VOOZH about

URL: https://thenewstack.io/observability/

⇱ Observability Overview, News and Trends | The New Stack


TNS
SUBSCRIBE
Join our community of software engineering leaders and aspirational developers. Always stay in-the-know by getting the most important news and exclusive content delivered fresh to your inbox to learn more about at-scale software development.
REQUIRED
It seems that you've previously unsubscribed from our newsletter in the past. Click the button below to open the re-subscribe form in a new tab. When you're done, simply close that tab and continue with this form to complete your subscription.
The New Stack does not sell your information or share it with unaffiliated third parties. By continuing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Welcome and thank you for joining The New Stack community!
Please answer a few simple questions to help us deliver the news and resources you are interested in.
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
Great to meet you!
Tell us a bit about your job so we can cover the topics you find most relevant.
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
Welcome!

We’re so glad you’re here. You can expect all the best TNS content to arrive Monday through Friday to keep you on top of the news and at the top of your game.

What’s next?

Check your inbox for a confirmation email where you can adjust your preferences and even join additional groups.

Follow TNS on your favorite social media networks.

Become a TNS follower on LinkedIn.

Check out the latest featured and trending stories while you wait for your first TNS newsletter.

PREV
1 of 2
NEXT
VOXPOP
As a JavaScript developer, what non-React tools do you use most often?
Angular
0%
Astro
0%
Svelte
0%
Vue.js
0%
Other
0%
I only use React
0%
I don't use JavaScript
0%
Thanks for your opinion! Subscribe below to get the final results, published exclusively in our TNS Update newsletter:
NEW! Try Stackie AI
From clobbered drafts to real-time sync
Apr 14th 2026 10:00am, by David Moore
TypeScript 6.0 RC arrives as a bridge to a faster future
Mar 14th 2026 9:00am, by Darryl K. Taft
Mastra empowers web devs to build AI agents in TypeScript
Jan 28th 2026 11:00am, by Loraine Lawson

Observability

OVERVIEW

Keeping track of metrics requires teams to know what metrics to follow. Conversely, observability helps teams determine what metrics are essential by monitoring system performance, asking pertinent questions and noting relevant information. Thus, observability identifies areas for monitoring.

Many organizations adopt cloud native technologies through microservices, containers, or serverless solutions. Tracing an event to its source with these distributed technologies became increasingly difficult.

In the past, monitoring tools could not adequately track communication pathways and interdependencies in cloud computing systems. Observability tools were introduced to improve the performance of information technology (IT) systems by watching system performance.

What Is Observability?

Observability is the process of monitoring and measuring the internal status of a system by evaluating its output. The output is comprised of logs, traces, and metrics. Observability aims to understand what happens across various environments, networks, and technologies, with the goal of resolving issues sooner rather than later.

The Difference Between Observability and Monitoring

Many DevOps teams refer to monitoring and observability interchangeably. There are significant differences between these concepts. Monitoring allows you to watch the state of your system based on predetermined metrics and logs. Observability is derived from control theory and understands the status of your internal systems by the outputs.

Monitoring requires teams to know what metrics to follow and helps keep track of them. On the other hand, observability tells teams what metrics are essential by watching overall system performance, asking relevant questions, and noting important information. In other words, observability identifies areas that need to be monitored.

Benefits of Data Observability

Observability gives development teams real-time visibility into their distributed system, allowing them to optimize the debugging process when there’s an error in the code. That is achieved by tracking the system and providing relevant data to make decisions swiftly.

Monitoring and Observability — What’s the Difference and Why Does It Matter? Let’s Find Out.

Asides from identifying valuable metrics, here are some other functions of observability:

Better alerting. Observability platforms allow developers to identify and solve problems faster by providing insights that show what changes have occurred in the system and the issues caused by those changes. This makes debugging and troubleshooting easy for teams.

Consistent workflow. With observability, development teams can see the entire journey of each request along with contextual data from traces. This capability optimizes performance and the debugging process.

Time-saving. Effective observability software helps reduce the time spent figuring out where an issue is from, what part of the deployment process the error is in or what third-party application led to the problem. Observability saves time by readily providing necessary data.

Accelerated developer velocity. Observability performs some functions of monitoring tools and makes troubleshooting swift and effective by removing developers’ uneasy areas. This feature gives development teams time to develop innovative ideas and carry out forward-facing activities.

What To Consider When Choosing Observability Tools

There are many observability tools available in the market. The tools best suited for your organization’s needs are vital for success. Depending on your systems, here are some factors to look out for when deciding on an observability tool:

Integration with modern tools. An adequate observability tool should not only work with your current stack but also have a proven history of updates that make it compatible with new platforms.

Ease of use. Your observability architecture should be easy to learn, understand, and use. Difficult to understand tools do not get added to workflows, defeating the architecture’s purpose.

Provision of real-time data. Good observability platforms should provide information in your distributed systems via queries, dashboards, and reports so that teams can take the necessary action in time.

Adoption of machine learning. Observability software should adopt a machine learning model and automate processes and data curation. This enables detection and makes response to anomalies fast.

Accordance with business value. All technology used by your organization should align with your business purpose. Observability tools should identify and evaluate data — such as system stability and deployment speed — that improve your business.

Difference Between Observability and Visibility

Although observability and visibility have many similarities, they are two different concepts in development and operations:

Visibility is the ability to monitor every stage in the development process and align it with the needs of stakeholders. In an attempt to undergo security modernization, organizations channeled multiple resources into achieving visibility. API-driven architectures enabled the aggregation of multiple logs, giving companies a clear view of systems. Visibility birthed the first generation of analytics.

Observability expands on the goals of monitoring software and provides organizations with a view of their systems, and enables correlation and inspection of data to provide insights that align with business objectives. Observability tracks systems to determine essential attributes that should be monitored.

Three Pillars of Observability

Three primary data classes are used in observability, often referred to as the pillars of observability. These three pillars are logs, traces, and metrics.

Logs: Logs are text records that a system makes of events while codes are run. A log often includes a timestamp that reflects the event’s time and a payload of details about the event itself. A log’s format could be plain, structured, or binary. Although plain text logs are the most common, structured logs that include easily queried metadata are gaining prominence.

Log files provide in-depth system details and are often the first place you look when you detect a fault. By reviewing logs, teams can easily troubleshoot codes and discover why an error occurred.

Metrics: Metrics are numerical representations of data measured over time. They usually include name, timestamp, KPIs, and labels. Metrics are useful in determining a service’s overall behavior as they are structured by default. This means that the data derived from metrics can easily be optimized and stored for longer periods.

Many teams prefer metrics because one can match them across other system components and get a clear picture of performance and system behavior.

Traces: A trace describes the full journey as it moves along a distributed system. As requests pass through the system, each action performed on it — referred to as a span — is filled with data concerning the action performed by the microservice.

Tracing is the observability technique that allows teams to see and understand the action lifecycle across all distributed system nodes. Traces provide context to the data from logs and metrics in observability as they allow you to profile systems.

Learn More About Observability at The New Stack

For The New Stack’s coverage of the observability space, we look at how pre-existing monitoring technologies such as New Relic and Dynatrace are optimized to support this new environment. We also examine the technologies from companies formed specifically to deal with observability and monitoring, such as Honeycomb.io and SignalFx.

Discover more about developments in observability and monitoring.

MORE
ESSENTIAL READING
What’s the Difference Between Observability and Monitoring?
Aug 7th, 2024 8:00am
BY Kumar Harsh
Observability and monitoring are complementary rather than alternatives. Monitoring is a vigilant guard while observability is a thoughtful analyst.
What Is OpenTelemetry? The Ultimate Guide
Aug 25th, 2024 6:00am
BY B. Cameron Gain
OpenTelemetry is not merely an observability platform, but also a set of best practices and standards that can be integrated into platform engineering or DevOps.
Observability: Working with Metrics, Logs and Traces
May 22nd, 2023 8:23am
BY Jessica Wachtel
The concept of observability centers around collecting data from all parts of the system to provide a unified view of the software at large.
Why Upgrade to Observability from Application Monitoring?
May 19th, 2023 11:49am
BY George Hamilton
Knowing the differences between monitoring and observability is critical as you go cloud native 
Rethinking Observability
Jan 3rd, 2024 10:00am
BY Chenxi Wang, Ph.D.
Two best practices to better align observability practices with the goal of delivering exceptional user experiences.
Introduction to Observability
Sep 27th, 2025 5:05am
BY B. Cameron Gain
Boost system reliability with observability! Learn how to monitor, trace and analyze applications for peak performance & fast issue resolution. Start mastering it now!
SHARE
TRENDING STORIES
Latest Observability Stories
Observability overload is drowning engineers
Jun 10th, 2026 1:27pm
BY Alex Wilhelm
SPONSORED
The tokenmaxxing party is over, and Revenium is mopping up
Jun 9th, 2026 6:00am
BY Chris J. Preimesberger
Vendor neutrality isn’t magic: A hard look at the OpenTelemetry ecosystem
May 29th, 2026 10:00am
BY Adriana Villela and Josh Lee
SPONSORED
Debugging the undebuggable: building observability into probabilistic AI systems
May 28th, 2026 7:00am
BY Oladimeji Sowole
SPONSORED
Taming the agentic influx: a blueprint for AI business observability
May 26th, 2026 8:00am
BY Charles Humble
SPONSORED
Who’s monitoring the agents?
May 24th, 2026 12:00pm
BY Moshe Bar
How Jaeger hit 8.6× compression on 10 million spans with ClickHouse
May 24th, 2026 11:00am
BY Mahad Zaryab
SPONSORED
After becoming cloud computing’s telemetry standard, OpenTelemetry graduates into the AI infrastructure era
May 21st, 2026 10:00am
BY Paul Sawers
FULL OBSERVABILITY ARCHIVE
TRENDING STORIES