Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

Mock vs Stub: Essential Differences

When discussing the process of testing an API, one of the most common sets of terms you might encounter are “mocks” and “stubs.” These terms are quite ubiquitous, but understanding exactly how they differ from one another - and when each is the correct method for software testing - is critical to building an appropriate test and validation framework. In this blog, we’re going to talk about the differences and similarities between mocks and stubs.

New API endpoints: Pause and resume website & ping monitors

We’ve added new API capabilities that give you more control over your monitoring workflows – directly from code. You can now pause and resume website and ping monitors via the StatusGator API, exposing the same pause functionality that’s available in the UI.

Verizon outage - January 14

When a major carrier like Verizon goes down, the impact is immediate and widespread. On January 14, 2026, thousands of users across the United States found themselves without cellular service, unable to make calls, send texts, or access data. While social media erupted with reports of “SOS mode” on iPhones, official acknowledgment from the provider lagged behind for hours.

Datadog vs. New Relic: 2026 Comparison

If you're working in IT monitoring and observability, you simply cannot ignore the power of Datadog and New Relic. These two tools have plenty of features that can revolutionize your entire observability strategy and give you complete control over your infrastructure. These tools are built so as to capture the tiniest of details, be it on applications, infrastructure, databases, servers, or something completely on the cloud.

How to Build Media Operations That Survive Full AI Automation

By the end of 2026, you will upload a product image and a budget to Meta, and its AI will generate the creatives, pick the audience, allocate spend across surfaces, and optimize in real time. Google’s Performance Max already automates bidding, asset selection, and cross‑channel allocation across Search, Shopping, YouTube, Display, and more.

The $1.4 Million Per Hour Business Cost of Downtime And How AIOps Help

Enterprise downtime now costs over $300,000 per hour for the majority of organizations, with large enterprises in critical sectors losing up to $1.4 million per hour when systems go offline. At the same time, cloud budgets continue to overshoot targets by double digits as organizations struggle to manage multi-cloud complexity, unplanned scaling, and resource misconfiguration.