article thumbnail

If there was ever a good time to be sure you have good governance, this is it

The Agile Manager

Since 2006, I've written multiple blog posts , a few articles and self-published an e-book on governing investments in strategic software. Engage a captive technical audit function or an external vendor with no connection whatsoever to a program of work to perform audits and peer reviews of tests, code, and team practices.

article thumbnail

What is distributed tracing and why does it matter?

Dynatrace

Distributed tracing follows an interaction by tagging it with a unique identifier, which stays with it as it interacts with microservices, containers, and infrastructure. It can also offer real-time visibility into user experience, from the top of the stack right down to the application layer and the large-scale infrastructure beneath.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

What is distributed tracing and why does it matter?

Dynatrace

Distributed tracing follows an interaction by tagging it with a unique identifier, which stays with it as it interacts with microservices, containers, and infrastructure. It can also offer real-time visibility into user experience, from the top of the stack right down to the application layer and the large-scale infrastructure beneath.

article thumbnail

Improving The Performance Of Wix Websites (Case Study)

Smashing Magazine

Implementing this change enabled us to take major steps such as updating our infrastructure along with completely rewriting our core functionality from the ground up. It was founded in 2006 and has since grown to have over 210 million users in 190 countries, and hosts over five million domains.

Website 128
article thumbnail

Doing Science On The Web

Alex Russell

This illustrates what happens when experiments inadvertently become critical infrastructure. Browsers move more slowly than sites (at the micro scale), but sites must contend with huge browser diversity and are therefore much more conservative about removing “working” code than browser engineers expected. Was that better?