SigNoz vs Dust
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
SigNoz exposes its observability stack via MCP — AI assistants can now query logs, traces, and metrics directly.
SigNoz's recent stream pairs an AI-side play with steady core-product work. The headline move is the SigNoz MCP Server: a hosted endpoint (plus a self-host option) that lets Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Claude, Codex, and Gemini search logs, query metrics, inspect traces, and work with alerts and dashboards through natural language. Around it, the core product keeps polishing: trace details have been rebuilt with funnel-aware navigation, Query Builder v5 lands in Infrastructure Monitoring, dashboards gain per-panel cursor-sync modes, ingestion-limit alerts are now one click with a default name, and native Azure monitoring covers VMs, App Service, AKS, Container Apps, Functions, SQL Database, and Blob Storage. Service accounts replace the legacy API Keys page, with RBAC and a clearer invite-expiry UI.
SigNoz is positioning itself in the 'AI-queryable observability' lane — open-source Datadog with an MCP front door. The MCP server makes the data queryable by every major coding assistant simultaneously, which is the right move for a tool whose primary buyer is the engineer at the IDE. The parallel work — Azure breadth, service accounts, faster query builder — looks like ground prep so that the MCP-mediated queries land on a faster, broader, more access-controlled backend.
Expect the MCP server to gain write actions (silence alert, acknowledge incident, snapshot a query) so AI assistants move from read-only investigators to incident-response participants. Cloud breadth is likely to keep growing — GCP-native monitoring would be the obvious next addition after Azure.
Dust is widening the agent-platform surface: multimodal tools, enterprise audit, model breadth.
Dust is shipping at a fast clip on three fronts that together define a serious agent platform: model breadth (Gemini 3.5 Flash, Grok 4.3, refreshed Anthropic lineup), agent capability (MCP tools can now return images the agent can actually see, plus context compaction for long runs), and enterprise readiness (workspace audit logs streamable to Datadog, Splunk, or any HTTPS sink). Integrations are getting versioned upgrades on the side (Asana MCP v2, Gmail labels and archive). The product is moving from 'chat with an agent' toward 'run agents in production with observability and multimodal I/O.'
Two clear directions: deeper enterprise GTM via SIEM-grade audit, and a more capable agent runtime that can see, remember, and act inside third-party SaaS. The MCP-image release in particular treats Model Context Protocol as a real I/O surface rather than a text-only RPC, which is where the broader MCP ecosystem is heading. Frequent model rotations suggest Dust is positioning as model-agnostic infrastructure rather than locking into one provider.
Next moves likely lean into the same arc: more MCP integrations with action verbs (write/delete/transition states), expanded multimodal returns (audio, structured documents), and finer-grained admin controls layered on top of the audit foundation - tool-usage policies, per-agent egress rules, or approval workflows.
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