Headquartered in Sunnyvale, California, Azul provides the Java platform for the modern cloud enterprise. Azul is the only company 100% focused on Java. Millions of Java developers, hundreds of millions of devices and the world’s most highly regarded businesses trust Azul to power their applications with exceptional capabilities, performance, security, value and success. Azul customers include 35% of the Fortune 100, 50% of Forbes top-10 World’s Most Valuable Brands, all 10 of the world’s top-10 financial trading companies and leading brands like Avaya, Bazaarvoice, BMW, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Telekom, LG, Mastercard, Mizuho, Priceline, Salesforce, Software AG and Workday.
Catchpoint is the Internet Resilience Company. The top online retailers, Global2000, CDNs, cloud service providers, and xSPs in the world rely on Catchpoint to increase their resilience by catching any issues in the Internet Stack before they impact their business. Catchpoint's Internet Performance Monitoring (IPM) suite offers synthetics, RUM, performance optimization, high-fidelity data and flexible visualizations with advanced analytics. It leverages thousands of global vantage points (including inside wireless networks, BGP, backbone, last mile, endpoint, enterprise, ISPs, and more) to provide unparalleled observability into anything that impacts your customers, workforce, networks, website performance, applications, and SPIs. Learn more at www.catchpoint.com
Instrumental is working to help engineers understand the health of their applications. After years working on some of the highest scale web applications, they were constantly frustrated with existing tools. Instrumental is what they think monitoring should be: flexible, powerful, easy-to-use, and built to handle any load. Ultimately, they strive to reduce the time between needing-knowledge and having-knowledge to zero. They’re not quite there yet, it still takes a little setup and a few seconds delay here or there but they’re close. If you have a question about your application’s performance, the answer is as close as one graph or one line of instrumentation code.