Telemetry your systems need. Data your AI agents can trust.
We help companies generate the telemetry they need—without excess—so people and AI agents can work from signals that are clean, accurate, and safe.
For us, the telemetry pipeline begins where spans, metrics, and logs are first generated: inside your applications. Improving telemetry at the source means less noise to filter later, lower downstream costs, and more dependable context when people or AI agents need to understand a system.
| Quality | What it means |
|---|---|
| Clean | Every signal has a purpose, without avoidable noise, duplication, or volume. |
| Accurate | Telemetry is complete, consistent, and aligned with OpenTelemetry semantics. |
| Safe | Sensitive data stays out of telemetry and the systems that receive it. |
| Agent-ready | AI agents get dependable context for analysis, decisions, and remediation. |
| Project | What it helps you do |
|---|---|
| OpenTelemetry Agent Skills | Give coding agents current, vendor-neutral OpenTelemetry knowledge grounded in upstream sources. |
| OllyGarden Skills | Help agents plan, validate, and improve instrumentation and telemetry pipelines using OllyGarden practices. |
| Tulip | Run a curated, vendor-agnostic OpenTelemetry Collector distribution with commercial support and long-term maintenance. |
| Grafts | Build with custom Collector components, including NATS JetStream and SNMP integrations. |
Our agent skills help people and coding agents generate better telemetry at the source. Tulip gives teams a supported Collector distribution for collecting, processing, and delivering it, while Grafts supplies components that extend what the Collector can do.
The OpenTelemetry Agent Skills stay vendor neutral and source grounded. OllyGarden Skills build on that foundation with the practices and workflows we use in the field.
Our open-source projects welcome issues, ideas, and pull requests. Start with the contribution guide in the repository you want to improve, or get in touch if you are not sure where your idea belongs.
For commercial support for OpenTelemetry Collector deployments, learn more about Tulip.