I have quite a few talks on the disconnect we now have between OPS and DEV. Still in 2023 most developers haven't used an observability tool and don't even know what it means. Having played with Digma quite a bit I'm very hopeful that it will help change that for the better.
I think that such tools can revolutionize debugging issues quickly and as a result improve overall system reliability.
Observability should be a shared responsibility for R&D. Without that DevOps are chasing their tail and R&D is blind.
Hello Team Digma,
Firstly, I want to extend my heartfelt congratulations and appreciation for the remarkable work you've done on Digma. The concept of a Continuous Feedback platform is revolutionary and much needed in the developer community. The features you've outlined are incredibly promising and I am particularly excited about the continuous detection of code anti-patterns and the IDE integration.
I am a .NET enthusiast and I am eagerly looking forward to experiencing Digma's capabilities in my development environment. I believe it could significantly enhance the development process and code quality in .NET projects. May I inquire if there are any plans in the pipeline to extend Digma's support to .NET? If so, do you have an estimated timeline for when this might be available?
Thank you once again for your dedication and hard work in bringing Digma to life. I am genuinely excited about the positive impact it will have on the developer community.
Warmest regards, Andy
Digma makes continuous feedback and live debugging so easy that unbelievable. Having so much information with so little (or no) effort is amazing. Having the best metrics and traceability in the local environment is also amazing.
Congrats on the launch!
looks like a very necessary tool in today's developers work environment.
Is there also support for hybrid code base? like Java+Kotlin?
Seeing issues and metrics directly in my code streamlines my workflow and cuts down on debugging time significantly. The insights are sharp, and the anti-pattern detection is spot-on.