Remove Hardware Remove Serverless Remove Storage Remove Webinar
article thumbnail

AWS serverless services: Exploring your options

Dynatrace

For many companies, the journey to modern cloud applications starts with serverless. While these serverless services provide strong business benefits due to their flexible on-demand usage and pricing model, they also introduce new complexities for observability. Amazon Web Services (AWS), offers a wide range of serverless solutions.

article thumbnail

What is function as a service? App development gets FaaS and furious

Dynatrace

FaaS enables developers to create and run a single function in the cloud using a serverless compute model. Cloud providers then manage physical hardware, virtual machines, and web server software management. Infrastructure as a service (IaaS) handles compute, storage, and network resources. But how does FaaS fit in?

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

Reducing PostgreSQL Costs in the Cloud

Percona

Let’s take a look at how to get the benefits you need while spending less, based on the recommendations presented by Dani Guzmán Burgos, our Percona Monitoring and Management (PMM) Tech Lead, on this webinar (now available on demand) hosted in November last year. Figure 5: Experimental PostgreSQL Vacuum Monitoring What about serverless?

Cloud 116
article thumbnail

What is a message queue? How an observability platform eases message queue monitoring

Dynatrace

Consumers store messages in a queue — usually in a buffer or on a storage medium — until they can process and delete them. Serverless platforms provision microservices as needed and shut them down immediately thereafter, allowing applications to be highly flexible, inexpensive to operate, and customizable. Watch webinar now!

article thumbnail

What is a message queue? How an observability platform eases message queue monitoring

Dynatrace

Consumers store messages in a queue — usually in a buffer or on a storage medium — until they can process and delete them. Serverless platforms provision microservices as needed and shut them down immediately thereafter, allowing applications to be highly flexible, inexpensive to operate, and customizable.