience, Splunk helps agencies turned data into doing learn more. Visit Splunk dot com slash public sector that.

Gibson Julianne Evita Splunk chief technical advisor Paul Reed Smith Dulles Jimmy China Martin