Selector AI announced its Spring 2024 release. Innovations
include a GenAI-powered network-oriented LLM, native full-stack monitoring
capabilities, and event correlation with root cause analysis.
The
industry's first and only unified monitoring, observability, and multi-domain
AIOps platform - Selector, provides a single pane of glass with key
functionality that historically required multiple tools.
With
this release, Selector can not only act on top of existing tools, but can
directly collect configuration, metric, event, and log telemetry with its
native monitoring capabilities.
"Operations
teams have long struggled with tool sprawl in their pursuit of actionable
monitoring and observability," said Kannan Kothandaraman, CEO at Selector.
"Today's release enables organizations to drive efficiency through tools
consolidation while providing insights into the health and performance of their
network and IT environments through Selector's innovations in AI and ML."
Key
highlights of the new release include:
- Integrated
GenAI: Leverage Selector Copilot to instantly access more
meaningful incident summaries, assist with troubleshooting, and automate
remediation.
- Monitoring
and Observability: NetOps, DevOps, and SRE teams can now collect and
analyze telemetry from the network up to their applications and everything
in between.
- Root-Cause
Analysis: An innovative causal approach identifies the root
cause of an incident, fast-tracking the investigation and remediation of
incidents.
- Digital
Twin: With Selector, users can build and leverage digital
representations of their network and IT infrastructure.
- GCP
Marketplace: Selector is coming to the GCP marketplace in Q2,
providing customers with frictionless software procurement, simplified
vendor management, streamlined pricing, and the ability to burn down cloud
commits.
"Gartner
reports that, by 2027, more than 40% of operational activities will be
performed using tools enhanced by GenAI, dramatically reducing the labor
involved," said Nitin Kumar, CTO at Selector." Assistive
troubleshooting, automated incident remediation, and incident summarization are
key features that operations leaders have been demanding for years."