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I tried out Datadog, read what I thought of this top-notch and comprehensive website monitoring solution
1:14 pm | April 29, 2025

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets Pro | Comments: Off

Website monitoring is an essential part of the suite of business tools these days. After all, you cannot afford for your website to be down for even just a few minutes. Besides financial loss, it can hurt your brand’s reputation and market image.

Datadog offers top-notch website monitoring software that comes included with Real Time Monitoring (RUM), which is monitoring based on real user interactions. You also get robust synthetic monitoring, which allows you to test every component of your website. Business giants like Netflix, Adobe, Airbnb, and Spotify trust Datadog to manage their infrastructure.

If you want to know more about this all-around website monitor, stick around until the end. In this article, we’ll discuss Datadog's features, pricing, and interface, and also give you a couple of alternatives to consider.

Datadog: Plans and pricing

Datadog has separate plans for synthetic monitoring and real user monitoring, much like Pingdom. However, Datadog goes a step ahead and breaks these plans down further – it offers dedicated plans for API testing, browser testing, and mobile app tests.

The API testing plan costs $5/month for 10K test runs. The Browser Testing plan costs $12/month per 1,000 test runs, and the Mobile App Testing plan costs $50/month per 100 test runs.

There are two plans for RUM too, one with session replay and one without it. The RUM with Session Replay plan costs $1.80/month for 1,000 sessions, while the RUM plan (without replay) costs $1.50/month for 1,000 sessions.

These limits are enough for any small to midsized business, making Datadog an affordable solution. Except for the mobile app testing plan, you’ll only have to pay $18.80/month for RUM and synthetic monitoring. This is cheaper than the likes of Uptime.com, whose plans can cost as high as $67 to $285 per month.

Apart from website monitoring solutions, Datadog also offers a complete security suite with solutions like cloud and application security management, runtime code analysis, CI pipeline visibility, and network monitoring – each function has a separate plan.

Datadog: Features

Datadog’s Real User Monitoring is one of the best across the board. It churns out essential website performance data such as Core Web Vitals and load times by harnessing data from real user experiences.

The best thing about Datadog is that you can view session replays to pinpoint the exact cause and instance of the issue. This lets you collect and process every error, resource, and action during each session. Users' actions can vary from checkout button clicks, taps, and more. You can even track custom metrics that are critical to your performance.

Datadog real user monitoring

(Image credit: Datadog)

Datadog also offers comprehensive Mobile Real User Monitoring (Mobile RUM) functions that test your app's stability, identify and address app crashes, and assist in resolving any glitches.

Its no-code web recorder makes it pretty easy to build customizable assertions that work on all the latest devices and operating systems. Datadog is also smart enough to avoid any UI changes so that you do not get any false positives.

Datadog’s API tests are ridiculously easy to create. You can access its API Catalog to access your overall HTTP test coverage and then build API checks for any untested endpoints in just a few clicks. Datadog’s AI-generated Synthetics swiftly identify any business-critical flows so that you can create the right test in a matter of seconds.

However, Datadog doesn’t stop at just detecting errors; it also helps in quick resolution by grouping related errors automatically so that you’re not bombarded with error notifications. You can run a simple faceted search to find out more about how these errors started and evolved.

Datadog also has one of the most extensive collections of third-party integrations, allowing you to set up custom workflows with as many as 800+ applications. Apps for various categories such as alerting, automation, caching, incident management, and log collection are available.

Datadog: Interface and in use

Datadog’s dashboards are filled with interactive charts and graphs that give you a quick snapshot of all running website checks. This graphic-oriented approach makes it easy for administrators to spot and resolve any errors.

Adding a new monitor is pretty straightforward. You simply need to select the request type, name it, add the URL, select locations you want to track from, and define alerting conditions.

Datadog dashboard

(Image credit: Datadog)

When you create a synthetics test, Datadog collects data and generates dashboards about your stack, browser applications, overall test performance, private locations, and events. There are similar dashboards for API checks and browser checks, too.

If you’re running RUM, you’ll see a performance summary tab with immediate summaries of each app's vitals, error deployments, and user analytics.

However, given the number of functions and dashboards Datadog offers, you’ll need a bit of time to get the hang of the platform. There are tons of videos on the platform that guide you through the setup and day-to-day use of the platform.

Datadog: Support

Datadog offers decent support with all its paid plans. Chat support is available from 10 am EST to 7 pm EST on weekdays, while email support is available during business hours (8:00 PM Sunday - 9:00 PM Friday EST, excluding holidays). You can expect a reply within 2 hours for business-critical issues and 48 hours for general issues.

While this is good enough customer support, Datadog does offer something better. If yours is a large organization that needs 24/7 technical support, you can purchase Datadog's Premier support plan, which costs 8% of monthly spend ($2,000 minimum). However, you need to make a minimum of a one-year commitment for this plan.

Under this, you get 24/7 email, chat, and phone support, with response times as low as 30 minutes. Besides this, there’s a designated team of global support engineers as well as priority handling for escalations. Simply put, this will be just like having an in-house IT team dedicated to Datadog issues.

Datadog: The competition

Pingdom is a robust monitoring solution offering as many as 44 plans across synthetic and real user monitoring with different check thresholds. This makes it as ideal for small businesses that need to run just 10 uptime tests in a month as it is for large businesses that want to run, say, 30,000+ checks.

Much like Datadog, Pingdom also offers customizable graphical dashboards. Its top-level dashboards provide a quick summary of all website performance and page-level metrics to help drill this information deeper.

If you’re looking for something more affordable and value-packed, Host-Tracker can be a good option. Its plans start from just $9.9/month, allowing 10 website checks. You can add additional websites at just $0.70/site. In addition to synthetic monitoring, Host-Tracker also checks the IP DNS blacklist and Google’s unsafe websites list to ensure your websites aren’t blacklisted. However, it doesn’t offer RUM.

Datadog: Final verdict

Datadog is a one-stop solution for all your website monitoring and security needs. You get both real user monitoring and synthetic monitoring, like API tests, browser tests, and mobile app testing.

Each function is offered as a separate plan so that you have to pay only for the features you use. This is ideal for small businesses with limited needs. Datadog’s extensive information-driven dashboards make it a very intuitive platform. These dashboards are fully customizable, allowing you to drill data down as per your needs.

Plus, Datadog is one of the few monitoring solutions that offer a dedicated plan for premium support, with 24/7 call, email, and chat support. That said, such extensive features also come with a bit of a learning curve. However, there are a lot of resources and videos on the platform to help beginners out.

FAQs

Who is Datadog best for?

Datadog is an all-around business solution offering services like security monitoring, network monitoring, log management, and synthetic and real user monitoring. It's ideal for businesses of all sizes since it offers feature-specific plans. For instance, if you only need real user monitoring, you can get started for as low as $1.80/month.

Large businesses can also benefit from customized plans and a dedicated customer support plan that offers 247 chat, phone, and email support – something you won’t get with any other website monitoring solution.

What is website monitoring?

Website monitoring is the process of constantly checking your websites to ensure they're up and running. This is performed by specially designed tools, or website monitoring solutions, that alert you in case there are any unexpected downtimes. These tools also help businesses get insights into how users interact with their websites and improve components that have been slowing down user experience and load speeds.

We've also listed the best website defacement monitoring service.

Dimensity 9500 specs leak: all-big CPU cores, monster NPU and other improvements
12:41 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

MediaTek is working on its 2025 flagship chipset and it sounds like it’s going to be a monster, based on information shared by Digital Chat Station. The chip will be fabbed on TSMC’s N3P node (the 9400 and 9400+ are N3E) and will feature an all-large CPU core architecture, plus a significantly more powerful NPU. According to the leakster, the Dimensity 9500 will have this CPU configuration: 1x Travis + 3x Alto + 4x Gelas. We don’t know what Alto is, but Travis and Gelas are the next Cortex-X and Cortex-A7xx cores from ARM as you can see in this roadmap from WikiChip: Unofficial...

Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge selfie camera revealed
10:42 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Samsung has been using the same 12 MP camera for the front-facing shooter since the Galaxy S23 series and will continue to do so. Recent reports revealed that the Galaxy S25 Edge will also get the S5K3LU sensor, also known as ISOCELL 3LU. This information adds to previous rumors that Samsung will implement the 200 MP main camera in the Galaxy S25 Ultra and Galaxy Z Fold SE. Samsung is a company that doesn't like to change a lot from one generation to another, and the camera situation is no different. The Galaxy S25 Edge with its S5K3LU sensor will join a lineup consisting of the...

I tested the HP EliteBook 840 G9, and found it to be an elegant, easy-to-manage laptop that’s packed with quality
10:24 am |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets Pro | Comments: Off

This review first appeared in issue 342 of PC Pro.

HP offers a staggeringly large array of business laptops, with the 800 series sitting in the mid-range. If you want lower prices, choose the 600 series; for the lightest designs, head to the 1040 or Dragonfly series. Even within the 800 series there’s a huge choice, so if you prefer a 2-in-1 design or AMD chips there will be something for you.

The 840 G9 is based on Intel’s 12th generation Core chips, in this case the i7-1255U. With only two performance cores, it’s no match for the i7-1260P in tasks that exploit multiple threads, but it will blast through everyday jobs with ease. Its low power demands also helped the 840 G9 last for between nine and 14 hours in our battery tests, and if the 256GB SSD isn’t big enough, you can open up the chassis and add a second (but physically smaller) M.2 SSD.

At 1.5kg it isn’t the most portable machine around, but it’s sleek and – for a business laptop – stylish. There’s no Ethernet port, but an HDMI port accompanies two USB-C Thunderbolt 4 ports on the left-hand side. USB-A ports sit on either side, and while our review unit doesn’t include a nano-SIM slot it is available on variants.

There’s no shortage of security features. On the left you’ll find a smart card reader, with a fingerprint reader tucked under the cursor keys plus a Windows Hello-compatible webcam. HP makes much of the 840 G9’s conferencing abilities, and its 1440p webcam is certainly above average. We weren’t blown away by its Auto Frame capabilities – this works but is stutter-y – but we do love the clear audio picked up by the dual-array mics. These cancel out background noise, too.

HP integrates its Wolf Security package within the laptop, but there’s only a single year’s subscription as standard. If you buy direct from HP, you can triple this – and upgrade the single year of return-to-base warranty to three years of on-site cover – for £179. Be careful, though, as you may end up with a Sure View screen (see our Dragonfly review for its pluses and minuses) rather than the excellent panel in our test unit.

We were similarly impressed by the quality of the keyboard, which combines the excellent traits of quietness with a cushioned yet decisive action. It would be a pleasure to belt out a report on this machine. You can even play music in the background, with one of the better pairs of speakers in evidence here.

This is a well-built laptop that may have taken our Labs Winner award if it wasn’t for the limited warranty and the question marks over which screen comes with which model.

We also rated the best 4K monitors.

Oppo K13 Turbo has a fan
9:36 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Oppo launched the K13 in India last week, and it now seems like there's going to be a Turbo version for at least the Chinese market. This one is coming soon and today a hands-on shot of its back has been leaked. You can see it below. The K13 Turbo's unique selling point will allegedly be the fact that it will sport an active fan for cooling as well as RGB lights on the back. It will be powered by the recently unveiled Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 SoC. Unfortunately, no other specs about it are known just yet, but given the fan and the RGB LEDs, this one will clearly be aimed specifically at...

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8:07 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

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Honor Magic8 Pro camera details leak
6:47 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Honor launched the Magic7 Pro in October and released it in November, and today we already have the first rumor talking about its successor, the Magic8 Pro, straight out of China. We already heard that the non-Pro Magic8 would shrink in size compared to the Magic7 last month. The Magic8 Pro is said to use Qualcomm's upcoming Snapdragon 8 Elite 2 SoC (or whatever else it ends up being called), as well as a triple rear camera system: 50 MP main, 50 MP ultrawide, 200 MP periscope telephoto. Honor Magic7 Pro On paper that's the same setup as last year, but the main camera should be...

The next OnePlus Ace 5 phone will use a very interesting chipset
5:11 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

You may have heard of MediaTek's Dimensity 9400, a flagship SoC launched last year, and the Dimensity 9400+, a higher-bin version of the 9400 that was announced a few weeks ago. You probably haven't heard of the Dimensity 9400e, unless you've read our recent report on the upcoming vivo X200 FE which is rumored to use it. Basically, the 9400e will be the lower-bin 9400 - the 9400+ is the top of the family, the 9400 is in the middle, the 9400e is the lower-end version, but still very much top of the line. And now OnePlus is rumored to put the Dimensity 9400e in the next Ace 5 device, which...

Samsung is bringing back the Classic Galaxy Watch
3:26 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Last year Samsung launched the Galaxy Watch7 alongside the Galaxy Watch Ultra, but there was no Classic model with a rotating bezel. There are apparently still quite a lot of fans of the rotating bezel, and thus Samsung will launch the Galaxy Watch8 Classic this year along with the Galaxy Watch8. This has now been revealed through the Watch8 Classic's certification at the Bluetooth SIG, which has confirmed its name and model number - SM-L505U. The Watch8 and Watch8 Classic are expected to make their debut with the Galaxy Z Fold7 and Flip7 in early July. At the beginning of this...

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite 2 to launch early
1:14 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Qualcomm unveiled the Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset in October of last year, so you'd normally assume its successor, tentatively called Elite 2, would arrive this coming October. However, according to a rumor out of China, the next Elite will actually be announced in late September. Then, in October, we'll already see devices using it hitting the streets, at least in China. Previously, the Elite 2's AnTuTu benchmark score got leaked, suggesting some pretty healthy upgrades in performance compared to its predecessor, and then we heard that its GPU performance would be up by 30%, while...

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