How low-tech paper resonance checks, inspired by safety‑critical industries, can act as an analog tuning fork for reliability—and how to combine them with modern SRE alerting and ML-based anomaly detection.
How creating a quiet, analog-style “incident reading room” can transform one-off outages into a continuous, collaborative learning engine for system reliability and team morale.
How SRE and ITIL-inspired incident management gets more resilient when you add one surprisingly powerful tool: a simple, low‑tech daily logbook for running and learning from major outages.
How a hand‑drawn “incident planetarium” can transform postmortems from blame sessions into a shared, visual practice of reliability, learning, and systemic improvement.
How to move from ad‑hoc, hand‑drawn approaches to a clear, repeatable “library” of incident practices that strengthens your reliability program and culture.
How to turn incident practice into a relaxed, human, and deeply reflective ritual by gathering around a literal (or metaphorical) paper coffee table for slow, blameless reliability conversations.
How SRE and DevOps teams can use a single notebook, a short “reliability time loop,” and analog rituals to run faster, clearer, and more effective post‑incident reviews.
How a simple Manila folder, a wall, and some markers can turn scattered lab incidents into a powerful reliability dashboard—and how to connect this low‑tech studio to open source tools and long‑term learning.
How a low-tech “flight deck” of sticky notes, guided by aviation’s Threat and Error Management model and SRE reliability principles, can transform incident command, reduce toil, and accelerate recovery from major outages.
How a cardboard “reliability puppet stage” turns incident practice into playful, low‑stakes simulations that surface failures early and strengthen SRE teams.