@priyanshudotsol Well I think that is because after reaching a certain stage in you career, people care more about how ypuncab grow their business and save money, than about technical skills, there are CTOs for that.
These tools have been historically reactive .ie, they respond after the incident takes place. Whereas modern observability emphasizes a proactive approach and long-term safety, it focuses on taking action to prevent such incidents.
For a long time, observability tools and frameworks only emitted logs, metrics, and traces. They help in understanding the internal state of the system, but failed to point out which function or block of code utilised most of the CPU resources. That is when profiles come in.
Lately, events have also been added as a fifth signal in Otel, though it has not been developed from scratch; it has been developed on top of the LogRecord data structure as a more detailed way of logging the incident in JSON format.
@mischavdburg Opinions come from experiences; if you are asking a carpenter how to bake a bread, he is not wrong, you are. So it is better to take advice from people who are in a position where you want to be.
@govardhana_mk hi @govardhana_mk i was also planning to learn Kubernetes, should i setup physical nodes at my home, for more effective learning, any tips?
@_vmlops Within core software engineering, AI engineers, DevOps/MLOps engineers will thrive, and there will be increasing demand for specialists like Cybersecurity and Kubernetes experts. Also human-centric jobs like consultants, sales, developer advocates, DevRels will gain relevance imo