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Datadog AI Research Lab Launches First-Ever Observability Foundation Model
Datadog AI Research Lab Launches First-Ever Observability Foundation Model

Yahoo

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Datadog AI Research Lab Launches First-Ever Observability Foundation Model

Datadog, Inc. (NASDAQ:DDOG) unveiled on May 21 the first releases from its newly established Datadog AI Research division. The company introduced an open-source foundation model called Toto and an observability benchmark named BOOM. This launch coincides with the company's advancement toward FedRAMP High authorization to serve mission-critical federal workloads. A closeup of a laboratory technician monitoring a computer for the Cloudbreak platform. Toto is the first open-source foundation model designed explicitly for observability. It is trained exclusively on Datadog's internal telemetry metrics. The model achieves 'state-of-the-art performance' compared to existing time series foundation models (TSFM), enabling instant anomaly detection and capacity planning without per-series tuning. This capability becomes critical when monitoring billions of ephemeral time series that characterize modern cloud environments. Alongside Toto, Datadog introduced BOOM, the largest public benchmark for observability metrics. It provides 350 million observations across 2,807 real-world multivariate series. The benchmark captures the unique challenges of production telemetry, including scale, sparsity, spikes, and cold-start issues. The AI research initiative supports the company's broader expansion into government markets. Datadog (NASDAQ:DDOG) announced it has achieved Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) High authorization. This authorization allows the company to serve federal agencies with stringent security requirements. Datadog, Inc. (NASDAQ:DDOG) is a cloud monitoring and security company. It provides observability and analytics for IT infrastructure, applications, and security. Its platform includes infrastructure monitoring, application performance monitoring, log management, cloud security, and incident management. While we acknowledge the potential of Datadog, Inc. (NASDAQ:DDOG) as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than DDOG and that has 100x upside potential, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None.

Datadog AI Research Lab Launches First-Ever Observability Foundation Model
Datadog AI Research Lab Launches First-Ever Observability Foundation Model

Yahoo

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Datadog AI Research Lab Launches First-Ever Observability Foundation Model

Datadog, Inc. (NASDAQ:DDOG) unveiled on May 21 the first releases from its newly established Datadog AI Research division. The company introduced an open-source foundation model called Toto and an observability benchmark named BOOM. This launch coincides with the company's advancement toward FedRAMP High authorization to serve mission-critical federal workloads. A closeup of a laboratory technician monitoring a computer for the Cloudbreak platform. Toto is the first open-source foundation model designed explicitly for observability. It is trained exclusively on Datadog's internal telemetry metrics. The model achieves 'state-of-the-art performance' compared to existing time series foundation models (TSFM), enabling instant anomaly detection and capacity planning without per-series tuning. This capability becomes critical when monitoring billions of ephemeral time series that characterize modern cloud environments. Alongside Toto, Datadog introduced BOOM, the largest public benchmark for observability metrics. It provides 350 million observations across 2,807 real-world multivariate series. The benchmark captures the unique challenges of production telemetry, including scale, sparsity, spikes, and cold-start issues. The AI research initiative supports the company's broader expansion into government markets. Datadog (NASDAQ:DDOG) announced it has achieved Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) High authorization. This authorization allows the company to serve federal agencies with stringent security requirements. Datadog, Inc. (NASDAQ:DDOG) is a cloud monitoring and security company. It provides observability and analytics for IT infrastructure, applications, and security. Its platform includes infrastructure monitoring, application performance monitoring, log management, cloud security, and incident management. While we acknowledge the potential of Datadog, Inc. (NASDAQ:DDOG) as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than DDOG and that has 100x upside potential, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. Sign in to access your portfolio

The big blue: Finding happiness deep in the Pacific
The big blue: Finding happiness deep in the Pacific

BBC News

time29-04-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

The big blue: Finding happiness deep in the Pacific

Growing up in Fiji, a nation spanning hundreds of Pacific islands, means growing up with the call of the ocean in your blood — even when you're far from the sea. Free diver Neelam Ratan spent her childhood on a sugarcane farm, swimming in rivers, but her first experience of snorkelling was transformative. 'I was 14 years old and I went with a couple of my friends,' she recalls. 'It was so beautiful. It was perfect. It was like coming home.' Surfers know Fiji for world-class waves such as Cloudbreak, but there's magic below the surface, too – from watching cleaner fish grooming giant manta rays to the thrill of scuba diving with bull sharks. Marine conservationist Jone Waitati spent seven years teaching diving in the cold, dark lakes, rivers and quarries around Frankfurt, Germany. When he returned home and dove into the ocean, he wept. 'It was so beautiful, such vibrant colours, I was crying underwater,' he says. 'All these creatures like dolphins, manta rays, whales — you can't see these things on land.' On a single breath of air…. Ratan, whose ancestors arrived in Fiji from India five generations ago, spent six years travelling the Pacific on a sailboat, scuba diving and modelling for her husband, an underwater photographer. Gradually, she realised that the noise of the bubbles from her tank disturbed marine life. 'The animals actually came closer to me and reacted better to my presence underwater if I didn't have a tank, if I didn't make any noise,' she says.

Ancient Iguanas 'Rafted' 5,000 Miles to Fiji, Study Shows
Ancient Iguanas 'Rafted' 5,000 Miles to Fiji, Study Shows

Yahoo

time20-03-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Ancient Iguanas 'Rafted' 5,000 Miles to Fiji, Study Shows

Today, Fiji is an idyllic island chain in the South Pacific, home to impossibly blue waters, elite vacation resorts, a vibrant local culture overflowing with tradition, and one of the world's finest waves: Cloudbreak, located off Tavarua Island. But millions of years ago, long before surfers ever ventured to the Fijian Island chain, a group of intrepid iguanas made the 5,000-mile journey. But how in the hell did iguanas, who are native to North America, make their way across the Pacific and into the Fijian Islands. Well, scientists with lots of time on their hands figured it out. 'Here, we investigate the occurrence and timing of the greatest known long-distance oceanic dispersal event in the history of terrestrial vertebrates—the rafting of iguanas from North America to Fiji,' the study explains. 'Iguanas are large-bodied herbivores that are well-known overwater dispersers, including species that colonized the Caribbean and the Galápagos islands. However, the origin of Fijian iguanas had not been comprehensively tested.' How did they do it?Likely by a method researchers call 'rafting' in which animals hop aboard a large tangle of vegetation, and ride it to a new destination. Somehow, these ancient reptilians survived a journey on a mess of plants across a fifth of the earth's entire circumference. And when was this? 'Those data indicate that the closest living relative of extant Fijian iguanas is the North American desert iguana and that the two taxa likely diverged during the late Paleogene near or after the onset of volcanism that produced the Fijian archipelago,' the study says. The Paleogene period was 66 to 23 million years ago. So, technically, sorta, kinda…iguanas were the first creatures to ride waves in Fiji – long before any human stumbled around.

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