New Relic is hosting Data Nerd Days on November 3, the second installment of our user conference where observability experts show you how to monitor every part of your application stack. Tickets are free and you can register right here.
Hereโs some of the talks Iโm most excited about:
Upgrade your k8s observability with Pixie (for beginners)
By Brad Schmitt and Drew Decker
For those new to observing their Kubernetes clusters, Pixie can seem like magic: giving you a breakdown of individual code execution without even installing a monitoring agent. You'll deploy New Relic's Pixie integration, analyze Service, DNS, and Network flow graphs to understand intra-cluster communication and latency, and traverse Flamegraphs to understand where code is running slowly.
Uncover security anomalies with Lacework
By Adam Larson
With security on everyoneโs mind this year, monitoring is a key part of the solution. Lacework is a cloud security platform that delivers automated security and compliance across multi-cloud environments, workloads, containers, and Kubernetes. Learn how you can significantly reduce alert noise and get to the security events that matter with Lacework.
Better customer experience with real user monitoring
By Phil Weber
Real User Monitoring and Synthetics can let you know you have a problem on your front end before a single user notices. Learn how to use New Relic's Real User Monitoring capabilities to ensure your front-end experiences are always working. In this hands-on session you'll learn how to collect custom data from your application.
To read more about all the sessions, visit our Data Nerd Days 2.0 sessions page.
Join us on November 3
Data Nerd Days is completely free to attend, and offers New Relic users a chance to become a bona fide data nerdโข. Registration is easy and open now. The first five hundred people who register will be entered into a drawing for a Nintendo Switch. See you there!
Canโt join us on November 3? Weโll be hosting two more Data Nerd Days 2.0 on November 11 for Asian-Pacific time zones and December 1 for European, Middle Eastern, and African time zones.
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