Systems | Development | Analytics | API | Testing

AlloyDB Lakehouse Federation: Unified access to BigQuery and Google Cloud Lakehouse

Join Paul Ramsey, Product Manager at Google, for a demonstration of AlloyDB’s new Lakehouse Federation capability. Using a fictional financial services firm, Cymbal Investments, we show how analysts can research S&P 500 trends by combining real-time vector search with data in BigQuery and Google Cloud Lakehouse. In this video, you will see: Learn how AlloyDB enables cloud and AI transformation for your data platform.

How to Scale Paid Media Across 5 Channels Without Losing Visibility (Google, Meta, LinkedIn, TikTok)

Agencies hit the same wall every time they try to grow: who is going to actually run the campaigns, and how do you keep visibility across every client and every channel when you do? Ashish Chaturvedi, data analyst of Atidiv, walks through how Atidiv and Databox solve both sides of the problem. Atidiv handles campaign execution across Google Ads, Meta, LinkedIn, TikTok, and email. Databox gives you the visibility layer: one interactive view where you can see spend, revenue, and return across every channel without chasing updates in Slack, email, or spreadsheets.

RAG and GenAI for Regulated and Public Sector Architectures

As a cloud engineer, I’ve seen organizations rush to implement Generative AI, only to hit a brick wall when the Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) asks about data residency or PII leakage. In the public sector and regulated industries like healthcare or finance, moving fast and breaking things isn't an option.

Enterprise Knowledge Management with RAG for Digital-Native Companies

Enterprise knowledge management RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation) is a production-grade AI architecture designed to connect Large Language Models (LLMs) securely to a continuous, real-time flow of proprietary corporate data. Unlike basic RAG implementations that rely on static document uploads and batch-processed vector databases, an enterprise RAG architecture utilizes event streaming to ingest document updates, regenerate embeddings, and synchronize context in real time.

Autonomous Agentic Event-Driven Systems Architecture

Autonomous / agentic event-driven systems are a class of AI-native architectures where software agents continuously sense events, reason over shared state, take actions, and learn from outcomes—all in real time and without human-in-the-loop orchestration. At an architectural level, these systems combine event streaming, stateful processing, and agentic decision layers to form closed-loop AI systems capable of operating independently at scale.

How a Hospital Management System Improves Patient Flow, Billing & Compliance: A Practical Guide

In an era where healthcare margins are tightening and regulatory scrutiny is at an all-time high, hospitals can no longer afford to operate with siloed systems. The traditional disconnect between clinical operations and financial administration creates a black hole where data gets lost, patients wait too long, and revenue evaporates through billing errors. The solution lies in a robust, centralized hospital management system (HMS).

Load Testing vs Stress Testing: Key Differences and When to Use Each

Load testing and stress testing are not the same thing, even though the terms get thrown around interchangeably in standups, RFPs, and vendor pages. Both put traffic against your service, but they answer different questions. Confusing them costs you either money (over-scoping a test) or a 3 a.m. incident (under-scoping one). This is the short version, then the long one. Is Your Infrastructure Ready for Global Traffic Spikes?

The new era of Healthcare Modernization in 2026 & beyond

Is your legacy healthcare system holding you back? Would you still wear a suit that no longer fits, just because it once looked great? Probably not. The same logic applies to your IT infrastructure. Healthcare organizations often grow comfortable with legacy systems simply because they’ve always worked. But what once worked well may now be putting your operations, patients, and reputation at serious risk.

CLI vs MCP: One Gives Speed, the Other Governance

CLI offers speed and developer freedom for API access; MCP provides centralized security, governance, and observability at enterprise scale. With CLI, credentials live on the developer's local machine and audit trails are shell-only — fast, but ungoverned. MCP adds authentication, centralized policy enforcement, and observability across all API calls, at the cost of some speed and higher token consumption. Kong's MCP Gateway is built for teams that need the governance trade-off without giving up too much velocity.#Shorts.