Remove 2005 Remove Code Remove Traffic
article thumbnail

It’s time to migrate from NAM to Dynatrace

Dynatrace

All-traffic monitoring, analysis on demand—network performance management started to grow as an independent engineering discipline. Real-time network performance analysis capabilities, including SSL decryption, enabled precise reconstruction of end user application states through the analysis of network traffic.

Network 167
article thumbnail

An Unbelievable Demo

Brendan Gregg

It was 2005, and I felt like I was in the eye of a hurricane. Another difference was that there were few roles in Australia for engineers in 2005, unlike the US. But I _did_ understand these tools, since I had coded similar functionality for my own DTraceToolkit. You can't make this stuff up. They were useful, but.I

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

The Surprising Effectiveness of Non-Overlapping, Sensitivity-Based Performance Models

John McCalpin

The presentation discusses a family of simple performance models that I developed over the last 20 years — originally in support of processor and system design at SGI (1996-1999), IBM (1999-2005), and AMD (2006-2008), but more recently in support of system procurements at The Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) (2009-present).

article thumbnail

Service Workers can save the environment!

Dean Hume

Electricity used by servers doubled between 2000 and 2005 (and has continued growing ever since) from 12 billion to 23 billion kilowatt hours. While this may not seem significant for websites with low traffic, as traffic to the site begins to increase, so does the amount of energy consumed. That’s around 23% of all requests!

Energy 40
article thumbnail

Service Workers can save the environment!

Dean Hume

Electricity used by servers doubled between 2000 and 2005 (and has continued growing ever since) from 12 billion to 23 billion kilowatt hours. While this may not seem significant for websites with low traffic, as traffic to the site begins to increase, so does the amount of energy consumed. That’s around 23% of all requests!

Energy 40
article thumbnail

Service Workers can save the environment!

Dean Hume

Electricity used by servers doubled between 2000 and 2005 (and has continued growing ever since) from 12 billion to 23 billion kilowatt hours. While this may not seem significant for websites with low traffic, as traffic to the site begins to increase, so does the amount of energy consumed. That’s around 23% of all requests!

Energy 40
article thumbnail

An Unbelievable Demo

Brendan Gregg

It was 2005, and I felt like I was in the eye of a hurricane. Another difference was that there were few roles in Australia for engineers in 2005, unlike the US. But I _did_ understand these tools, since I had coded similar functionality for my own DTraceToolkit. You can't make this stuff up. They were useful, but.I