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Site24x7 Releases Real User Monitoring and Mobile APM

Site24x7 announced the general availability of real user monitoring (RUM) and mobile application performance management (APM) features.

"With the new updates to our APM capabilities, Site24x7 empowers DevOps teams to understand performance issues across the development stack, from the application Web client and native mobile apps to the back-end database," said Gibu Mathew, Director of Product management, Site24x7. "This visibility reduces the time needed for development teams to fix issues and improve user experience."

Site24x7 RUM gives insights into the complete life cycle of a Web page and helps analyze how real users experience applications. Application performance is captured from various perspectives such as browser, platform, country and ISP.

When integrated with APM Insight - the application performance monitoring tool for Java, .NET and Ruby on Rails Web transactions - RUM helps deepen app performance analysis, all in a single console. With this integration in place, users can get visibility from the end users' experience to back-end dependencies.

To provide end users with a seamless mobile experience, developers need data on application response times and device details such as operating system, browser and device. Mobile APM gives complete visibility into native Android and iOS app behavior and helps resolve performance issues that affect end-user experience. Developers can also analyze the responsiveness of mobile apps by monitoring individual transactions by response time and throughput.

With these integrated capabilities, Site24x7's application performance monitoring and troubleshooting capabilities now cover the full data path of both desktop browsers and native mobile apps.

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Site24x7 Releases Real User Monitoring and Mobile APM

Site24x7 announced the general availability of real user monitoring (RUM) and mobile application performance management (APM) features.

"With the new updates to our APM capabilities, Site24x7 empowers DevOps teams to understand performance issues across the development stack, from the application Web client and native mobile apps to the back-end database," said Gibu Mathew, Director of Product management, Site24x7. "This visibility reduces the time needed for development teams to fix issues and improve user experience."

Site24x7 RUM gives insights into the complete life cycle of a Web page and helps analyze how real users experience applications. Application performance is captured from various perspectives such as browser, platform, country and ISP.

When integrated with APM Insight - the application performance monitoring tool for Java, .NET and Ruby on Rails Web transactions - RUM helps deepen app performance analysis, all in a single console. With this integration in place, users can get visibility from the end users' experience to back-end dependencies.

To provide end users with a seamless mobile experience, developers need data on application response times and device details such as operating system, browser and device. Mobile APM gives complete visibility into native Android and iOS app behavior and helps resolve performance issues that affect end-user experience. Developers can also analyze the responsiveness of mobile apps by monitoring individual transactions by response time and throughput.

With these integrated capabilities, Site24x7's application performance monitoring and troubleshooting capabilities now cover the full data path of both desktop browsers and native mobile apps.

The Latest

I've spent a lot of time in the channel, and one thing I keep coming back to is this: a partner program is only as good as what it looks like in the field. Many programs look great on paper, but when a partner is in front of a customer navigating a complex hybrid environment or trying to make the case for AI-powered observability, the gap between what a vendor promises and what it actually delivers becomes very clear, very fast ...

Enterprises today operate in a real-time environment where uninterrupted access to trusted data has become a baseline expectation for users, applications and automated systems. Traditional DataOps models, built on manual effort and human triage, cannot keep pace with this always active demand. AI agents are emerging as the operational backbone, ensuring consistent data availability, reinforcing trustworthiness and enabling a level of scale that manual processes cannot achieve ...

For decades, trust in the digital workplace rested on familiar signals. We trusted faces on video calls, voices on the phone, and emails that appeared to come from people we knew. These cues felt human and intuitive. They anchored how decisions were made, approvals were granted, and access was authorized. AI-powered deepfakes have quietly broken that model ...

Cloud migration was supposed to be a one-way door. For most enterprises, it turns out it isn't. Cloud data repatriation is a real and growing trend. A new survey ... finds that 89% of organizations plan to expand their on-premises infrastructure footprint over the next two years — and 75% have already moved at least some workloads back from public cloud in the past 24 months. The findings point to a broad rethinking of where data belongs ...

Over the past few years, large language models (LLMs) have revolutionized the software industry. Given their ability to excel at multi-step reasoning, LLMs have helped enterprises streamline workflows and adapt to the unknown. However, employing such models comes with sky-high costs, latency issues, and limited flexibility. In the realm of IT operations, it is generally wiser to employ smaller, domain-specific models instead ...

For years, DevOps teams operated under a simple assumption: collect enough telemetry, and you can find and fix any problem. That assumption is breaking down. Modern enterprises now operate across microservices, hybrid cloud environments, APIs, Kubernetes, and highly automated delivery pipelines. Releases happen continuously, dependencies shift constantly, and failures spread faster than teams can diagnose them ...

New Relic surveyed IT and engineering leaders from the media and entertainment (M&E) sector to understand what's working — and where challenges persist with their observability practices. The findings reveal how M&E organizations are navigating rising platform complexity, audience expectations, and AI-driven change. Below are five takeaways that stand out ...

Let me start with something I've seen play out more times than I can count. A team hits a wall with the cloud. Costs creep up, then spike. Performance starts to feel inconsistent. Someone in finance asks a simple question like "why did this double?" and nobody has a clean answer ... Maybe this isn't the right place for everything. That realization feels like a breakthrough, like you've identified the problem. In reality, you've just identified the starting line ...

In MEAN TIME TO INSIGHT Episode 24, Shamus McGillicuddy, VP of Research, Network Infrastructure and Operations, at EMA discusses network observability tool sprawl ... 

In cloud-native systems, scaling is often as simple as moving a slider. For on-premise databases, the stakes are different. Over-provisioning hardware is expensive. Under-provisioning leads to performance bottlenecks that are difficult to fix once the equipment is in the rack ...