Exploding Collections 💥
TL;DR: Seq 2023.3 introduces the unnest set function and lateral cross joins, enabling natural queries over nested collections in log events. Here's »
TL;DR: Seq 2023.3 introduces the unnest set function and lateral cross joins, enabling natural queries over nested collections in log events. Here's »
TL;DR: Seq 2023.3 is now available from datalust.co and by pulling datalust/seq from Docker Hub. It adds support for SQL-style unnest() over »
Structured logs are the latest component of the OpenTelemetry protocol (OTLP) to stabilize. The promise of structured logging with OTLP is huge: built around a common »
TL;DR: Seq 2023.2 is out! It adds a native ingestion endpoint for OpenTelemetry Logs, which makes it easier getting structured logs into Seq from »
Just yesterday we posted an update on Seq's support for the OpenTelemetry logs protocol. One slightly painful limitation, which resulted in quite a bit »
Hi! 👋 We've just published Seq 2023.2.9305-pre, the first preview MSI and Docker Hub :preview tag for the upcoming Seq 2023.2. This »
It's been a month since Seq 2023.1 was released, and in that time we've seen a great uptake of the new »
Log data is noisy! Sometimes a rock band playing at the foot of your bed kind of noisy. This isn't always a bad thing »
Nearly a year in the making, Seq 2023.1 is faster, plays better with container hosts, and scales up like no Seq version before. Get the »
TL;DR: Seq's new query engine uses CPU cores and memory more intelligently. It's ready to try in non-mission-critical environments, and we& »