The world of IT is constantly evolving, with new terms and technologies emerging all the time. Some of these terms last for years, while others are short-lived. However, those who work in the industry know that these terms are constantly changing, and they need to keep up with the latest developments to stay ahead
For those who in the IT industry for over decade will know, the same field of business domain will not stay static, and it will keep incorporating latest technologies and practice, and evolve into new domain where usually new terms will be coined and used accordingly to try differentiate from the original domain. This post
We already discuss about what is Application Data Management (ADM). So in this post we are going to talk over about the Application Data Management Implementation Phases. There are 3 phases in the implementation of ADM; Analysis and Planning, Implementation and Automation, last but not least review and refinement. The first phase is analysis and
APM monitors applications across multiple devices, servers, and systems, providing performance statistics and overall application health, while alerting on performance degradation and potential problems before they result in service outages. APM helps IT organizations measure and guarantee Service Level Agreements (SLAs) and assists in pinpointing application performance bottlenecks and points of failure. We going see
Cloud application performance management (CAPM) is ferent from non-cloud application performance management in its nature and deployment. Software consultant Nari Kannan explains CAPM and how to choose the right tools for deploying your solution. Cloud applications are deployed, for the most part, in private cloud instances first, and then as demand increases, public cloud instances
Another three-letter acronym I see frequently mixed in with APM is NPM which stands for Network Performance Management. At first glance they look very similar. The distinction appears very subtle with just a one letter difference, but it speaks volumes because their core technologies and approaches to monitoring application performance are fundamentally different. Application Performance
In the realm of application performance management, many business owners wonder what its true benefits are. While the potential benefits of APM are limitless, there are several real-world advantages that not only determine the success of your company, but also the success of your reputation. Increased Revenue and Sales Every business that utilizes eCommerce, either
We all know from firsthand experience that nothing irks end users more than unexpectedly slow response times. In fact, slowness is arguably a bigger problem than application downtime and unavailability. Research on ecommerce websites shows that slowdowns occur ten times more often than outages, and those cumulative slowdowns add up to twice the impact to
In a business landscape where competition is fierce, the time between development and deployment is ever more compressed, and customer retention matters most, it pays to do everything in your power to ensure that your software delivers a steady baseline of performance, 24/7. This is particularly true of web-based applications, where consistent speed and uptime
There are many software tool for handling big data to help in achieving these goals and help data scientists to process data for analyzing them. Many new languages, frameworks and data storage technologies have emerged that supports handling of big data. R : is an open-source statistical computing language that provides a wide variety of