Newsroom
ICYMI: Advice for Aspiring Site Reliability Engineers
Blameless defines and divvies up responsibilities between SRE team members as incidents occur and provides them with a summary of the issue, as well as status updates, in Slack.
The Need for Site Reliability Engineering: A Podcast with the Blameless Founders
To delve into SRE, EAR spoke with Ashar Rizqi and Lyon Wong, the founders of Blameless. Blameless takes site reliability engineering practices and productizes them.
How to Avoid the 5 SRE Implementation Traps that Catch Even the Best Teams
Today’s businesses must quickly release new software into production, yet the majority fail to deliver quality software efficiently.
Cisco is Backing a New Early-Stage Venture Firm with Jon Sakoda, Formerly of NEA
Blameless, a developer of software for site reliability engineers, announced a $20 million round last week from Lightspeed Venture Partners, Accel and strategic investors, one of which was Decibel.
Former NEA Partner Jon Sakoda Takes the Wraps Off His New, Cisco-backed Venture Fund, Decibel
Decibel has also backed Blameless, a developer of software for site reliability engineers that announced $20 million in funding just last week led by Lightspeed Venture Partners.
Enterprise SRE Startup Blameless Emerges From Stealth With $20M+ from Accel, Lightspeed
In the software business, uptime is money, and lags risk lost revenue. Imagine yourself shopping online. In a competitive landscape of commoditized services, speed and reliability deliver a competitive edge.
SRE Software Refines DevOps Incident Response for Enterprise
SRE workflows often emerge organically within enterprise IT teams, but software tools add measurability and automation for incident response and review in one DevOps shop.
Press releases
Blameless to Host Workshop on SLO Best Practices for Modern Software Businesses
SLOs prevent companies from setting an unrealistic reliability target and also enable error budgets that give development teams permission to make riskier changes while setting the “stop” threshold.