Tech Education

Festive image of 'Frosty the Snowman' as a mischievous Chaos Engineer. Frosty wears a lab coat, safety goggles, and holds a wrench, standing next to a glowing control panel with flashing error alerts, network split icons, and warning triangles. In the background, Christmas lights, snowflakes, and a decorated server rack create a festive atmosphere. Elves wearing hard hats are working on server cables, symbolizing advanced chaos experiments and system testing.

3 Days Until Christmas: Frosty the Fault Injection: Advanced Chaos Techniques for Experts

On Day 3 of our 10 Days of Christmas Chaos, we meet ‘Frosty the Fault Injection’ and dive into advanced Chaos Engineering techniques. From CPU throttling and noisy neighbor simulations to database rollbacks and network partitions, learn how experts run high-impact experiments. Discover how to take your chaos skills to the next level and keep your systems resilient against even the most complex failures. Drop your ideas for advanced chaos experiments — the best ones might be featured in our next post!

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Festive image of seven mischievous elves in a North Pole-style workshop, each representing one of the '7 Deadly Sins of Chaos Engineering.' The elves are causing controlled chaos around glowing server racks, system dashboards with error alerts, and holiday decorations like Christmas lights, snowflakes, and candy canes. Santa Claus is seen in the background, facepalming as he watches the chaos unfold, symbolizing the impact of poor chaos engineering practices.

Day 4: The 7 Deadly Sins of Chaos Engineering

On Day 4 of our 10 Days of Christmas Chaos, we reveal ‘The 7 Deadly Sins of Chaos Engineering.’ From ignoring blast radius controls to running chaos during peak load, these common mistakes can derail even the best-intentioned experiments. Discover how to avoid these sins, improve your chaos strategy, and keep your systems resilient this holiday season. Drop a comment to confess your chaos sins — the best stories may be featured in a future post!

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Festive image of a Christmas tree made of 12 tech system icons, including servers, cloud symbols, network nodes, database symbols, CI/CD pipelines, and microservice connections as ornaments. Santa Claus stands nearby with a checklist, inspecting the tree. The background shows a cozy North Pole-style workshop adorned with glowing Christmas lights, snowflakes, and holiday decor. Subtle chaos-themed elements like warning signs, network cables, and server alerts hint at system failures and Chaos Engineering concepts.

Day 6: The 12 Systems of Christmas: Chaos Engineering Across Your Tech Stack

On Day 6 of our 10 Days of Christmas Chaos, we explore ‘The 12 Systems of Christmas: Chaos Engineering Across Your Tech Stack.’ From microservices and databases to network splits and CI/CD failures, discover how to test every part of your stack for resilience. Learn how cross-stack chaos experiments can prepare you for outages, reduce downtime, and ensure a smooth holiday season for users.

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Santa Claus in a command center-style control room filled with screens flashing error alerts, outage warnings, and system dashboards. Santa wears a headset, looking focused as he points at one of the screens. Around him, playful elves rush with wrenches, checklists, and alert bells. The scene is set in a festive holiday atmosphere with Christmas lights, snowflakes falling outside the window, and subtle chaos-themed design elements like alert icons, warning triangles, and network error symbols integrated into the background.

Day 8: Jingle All The Way (To Incident Resolution): Chaos-Driven Incident Management

On Day 8 of our 10 Days of Christmas Chaos, we tackle ‘Jingle All The Way (To Incident Resolution): Chaos-Driven Incident Management.’ Discover how Chaos Engineering improves incident response, prepares on-call teams, and strengthens postmortem reports. Learn how to build chaos readiness into your workflows, simulate failure scenarios, and turn incidents into learning moments. Drop your vote for the worst incident response you’ve seen — we’ll feature the best stories!

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Santa Claus holding a large scroll labeled 'Naughty List' with the word 'Myths' written prominently. Mischievous elves surround him, looking curious and playful. The background is a festive North Pole workshop adorned with Christmas lights, candy canes, and snowflakes. Subtle tech elements like cloud icons, server racks, and error alert symbols are cleverly integrated into the scene to symbolize chaos engineering concepts.

Day 9: The Naughty List: 10 Myths About Chaos Engineering

Think you know Chaos Engineering? Think again! On Day 9 of our 10 Days of Christmas Chaos, we tackle ‘The Naughty List: 10 Myths About Chaos Engineering.’ From the idea that it’s just ‘breaking production’ to the belief that it’s only for big tech, we bust the most persistent misconceptions. Discover the truth behind Chaos Engineering, learn how it applies to companies big and small, and join the conversation by sharing the biggest myths you’ve heard. Which myth do you think tops the Naughty List?

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