Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Observability platform for distributed systems; raised $147M total ($50M Series D 2023); 160% net revenue retention; founded by Charity Majors; columnar storage enables sub-second queries
Honeycomb is a modern observability platform founded in 2016 by Charity Majors and Christine Yen and headquartered in San Francisco, California, built to give engineering teams the ability to understand the behavior of complex distributed systems in production through a fundamentally different approach to data storage and querying. The company was founded on Majors' experience at Parse and Facebook, where she concluded that traditional monitoring and APM tools — designed for monolithic systems with predictable failure modes — were structurally inadequate for the debugging requirements of microservices architectures at scale. Honeycomb's mission is to make production software fast, reliable, and enjoyable to build and run, by giving engineers the observability capabilities to understand their systems in the same way their users experience them.\n\nHoneycomb's platform is built on a column-oriented data store purpose-designed for high-cardinality, high-dimensionality event data — the structured telemetry events that microservices emit at runtime. This architecture enables engineers to query across billions of raw events in seconds with arbitrary dimension combinations, a capability that pre-aggregated metrics and sampled traces cannot match. Honeycomb's product includes trace visualization, heatmaps, BubbleUp for anomaly attribution, and Honeycomb Query Language (HQL) for expressive ad-hoc analysis. The platform supports OpenTelemetry natively, making instrumentation vendor-neutral and portable. Honeycomb serves software engineering teams at technology companies and enterprises building distributed systems on cloud infrastructure.\n\nHoneycomb raised a $50 million Series D in April 2023, bringing total funding to $147 million, and reports 160% net revenue retention — a metric that reflects deep product adoption and consistent expansion within its customer base. Its thought leadership in the observability space, through Majors' prolific writing and public advocacy for the term "observability" as a distinct engineering discipline, has made Honeycomb a reference brand for engineering teams that care about production system understanding. As the observability market consolidates around OpenTelemetry as a standard, Honeycomb's native support positions it well against both traditional APM vendors and cloud provider observability products.
Irving TX global EPC contractor (NYSE: FLR) at $16.3B 2024 revenue with $17.7B backlog; new CEO Jim Breuer May 2025 growing data center/semiconductor segment from BHP Olympic Dam to CHIPS Act fabs competing with Bechtel and AECOM.
Fluor Corporation is an Irving, Texas-based engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: FLR) — providing global energy, chemicals, infrastructure, government, and advanced technology clients with EPC project delivery services across the full capital project lifecycle from feasibility through commissioning and maintenance. In 2024, Fluor reported $16.3 billion in revenue (Fortune 500 #265) with $9.5 billion in new awards and an $17.7 billion ending backlog, demonstrating pipeline growth driven by the AI data center construction surge, semiconductor manufacturing expansion (CHIPS Act-funded fabs), and life sciences facility build-out. In May 2025, Jim Breuer was named CEO, succeeding David Constable who became Executive Chairman. Founded in 1912 (113-year operating history), Fluor operates through Urban Solutions (infrastructure, manufacturing, life sciences), Mission Solutions (government), and Energy Solutions (oil, gas, chemicals, renewables) segments.
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