Palo Alto Networks' acquisition of Chronosphere for more than $5 billion is not just another headline-grabbing software deal, it's a clear signal that the lines between cybersecurity, observability and AI-driven infrastructure monitoring are converging faster than most investors realise. For Australia, it's also another defining moment in the rise of homegrown founders shaping global enterprise software.
Chronosphere, founded by Australian engineers Martin Mao and Rob Skillington, started as a solution to a very specific problem at Uber: how do you monitor a system operating at the scale of hundreds of millions of transactions and billions of. . .
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