Most platform teams aren’t deciding whether they’ll run across multiple clouds. They already are, or they’ll be soon. The real question is how to migrate critical systems without turning on-call into a guessing game. Observability raises the stakes more than almost any other domain. An observability control plane isn’t just a dashboard. It’s the operational authority system. It defines alert rules, routing, ownership, escalation policy, and notification endpoints. When that layer is wrong, the impact is immediate. The wrong team gets paged. The right team never hears about the incident. Your service level indicators look clean while production burns. A typical failure pattern is painfully simple. During a migration window, an ownership change lands in one system but not the other. A routing update is processed out of order. A notification endpoint rotates, but only one store is updated. Those discrepancies can sit quietly for days. Then a real incident hits, an alert fires, and it...
JetBrains has launched a new “agentic” tooling stack that pairs a multi‑agent development environment, Air, with a standalone, LLM‑agnostic coding agent, Junie CLI. If you know JetBrains , you probably know it for Kotlin , the statically typed Java Virtual Machine (JVM) language used mostly for Android development, or for its well-known integrated development environments (IDEs), such as IntelliJ IDEA for Java, PyCharm for Python, and WebStorm for JavaScript. Going forward, JetBrains hopes you’ll also know it for its AI tools, JetBrains Air and Junie CLI . The first, Air, is pitched as an “agentic development environment” that lets developers delegate coding tasks to multiple AI agents running concurrently. Rather than bolting chat boxes onto editors, Air “builds tools around the agent,” bundling terminals, Git, previews, and code navigation into a single workspace designed to guide and correct agents rather than just prompt them. JetBrains says it’s using its 26 years of IDE ...