KloudMate is a monitoring and observability platform for engineering teams to reduce mean time to detect and repair (MTTD & MTTR), improve application performance and enhance user experience. The platform is spellworking for Developers, Site Reliability Engineers (SREs) and DevOps teams, who build, deploy & manage applications on microservices based architectures and distributed systems.
With its OpenTelemetry integration, KloudMate makes it effortless integrate with your software landscape, extending observability across diverse layers. This also enables interoperability, extensibility, vendor-neutralism and cost-efficiency.
Create dashboards, analyze logs, trace requests, monitor errors, setup alarms and get insightful metrics. All in a generous, forever free plan.
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Most monitoring platforms require code change at user end, instrumentation and agent installations, to integrate. KloudMate is non-intrusive and can be set up in minutes.
Most observability solutions in the market are extortionate, which often come with intricate pricing structures that become super expensive at scale. KloudMate keeps pricing simple, only based on the amount of logs ingested.
KloudMate's answer
KloudMate offers a non-intrusive, agent-less integration with AWS, that can be setup within minutes.
KloudMate's answer
AWS, Serverless, Lambda, RDS, CloudWatch, Kinesis, SQS, SES, CloudFront, S3, Amplify, API Gateway, Kafka
KloudMate's answer
Engineering teams building, deploying and managing distributed applications on multi-cloud, microservices based environments. Developers, DevOps teams, Site Reliability Engineers.
Based on our record, Home-Assistant.io seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 66 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
HA is Home Assistant. You should check it out. Mushroom is an add on to HA’s interface that adds sone different style “cards” than what it comes with. Source: 10 months ago
Yes, there's Home Assistant that can work completely off-line. You can find multitude tutorials on youtube on how to set it up, even using cheap solutions like Raspberry PI. Source: 11 months ago
I'm going to suggest- you ever heard of Home Assistant? It's a really useful home automation tool you could integrate with weather and clock on a dashboard. As well, you could use it to control smart devices. Source: 12 months ago
As for the "what is playing" detection on my google minis. This is done with "https://home-assistant.io/". Source: about 1 year ago
The method that seems to work most reliability with all devices and all ecosystems is a Zigbee2MQTT software hub running on a computer alongside Home Assistant. The Z2M project has a list of compatible USB dongles which are typically around $20-30 (The Sonoff being a good one) but you still need a server (i.e. a small computer like a thin client or raspberry pi) and install and configure the software, so this... Source: about 1 year ago
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