

Syslog: Unlock Real-Time Visibility 1-2-3!
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Why attend?
Are you still relying on manual processes and “in the dark” guesswork when it comes to your syslog environment? Many traditional syslog tools (like syslog-ng, SC4S, or even Axosyslog) lack the modern, visual monitoring capabilities that cloud-native application teams now consider standard.
In this webinar, we’ll show you just how easy it can be to bring real-time transparency to your syslog environment—no coding, guesswork, or complicated integrations needed. We’ll walk you through a simple three-step approach to installing and configuring a monitoring solution (Axolet) that provides instant metrics on data ingestion, parsing, loss, and other critical syslog events. And that’s possible even if you don’t want your data to ever leave your premises.
If you think “syslog is dead,” think again. With the right monitoring and visual insights, you can transform this tried-and-true protocol into a modern, efficient, and reliable foundation for enterprise logging.
Questions we’ll cover
- How can you identify and resolve ingestion and parsing issues in real-time?
- What tools and steps are needed to quickly install a visual monitoring solution for syslog?
- How does monitoring syslog data flows reduce security blind spots and improve incident response?
- What are the benefits of modernizing your syslog infrastructure while preserving existing investments?
Who is this webinar for?
- SOC Content Management or Detection Engineers
- Security and Log Management Engineers
- SREs, DevOps, DevSecOps Engineers, and Developers
- Information Security or Cybersecurity Architects
- SIEM Architects or Engineers
- Anyone working with syslog-ng, SC4S, or Axosyslog
Speakers

Mark BONSACK
Mark is leading Axoflow’s Sales Engineering team helping customers solve their logging challenges. He is also the co-creator for SC4S (Splunk Connect for Syslog) used by thousands of Splunk customers for optimal syslog data ingestion.

Neil BOYD
Neil has focused on solving large scale data and network projects and was responsible for the commercial sales of syslog-ng in the US for more than 8 years.