• What’s Driving the Rising Cost of Observability?

  • Jan 30 2025
  • Length: 25 mins
  • Podcast

What’s Driving the Rising Cost of Observability?

  • Summary

  • Observability is expensive because traditional tools weren’t designed for the complexity and scale of modern cloud-native systems, explains Christine Yen, CEO of Honeycomb.io. Logging tools, while flexible, were optimized for manual, human-scale data reading. This approach struggles with the massive scale of today’s software, making logging slow and resource-intensive. Monitoring tools, with their dashboards and metrics, prioritized speed over flexibility, which doesn’t align with the dynamic nature of containerized microservices. Similarly, traditional APM tools relied on “magical” setups tailored for consistent application environments like Rails, but they falter in modern polyglot infrastructures with diverse frameworks.

    Additionally, observability costs are rising due to evolving demands from DevOps, platform engineering, and site reliability engineering (SRE). Practices like service-level objectives (SLOs) emphasize end-user experience, pushing teams to track meaningful metrics. However, outdated observability tools often hinder this, forcing teams to cut back on crucial data. Yen highlights the potential of AI and innovations like OpenTelemetry to address these challenges.

    Learn more from The New Stack about the latest trends in observability:

    Honeycomb.io’s Austin Parker: OpenTelemetry In-Depth

    Observability in 2025: OpenTelemetry and AI to Fill In Gaps

    Observability and AI: New Connections at KubeCon

    Join our community of newsletter subscribers to stay on top of the news and at the top of your game.

    Show More Show Less

What listeners say about What’s Driving the Rising Cost of Observability?

Average Customer Ratings

Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.

In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.