Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

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Open Source vs. Proprietary LLMs

Large Language Models (LLMs) are now essential to modern artificial intelligence (AI), enabling machines to understand and generate human language. Their impact is evident across various industries, with estimates suggesting that by 2025, 750 million apps will integrate LLMs. From enhancing customer service with intelligent chatbots to advancing medical research, LLMs are driving efficiency in business operations.

JFrog Cloud: Architected for Performance at Scale

Petabytes of monthly data transfer. Thousands of concurrent requests per customer. Hundreds of thousands of requests per minute per customer. The JFrog Platform is a mission critical piece of software development and delivery infrastructure for companies that require performance at scale. When you’re supporting thousands of developers, even a minute of downtime or delay can mean millions of dollars lost productivity.

DynamoDB Vs. MongoDB: Battle Of The Best Databases In (About) 10 Minutes

If picking the best database management system (DBMS) were a road trip, both MongoDB and DynamoDB would get you there. Ultimately, it comes down to choosing whether you need the specialized efficiency of DynamoDB within Amazon Web Services (AWS) or the “off-road” flexibility of platform-agnostic MongoDB. What do road trips and off-road antics have to do with deciding between MongoDB vs. DynamoDB?

Analyzing user behavior to optimize user experience

Every interaction a user has with your application—whether positive or negative—directly impacts your business outcomes. But how can you uncover what truly shapes these interactions? The answer lies in analyzing user behavior to identify opportunities for user experience optimization and improving performance as user impact.

The quest for the four nines: Achieving 99.99% uptime with advanced website monitoring

In an age of instant access, your website is crucial for meeting customer expectations. Downtime, even fleetingly, translates directly into lost revenue, irreparable reputational damage, and the erosion of hard-earned customer trust. For enterprises, achieving near-perfect uptime – the coveted "four nines" (99.99% availability) – is no longer a luxury; it's a business imperative. This translates to a maximum permissible downtime of just 52 minutes and 36 seconds per year.