
Oracle earnings missed by $0.01, revenue fell short of estimatesAn on-duty Red Lake Tribal police officer was one of two drivers who died in a traffic collision Wednesday, officials said. The crash occurred on Hwy. 1 east of the Red Lake community, according to the Red Lake Police Department. Police identified the officer as Jesse Branch, 35, and the other person who died as Alan Lussier Jr. Officials did not give an age for Lussier or cities of residence for either man. The circumstances of the crash have yet to be disclosed. Red Lake Tribal Chairman Darrell G Seki Sr. has ordered flags flown at half-staff at tribal buildings and other locations in Branch’s honor. Several who knew Branch took to social media to mourn him. “He was so so proud to move from detention to police officer,” wrote Alice Benaise, who said she saw and chatted with him for a few minutes Saturday. ”He told me he had just come back from a training. He just loved Red Lake & our people.” Ashlyn Lyons posted online that Branch had been her coworker for many years and knew him since he was 18 years old. “He was ready to enter into public safety at a young age,” Charnoski wrote. “He dedicated his life to Red Lake Nation. The same police department lost another officer in July 2021, when Ryan Bialke was shot to death by David Brian Donnell Jr. Donnell, now 31, was sentenced two years later to a 37-year term. Bialke was one of five officers to respond to a welfare check at Donnell’s home on the Red Lake Indian Reservation on July 27, 2021. Donnell, who was reportedly using drugs and suicidal, went inside the house when officers arrived. Bialke, who knew there was a tribal warrant out for Donnell, kicked down the front door. He was met with gunfire and died immediately.
Businesses are generating vast amounts of event data across clouds, applications, and 3rd party SaaS. Too often this data is siloed, sampled, and thrown out to save cash. But here’s the thing: The companies that will win in the AI age will leverage as much of that data and context as possible. Data is the lifeblood of performant and reliable AI – and that’s where Axiom comes in. Axiom’s innovative, proprietary database helps companies store, manage, and pipeline event data at scale. The founders of Axiom worked together at a company called Xamarin, later acquired by Microsoft, and found themselves struggling to handle data at scale. Like most companies out there, they realized the cost of storing data was very high, forcing them to try sampling the data and other less-than-ideal solutions. Axiom was born as a response to this problem. To truly allow companies to store their data cheaply and query it on demand, they knew they needed to build a new kind of database from the ground up. So, they did what startups do: they raised some seed funding and have been heads down working for the past couple of years, acquiring big name customers along the way such as Asana, Netlify, and X.AI along the way. A Unique Architectural Advantage Axiom’s architecture sets it apart in the crowded observability space. By leveraging cloud-native technologies, the company offers infinitely elastic data storage and scalable computing power. Here are three stand-out components of Axiom’s platform: 1) A custom-built single datastore across logs, traces, and all event data. This data is always available and can be queried in real time, and 38X compression makes it possible to store the data forever. 2) By leveraging cloud native technologies, the data is infinitely scalable and can handle petabyte scale queries with sub-second response times. 3) The data can be routed wherever it is needed. This means that while the Axiom platform becomes your single source of truth for all of your data, it’s also simple to pipeline that data out to 3rd party applications and services. Seamless Data Handling With Axiom, companies can effortlessly ingest data across their various cloud services, in order to have a central source of truth and control plane. Businesses can then pipeline that data out on demand whenever and wherever they need to. This capability significantly improves analysis and decision-making, handing organizations the tools to harness the full potential of their data. As many businesses face the harsh reality of discarding valuable data due to high costs, Axiom provides a solution that allows for comprehensive data retention—enabling companies to prepare for future advancements in AI and analytics. Unlike other solutions, all data that comes into Axiom is stored in a single datastore and then can be routed elsewhere with a powerful processing language. The AI Advantage and Additional Integrations In an era fueled by artificial intelligence, having access to extensive datasets offers a competitive edge. Axiom’s platform facilitates data storage and even enhances its accessibility for future AI-driven insights. The ability to retain all data across multiple disciplines or departments can lead to more accurate outcomes and broader business insights, especially when addressing concerns around AI hallucinations and the reliability of data. Additionally, Axiom’s platform is built to integrate with Kubernetes and other cloud-native technologies, making it particularly advantageous for organizations adopting microservices. As data volumes continue to rise, Axiom’s architecture can manage this influx efficiently, allowing businesses to scale without compromise. Ethical Considerations in Data Retention Data retention is becoming increasingly vital across various industries––particularly finance, where regulatory compliance mandates long-term storage. Axiom addresses these ethical considerations by guaranteeing that businesses can retain data responsibly. By eliminating the outdated practice of data sampling (which reduces stored data and can lead to incomplete insights), Axiom empowers organizations to maintain a complete dataset for comprehensive analysis. Affordable and Centralized Solutions Centralized data storage is key to effective decision-making, but it must also be cost-effective. Axiom is enabling businesses to store vast amounts of event data affordably. This centralization leads to better business intelligence, so organizations can analyze everything from e-commerce user journeys to SaaS uptime and marketing efforts without the fear of incurring exorbitant costs. Axiom’s Future With a commitment to improving how companies manage their data, Axiom is poised to play a significant role in the AI-driven transformation of business intelligence. The upcoming presence at events like AWS re:Invent will showcase Axiom's infrastructure-agnostic platform and highlight its unique capabilities to potential users.The Pentagon on Wednesday flatly dismissed claims by a U.S. lawmaker that Iran might be launching drones over New Jersey from a "mothership" off the East Coast. "There is no truth to that," said Pentagon spokesperson Sabrina Singh. "There is no Iranian ship off the coast of the United States and there's no so-called 'mothership' launching drones towards the United States." Republican Congressman Jeff Van Drew, whose district in New Jersey includes Atlantic City, said he had uncovered what appeared to be an Iranian plot. "What we’ve uncovered is alarming — drones flying in from the direction of the ocean, possibly linked to a missing Iranian mothership," he said on social media platform X. The lawmaker also made the claims on Fox News. The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said it began receiving reports of drone activity near Morris County, New Jersey, on Nov. 18. The FAA has barred drone flights over Picatinny Arsenal Military Base and Trump National Golf Club Bedminster. Last week, the FBI and New Jersey State Police asked the public to report any information related to the recent sightings of possible drones flying in several areas along the Raritan River. "Witnesses have spotted the cluster of what look to be drones and a possible fixed-wing aircraft. We have reports from the public and law enforcement dating back several weeks," the FBI said. The Pentagon said an initial assessment had shown the drones were not from another country and that the U.S. military had not shot them down because they did not pose a threat to any military installations. "We have no evidence that these activities are coming from a foreign entity or the work of an adversary," Singh said. "We're going to continue to monitor what is happening. But, you know, at no point were our installations threatened when this activity was occurring." Still, the latest drone sightings are a reminder of the growing concern about a proliferation of drone technology and the potential security considerations, given that drones can carry surveillance technology or even explosives. At a press conference, House of Representatives Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries was asked about the lack of information about the drones. "We need a greater degree of transparency from law enforcement authorities, and we will make sure that happens in the days and weeks to come," Jeffries said.
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