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You're reading from  Data Observability for Data Engineering

Product typeBook
Published inDec 2023
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781804616024
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Michele Pinto
Michele Pinto
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Michele Pinto

Michele Pinto is the Head of Engineering at Kensu. With over 15 years of experience, Michele has a great knack for understanding how data observability and data engineering are closely linked. He started his career as a software engineer and has worked since then in various roles, such as big data engineer, big data architect, head of data and until recently he was a Head of Engineering. He has a great community presence and believes in giving back to the community. He has also been a teacher for Digital Product Management Master TAG Innovation School in Milan, Italy. His collaboration on the book has been prompt, swift, eager, and very invested.
Read more about Michele Pinto

Sammy El Khammal
Sammy El Khammal
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Sammy El Khammal

Sammy El Khammal works at Kensu. He started off as a field engineer and worked his way up to the position of product manager. In the past, he has also worked with Mercedes as their Business Development Analyst – Intern. He has also been an O'Reilly teacher for 3 workshops on data quality, lineage monitoring, and data observability. During that time, he provided some brilliant insights, very responsive behaviour, and immense talent and determination.
Read more about Sammy El Khammal

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Summary

This chapter delved into the intricate process of implementing and scaling data observability within organizations, emphasizing the common pitfalls faced during the integration of observability.

We have seen the main challenges, which are the control of costs, the overhead with other jobs, the security concerns, the increase in complexity of the architecture, the trade-off to be handled with legacy systems, and finally, the information overload that teams can experience. We have also seen that all these challenges can be overcome and the risks mitigated.

Then, we listed the questions a data team must answer during observability implementation. The list covered the criteria for selecting the appropriate project and observability tool, considering aspects such as security, compliance, cost, integration, data retention, intelligence, and customization. The discussion on costs explored various strategies, including open source solutions, in-house development, vendor solutions...

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Data Observability for Data Engineering
Published in: Dec 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781804616024

Authors (2)

author image
Michele Pinto

Michele Pinto is the Head of Engineering at Kensu. With over 15 years of experience, Michele has a great knack for understanding how data observability and data engineering are closely linked. He started his career as a software engineer and has worked since then in various roles, such as big data engineer, big data architect, head of data and until recently he was a Head of Engineering. He has a great community presence and believes in giving back to the community. He has also been a teacher for Digital Product Management Master TAG Innovation School in Milan, Italy. His collaboration on the book has been prompt, swift, eager, and very invested.
Read more about Michele Pinto

author image
Sammy El Khammal

Sammy El Khammal works at Kensu. He started off as a field engineer and worked his way up to the position of product manager. In the past, he has also worked with Mercedes as their Business Development Analyst – Intern. He has also been an O'Reilly teacher for 3 workshops on data quality, lineage monitoring, and data observability. During that time, he provided some brilliant insights, very responsive behaviour, and immense talent and determination.
Read more about Sammy El Khammal