Flexibility Drives Enterprise Cloud Monitoring Success: How AppNeta Delivers
As cloud adoption accelerates, IT operations teams often lose granular visibility into the infrastructure and mission‑critical applications their users depend on. At AppNeta, we continuously enhance our platform to address these challenges swiftly. Below, we outline the pillars that make our IT operations monitoring tool exceptionally flexible.
What’s Needed in a Modern Monitoring Solution to Ensure Flexibility?
1. Usability: A User‑Friendly Interface that Delivers Actionable Insights
Many APM and NPM solutions promise key performance metrics, yet accessing that data and acting on it can be difficult. AppNeta’s network performance metrics include total, available, and used capacity, enabling you to verify whether your ISP is delivering on contract. Our data distinguishes whether a poor user experience stems from the application or the network, allowing rapid root‑cause analysis.
2. Integratability: Comprehensive APIs
Our data is easily consumable via a Swagger‑documented API, covering all metrics in our APM for IT Ops suite—PathView, FlowView, and AppView—so you can embed insights directly into your existing workflows.
3. Flexible Deployment: Versatile Agents
Our agents run natively on physical or virtual machines, inside private or public clouds, or on‑premises. We don’t constrain our solutions to a single industry, audience, or size; simply share your requirements, and we’ll craft a deployment package that fits perfectly.
Continued Deployment Flexibility: New Virtual Appliance Releases
Committed to platform flexibility, we recently launched a new KVM‑based virtual appliance (v35). This addition complements our existing OVA‑based v30 appliance, giving customers the breadth of choice needed to monitor user experience across cloud providers or SaaS applications.
Application and network performance is relative to your measurement perspective. Our appliances can be positioned in remote offices, measuring performance along the same delivery paths your employees use.
The v35 extends that capability by enabling deployment in locations previously inaccessible—such as cloud providers or virtualized environments within your own data center. It also simplifies rapid deployment in remote sites capable of running a KVM appliance, a critical advantage for enterprises with offices in China, India, or other regions where shipping physical hardware is costly and time‑consuming.
Which virtualization type do you use or prefer: KVM or OVA? Let us know in the comments.
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