Judiciously: With good judgement. Logging is one of the simplest things a developer can do, and one of the easiest things to get wrong. A single misplaced log line can be harmless, but a pattern of careless logging turns into noise, confusion, and even security risk. The challenge isn’t teaching engineers how to log, it’s helping them understand why they’re logging in the first place. Here I intended to draw that distinction clearly: choosing logs that illuminate behaviour, support debugging, and reveal failures, while avoiding the chatter, duplication, and reassurance‑driven messages that bury the real signals. Finding the Line Between Useful and Noisy Teams often fall into the trap of believing that if they simply “log enough,” the rest of observability will take care of itself. It’s an appealing idea: produce a steady stream of detail, let dashboards and alerts sift through it, and assume that somewhere in the noise the truth will reveal itself. But this mindset skips th...
I know what you’re thinking. Didn’t I do this not long ago? It’s true, I did . Less than 18 months ago in fact. And if Winterfylleth releases another album and does an album launch in the next 18 months I’ll go and do it all again. I left work at 2pm, got the train to London, the Underground to Cambden and spent all of five minutes with the band. I had the latest album signed - which I have twice now, on CD and on vinyl which I collected from Raven Records this evening - my ARD (mark Deeks' band) CDs and record signed, and all my Necronautical (Rust Ob Sun's band) CDs signed. They all did the Metal pose, I see them do on social media, with me. They were all very accommodating, which made my week and is why I go! Mark Deeks was there this time, and it was great to meet him in person after much messaging on social media. It was good to meet Rust Ob Sun for the first time too! His Facebook posts are great. In a flash it was over and I was heading back to Norwich, via a few ho...